4 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday. March 19. 1968 ...,, .... ... J f . , .... ,.... ....* 'CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS'... ...ANOTHER VIEW By DEBORAH LINDERMAN From Expo '67 and a smattering of commercially distributed Czech films, one gets a sample of a "film culture" that is pretty stunning. Sophisticated is not the word, for it suggests at most a certain refinement in the handling of complexity; and though Czech cinema has a superb sense of style, this is not of the western sort. It is rather the style that shows you nothing of what went into achieving it, like the art that conceals art. In this sense, Closely Watched Trains is a feat of style. But that style is really only a symptom of how the mature mind integrates itself on many levels of awareness, an integration that belongs finally to the kind of lofty humor that is at ease where different kinds of experience come into "collision." The humor in this film is of that supremely "mature" sort. Though the film has, true enough, nothing of fierce clipping and zooming, or the tech- nical "expressionism" that seeps through Western cinema from France, this "lack" does not make it unfit for the cinematic me- dium, nor a thing better fit to shore up "dead theatre" than to be a fine film. One assumption that the film starts from is that its audience is not treacle-witted: i.e., we all have felt enough of life and death to respond to these extremes of experience, even when they collide, with a reflective self-amusement. Thus it has an easy integration that, in its urbanity, outstrips by miles violent fantasies of anxt and crisis and dizzying camera angles that mash you to a pulp. But the film's themes are critical, if its texture isn't: a boy is trying to become a man, Czechoslavakia is Nazi-occupied. And this double situation is lightly turned into the most delicate of ironies. For the lad is a whey-faced idler (he comes from a long line of idlers-his grandfather had tried to stop Nazi tanks by hypnotizing them) who dons a railroader's uniform and "goes to war" at a station in the middle of nowhere to help watch over Nazi munition trains. The uniform that he wears, with something short of military verve, is a symbol of his official engagement. But the station, despite its elaborate machinery of semaphores and teletypes, and its pretense at bureaucracy, is full of other idlers- lechers who are much more attentive to their own lusts than to their patriotic duties. Amid all the lechery, and little potentates making a great show of toeing the line, the boy tries vainly to establish his potency. Outdone, he goes to a brothel with the sole aim of cut- ting his wrists. This accomplished, he ends up in a hospital bed: a doctor diagnoses "ejaculata praecox" and advises an older woman. The boy asks for the loan of the stationmaster's wife and is refused. Finally, from out the underground, appears the "real woman" delivering explosives to sabotage a German train. She shows him how -- sex is a laughing matter. Then, in the stream of things, it "accidentally" falls to him to blow up the Nazi train with the (literal) bomb she had delivered. When it explodes, shatteringly, every ne'er-do-well at the station doubles up in hilarity.. Thus love and war, diffidence and duty, come smoothly to- gether with nothing of public statement or wisecracking (though the film is very funny). The camera is quite "sensitive" to its ironies and uses the most unobtrusive "tricks" of dislocation to back them up: with seductions in progress it looks at the tele- types going gently awry; when there is strategic parlance, it focuses on a pencil absent-mindedly scratching a breast. It fre- quently seems somehow to "come upon" the railroader's cap-with- brim, but treats the "dutiful" hat with tongue-in-cheek by putting it off-center at bottom frame, or, at least once, with barnyard pigeons perched underminingly on it. Though active lechery belongs to the men, the women show a ribald complicity; helped by a lecherous camera eye which sees them sitting now grinding a pepper mill between the knees, now with goose in lap stroking its neck. The filming is always attractive - every frame is a picture - and the Czechs have a talent for