Confusing story leaves ‘Eye’ sightless By Samuel McKewon Senioreditor Obsession is not an easy thing to put on film. Alfred Hitchcock knew how to do it; his films had an obsession rising out of normality. These made the best films, and his main actor was the every man James Stewart. But obsession is not supposed to be confusing - we can’t be left wondering who was obsessed and, more important ly, why. So watching the new movie “Eye of the Beholder” was an alienating experi ence, in which the viewer is entirely sep arated from the events onscreen. It was the kind of separation that gives you a headache. The movie is based on a 1980 novel by Marc Behm with an interesting premise: a surveillance photographer for the British Embassy (Ewan McGregor) strays from the rules when he gets too close to a cold-blooded seri al killer (Ashley Judd) for reasons we can only try to grasp. The most logical explanation is thal McGregor’s character (who has no name, just “The Eye”) views his prey, Joanna Eris, as a lot like his daughter. He is no longer is able to see his daugh ter because his ex-wife walked out or him. The Eye envisions his young daughter everywhere he goes, until, in a strange scene, he leaves her to follow the killer. As for Judd, her character essential ly stalks rich men, kills them, then steals their wad of cash - or whatever they might have on them. Judd makes a good vamp - sun glasses and wigs look about as good on her as anyone - but her role is woefully underwritten. There is only a slight hint of Judd’s motivation as to why she is who she is - but even that doesn’t stick. It would have been better if there hadn’t been any motivation at all. So Judd travels from big city to big city (San Francisco, Chicago and New York to name a few) and the Eye fol lows, taking pictures along the way and becoming her guardian angel of sorts. For a while, the movie works. But there’s too much strangeness, both in the script and production, for the movie to work. Director Stephan Elliot pours on the style needlessly; the film moves out of the noir genre and into some kind of psychological thriller. It steals from Hitchcock’s “Rear Window” and “Vertigo,” but leaves behind Hitchcocks’s ability to establish a scene. And the performances are off. McGregor is plays a character who was much older in tire novel; his acting suf fers for it. We strain to figure what his character really wants from Joanna - lust, love or just the chance to watch another murder. Judd’s character has no drive, but she manages to make it work, for a while. Anything is better than her junk role in “Double Jeopardy.” The supporting cast is small; k.d. lang is The Eye’s single connection to the outside world, Patrick Bergin is a possible suitor to Joanna and Jason Preistley weighs in with a small but fair ly memorable part as a bleach-blond road hustler. The role of Joanna’s mentor is filled by veteran Genevieve Bujold, who does her best with a severely underwritten role. “Eye of the Beholder” isn’t a bad Eye of the Beholder STARS: Ewan McGregor, Ashley Judd DIRECTOR: Stephan Elliot RATING: R (language, lots 'o serial murders) ' GRADE: C FIVE WORDS: "Eye" goes off the rails. film as much it is one that doesn’t know where to go. It seems confused with itself, and after a while the director, Elliot, simply stops giving answers for The Eye’s motivation. It’s at that point that the movie goes off the rails. It never chooses to get back on. Alley art gallery leaves vendors perplexed CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Strings ol bare light bulbs crisscross the alley Further down dangles a banner com plaining of police harassment. And then the pictures: raggec young men on bikes, using one hanc to steady oversized trays on theii heads piled with bread, the other tc steer through Cairo’s vehicular pan demonium. The photographs and the banners on display this week in a downtown alleyway are part of an unusual exhi bition celebrating the working man in his medium - the street. The reaction of the shop owners along the alley has added another ele ment, underscoring how the debate over freedom of expression works its way even onto Egypt’s streets. At first, there was suspicion. Why this subject? Are you making fun ol them? Are you for or against the gov ernment? What are you trying to say by hanging the pictures outside? All were questions fielded by photographer Halla El-Qousy as she put up her work in preparation for the show’s opening Jan. 20. The show, part of a