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Actors:
Woody Allen, Mia Farrow, John Malkovich, Madonna, David Ogden Stiers,
Michael Kirby |
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In a murky, seriously deranged cityscape
only a studio art department could create, a giant bald strangler (Michael
Kirby) is going around killing people with piano wire. The authorities
are powerless (though he stomps about freely, occasionally declaiming
speeches), so vigilante posses start roving the streets. For some reason,
they dragoon a noisy nebbish named Kleinman (Allen) to assist them. So
Kleinman goes into the fog, kvetching, and meets Irmy (Mia Farrow), a
circus sword swallower (no double-entendres, please) whose clown of a
husband (John Malkovich) is two-timing her with the strongman's wife (Madonna).
Add an "et cetera" here, because the big, mostly wasted cast
also includes Kenneth Mars as the strongman, Donald Pleasence as a philosophical
coroner, John Cusack as a student who mistakes Irmy for a prostitute,
and Kathy Bates, Jodie Foster, and Lily Tomlin as the real prostitutes
in whose company she happens to be at the time. None of this adds up,
and the whole thing moves and feels less like a film than one of Allen's
oddball New Yorker sketches. Still, as the fever dream of an art-house
addict, it has its moments. --Richard T. Jameson |
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