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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1987)
SKIERS! Alpine & Nordic The U ol O Ski Team & Club is preparing (or the winter season. For all interested in partic ipating with the team, an informational meeting will he held: • THURS., Oct. 8 at 7:00 pm * EMU - main level RM 167 9m mnt* mkt «br fnrr%r*m ioMM I ( Mi • IMU RM S • Til: b8b-»7ll ANY New FENDER GUITAR in our store is HALF PRICE! • Oiler Good 9-2807 through 10 10-87 • Halt ol tuggealed ii»i price Cm* mull be purchased with initru merit at regular price - no additional promotional consideration* anriltr shla 4% surchwga on bank and* WO E. 40th Eugene nprn rtrainp 'lill * lah ally tmnrd fttr JO min FREE DINNER? Thai's right Every night Swingers Nightclub otters a tree dinner buttet trom 4 pm to 8 pm lor all its customers That's every night, tree dinner Plus LIVE RockN-Roll 6 nights a week Come tor dinner and stay tor LIVE entertainment and dancing 535 Main, Springfield, OR 747-0307 SWINGERS NIGHTCLUB At The Movies_ Teen films fail to entertain 'Like Father, Like Son' is worst of the pack By Nathan Deer Emerald Contributor "The Pick-Up Artist" has an interesting premise, but as with the case with so many movies, it doesn't develop it. Jack Jericho (Robert Downey) is the youthful lotharlo who woos and wins women with his irresistible charm. The only problem is that we don't believe it. The girls in the film do. that is. all but Kandy (Molly Kingwald). You might think we'd appreciate Kandy's good sense and taste to be wary of Jericho. Hut after initially resisting his advances. Kandy, of course, becomes more compliant. "The Pick-Up Artist" is an unsatisfying film Downey and Kingwald are competent young actors, but they possess no special appeal The film is fur ther hampered by a tendency to lose its focus. Instead of concentrating on the attractive young couple, the film, directed by James Toback. shifts to secondary characters, including Kandy's feckless father (played by the omnipre sent Dennis Hopper), and becomes increasingly dreary. "The Pick-Up Artist" once again illustrates the maxim that Hollywood is better at thinking up interesting ideas than bring ing them to life. * * "Like Father, Like Son" is a dismal comedy of brain transference. That's right. Kirk Cameron and Dudley Moore switch brains. Not literally, of course (although that would have been much more in CLOTHING YOU WON’T FIND ANYWHERE ELSE! c^L-nilksilbfc/sre ON THE CORNER OK 27th & Willamette 345-5945 COUPON COUPON OFF WITH THIS COCPON AM) STI DENT II) STUN NTS UNIT PITAS* KAPIKKS (MTORtK .11. INT COUPON (flurtwy Photo Robert Downey and Molly Ringwald give competent perfor mances in “The Pick-lJp Artist,” but the movie often gets sidetracked and isn't very satisfying. teresting). but via some magic potion. Soon after consuming the supernatural elixir, dad (Moore) becomes burdened with son’s (Cameron's) brain, and vice versa, laughs soon follow At least that is intended Hut for anyone in the audience with a brain, laughs do not follow. Instead, groans do. Moore, who once made a moderately amusing movie ("Arthur”) a decade ago. is still trying to find that right role in that right movie. His search continues. Cameron, the heart throb (is that possible) of some television show (don't ask me which one; they all look the same to me), is trying to parlay the popularity from his hit TV show into cinematic fame. He's destined for after-school reruns. "Like Father. Like Son” is simply a witless comedy. * "Big Shots” may entertain children. Hut it's unlikely to divert people out of puberty, unless their mind has yet to catch up with their hormones, just the same "Big Shots" is an innocuous movie marred by needless car chases and im probable adventures, but at least it doesn't pander to its targeted audience too much. Obie (Ricky Busker) is a suburban white kid who has just lost his father. Distraught and confused, he runs away from home and encounters a street-smart black kid (Darius McCrary). The two tykes team up to retrieve Obie’s swiped wristwatch, a keepsake given to him by his deceased father. In the process, they encounter a series of unsavory characters, engage in several ridiculous adventures, and, of course, discover a sense of responsibili ty and mutual respect for Jhemsalves, their families, their ethnic origins, their world, and. no doubt, their cosmos. "Big Shots" isn't a bad kid's movie. It just isn't good. It's the kind of movie that makes you yearn, just a little bit, for those Disney movies of the 1960s. They were corny, but they were more inventive, funny, and, surprisingly, were not as earnest and sober about teaching youngsters social and filial responsibilities. s * Court**? Photo Ricky Busker (left) and Darius McCray star in "Big Shots," an adventure film that should entertain at least kids