Page 12 The Battalion Monday, January 23,1989 “Mississippi Burning” Starring Gene Hackman and Willem Dafoe Directed by Alan Parker Rated R “Mississippi Burning,” a film full of gripping intensity and compelling per formances, is one of the greatest films of the 1980s. Director Alan Parker has taken a tur bulent period in Asnerican history and REVIEW SHANE HALL “Talk Radio” Starring Eric Bogosian Directed by Oliver Stone Rated R Rather than making feel-good-type movies, director Oliver Stone has built himself a reputation for hard hitting, sometimes violent films that take on many social and political topics. He showed us the Vietnam War through the foot soldier’s eyes in “Platoon” and the urban war fought with computers and stocks in “Wall Street. ” “Talk Radio,” Stone’s latest ef fort, is a gutsy film focused on a controversial talk show host on the radio. The screenplay, written by Stone and star Eric Bogosian, is based on REVIEW SHANE HALL Bogosian’s one-man play and on the story of Alan Berg, the Denver radio personality murdered by a white supremacist. Bogosian stars as Barry Cham plain, the abusive, irreverent host of a*talk show on a Dallas radio sta tion. His message is that people don’t talk about what’s happening in the world anymore. Every night, Barry fields calls from an audience of rednecks and bigots. Shooting off stinging one-liners and verbal jabs, Barry Champlain is a man full of fury, unafraid to say what he thinks no matter whom it offends. Even when he begins receiving death threats from neo-Nazi luna tics, he doesn’t stop. Robert Richardson’s photogra phy of “Talk Radio” is excellent, us ing a wide variety of camera angles. Filmed in Dallas last spring, most of the movie is set in the radio sta tion studio. Stone’s direction of the film is su perb and sometimes brimming with intensity and moments of suspense. In one such moment, Barry re ceives a call on the show from a man claiming to have sent him a bomb through the mail . All the while, Barry eyes a pack age sitting atop a stack of mail next to him. The scene’s intensity is heightened by Richardson’s camera technique and Stewart Copeland’s soundtrack. Filled with elements of anger, in tensity, and even a little humor, “Talk Radio” is an impressive work from one of America’s most daring filmmakers. The opening sequence is a depiction of the murders. After the workers are reported missing, an FBI investigation begins. Gene Hackman and Willem Dafoe star as two agents from different back grounds who are in charge of the inves tigation. Dafoe plays agent Ward, a by-the- book liberal. A native Northeasterner, Ward is an outsider in a region where outsiders are less than welcome. crafted a remarkable film that has raised widespread controversy. With a career that includes such films as “Angel Heart” and “Midnight Express,” it’s a good bet that Parker is not one to shy away from the contro versial. “Mississippi Burning,” like his pre vious efforts, is a movie filled with star tling visual images and graphic vio lence. The film is based on the 1964 slay ing of three civil rights workers in Mis sissippi and the investigation that fol lowed. Hackman, as agent Anderson, turns in his greatest performance in several years, possibly of all time. Anderson is a Southern good ol’ boy and a former Mississippi lawman who doesn’t mind using methods that are not standard procedure. While Ward is questioning people who won’t talk and bringing in hun dreds of agents to drag swamps for bodies, Anderson becomes friendly with the wife of the sheriffs deputy in volved in the murder and begins find ing facts to speed up the investigation. “Mississippi Burning” is neither a documentary nor the story of the civil rights movement. It is a film that shows why the movement was necessary. Parker packs the film with difficult-to- watch scenes of churches burning and blacks being terrorized in their homes and beaten in the streets by redneck Klansmen. These scenes, as well as the rest of the movie, are brilliantly photo- graphedthroughout. Dafoe and Hackman both are su perb in their roles and the conflict be tween their characters makes for some fine dramatic moments. Although the story is set 25 years ago, “Mississippi Burning” is a contem porary film. With today’s increasingly common reports of racial conflict and white su premacist groups, this film serves as a reminder of the repugnance of racial hatred. Rush’s live album a hit, Floyd’s a miss f m Rush and Pink Floyd do not make rock n’ roll in the tradi tional sense. They construct hard-hitting, powerful, complex and sometimes delicate musical compositions much like classical composers have done in the past, with the added benefit of in triguing lyrics. You can’t dance to their songs, and you can’t bang your head to them, but many people have found that you can receive a whole lot of enjoyment from just listening to them. If you’re not careful, you just may learn something too. Over the fifteen-plus years these bands have been putting out albums, they’ve each built in credibly loyal followings of very diverse fans. Go to one of their concerts, and the audience will in clude both the long-haired kids who wouldn’t look out of place at a Metallica concert