not letting the picture become picturesque. The same talent keeps humor from becoming whimsy, irony from being commentary, and idiosyncrasy from being bizarre. RtRmusic Reaction Revision in the Bo-Barty 7 By KEN SANDERSON Liberation News Service First of Two Parts Writing in the May 25, 1965, issue of Spider m a g a z i n e (Berkeley), Charles Bordin opened a new branch of radi- cal scholarship with his sem- inal essay "On the Question of Revisionism in the Worker's and Peasant's Music: Some Im- plications for the Revolution- ary Party, Party, Bo-Barty." Seeking to test Bordin's ana- lytic method, I have chosen here to discuss the recent ap- pearance of the all-white psy- chedelic rock-group as an in- dex of certainrreactionary ten- dencies in our society and as a cautionary example to those who would take the capitalist road. The method, it will be- come apparent, is proto-psy- choanalytico - crypto - cunni- linguistic. Consider the "fons et origo" of white acid-rock, the Beatles. Bourgeois scholars generally interpret the name "Beatles" as deriving from "the Crick- ets," the late Buddy Holly's group of the middle fifties; they suppose it to be associated simply with "Beat" and "Be- atitude." Correct a n a 1 y s i s shows, however, that in prac- tice the name is pronounced "Beadles," and "beadle" is a British term for a minor church official; in fact, Webster's New World Dictionary defines "beadledom" as "petty bureau- cracy." In other words, the group's name unconsciously be- trays its true political leanings, in this case toward Revisionism. A fine example of Revision- ism's tendency to turn into Re- action is provided by the Mon- kees, a group which "apes" the Beatles and is widely recognized as a shoddy Madison Avenue product. "Monkees" is a dis- guised form of "Monks," who are, like beadles, associated with religion. Moreover, "Mon- key-on-the-back" is slang for drug-addiction: no objective scholar can fail to recognize here an unwitting recognition by the forces of Reaction that religion is an opiate of the masses (Cf. "Kick the habit"). Since the rise of the Beatles, other groups have appeared which have proved to be less concerned about concealing their reactionary leanings. The "Grateful Dead," for example, is favored by those who would rather be Dead than Red. "Moby Grape" proclaims an outright slander on the strug- gle of California agricultural workers against the monopoly of the grape-growers: the workers are denounced as a "Mob." The "Kinks" achieved pop- ularity with their song "A TONIGHT RIO, GRANDE Directed by John Ford JOHN WAYN E "'A good movie !"-Wanda Reif 7:00 & 9:05 75c ARCH AUD. Petty Bourgeois Revisionaries Well-Respected Man," which seems to satirizerthe apathetic middle-classes. Correct analy- sis shows, however, that the letter "K" is equidistant in the alphabet (by four letters) from the letters "F" and "P". In other words, "Kinks" is a merging of "Finks" and "Pinks": seen in its true light, their satire can be recognized as the work of agents provoca- teurs, a piece of dangerous in- flammatory writing designed to disrupt the smooth organiz- ing of cadres in the suburbs. Two right-wing groups which openly trumpet their crimes are the elitist "Cream" and the vigilantist "Paul Revere and the Raiders." While friends of the future classless society will, no doubt, welcome this tendency of the enemy to reveal himself clear- ly, we must beware those groups which deliberately blur the line between Progress and Reaction, hoping to attract maximum support from all sides. "Big Brother and the Holding Company" is a good example of this duplicity, for the two terms in the name can- not be reconciled. From one point of view, "Big Brother" is the national leader of emerging anti-colonial revolutions, and as such his name should not be associated with a holding com- pany, one of those nefarious capitalist institutions whose sole purpose is to conceal from the people the true monopoly capital. nature of Faculty Assembly Vote On the other hand, "Big Brother" may refer to some chief of secret police, in which case his name should not be associated with a holding com- pany, since to be "holding" means to possess marijuana or other drugs, and there are some who regard drugs as an instru- ment for building revolutionary, consciousness. In any event, it is clear that this group is in league with the running dogs of Wall Street who always stand to profit from the politi- cal confusion of the masses. Tomorrow: The Liberals 3020 Washtenaw Ph. 434-1782 Between Ann Arbor & Ypsilanti WINNER OF ACADEMY AWARDSI DAVID LEAN'S FILMD Z H11AGO Shows Wed., Sat., Sun. 1:00-4:25-8:00 Mon., Tues.