festival publicizing the downtown art sd3*4n Cairo, closes ' (—= > A 1 GIFT that remembers ...by helping others to live When you lose someone dear to you-or when a special person has a birthday, quits smoking, or has some other occasion to celebrate-memorial gifts or iribute gifts made for them to your Lung Association help prevent lung disease and improve the care of those suffering trom it. » t AMERICAN LUNG ASSOCIATION* of Nebraska 7101 Newport Ave., #303 Omaha, NE 68132 1 -800-LUNG-US A V _f Support The College Fund. Call I -800-332-UNCF. The College Fund/UNCI X mind is a ti-rrihlc tllim! lu awtt. Friday. Such public art displays are rare in Cairo, and depictions of poverty often raise hackles among Egyptians And there’s always wariness ovei even a hint of criticism of the govern ment. To Mohammed Warda, ar employee at a flower shop at the enc of the alley, the display was nonsense “If they want to say something, they should come right out and say it instead of taking pictures,” he says. El-Qousy and fellow photograph er Graham Waite say their intention was not to make political statements or criticize the government. Rather, says Waite, who is British, it’s about “21st century heroes.” Their photos draw attention to a sight the people of Cairo see so often it may no longer register: the wiry young workers known as breadmen who deliver bread to homes and shops across the city. They make an average of $3.50 to $4.50 per day. “They’re heroes because they gel up every day and do it again, and again and again,” Waite says. As unlicensed businessmen in a bureaucratic country, they also are “If they want to say something, they should come right out and say it instead of taking pictures!’ Mohammed Warda flower shop employee breaking the law. Aside from the dan gers of traffic, the breadmen face the often more daunting prospect of arrest. The arrests are usually not an effort to enforce law, but more often a shakedown by the police. A banner next to one photo quotes Seif, a 19-year-old breadman interviewed by El-Qousy and Waite: “I’ve been dragged to the police and had to pay 15 pounds (about $4) to get out.” One employee of a shop under the banner was shocked, saying it was a topic best not discussed publicly, even if the breadmen are persecuted. - Egypt’s constitution guarantees freedom of expression, but in prac tice most people avoid saying any thing they fear might anger the gov ernment. Egyptian human rights activists have been jailed and accused of harming the nation’s reputation by pointing out police abuses. The alley was chosen as a venue by the owner of a nearby gallery. El Qousy says some shop owners were concerned about who would be held responsible if the authorities came around asking questions about the photos. But others gradually began to put aside old fears. Mohammed Abdullah, an employee at an electronics shop in the alley, says the exhibit encouraged him to visit an art gallery for the first time. The alley exhibit “raises the image of these breadmen in people’s eyes and forces you to respect them for what they do and go through,” Abdullah says. “It’s very chic.” | Sundance honor split for two films PARK CITY, Utah (AP) - The grit ty boxing saga “Girlfight” and the ten der sibling-reunion tale “You Can Count on Me” shared top honors at the Sundance Film Festival, the nation’s top showcase for independent movies. The two movies split the grand jury prize Saturday for best dramatic film. “Girlfight” also won the dramatic directing award for Karyn Kusama, and “You Can Count on Me” won the Waldo Salt screenwriting award for Kenneth Lonetgan, who also directed die film. “Girlfight” stars Michelle Rodriguez as a young woman who channels her fierce temper to become a champion boxer. “You Can CounfSh Me” features Laura Linney and Mark Ruffalo as a sister and brother strug gling to maintain a sense of family years after their parents are killed in a car crash. Matthew Broderick co-stars in the movie. The grand jury prize for documen tary went to “Long Night’s Journey Into Day,” which examines four cases that came before South Africa’s Truth and _ Reconciliation Commission in the aftermath of apartheid. The documentary directing award went to Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman for “Paragraph 175,” an exploration of Nazi atrocities against homosexuals. The audience award for dramatic film, chosen by public balloting, went to “Two Family House,” a 1950s por trait of an Italian-American loser who bucks tradition