Critics' Voices: Mar. 12, 1990

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MOVIES

THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER. The adaptation of Tom Clancy's best-selling nuclear- submarine saga (with sturdy Sean Connery) earns its thrills; it nicely balances human menace with technical gee-wizardry. But could this scenario happen in Gorbachev's navy?

WHERE THE HEART IS. Can a spoiled Manhattan family find happiness squatting in - a Brooklyn hovel? Why, sure. Can top director John Boorman (Hope and Glory) make a Disney comedy? Well, no. Dabney Coleman supplies the (few forced) laughs, Uma Thurman the redeeming prurient interest.

CINEMA PARADISO. In this Oscar nominee for best foreign picture, a Sicilian boy of the 1950s sees movies as the whole world -- a panorama of laughter, drama and forbidden dreams.

MUSIC

MICHAEL PENN: MARCH (RCA). Surprise. Here's a homage to the playful high seriousness of Beatles music that sounds workably modest, modern and personal. Penn (yes, he's got an actor brother named Sean) takes a while to find his footing, but once he does, tunes like Big House grab hold and don't let go.

JAZZ MASTERPIECES (Columbia). The latest crop of reissues in this remarkable four-year-old project features classic performances by such legends as Miles Davis, Roy Eldridge and Billie Holiday. But the most welcome new arrival to the series is trumpeter Bix Beiderbecke, whose digitally remastered 1927 sides capture the haunting tone and phrasing of the original "young man with a horn."

BOOKS

LONDON FIELDS by Martin Amis (Harmony; $19.95). The British author of Success and Money: A Suicide Note produces a murderously funny novel about a 1990s world that is tumbling inexorably toward a loveless void.

WHAT I SAW AT THE REVOLUTION by Peggy Noonan (Random House; $19.95). From a former speechwriter for Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush, the most amusing and self-effacing political memoir likely to come out of the 1980s.

MARY REILLY by Valerie Martin (Doubleday; $18.95). The Jekyll-Hyde saga from the point of view of a spunky, sensual servant girl.

ART

PHOTOGRAPHY UNTIL NOW, Museum of Modern Art, New York City. This idiosyncratic history of camera art culminates John Szarkowski's 28 distinguished years as MOMA's chief photo curator. Szarkowski tells the familiar tale with many unfamiliar images, like an impish papa springing surprises throughout a bedtime story. Through May 29.

SELECTIONS AND TRANSFORMATIONS: THE ART OF JOHN MARIN, National Gallery of Art, Washington. John Marin (1870-1953), a gifted painter whose dynamic, semi- abstract seascapes and urban scenes made him one of America's leading modernists, is surely due for a comeback. Perhaps this comprehensive sampling of his works could be the start of it. Through April 15.

TELEVISION

ELVIS (ABC, Sundays, 8:30 p.m. EST). ABC's new bio series offers two surprises. Rather than a cynical attempt to cash in on Elvismania, it is an unpretentious look at the King's early years. Surprise No. 2: despite glowing reviews and a good time slot, Elvis is walking on Lonely Street in the ratings.

CHANGES: CONVERSATIONS WITH JANE PAULEY (NBC, March 13, 10 p.m. EST). Jane Pauley interviews people who have gone through major personal or professional transitions in her first prime-time special since she left the Today show after 13 years.

ETC.

Quotes of the Day »

MICHAEL BLOOMBERG, New York City mayor, criticizing two EMTs accused of ignoring a pregnant woman who collapsed in a coffee shop where they were taking a break; the woman and her baby later died
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