I I $1.95 ea. ' long stemmed University Floral 118 N. 14th 474-3792 DANCE from Page 9 "But they were blown away by Mir sense of community and amount rf freedom in our dance." Dayger said the 14 dancers in the company all have different body sizes. "We’re not all S-foot-2 and skinny," he said. "We look like a community of people." This makes die dance very human, he said. n Tickets for the performance are $13 and $9 and half price for students. Grandpa's Ribs ' Restaurant ft Lounge i J 49c Sandwiches j i beef & pork j | Free Delivery i J Explw* 10-05-S9 j (TNs location only) — — _j h mm H — — — — W — — — ■■■■■■ M Bk SPECIAL GUEST NRBQ Vilt0CT0BER3 DEVANEY CENTER Reserved Tickets available at Nebraska Union, Vbunkers, and all Tlcketmaster Locations or Charge by Phone: 402-475-1212 QTiffin (Hamlsh McFarlane), and Conner (Bruce Lyons), confer In a scene from ‘The Naviga tor.” ‘The Navigator> director creates many emotionally powerful scenes By John Payne Staff Reporter__ A movie as imaginative and1 original as “The Navigator An Odyssey Across Time” would be worth seeing on the basis of its premise alone. But this film also succeeds in ■ "1 ■ ■ r ... deliveiing one emotionally power ful scene after another, while say ing something very basic about human nature. The somber fable begins in an isolated mining village in Cum bria, England. The year is 1348, and the entire countryside is be -i sieged by the Black Death. Village dwellers live in daily fear of the ever-spreading plague. A young man named Conner (Bruce Lyons), somewhat of a leader of the village, just has re turned from a lengthy journey into the plague-stricken cities. His re ports of the advancing Black Death • suggest that the village has about two months before it is reached. Connor’s younger brother Grif fin (Hamtsh McFvhne), a prophet of sorts, has been haunted by recur ring dreams of what must be done • to save the village. In his dreams he sees a huge cathedral in a far-away city. As a tribute to God, a cross made of copper from the village mines must be placed upon the spire of the cathedral. And the people must do it before the dawn of tne next day. Only then will the village be spared. In his dreams, Griffin has envi sioned a great pit, believed by many to lead to the other side of the earth. Three other miners accom pany the brothers on their pilgrim age to Griffin's “celestial city.*’ When the group reaches the other side they are amazed, as is the audience, to discover that they have tunneled into 1988 New Zeal and. The quest for this mysterious cathedral takes up a good deal of “The Navigator,’ ’ but it’s the mining-village scenes, shot in beautiful black and white, that set it apart from similar movies like “Highlander." ‘The Navigator” won six Aus tralian Oscars last year, including best picture and beat cinematogra phy. Visually it is magnificent But the real strength of the film is in tire way Director Vincent Ward has created a genuine sense of fear and urgency within the village. The film is showing at the Shel don Film Theatre. Screening times are 7 and 9 p.m. tonight, with matinees at 1 and 3 p.m. Saturday, and 3 and S p.m. Sunday. “The Navigator" runs through Oct. 7. Parents, reviewer like Sea’ by Mark Haia and Becky Tktanan _ Mark Hain: Usually a parental recommendation won’t propel me at jet speed to see a film, especially when it’s accompanied by a line such as, “I just don’t know about that Ellen Barkin - She’s so, well . .. slutty.’’ But still “Sea of Love'4 was the only new movie in town, and I gotta hand it to Mom and Dad, I enjoyed the flick. Becky Tideman: You’re right. Parental recommendations are a little awkward. After reading last week's review my Dad inquired several times as to which vice I preferred, sex, lies or videotape. I told him defi nitely videotape; I just think it’s a wonderful medium. Ml!: The film opens with a typical “isn’t New York scary and danger ous*’ scene,and gives us a delightful array of whores,pimps andperverts who are seemingly swimming through a “sea,’ * and as the old coun try ballad goes, they’re all “looking for love.” The camera slowly pans heaven ward, far above the city to a lit win dow, which appears to be a safe ref uge from the scandal and disease which lies below. The sweet, calming tune of “Sea of Love” wafts through the gently billowing curtains. An, peace at last. But surprise! We're just in time to cafch a brutal murder, or chestrated to the mellow sounds of die title track. BT: Enter Frank Keller, played by A1 Pacino. Frank is a homicide detec tive, and therefore attuned to all those nifty Perry Mason bad-guy csichhig a techniques. Unfortunately, by the time he gets to the scene of the mur der the New York Police Depart ments had put their donut fondling fingers all over much of the evidence. Frank gets lucky though, and lifts a pair of prints from lip-stick stained cigarette. Soon after at an unex plained male-bonding beer-swigging police event, Frank nms into Sher man Touhy, played by John Goodman of “Roseanne.” They dis cover the murder isn't an isolated event. It’s a serial killing. And the plot thickens... MH: Frank and Sherman team up and discover that all the killer’s vic tims placed teenage poetry in the classifieds of lonely hearts maga zines. So, the two decide to take out their own personal ad and go through the strenuous and dangerous task of tak ing out all the lovelies who respond to their sappy plea. They figure all they need to do is lift the set a prints which match the ones on the cigarette, and they’re in business. BT: “Sea of Love” continues through a barrage of steamy scenes where Frank falls for one of the sus pects, Helen, played by Ellen Barkin. The performances were all solid. I’ve long hud a tendency to combine A1 Pacino, Robert DeNiro and Dustin Hoffman into a single character — a gun-toting Italian Orthodox Jewish cross-dressing cocaine dealer, but now that Pacino has returned to the big screen, I think I finally have them straight. While it’s nothing earth shattering, “Sea of Love” is well made, interesting, and must impor tantly in this season of unoriginauty, it’s not a sequel. /