played by Tom Behringer as your typical unemployed mercenary soldier. I'm looking for Miss Hetsco's room. My name's Smith, I'm her substitute. Ha, long relay. I'm the principal. Oh, good to meet you. You're not one of our regular subs. That's Ernie Hudson as the school's principal. There have been a lot of movies about teachers dealing with tough classes, but this class is in a league of its own. Today, we're going to talk about Vietnam. Yeah, who? Oh, shit. It becomes clear that the school administration is hiding a massive secret, and that the good guys, like the teachers played by Behringer and Plummer, might find their lives in danger if they look too deeply. Now, I'm cool, so this is a personal mission or a joint operation between the CIA and the PTA. The substitute is one of those movies I don't even know why they bothered to make. The screenplay is completely devoid of any originality, and it's simply a clothesline for a series of boring action scenes in which guys shoot at each other, throw hand grenades, and run down darkened corridors. We've seen that stuff a million times before. Behringer and Venora have some nice warmth in their scenes together, and all I could think of was, why couldn't they have found an intelligent movie to appear in? You know, I like them too as a couple, and one thing I was noticing, because this is not a tough screenplay to follow, was how gorgeous both of their skin was. You know, the movie's in trouble. Gee, they look so tan. Perfectly tan. Where do they fly? They really work, you know? Well, they spent a lot of time out in the sun while the screenwriters were trying to rewrite the script. Can you believe that the principal is using school buses to smuggle cocaine, which he hides in the boiler room in order to sell to the students? Talk about a vertical business plan. The other thing is, there is one good scene where Behringer talks to the kids and talks about the opportunities that they're losing by going through this life of crime and all that, and the kids respond with some like, what else can we do? What else are our options? There was a kernel of sweetness and warmth in that scene that unfortunately the movie throws away with a third action finale. Could have been a different movie. Mark Wahlberg plays a stranger who terrorizes a suburban family in Fear, coming up next. Chevy Blazer. The only sport utility vehicle with a driver control system. It's nice to know it's there. This is more like it. Soon I'll be far away from anyone who's ever even heard of Ten Cents a Minute from Sprint. Ten cents a minute? One thin dime. A dime a minute is a wonderful deal. And it's good forever. It's as simple as that. Simple as that. Simple as that. To think. After all my work, I'll be remembered as the dime lady. But I'm not going to think about that. That's why I'm taking this little trip to Hawaii. Call now to get Ten Cents a Minute across the U.S. and now even to Canada. Our next film is the Don't Date Strangers thriller called Fear. And what an inspired title that is and what a trashy movie too. It's about a teenage girl from Seattle who has just moved in with her divorced dad, his new wife. She befriends a strange young man in town who has already helped her violate one curfew and comes over now to pick her up for a second date. Nicole! Yeah? Get me a coat. Okay, I'll be right there. Thank you. You almost ready? That's Mark Wahlberg, the former rapper as The Creep and Reese Witherspoon as the daughter. He turns her on but turns off her dad played by William L. Peterson. I know about things coming apart at work. I also know you ain't keeping up so to speak here under the bargain with the Mrs. Walker. Relax Steve. We're friends. We're practically family. But the third act of the film is pure mayhem as The Creep and three of his even creepier thug buddies come looking for vengeance at William Peterson's home. Hell could have been different Mr. Walker. It should have allowed nature to take its course. In the end it will anyway. So let me down! I was shocked that Fear was made by the fine filmmaker James Foley and get a load of his credits. Edgy pictures like At Close Rain, After Dark My Sweet and also Glengarry Glen Ross. This film Fear is not worthy of his talent or your attendance. I completely disagree with you. I was really surprised by how effective this movie was. I thought Mark Wahlberg and Reese Witherspoon were so effective as this couple and the way that he was able to smooth talk her and kind of get her confidence and seem like such a nice guy. The scene between Wahlberg and Peterson outside the school when the two men are threatening each other that was really riveting because that young creep had a way to really get underneath the older man's skin. He really knew how to stick it in and twist it and I felt that this movie was surprisingly suspenseful and also psychologically very much on target. I don't think it's on target because I don't think, first of all, it doesn't get difficult to get a father anxious about his daughter. You don't have to be clever to do that. But think of the frustration when you can't get your daughter to believe that this guy that she's in love with might be dangerous. That's such a universal feeling. Roger, how about a sit down sequence where they talk it out? They do try to do that. There was a lot of good dialogue in this movie. I was surprised how well it went around. I think it was so obvious that this guy was a phony to the father at the very least. Of course, it's always obvious to the father and it's never obvious to the daughter. That's the whole point. And did you like the conclusion? The third act, you didn't think that was just run through him? Part of it was movie making and part of it, as a matter of fact, was plausible, believe it or not. Oh, including the house, the fortress-like house? Sure, because he's an architect and he's built this house out in the woods and he wants it to be. Entering the fortress, it's a traditional movie cliché. When we come back, Michael Iterioli and Oscar winner Mira Sorvino in Sweet Nothing. Cometress John Penn eats a Reese's peanut butter cup. After a thorough examination, I very precisely eliminate the inner area until I create some really nifty frames. See? There's no wrong way to eat a Reese's. Your eyes. Every day they open on a hostile world which