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■ BEST BET
12 » The Red and Black • Friday, September 21. 1990
TGIF
The Tate Student Center Gallery is holding a reception Monday
6-8 p.m. for photographer Gary Caywood. Caywood’s exhibit en
titled,"OBSTACLES: Environmental Impediments To Blind
People," could open your eyes. Check it out.
Indigo Girls back in town, movies abound for weekend fun
■ AFTER HOURS
TATE CENTER THEATER
• Sept. 21-22:The Hunt for Red
October. Alec Baldwin smolders.
Sean Connery speaks Russian and
Tim Curry is impossible to take
seriously in this exciting, highly
watchable tale of a boy and his
submarine.
• Sept. 21 22 midnight:Pink Floyd:
The Wall. It starts with a vacuum
cleaner and ends with n bang and
in between there’s a lot of neato
blood, sex and rock-n-roll.
Pretentious and overrated, but
worth a look.
• Sept. 23:Hamlet. The Russian
version. Considered by many to be
the definitive Hamlet.
• Sept. 25:The Killing. Kicks off
Stanley Kubrick Week at Tate.
Ilorseracing and intrigue.
Weird on Top: Lula and Sailor (Laura Dern and Nicholas
Cage) are wild at heart in David Lynch's new film.
HAPPY HOUR 3-7
Pitchers of Bud Lite
$2.50
Afternool
Stewart & Winfield &
Night
• Sept. 26:2001: A Space Odyssey.
A stunning film that utilizes the
principal power of cinema — to
take us somewhere we’ve never
been before. Should be great on the
big screen. Thus spake
Zarethustra.
• Sept. 27:Full Metal Jacket. Join
the marines! See the world! Meet
interesting, exotic people ... and
kill them! The last of Tate’s
Kubrick trilogy is great for about
the first hour and then it slows to a
crawl. It’s a darned interesting
crawl, though.
MOVIES IN TOWN
ALPS
• Dick Tracy. Blazing guns, Warren
Beatty kissing Madonna and
ooohh...the colors. This is a good
Movie (with a capital M).
• Jungle Book. If you pick a pau-
pau or a prickly pear and you prick
a raw paw, well next time beware.
You don’t need to use the paw
when you pick a pear, try to use the
claw. But you don’t need to use the
claw if you pick a pear of the big
pau-pau. Have I given you a clue?
CLASSIC TRIPLE
• Ghost. Spirit love is the only love.
• Exorcist III. Supposedly kinda
funny. Whether it was meant to be
or not is another story.
• Narrow Margin. Thin.
GEORGIA SQUARE
» Young Guns II. Fairly okay
western.
• Air America. A new concept —
non-stick movie-making.
• Flatliners. Kiefer Sutherland,
Julia Roberts, Kevin Bacon and
William Baldwin play medical
students who can somehow afford
to live in expensive, MTV-designed
apartments. They play around
with medical equipment in an
abandoned cathedral, kill
themselves, have really bad
dreams, come back, get beaten up a
lot and pretend to be really deep.
The whole movie pretends to be
really deep, but it fails to make its
own premise work.
• Men at Work. Charlie Sheen and
Emilio Estevez take out the trash.
• Taking Care of Business. Once
again, the capable Jim Belushi is
denied a worthy vehicle. Charles
Grodin co-stars.
• Postcards From the Edge. A feel
good movie with a sharp and witty
script.
• Death Warrant. Kickboxer Van
Damme in an action thriller. Hiii-
yah.
• Funny About Love. Let’s hope the
title is an adequate description.
Gene Wilder needs some good
Atlantans Amy Ray and Emily Saliers make up the fabulous Indigo Girls. They will
play their harmonious music Monday night at the Georgia Theatre.
i news.
• Hardware. Erotic and violent sci-
fci. Good word-of-mouth from
people who like erotic and violent
sci-fi.
LEFONT BEECHWOOD
• Presumed Innocent. Solid
courtroom drama with a masterful
low-key performance by Harrison
Ford.
• Darkman. The best movie of the
summer. Stylish, funny, thrilling
and refreshing. Everyone who even
thinks about making an action-
adventure movie should be forced
to watch this first.
• Wild at Heart. This movie seems
to divide audiences right down the
middle. Definitely strange and
often a little difficult to watch
because of David Lynch’s
demented obsessions with violence.
Still, the movie is full of life and
energy and is paced wonderfully.
Both funny and sad at the same
time, “Wild at Heart” is a true
original and is therefore not for
everyone.
