& QUT ^HE QTHER' Tom petty's latest album is still in the audio, with an interim bass player, Howie Epstein (who usually hacks Del Shannon, whom Petty re cently produced, hence the logical connection) Ron Blair. Petty's former bassist, left around Christmas last year and is. as they say, 'pursuing different musical directions.”' Joni MiTCHELi has reportedly scrap ped all the songs for her next album and is in New York writing new ones Robin lane, formerly leading Robin Lane & the Chartbusters for Warner Bros. Records, is now record ing in MCA Music Studios. LA. with Stan Lynch (Tom Petty drummer) El hot Easton (Cars guitarist) and Leroy Radcliffe (ex-Chartbuster). Playing Games Tap devised by h r tom- sawyer a California philologist, is a thesaurus/dictionary disguised as a word game TAP consists of two decks of tap cards, a spin dial and a score pad. and the words are not simple. Sawyer told one writer. “I'm not going to lower the difficulty of the words just to hit the masses. If they don't buy it. ! don’t give a damn It's going to stay highbrow " Sesquipedalians among us may order TAP by sending $16 to Logophilia Unlimited. Inc.. 2253 Park Bivd , Palo Alto, CA 94306 Pente. pronounced PEN tay recently sponsored a $10,000 World Open Pente Championship in Dallas, with first prize of $5000 cash, a week for two in England and a Grecian urn (say what?) Based on the Japanese game Go. Pente is four years old and deter mined to be five Like the Song Says, “Don’t Go ...” Rumored that "Wolverton Moun tain." lovably ridiculous 1962 C&W/crossover hii for Claude King, is being developed into a film You Should Be Dancing, Yarrgh! According to a recent report in Va riety the State of California is 13000 Wt> WOW 3 HOURS OF PLAYING WLClCAR. WAR ' FORSeT IT, OUDf ' iOU'rt LOST ■ -This ROMAA/CF' pioneering a new treatment for con victed sex offenders, sort of a litmus test for their progress in therapy Pris oners go to discos for an evening erf discreetly observed mingling If they can shake a tailfeather without resort ing to strangulation holds, improve ment is assumed How/ever, in the milieu of a disco, it isn't easy to tell a maniac from a victim of Saiurdav Night Fever at least two inmates have es caped in the stroboscopic confusion Moreover, suggested the Vanen re porter, perhaps a disco evening should be considered cruel and unusual punishment" His alternative sugges non take offenders to a punk club If thev mingle successfully, lock cm up again If thev shy from slam dancing, pronounce them cured Just What Are Your Fai'orite Stars Up To? Sylvesterstslutnl will write and star in Pah a contemporary comedv later this year we 11 see him one more time as Rocky in the third installment of that saga, and he lust finished f trs Hluod, after mans delays and several injuries Scott gunn the coach in Personal Hest (and die sexiest man in 1 rban Cowboy) will play astronaut Alan Shepard in The Rig/tu Stuff based on "Rim Wolfes hook Dennis Quaid and Sam Shepard also star A ns m vino left the Broadwav cast of Amadeus to travel to Europe, where she'll star in lentl, directed by Barbra Streisand Mom is wm-Liasino A Clockwork (trance because it ls deemed a precursor of punk and as such mai intrigue a whole new generation of freaks P)N gCREEN One from the Heart starrtny Frederic Fcjrrest, Ten (iarr, Raul Julia and Sastassia Kmski screenplay by Francis Coppola and Arman Hemstem, directed by Francis ' C-oppola WJrancis Ctippola has taken a simple M* love story and produced one of the most wonderful movies in years. One I from the Heart is about losers, living ' out their second-rate lives in Las Vegas, a town that only cares about its big winners Frannie and Hank (Garr and Forrest) are celebrating their fifth an niversary of meeting and subsequently living together, but on this July 4th they argue and go out on the town separately When Coppola announced that he was building a complete replica of the Vegas strip on a Zoetrope Studio soundstage, it seemed as if he was get ting a bit carried away Here be was, making a simple musical romance, and the budget was quickly approaching the grandiose scale erf Coppola s re cent epic classic Apocalypse Sou At One from the Heart's Final Preview Showing at New York's Radio City Music Hall it appeared as if every dol lar were well spent No detail seems to have been omitted the colors are gorgeous, including the only opening credits that could ever be described as breathtaking At times it appears as if the