Movie Review ‘Blue City’ is just plain awful By Matt Diedrich Reporter The advertisements for “Blue City” say it’s located “below Mi ami and above the law.” They should have said it’s bevond be lief and beneath contempt. “Blue City" is nothing more than a Caucasian version of “Beverly Hills Cop." It virtually matches the Eddie Murphy film scene-for-scene, creating one of the most blatant, shameless ri- poffs of recent years. It stars Eddie Murphy — I mean, Judd Nelson — as Billy Turner, a tough-talking guv who returns to his hometown after five years to find out his father, the mayor, has been murdered. Rumor has it a big- time hood named Kerch (Steven Berkoff — oops, I mean Scott Wilson) did it, but the police chief (Ronny Cox — I mean, Paul Winfield) savs he doesn't have enough evidence to make an arrest. So Billy decides to catch his father’s killer on his own. This, of course, involves things such as blowing up Kerch's car, tearing up his ca sino, and stealing some of his il legally-obtained funds. In be tween these scenes of mayhem, Billy barges in on Kerch’s busi ness meetings and savs things like, “I’ve got vour number.” After a while Kerch decides to fight back. What follows is a predictable series of action scenes, culminating in the big final shootout at (where else?) Kerch’s private mansion. The embarrassing superficia- litv of “Blue Citv” is a big reason for its failure. Besides the ob vious elements of “Beverly Hills Cop,” “Blue City” borrows much of its look from “Miami Vice.” Every few minutes, for instance, the action stops dead to allow time for another music i video, bringing whatever pace the movie might have estab lished to a grinding halt. There's an obligatory^ sex scene, an obligatory^ barroom brawl, even an obligatory nighttime motorcycle ride. The only thing missing is a stone And that’s writer-producer Walter Hill’s fault. Hill has al ways excelled at making slick looking action films but, with the exception of “48 Hrs.," has never invented enough of a ston 7 to go with them. His cre- ativity has reached its nddir with “Blue City',” which actu ally contains two sequences that Hill lifted directly from his last action picture, “Streets of Fire." Hill isn't the only one who should be ashamed of himself, however. Judd Nelson, who was oh-so-great in “The Breakfast Club,” is totally out of place | here. He can talk tough with the best of them, but when it comes to being tough — well, let's just sav Clint Eastwood has nothing to wony about. Nelson has a few great smart-aleck re marks and even some nice dis- plavs of emotion, but as an ac tion hero he’s a bust. You may wonder why I haven't vet mentioned Nelson’s co-star, Ally Sheedy. That’s be cause her role is so incidental and unnecessary' that it hardly deserves mention. Sheedy plays Nelson’s girlfriend Annie, who’s alwavs around to warn him about the big bad crime boss, or to do some detective work for him, or to comfort him in times of sorrow. “Blue City” does have its good points. The visual styJe, the ac tion, the music and even certain bits of dialogue are excellent. But watching an hour of “Miami Vice” yields the same result, and costs a lot less. Opinion By Nancy Feigenbaum Stajf Writer I once took a class known to the student body as “prime-time psych.” A bald version of Bob Barker lectured 2,500 of us in the university’s largest audito rium, trailing a microphone cord and making liberal use of slides, films and other sleep-in ducing materials. Three mornings a week at 8 a.m., he would emcee a list of facts for us to copy in our note books. Not too fast. It was a great course for ex ploring the capacity of short term memory. One of the facts I still remember is about pi geons and people. Or maybe it was pelicans. In any case, it had something to do with birds. People, he said, are just like birds on a telephone wire. They always sit far enough apart so no one bird infringes on an other bird’s space. I can appre ciate the analogy, however ung- lamorous and elevators are a perfect example. A person alone in an elevator does whatever he pleases. He stands in the middle, leans on a rail or checks his fly. The next person walks straight to a cor ner. The first guy moves to a corner, too, and neither one says anything. When the next few people get on, everyone moves a little until equilibrium has been regained, then they stare at the numbers over the doors. There’s a good chance that if anyone says anything no one will answer. One elevator in the language building of my old school gave everybody trouble. It was very small and very slow, so when six people rode at the same time, they were likely to be caught in intimate poses for several minutes at a time. Even' day at 30 seconds to noon, I would dash into the el evator and engross myself in the panel of numbers above the doors. This elevator didn’t have any and people never got used to the elevator’s deficiency. One day, someone with an astute appreciation of human (and bird) psychology painted num bers on the metal panel. The only thing worse than having to look at strangers in a small space is having to pretend you’re not listening to them. People who have conversations on elevators deserve to be stuck between floors at closing time — with nothing to read. Elevator conversations are al ways appropriate and usually whispered but even small sounds cany over a distance of two feet, subjecting the rest of the elevator to something like this: Sweatshirt No. 1: “Did you hear the news about Carla?” Sweatshirt No. 2: “Don’t tell me. Not again!” No. 1: “Uh huh, and this time at the laundromat.” No. 2 (rumaging in her purse for something): “You can’t be serious. I thought she was over that.” No. 1: “Apparently not. It took the firemen all night to get her loose.” No. 2 (finding her lipstick and putting some on as she speaks): “Well, I get off here. Say hi to Carla, will you?” For all they knew, Carla was squeezed in at the back, blush- ing. Another place for peculiar conversations is in bathrooms. Here the problem is one of se lective deafness. I overheard this conversation in restroom at a college lecture hall. “Is anyone in there?” asks a woman in line. “I don’t know,” says the other person waiting. “I think it’s empty.” The first person crouches at the stall door slightly, but not quite enough to learn anything. They both shrug. “What about that one?” asks the first one, pointing to the open door at the end. “I think it’s for handicapped people,” the second one says. The first one accepts this ex planation and they both both continue waiting until someone emerges from the closed stall, where she’d been listening all along. — 5 —