• Goodfellas. Latest movie from
American genius Martin Scorcese
promises to be quality viewing.
Robert DeNiro, Ray Liotta and Joe
Pesci star in this gangland tale.
— Noel Murray
MUSIC IN TOWN
40 WATT
• Sept. 21: Take a hayride to hell
with Hillbilly Frankenstein.
Tuscaloosa’s Storm Orphans open.
• Sept. 22: Seven Simons pursue
their atmospheric sound before
late night disco.
• Sept. 24: Michael Lachowski
Dance Party. Dance! Dance, damn
you!
• Sept. 25 Nothing set yet. Let
your fingers do the walking. 549-
7871.
• Sept. 26: Pop supersensation
Doubts Even Here take their final
: bows with the guitar fp*ind of The
Violets blazing the trail.
I • Sept. 27: Porn Orchard play their
peculiar brand of jazzcore.
j GEORGIA THEATRE
• Sept. 21: Dreams So Real work
their standard inoffensive guitar
jangle. Blind Lemon Pie opens.
• Sept. 22: White Buffalo indulge
themselves.
I • Sept. 24: Indigo Girls. Stiff $12
I cover price but worth every penny.
I Everyone should have heard these
special ladies by now, but if you
' haven’t seen them live, you don’t
I really know. Guaranteed to be a
warm, energetic evening,
j • Sept. 25: Atlanta favorites The
: Grapes.
ROCKFISH PALACE
j • Sept. 21: I insist you see The Jody
l Grind. They are, without a doubt,
the most talented, entertaining
I combo around. Jazz, country, folk.
rock ... they mix-and-match th?m
all. Quality knows no genre. Asa
Nisi Masa opens.
• Sept 22: The goofy ska of Pez. All
of the songs you hate in versions
that make it impossible to hate
them. Great fun.
• Sept. 24: Pez again. Just can’t get
enough.
DOWNSTAIRS
• Sept.21: The Drcvers Old-Time
Medicine Show.
• Sept. 22: Vigilantes of Love offer
more words per song than a band
twice their size. Sort of a bargain.
• Sept. 24: A benefit for the people
who put together the wonderful
Blue Plate Special literary
magazine. Support literature in
this town.
• Sept. 25: One of Athens best
bands, Roosevelt, will probably
melt The Downstairs at this
Georgia Environmental Project
Benefit. Roosevelt is loud.
R(x>sevelt is groovy. Roosevelt is
great.
• Sept 26: A new and highly
laudable project for The
Downstairs — films by local
artists. Public Service
Announcement agency C-00 is
exhibited this time around.
Support film in this town.
• Sept. 27: Kodac Harrison and the
Lite Folk of Farnz and the Burgoos.
— Noel Murray
O MALLEYS;
osper
$45 Per Quarter
S 120 Per Year
r~
• 30,000 square ft. facility
Featunng
■ Sauna
• Co-cd exercise facility
• High & Low impact and Bench Aerobics
• Certified staff
• Tanning
• Nautilus
• Lrfesleps
• Extensive free weight area
• Lifecycles
• Treadmills
• Consulting sports medicine
• Whirlpools
therapist
• Liierower
• Nutntional Consultant
• Stair Master
• Open 6 days a week
\
7
279 Williams St.
549-2636
195 Eppa Bridge Rd.
SUSSEX
* T * *
OIN THE CLUB!
Ojily a fen left
1,2,3 Bedroom Apartments
• 2 Bedroom Townhouses & Efficiencies
• Lighted Tennis Courts
• Minutes from Campus
• On Athons Busline
• Indoor and Outdoor Pools
• Fully Equipped Weight Room
w/ Free Weights
• Cnmcroom w/ Pool Tublcs, Ping Pong,
Bumper Pool, Video Gumus
$2002A off* 1st MONTHS Rent
with thik ad
"■restrictions apply
*7
Friday
&
Saturday
John Berry
$3 cover
Open
immediately
8 after the
game
164 E. Clayton St. Above
548-7573 Etcetera
FRIDAY
&
SATURDAY
Bubba Dean & J.T. Jones
... Live and on the Deck
Dancing Inside
$3 00 Cover w/ UGA I.D.
279 Williams St.
549-3306
ANNOUNCING
STUDENT POSITIONS
AT UGA FOOD SERVICES
-Convenient campus location
-Your meals while working
-We work around your
class schedule
-A chance to move up to
Student Management
>PLY DOWNSTAIRS SNELLING HALL
od Services Administration
542-1256