PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN riAIITv PAGE TWO TU ~LTrn !AiIlq A --tl' V a>. UN R N I cinema 'Good, Bad, Ugly': HELD OVER AGAIN! c~C" I SHOWS AT 1,3,5, 7, 9 P.M. -N.Y. TIMES Violent Sermon "The Tension Is Terrific !~ By BARBARA HOCKMAN There is a lot of talk current- ly about violence, its value and place in our society. Usually, "violent" means with a vehement or intense force, but some people regard any quiet act of destruc- tion as violence. Movie violence moves us to these questions: Will the portrayed ferocious action in- fluence the viewer towards simi- lar behavior? And is there some- thing unhealthy in the produc- tion and attraction of such scenes? "The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly," (now at the State theatre) is a film of violence; however, I contend that it is an anti-violence movie. Whether intended or not, the movie has a conscience. It is a subtle tragi-comic mixture, a critique of both our violent war- ridden world and of violent movies themselves. The plot is merely prolonged days-in-the-lives of several men whose outward behaviors are not radically different from one an- other. They are all motivated by money and profusely kill other, men standing in their way. Yet, they are cleverly labeled "good," "bad," and "ugly," and the moral distinctions are revealed. The "Bad Man" cares only for himself, ruthlessly delights in physical torture, and could never be trusted by anyone. The "Good Man" stands independent, some- what alienated from his society, doesn't seem to relish murder so much as he considers it "neces- sary," and might be trusted by another "Good Man." The "Ugly Man" grabs for what he can get: he is a victim of poverty and a poor upbringing; he commands our reprimanding sympathy. These principal characters, set in the time of American Civil War, are representatives typical of our own time. Furthermore, the Civil War, almost irrelevant to the movie story, functions as; a view and critical judgement of; war. In an army camp scene, the commanding officer is a sensitive alcoholic. In a few words he de- scribes the "war game," a ludi- crous, pitiful setting forth, which he is not strong enough to over- come. The war theme is a back- ground, as if to echo each single' gunshot and multiply it twenty- fold. The views of the army camp before and after battle are ultra- realistic but also very surreal. They made me feel, on the one' hand, "it's like a documentary - how many war films ever showed the slow misery of collecting the dead," - and on the other hand, "it's far away, unimaginable, ab- stract, can't touch me." Pervading the whole film, this surreal mood has two effects. One is that the movie is truly a story, that is, a fictio;i. Regardless of how it is meant to mirror real- ity, it is all a contrived fantasy. The other is the sense of a moral- ity. The film seems to suggest an untold way of life better than any of the three characters, and a judgment over them. It is quite unlike the pessimism and nihilism in so many con- tempory films. This mood is pri- marily a product of the photo- graphy. (The dialogue is not highly significant, and the acting, while convincing, is not exciting. ! Eli Wallach, the Ugly Man is ratherdelightful, but Clint East- wood relies solely on his passive style for attraction. The visual effect, the pure im- age, is the strength of the film, and I found it, in ways, compar- able to the style and theory of Eisenstein. This consists of pre- dominance of close-up shots, es- pecially of near-still figures, then interposed with very distant shots. Montage effects are beautifully successful: That is, a series or sequence of quick, very strong and total pictures of different things which relate or convey a meaning- ful association. Also, there are well-worked, if sometimes amus- ing, continuities from one scene to the next. Occasionally the long close-up shots grow into carica- tures, as if they were cartoons, or pop-art type paintings, but this does not detract. Creative Arts ]Festival Thursday, Feb. 1 STAN VANDERBEEK! Architecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m. LORD CHAMBERLAIN'S j PLAYERS "Salome"! Angell Hall Foyer, 8 p.m. STUDENT LABORATORY THEATRE Frieze Arena, 4 p.m. Friday, Feb. 2 S JOHN BARTH Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. LORD CHAMBERLAIN'S PLAYERS "Salome" Angell Hall Foyer, 8 p.m. "Keeps You Glued To Your Seat!" -MICHIGAN DAILY NeWAIT UNTIL DARK Next: W. C. FIELDS FESTIVAL I THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1968 FRIDAY NIGHT CHARLIE CHAPLIN NIGHT Thursday, Feb. I-Stan VanDerBeek wib appear in person, at Cinema Guild Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 2 and 3 MR. ARKADIN Dir. Orson Welles, 1955 4 I Bogart's I 7:00 & 9:05 P.M. ARCH ITECTURE AUDiTORIUM I 11 For program information, 662-8871 NOW ONLY 75c SAT. Feature Times MON-FRI. DOORS OPEN 7:00 P.M. Stair Case 3:00-7:10 STAIR CASE Reflections 72ONY NTONAL eENERAL CORPORATION5:-:2 7:20 ONLY :-:2 FXEASTERN TEATSin,5:10-92 FOR___v'u u uuie Sun. Feature Times REFLECTIONS F11 -ILL:1E le - 9:30 ONLY 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769.1300 