can make them itchy and red. Now from the eye care experts at Bausch & Long comes doctor prescribed medicine now available without a prescription. OPKON-A eyedrops. OPKON-A goes beyond ordinary eyedrops to relieve both redness and itching. It blocks your eyes' reaction to pollen, ragweed, and animal hair. Calm and clear your eyes with OPKON-A. From Bausch & Long, the relief your eyes have been looking for. Do you know which grass and weed killer works faster? The weeds do. Weeds can't hide. Spectracide. Displeased odor canceled. All vehicles now available to the general public. Get a 97 F-150 and save $3,000 to buy for $13,995. Only at the Liquid Foretrain Clearance Center. Join the Colorado Rockies and other Major League Baseball players to strike out childhood diseases. To get free or low cost shots for your child, call the number on your screen for the clinic nearest you. So do your own thing. In California. Whatever kind of thing that is. It's an emergency liquidation at Douglas Toyota. Get a 96 Carola for $88 a month. Emergency liquidation means you buy like a dealer only at Douglas Toyota, the Toyota warehouse. The Century Plaza. Offering the finest in luxury service in Southern California style, adjacent to Beverly Hills on L.A.'s fashionable west side. The Century Plaza Hotel and Tower, a western hotel. Our next movie is one of the most insightful and intelligent I've seen about the subject of drugs and how they use people. The name of the movie is Sweet Nothing and it stars Michael Imperiali as a young Wall Street office worker who's happily married and the proud father of a new child when a friend convinces him to try crack cocaine. I just remember the overwhelming feeling and thinking to myself. So that's what I've been missing. Because it somehow felt right. Like we belonged together. Like I had found a long lost friend I had never met before. He quits his job and tells his wife that from now on their financial crunch is over. He's going to just sell enough crack so they can take it easy, he promises her. Life is played by Mera Sorvino. I don't want you to get shot or anything. Nobody's going to get shot. But soon he's smoking as much crack as he's selling and instead of raking in the cash, he's desperately in debt to dealers who will hurt him and his family. Jersey first. New Jersey first stop. They only buy in quantity. I know I'm going to tell them it's a sample, then if they like it they're going to like it. They come back, they meet the man personally. You better not be an angel. I know what your kids play. A lot of movies say they're based on true stories. All this one says is that it's based on injuries found in a diary in a Bronx apartment in 1991. And somehow I believe that because Sweet Nothing has the ring of truth. It's not an action picture, it doesn't glamorize drugs. It's about a long, slow slide into addiction and how its crack victim loses the love and respect of his wife, his children, his family, and finally even himself. The performances are strong and true and the direction by Gary Winnick finds the sadness and desperation in the soul of one more addict who has gotten trapped and doesn't even know how. It's a good film and I'll tell you, first of all, I think it's going to get a little attention because of Mira Sorvino and coming out after her Oscar win. And she's very good and it proves that that was a real performance that we saw if we didn't know it in Woody Allen's picture. But this Michael Imperioli carries the film. It's his story and he's really wonderful. I mean, you're fascinated by him. It's just that as a introduction to an actor, I don't remember seeing him before. He's been a character actor in movies before. This is his first leading role. And boy, is he equal to it. It's a very good picture. It has played off apparently in New York City. It's coming, I believe, next week to Los Angeles, moving out wider in Los Angeles. And I hope it gets spread around the country. This is the kind of film that can be thrown away to video if its distributor doesn't have enough faith into it. So let's encourage them to spread it around the country. What he does in this film is so interesting. I mean, it takes place over a period of three or four years. It's not like it all takes place in three weeks. And it's about a gradual disintegration. I mean, the scene where he comes into the house and grabs the television set out of the wall while his kids are watching it and takes the TV to sell it to get some money for crack. I mean, moments like that. Those are, you know, the flamboyant moments. I want to talk about the writing of this picture. First of all, you have an addict who is an excellent writer. So he describes how it makes him feel. Yes, and those things are plausible. And so it's a smart picture about addiction. Okay, now let's take another look at the movies we reviewed this week. Two thumbs down for Celtic Pride, the comedy about a couple of fanatic Boston fans. Two thumbs up, though, for Mystery Science Theater 3000, the movie, the feature-length version of the TV show where the audience is actually encouraged to talk during the screening. Two thumbs down for Mrs. Winterborn, an old-fashioned romantic comedy, even though the actors generated a certain charm. Two more thumbs down for The Substitute, another one of those formula action pictures where the whole plot is basically a set up for violence at the end. We split on the thriller Fear. I think it generates some genuine psychological interest in its portrait of a family under siege. Gene feels it's just predictable trash. And two thumbs up, way up, for the insightful and powerful Sweet Nothing, the strong performance by Michael Imperioli as a man who loses control of his life to drugs. And Marisa Arvino as the wife who loves him but can't help him. So that's a good one, isn't it? If people can possibly get a chance to see it, Sweet Nothing, yeah. And then, of course, MST 3K. Okay, you got it. That's it for this week. Next week we'll be back with reviews of more new movies, including Mulholland Falls, starring Nick Nolte and Melanie Griffith in a murder mystery set in post-war L.A., and also the truth about cats and dogs with Uma Thurman, Daniel Garofalo, and Ben Chaplin in a romantic comedy about mistaken identity. That's next week, and until then, the balcony is closed.