Mien he takes up with a young Irish woman and her baby of mixed race. “Dark Days,” which examines a group of New York’s homeless who built their own shantytown community in an underground tunnel, won the audience award for documentary. “Saving Grace,” starring Brenda Blethyn as a destitute, marijuana-grow ing British widow, won the audience award for world cinema. The dramatic jury awarded two spe cial acting honors. Janet McTeer, who won a Golden Globe last week for “Tumbleweeds,” and Aidan Quinn, Pat Carroll, Jane Adams, Gregory Cook and Iris DeMent received a special jury prize for outstanding ensemble perfor mance in “Songcateher.” McTeer stars as a musicologist in 1907 who gathers folk songs in the Appalachian back woods. Donal Logue won a special jury prize for outstanding performance in, “The Tao of Steve.” Logue plays an overweight womanizer whose pickup artistry is based on die cool aloofhessof Steve McQueen. Logue’s character, defending his underachieving lifestyle, utters, “Doing stuff is overrated. I mean, Hitler did a lot, but don'tAve all wish he’d stayed home and gotten stoned?” Other awards presented Saturday, the next-to-last day of the Sundance festival are as follows: * ■ Cinematography award in dra matic competition: Tom Krueger, “Committed.” ■ Freedom of Expression Award, documentary: “Dark Days.” ■ Cinematography award in docu mentary competition: Andrew Young for “Americanos: Latino Life in the United States” and Marc Singer for “Dark Days.” ■ Special jury prize for artistic achievement, documentary: “The Ballad of Ramblin’ Jack,” directed by Aiyana Elliott. ■ Special jury prize for writing, documentary: Daniel McCabe, Paul Stekler and Steve Fayer, “George Wallace: Settin’ the Woods on Fire.” ■ Jury prize in Latin American cin ema: “Herod’s Law,” directed by Luis Estrada, and “No One Writes to the Colonel,” directed by Arturo Ripstein. ■ Jury prize in short filmmaking: “Five Feet High and Rising,” directed by Peter Sollett. ■ Honorable mention for short filmmaking: “Titler,” “The Drowning Room,” “This is for Betsy Hall,” “Ice Fishing,” “Darling International,” “Friday,” “ Hitch,” “The Bats.” I shoponlim@mall.dailyneb.com | Disney to film movie on Pearl Harbor bombing PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii (AP) - The Walt Disney Co. has given the green light to a $135 mil lion movie about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, according to a trade publication. “Pearl Harbor” should begin production in April for release around Memorial Day 2001, Daily Variety reported Thursday. The story line will be about two fighter pilots from Tennessee who fall in love with the same nurse. Actors considered for the film include Charlize Theron, currently on the big screen in “The Cider House Rules,” Wes Bentley, who starred in “American Beauty,” and Jim Caviezel, who played a soldier in “The Thin Red Line.” The movie will be directed by Michael Bay, whose credits include “Armageddon” and “The Rock Water scenes will be shot in the same California facility built for “Titanic.” Almodovar movie wins Best Film in Spanish festival MADRID, Spain (AP) - Pedro Almodovar won Best Director and Best Film for “Todo Sobre Mi Madre” (All About My Mother) in the Spanish Goya Cinema Awards “ presented Sunday. The movie, Spain’s candidate for a foreign-language Oscar, is the story of a single woman who expe riences the death of her son and goes in search of the boy’s father. Organized by the Spanish Cinema Academy, the Goya film awards take their name from the 18th century Spanish painter. Ethridge, Shepard take stand against Proposition 22 BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - Rock star Melissa Etheridge joined the battle against a ballot measure aimed at banning state recognition of same-sex marriages, saying on Friday that the proposal was fbeled by hate and bigotry. “There are hundreds and thou sands of people that I represent that are jiist like me that don’t happen to have two Grammys that this affects. And this affects me deeply,” said Htheridge, who is gay. Proposition 22, which appears on the March 7 ballot, would pro hibit California from granting legal recognition to same-sex marriages - that are legally performed in other states. TA»ninnr T7 thi A ctt* o natt/o conference was Judy Shepard, whose son, Matthew, wasbeaten, tied to a fence and left to die outside Laramie, Wyo., in October 1998. “What it does is create a climate where such actions are viewed as acceptable,” she said.