and the clean- cut, thick-glasses types who could be working on an advanced phys ics degree. A concert by Rush or Pink Floyd is more than your average show. It is an extravaganza for the ears, the eyes and the mind. The recent release of the double live albums Delicate Sound of Thunder by Pink Floyd and A Show of Hands by Rush, will have their fans heading for the record stores, eager to buy a tangible re minder of these concerts. With Delicate Sound of Thun der, Pink Floyd has produced what amounts to a soundtrack of the show they had on the road throughout 1987 and 1988. This album never should have been made. The first half is nothing more than a live rendition of more than half of the songs on 1987’s A Momentary Lapse of REVIEW KEITH SPERA Reason. Since that album was boring and bland compared with past Floyd masterpieces, and the live versions of these songs sound just like the studio version, the first half of Delicate is a waste of time if you’ve heard Momentary. The second half is a bit more interesting. It provides a greatest- hits retrospective of Pink Floyd classics. Each of these songs, how ever, were originally recorded as a part of a whole; they were tied in, both musically and lyrically, with the rest of the songs on the albums on which they first ap peared. Recording these songs out of context on a live album denies them the full meaning and bass notes once covered by Wa ters. He does an adequate job of playing, but the attitude just isn’t there. The album is musically aver age, with the weak rendition of “Another Brick in the Wall Part II” being offset by killer perfor mances of “Comfortably Numb” and “Run Like Hell.” David Gil- mour does a fine job on guitar, but his voice is obviously strained on several songs (perhaps be cause the album was recorded in August of 1988, after Gilmour had performed almost a year of concerts.) For those who attended a Pink Floyd concert but don’t re member it due to overindulgence of some sort or another, Delicate can provide a partial example of what was missed at the show. Other than that stick to Pink Floyd’s past releases. impact they were meant to have. In concert, this can be over looked, since the songs are not all that is happening — there are the legendary special effects to con tend with. However, with the al bum, you don’t get the 30-foot in flatable pig, the surround-sound, the footage of jumbo German shepherds with glowing eyes, or the light and laser show that made the Pink Floyd concert something special. The Rush album is another story. It does not pretend to be a documentation of their most re cent show-indeed, the songs con tained on A Show of Hands were recorded on two different tours. Like the two live albums Rush has released in the past, this album serves a different purpose: to mark the end of another chapter Each instrument is clearly aurl ble, and Geddy Lee’s distinct!*) vocals shimmer above the muiMLONl) Neil Peart’s extraordinary drcflP was ming ability is showcased inp' n ^ four minute drum solo emiilol when “The Rhythm Method.” A Pelrew twt drum solo is not a display oflnj fast he can play, or an exhibitii of what unusual pieces of (J drum kit he can beat on 4 hanging upside down with anil dience member’s bra clamped dwsand his teeth (your typical heji®A recet metal drum solo.) It is a skillful® engag executed medley of various benRiiily pi and sounds, including thesyntlulieiitenan sized sounds of chimes, bra" 30 last ye; struments and a harp. ftarah ' Bf thos The band switches moods band’s 8 styles throughout the album- Queen M are sweeping and majestic tBhickin “Marathon,” and dark, omincBdrew, and powerful on “Witch HtintB>ected Throughout the album, theygrBnts an their newer songs a bit mciWir first power by letting Alex LifemBBut a guitar stand out a bit morepro;®ed Sut inently that it did on the studBicated versions of the songs. “Close Bed be the Heart” closes out the afteBssdoe with Rush cutting loose a bit®l her h deviating f rom the song’sorigiJh? gover You also don’t get founding member Roger Waters, who was the band’s bassist and main lyric ist until conflicting egos in the band caused him to quit after The Final Cut was released in 1983. It was he who wrote many of Floyd’s darker songs. Now, a fresh faced fellow named Guy Pratt plays the in Rush’s musical history. The al bum sums up the music Rush has created since their last live album, Exit. . .Stage Left (only two of A Show of Hands 14 songs pre-date Exit), and provides an opportu nity for the band to set off in a new musical direction, as they have done after their last two live albums. With its latest release, Rush has produced a perfect example of how a live album should sound. sound and giving the audierB Her R something to clap along to. pi' s hea Bgie is These two live albums rw of tl resent something very diffemBf to the two bands that produiij them. For Pink Floyd, it isasmBfhe nt that they are not what theynivBinion 1 were. Without Roger WatcrP?