| |
| | Review/Film; Schrader's 'Patty Hearst' - New York Times |
 | | LEAD: Patty Hearst, a k a Tania, a member of the self-styled Symbionese Liberation Army, and two of her S.L.A. comrades sit on a bed in an anonymous Los Angeles motel room and watch a ''live'' telecast as the police storm their S.L.A. hideout in another part of the city. |
 | | Patty Hearst, a k a Tania, a member of the self-styled Symbionese Liberation Army, and two of her S.L.A. comrades sit on a bed in an anonymous Los Angeles motel room and watch a ''live'' telecast as the police storm their S.L.A. hideout in another part of the city. |
 | | The film's Patty Hearst, played by Natasha Richardson in an absolutely smashing performance, is a decent-natured young woman of average intelligence, emotionally equipped to cope with nothing much more complex than her classes, family life and routine relationships. |
| query.nytimes.com /gst/fullpage.html?res=940DEED61E3AF930A1575AC0A96E948260 (720 words) |
|