PARTY fund, RILEY HALL, and International Student Association PRESENTS: (SlNterMatioNal Halloween Dance Party Cosfume & fR££ ADMISSION with ISA coupon Drag Show Obtests Door Prizes CMtS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30th 1998 8:00 PM to 12:00 Midnight RILEY HALL 11th & PATTERSON For more information contact: ISA office: 346-4387 email asuoisa@gladstone uoregon.edu 'HALLOWEEN ’ BASH SATURDAY, OCT. 31 ST To earn a 4.00 in Brewology all you need to know is STEELHEAD. □ 9 Award Winning Micro-Brews □ Soups, Salads □ Ribs □ Fresh Pizza □ Sandwiches □ Pastas □ Burgers □ Spirits □ Home Made Rootbeer TAKE A BREW HOME IN STEELHEAD'S BOX V BEER Steelhead Brewing Company 199 East 5th Avenue Eugene, OR Phone 686-2739 Eugene, OR, - Burlingame, CA - fishermans Wharf, San Francisco, (A, - Irvine, (A Vampires Courtesy'photo Actor Thomas Ian Griffith wears some heavy make-up and fangs for the role of Valek, ’ a 600- year- old vampire in search omnipotence, in the horror-action film ‘John Carpenter's Vampires.’ Valek (foreground), a vampire played by actor Thomas Ian Griffith, joins his blood-sucking cronies in a battle against a team of Vatican mercenaries in a scene from‘John Carpenter’s Vampires.' continued trom Page 7A er-with-the-heart-gold character, Katrina, who was bitten by a vam pire, uses her telepathic powers to track Valek down. At this point the film begins to lose blood. The vampires finally clash with Crow and his team. But they are cartoonish and ridiculous, more resembling kids in Halloween costumes than anything frighten ing. During the battle scenes, the film focuses more on blood and gore, losing any real dramatic ten sion in the script. But even these problems don’t hobble the movie as much as the poor writing that plagues it through out. The screenplay — written by John Carpenter, John Steakley, Don Jakoby and Dan Mazur—is sluggish and slow, weighted down by its pre dictability. Worse, the actors are caricatures rather than real people. Woods, de spite a bravada turn as the smarmy Crow, is bogged down in an under written role. It is only after three quarters of the way through the film that a reason is given for why Crow is fighting these vampires at all. Baldwin gives a nice performance as the sympathetic sidekick, who, predictably, falls for Katrina. And Katrina (Lee) spends most of the movie looking as though she would rather be somewhere else. As the movie dwindles to an ane mic and incoherent conclusion, movie-goers are left feeling the same way. Picks and Pans "It had really good action. It didnl have any slow parts. It wasn't the greatest writing job, but I do like the vampire genre" —Jordan Lewis “l enjoyed it overall. I found it a little corny in parts. I liked the modern format of these vampire movies." — Gawaen Stern “I didn’t like anything about it. It was funny, but it wasn't supposed to be funny." — Rick Jackson “tt was just like Carpenter’s other movies: they begin interesting and fall apart. Carpenter just goofs it up at the end. They should bring in a re lief director after the middle of his movies." —Pat Holmes “It was sluggish and slow. The mid dle part was cottage cheese, It churns but nothing interesting hap pens." — Ooug Holmes “It was OK. It was predictable, but what movie isn't predictable?” — AnnaSchmal Director John Carpenter (foreground) instructs actor Thomas Ian Griffith in a short Vam pire 101’ lesson during a filming break in his self-titled film about vampires.