|led 50 guidance, they have forgott® of err what they are all about; maybcBHews ; should be the end. For Rush,!:® her the closing in a chapter of a IwBtain, c that hopefully has many m«w e d hei chapters to come. Bt was two ’ Author’s life leads to book detailing her childhood abuse (AP) — The story of child abuse that Sylvia Fraser tells in “My Fa ther’s House” would be chilling on any terms. But, even more so, the story is the writer’s own. Fraser created a separate identity, another self, to exist when her father sexually abused her during child hood. The other self remained hid den and unknown to her for 40 years until she realized she had been an abused child and summoned back the memories. In an interview in her nearly all- white living room, the author said she started to write a novel about what had happened but was “offen ded” by the idea that she was putting into fiction something that was fact. She decided to go ahead with the book despite the self-exposure it necessarily would bring. The response has been positive, she said, including many letters from people who tell her, “You’ve written my story.” “My Father’s House” was first published last year by Doubleday Canada and, now in paperback, has been high on the Canadian best seller lists. It recently was published in hardcover in the United States. While the story has been told be fore in such books as “Sybil,” Fra ser’s is the first book by a profes sional writer about her own abuse and multiple personalities. Unlike Sybil, whose case has been documented by psychologists, Fraser did not seek psychiatric help. She completely blocked out all conscious memory of her abuse and main tained that the child victim was a completely separate personality. Fraser believes that neighbors may have suspected something was wrong in her household but were re- Oylvia Fraser decided to go ahead with the book despite the self exposure it necessarily would bring.The response has been positive, including many letters from people who tell her, “You’ve written my story.” REVIEW SHANE HALL Night Train Bobby Mack luctant to say anything in a time when divorice was not even dis cussed. Through personal awareness and woman consciousness-raising ses sions in the 1970s, she slowly came to terms with who she was. The actual memory came spontaneously one day in 1983 while she was socializing with friends. Fraser has written four novels since her first novel, “Pandora,” was published in 1972 — all of them in cluded themes or incidents of sexual violence. “Of course, now I understand that it was my other self,” she said. “My whole writing impulse had really come from my abused self.” “My Father’s House” is a sort of detective story in which Fraser searches for the unknown portions of her own past. Yet it also is a re markably vivid memoir of growing up in Hamilton, a city about an hour’s drive southwest of Toronto, in the 1940s and ’50s. Fraser attributes the crucial deci sions made in her life, from walking out on a good marriage to an affair with the father of a childhood friend, to the confusion underlying an always outwardly strong front. “The whole emotional drive of my life was to reunite my two selves,” she said. Bobby Mack and his band, Night Train, play a driving brand of Texas rock in the vein of Texas rockers such as Omar and the Howlers and the Fabulous Thunderbirds. The al bum Night Train," on SJM Records, is a six-song EP that features Mack and his band (drummer Jimmy Pate, bassist Larry Eisenberg and guitarist Chris Duarte), as well as an impres sive lineup of guest musicians, in cluding rock guitar pioneer Lonnie Mack (no relation to Bobby). The record includes soulful rock ’n’ roll complete with back-up vocals and horns (“Change My Mind” and “Treat Her Like a Lady”) and power trio rock on “Change It,” which was a top 10 hit for Stevie Ray Vaughan. Mack’s version is not as heavy on fla shy guitar stunts as Vaughan’s, but is sure to find favor with fans of Vaug han’s music. Mack’s instrumental, “Take It Ho me,” is recommended for guitar en thusiasts. Mack, Duarte and Lonnie Mack make a formidable guilarl while the rhythms of Pate and t berg give the song a rocksolidli beat. Riley Osborne plays kevlxd and finishes up the record wiihj second version of “42nd Street | If this sounds like your]® rock ’n’ roll, you can see Bobbvl 1 and Night Train at Brazos Latil Thursday night. It will be first College Station appearanttl Mack, a Texas native, orga: Texas Musicians For the World] participated in the 1987 1 s/USSR Music Exchange brought a sample of Texas id talent to the Soviet Union. H( has performed in Europe an; pan. While in Japan, hemetwii] country’s minister of foreigna The End of The Day The Reivers REVIEW to discuss involvement of WeM°^ svv artists in changing Japanese viefl e t am 111 the handicapped. In 1986,theT§ “, umn Senate proclaimed Mack I® u . Music Ambassador to the Wor fi 01 ’ Slirfer, t -..i—i— i —Ipr wl Tere. Ai S. HOECHSTETTER .v- «£ Super Special ^ ^ Centurion Cavaletto ^ Blemished Paint reg $249 95 NOW $159 88 Check These Features Alloy rims * Shimano index shift *Quick release wheel * all sizes Crome moly frame * assembled with full warranty. Valley Cyclery FM 2818 behind K Mart 764-2000 <#■ The Reivers recently released al bum, End of the Day is a nice album, but that’s about it — all the songs sound basically the same. None of the songs are particularly awful, so it’s not a bad listening experience, but the songs aren’t