1:i0a5e:5-:1 Stair Case 3:00-7:10 DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM leave the children homes 'Movie-Mural' Effect Creates Film Collage By KEEWATIN DEWDNEY Film-maker Stan Vanderbeek,, is featured this evening in the1 Cinema Guild sponsored "Simul- taneous / Magic / Movie / Space / Theatre," a retrospective of Van-{ derbeek's film works put together into a space-time collage. An assemblage of screens, three aisle projectors, two projectors in; the booth, and two slide projectors should furnish something like the "image library" or "movie-mural"i that Vanderbeek dreams -about.i His dreams, however, have beeni by no means passive. His "Moviei Drome" studio, looking much like an observatory and squatting be- side his Stoney Point, N.Y. home, is the scene of a prototype image library. In the Movie Drome the audi- ence lies on the floor around the1 circular trim, feet toward the cen- ter, ;while on all available spheri- call wall space images, both mov- ing and still, are projected to pro- vide the movie-mural. Vanderbeek clearly sees the audiovisual film re- placing the major part of our now non-filmic communication. Perhaps no one is better quali- fied to explore the possibilities of such communication. He is maker of at least thirty films, some the recipients of major national and international awards. Films such as "Science Friction" (1959), winner of the Creative Film Foundations Award of Ditinction, and West German International Film Festi- val award; "Breathdeath" (1964) winner of Bell Telephone Prize and Third International Ex-. perimental Film Competition, Bel- gium, as well as an Ann Arbor Film Festival award-winner, may be shown tonight. In a manifesto entitled "Culture: Intercom and Expanded Cinema" appearing in the Tulane Drama Review a year ago, Vanderbeek wrote "It is imperative that we quickly find some way for the 'level of world understanding to rise to a new human scale. This scale is the world. "The risks are the life or death of this world . . . I propose the following: That immediate- re- Y BOGART THE KING- IS BACK WITH "THE QUEE" STARTS SATURDAY Vtli Forum search begin on the possibility of a picture language based _on mo- tion pictures. That we combine audio-visual devices into an edu- cational tool: an experience ma- chine or 'cultural intercom.'" Vanderbeek's Movie Drome is a prototype of just such and edu- cational tool. He envisages sever- al such centers located over the world receiving audio visual mes- sages via satellite from a kind of audio-visual bank. Computers process, this information and aid in the forming of this information into an audio-visual experience particularly suited to local con- ditions. The content of tonights show- ings held at both 7 and 9 p.m. in the Architecture and Design Aud., should include most of his better known works. Films such as "Wheels No. 2 and No. 1" "Panels for The Walls of the World," "Computer Art" might be shown but the actual content is as yet uncertain. May this previewer say that to miss Vanderbeek is to miss both an exciting peek into the future and a more than passing glimpse of oneself. I "SPLENDID! INGEN IOUS ! -Time Magazine 'EXCELLENT PERFORMANCES !" -Carroll, N.Y. News -Wolf, Cue Mag. "YOU JUST HAVE TO GO SEE IT!" -Cosmopolitan Magazine Program information 8-6416 I"A movie you won't ' want to miss!" -Judith Crist. the Today Show the whole crazy4 mixed-up love st is back in action!5 lbs belching scene... the leeches... Uie escape Itirough the jungle..e HORIZON PICTURES presents HUMPHREY BOOARTATHARINE HEPBURN '.5. .t { 1 ~ Ona '(5'R . OtQR YTECHNICOLOR EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT STARTS SATURDAY TAYLOR MARLON BRANDO IN THE JOHN HUSTON-RAY STARK PRODUCTION REFLECTIONS INAGOLDEN EYE PLUS SECOND GREAT HIT The year's #1 best seller picks you up and, never lets you down. ANALANIPAKULA ROBERT MUIwGAN WEDNESDAY-Feb. 7th ,-' \,.JUs*PH E.LEVINE aaes /MD -.r a BKE NICHOLS-LAWRENCE TURMANOS j r THE GRADUATE r AN EMBASSY PICTURES RELEASE 4o MGM, Flmispeei Dirk Bogarde Jack C cwtos FRlm of I SAT. 1-3-5-7-9-11 SUN. 1-3-5-7-9 MON. thru THUR. 7-9 Vali Forum The Man with No Name Returns . 210 S use ii' - I i I - - i- FIFTH AVE. NEAR LIBERTY-761-9700 LAST 2 DAYS TO SEE "PRIVILEGE" Daily Classifieds' I 11 CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL Oscar Wilde's SALOME by Our Faculty's Own CLIIN EASTWOO0D n THE GOOD, O THE BAD1 co-starrgEUGLY EVAN CLEEF A IVR IMiio BRE --Te s -also starring ________ __ [66JEREIm E LLUL\JL r " AGE SCARPELLJEUCIANO VNCENZONI and SERGIOLEONE- ENNI MORRICONE - ALBERT0 GRIMALDIor P.E.A.-Produzioni Europee Associate, Rome in the role of Tuco Suuut dForMature Audinc-' CHNISCOPE5TECHNICOLOR' ,5nrAr LORD CHAMBERLAIN PLAYERS Thurs., Fri., Sat., Feb. 1-3 8:00-foyer of Angell Hall Tickets: $1.00 at Union desk UAC R 3 SHOWS DAILY 1:45-5:00-8:05 4 SHOWS Friday and Saturday 1:00-3:40-6:20-9:15 NO 2-6264 ill Coming Next LEE MARVIN as T AT E ("SERGEANT RYKER" Th r T 0 N I G H T I STAN VANDERBEEK Collagist, Collisicnist, Illusionist, & Film-maker OL.:_ Thursday, February 1 PI N111 ; MEOW -aff.. 11 Hill