characters are secondary to the visual wonders. We are being shown a story about marginally ordinary people who aren t half as interesting as the town they live in (although, oddly, we never see gambling, we just hear it). One from the Heart works under the premise that its insignificant characters are only a minute part of Las Vegas, the glossy, overbearing town that engulfs individuals into a blurring swirl erf anonymity Blues artist Tom Waits has provided a superb soundtrack, with vocal ac companiment from Crystal Gayle. Their music is the perfect backdrop to Frannie and Hanks dreary lives, where ' people change their hairstyles in the hope of changing themselves. Raul Julia as Ray, Frannie s singer/piano player/waiter fling, turns in an out standing performance. His Latin seduc tion scene, with its hysterically corny mambo "mood music, is one of the film’s highlights Lainie Kazan and Harry Dean Stanton are funny and touching as Frannie and Hank s friends who find one another through their friends’ misfortune Unfortunately, though, Nastassia Kinski’s role (no fault of her own) is easily the shal lowest and least effective of all. Even Kinski's greatest asset, her beauty, is never fully exploited. Like Julia, Kins ki's Leila, a circus performer/striptease artist, is merely an exotic oddity, both interesting targets for our heroes' straying. Photographer Vittorio Storaro (also with Coppola for Apocalypse) has used every trick to delight the eyes with gorgeous colors and dazzling cinema Every scene has a surrealistic touch to it, from cartoon moon and stars to a Las Vegas strip that's just too bright and too real. It’s a story about real people in a real town, yet somehow it comes out feeling like a wonderful fantasy, a romance that captures the lives of eminently forgettable people and makes us want to remember them. Eric Flaunt ■ Personal Best starring Mariel Hemingway, Patrice Donnelly, Scott Glenn and Kenny Moore; written, produced and directed by Robert Towne Two track athletes meet at the 1976 Olympic trials and literally run off together Over the next four years they are variously lovers and rivals, finally reconciling as friends during the 1980 Olympic trials. Standard sports melo drama, except for a modern twist: the athletes are women. For his directorial debut, Academy Award-winning screenwriter Robert Towne (Chinatown, Shampoo, The Last Detail) has coincidentally touched on two themes-of-the-year: track (cf. Chariots of Fire) and homosexuality (Making Love and the upcoming Partners). Nonetheless, the film breaks new ground for American movies, both in its celebration of strong, mus cular women athletes, and in its un flinching portrayal of a lesbian rela tionship. Towne handles that relationship — between pentathletes Chris Cahill (Hemingway) and Tory Skinner (Don nelly)—with a sensitivity and psycho logical precision that avoid stereotypes. He’s also on target with the athletes’ complexly motivated and motivating coach (Glenn, remem bered as the sexy and dangerous Wes Hightower in Urban Cowboy), and with Hemingway’s heterosexual love interest, played by Sports Illustrated writer Kenny Moore. Hemingway is convincing and ingratiating, if a bit whiny, but Donnelly (a former hurdler who had never acted) and Glenn set off the most sparks with their intense, edgy performances. But despite the stirring sports action and Towne’s telling dialogue and characterizations, something’s missing in Personal Best Most of the problems probably involve first-outing jitters — flatfooted cutting, lines topheavy with Meaning, and especially a lack of background on the main characters. Unlike Chariots of Fire, which was consumed with motivation, Personal Best leaves us wondering why these (Continued on page 15) BEFORE THEY GO IN A CAR. THEY GO THROUGH we test our speakers to withstand conditions worse than just about any found on this planet We freeze them to arctic temperatures of -22°E We fry them to above-Death Valley temperatures of ZiZ r. And when we claim our speakers can handle 60 watts, it’s because we pumped 60 watts through them continuously for 4 solid days. The above tortures are inflicted on not one, but A HELL. © 1982 Pioneer Electronics of America, 1925 E you,n«Mdeafer Bll-te.call:(8001447-4700. InKliooi.: (800(322+100. every single speaker model we make. So when you put them in your car, theyll deliver every brilliant sound that’s on the recording. Come hell or high water. ) PIONEER* We never miss a performance.