particularly great either. The first song is encouraging. “It’s About Time” has a good beat, and lead singer John Croslin’s voice is impressive, but the precedent it sets for the rest of the songs to follow is not upheld. Although the lyrics are not award winning, they’ll do for this mediocre album. “Star Telegram” sounds like it could be a sentimental advertise ment for the Fort Worth Star-Tele gram, with lyrics like, “In those golden Mustang days backyard sul fur and croquet with the Star Tele gram, Orange Crushes in my hand with the Star Telegram.” One can just picture the ad on TV with children playing in slow motion the background as the sun sets be hind them. “Lazy Afternoon” has a slightly different sound because it is vocalist Kim Longacre’s only solo on the al bum. The song also has a slight jazz flavor to it. This jazziness, combined with her clear, vibrant voice makes it an interesting song. Among the other tracks are “He Will Settle It,” yet another ambigu ous, repetitive song. With this al bum, if you’ve heard one song, you’ve heard them all. However, “Cut Above” has some interesting lyrics. The song is about the mental torments of a man who has made it to the top in the business world and the problems he faces within himself. Another track with interesting ly rics is “Discontent of Winter” has ly rics that conjure up images of rest lessness, but that same basic Reivers beat and melody are still present. Many of the songs have a strong country and western influence. “Al most Home,” is a good exampIBh^fp this. The second side of the ret q u i much more enjoyable to lis |t; Hre wort than the first side. k “Wha “Truth to Tell” is the bestsotMg j n the album. It’s a good songtoi|| nt ” j to if you need an outlet for ft aiH ] sa y S lion. Jjpday, y< However, the next song, “l® U se tc Out,” is a letdown after such a Ky wav< song. It just drags on andonwilg Toda' saying or doing anything, Snake R “Dude Man Hey”, an instrc Jdaming tal, gives the listener good exp jot her. G to all of the band members skill® “This eluding Andy Metcalfe and®ear-old McCord on keyboards and «burra Lamb on guitar. Beaker, “Your Secrets are not Safe' little one same old thing — words and or two c that have no substance. ft Maybe these words do have] stance but they’re just preseM such a boring manner that' don’t encourage anyone to listen I Although the album isn’t oil listen to for a deep meanitl wouldn’t be bad as background! sic. Still, I wouldn’t give up Reivers — they do show somepljAP) tial, but they need to vary theirSBidfs plves a t Book advises women to avoid consuming desire forperfectioi ling to a i But un lays it is b : The di jaralyzin ris home Pquentj* In Apr (AP) —- Karen makes $250,000 a year working for E.F. Hutton and prides herself on being a “shark.” Anita runs miles every day but has been bulimic for eight years. Marjo rie has made straight A’s all her life but panics and overprepares for ev ery test. What all these women have in common, says Colette Dowling, is an overwhelming desire to achieve per fection. In her book “Perfect Women” (Summit, $18.95), Dowling argues that this striving for ever-higher goals — hours of aerobics every day, 60-hour work weeks, making every meal from scratch — is not a healthy exercise to fulfill one’s potential but a desperate scramble to fill an inner void. “An artistic drive is satisfying,” Dowling says. “A drive to perform is ... a kind of rigid, compulsive symp tom, as compared to something that’s really joyful and self-express ive and gives back to us.” Dowling, best known for her 1981 best seller “The Cinderella Com plex,” says, “The whole drive to be perfect comes out of a feeling of in feriority. We wouldn’t even be inter ested in the idea of perfection if there wasn’t something that we psy chologically were compensating for.” The premise of the “Cinderella Complex” was that women had a deep-seated belief that they could not take care of themselves, that de spite the gains of the women’s movement they were still waiting for a Prince Charming to whisk them off to “live happily ever after.” Dowling, 50, said the book was based on her own experience. “Perfect Women,” similarly, is based on Dowling’s own experi ences. The author found that despite the success of “The Cinderella Com plex,” which spent 26 weeks on the ||e on best-seller list, she still felt indioved tc about her work and at a loss tolis spina next project. At the same time, her daughter, Gabrielle, a star sen 1 ! athlete and beauty, dropped ( Harvard University and re«| that she had been bulimic foryt®Unwill Dowling realized that her ( ' Arndt wi lentless drive for success had Be in FI which tr< passed on to her daughter. j|rk Cit In “Perfect Women,” DoBh one cites psychological studies deBremov the mother-daughter relation'wd. “They (mothers) are notovedlArndt’ volved with us (daughters) 2'writi rate persons; they’re overly in ffilentall) with us as extensions of themsBysicalh she said. iHe say The way for a woman to By walk the perfection treadmill, sheBthetre r^lr^mr'ci11\/ c^r^arofp to psychologically separate 111 from her mother, which can btfc says. ‘ through therapy, self-explotfiysicali: and perhaps confrontation, fate. f “I’m a