-Thurs., Fri. I Show only-8:00 761-9700 Vth Forum Tues. thru Thurs.-7:00-9:15 Fri. & Sat.-3-5-7-9:15-11:20 WwINNER I ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONSI1 0 BEST PICTURE 0 BEST AC I OR DUST IN HOFFMAN 0 BEST ACTRESS ANNE BANLCROFT S PHELEVINE BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS MIKE NICHOLS KATHERINE ROSS LAWRENCETURMABESTDIRECTOR MIKE NICHOLS " BEST SCREEN PLAY / BEST GUCINEMA * 1 TOGRAPHY, THE r GRADUATE Passes Elders (Continued from Page 1) proposed research" either "to permit the discussion concerning the appropriateness of such re- search within the University" or "to apprise colleagues in imme- diate and related disciplines of the nature and importance" of the project's potential importance to those disciplines; 0 The University will not en- ter into anyicontract which re- quires the prior approval of any. outside person or agency for pub- lication or dissemination of the results of any research, with cer- tain exceptions, and, with regard to these exceptions, the Univer- sity would not accept projects which were "unreasonably re- stricted" with regard to publica- tion. In addition to adopting the four policy statements, Assembly vot- ed to set up "a review committee of nine members, broadly repre- sentative of the entire faculty" to examine research proposals and field Report make recommendations to the Vice President for Research. The recommendations would be sub- ject to vice presidential veto. Assembly also approved the re- port's recommendation that it as- sume the responsibility for the creation of an inter-university committee which would work toward the reduction of federal restrictions on publication and dissemination of the results of university research. WNE BANCROFT. DUSTIN HOFFMAN-KATHARINE ROSS GADDER WILLINGHAM. BUCK HENRY PIAUL SIMON i0uI6L.GARFUNKEL .AIENCE TURMAN -I-ENICHOLS TECHNiCOLOR PANAVISiON #A EMIMSSY PICTURES 14"NI NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORA~tON 6TH FOX EASTER~N THEATRES Th WEK OHVIL E 00375 No. MAPLE RD. -769-1300700 & 9 urs. 1:00 I go Alk I SAT. 3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00-11:00 1:00 SUN. 1 :00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 FRI. 7:00-9:00-1 'P .R ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS.. I j1A3mAwVfI SUBSCRIBE TO, THE MICHIGAN DAILY I CINEMA II ANNOUNCES PETITIONING for MEMBERSHIP Sign Up for Interviews by. 5 P.M. March 21 in S.G.C. OffcsSAB INTERVIEWING FOR CINEMA GUILD BOARD Tuesday, March 19 3:00-7:00 P.M. Wednesday, March 20 4:00-10:00 P.M. SIGN UP AT CINEMA GUILD OFFICE 2538 SAB Wftt y fl MI N 4d POBERTB&NTOMFy-Producd by WARRII BTTy-D- 0 0 byRMnoR f M TECNNICOLOR.PROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS See Feature at 1 :00-3:00-5:00-7:05-9:10 Wednesday Afternoon Last 2 Days is LADIES' DAY from 1 P.M. to 6 P.M. Dial NO 2-6264 THURSDAY: "COP-OUT' i i L LI, TONIGHT AT 7-9 P.M. 4 1 T @MM I DIAL 8-64 16 I 1 M'ICH IGAN MEN'S GLEE CLUB N G: SAURA, ACH2 (INTERVIEWS MARCH 19-21) OR CALL 764-7631 or 769-3585 I - I .~ DIAL 5-6290 NOMINATED FOR 4 ACADEMY AWARDS I I THIS WEEK JEAN RENOIR Two films by the great French director Thursday and Friday, March 21,.22 BOUDU SAVED-FROMDROWNING Starring Michel Simon as Boudu "A shaggy man story" (Pauline Kael) Saturday and Sunday, March 23, 24 PICNIC ON THE GRASS "A fantasy with a pagan moral" Call 662-8871 "Perhaps the most beautiful movie in history"-Brendan Gill, The New Yorker. "Exquisite is only the first word that surges' in my mind as an appropriate description of this exceptional film. Its color is-absolutely gorgeous. The use of music and, equally eloquent, of silences and sounds is beyond verbal description. The performances are perfect-that is the only word."- B o s I e y Crowther, New York Times. "May well be the most beautiful filmy e v er m a de." sometimes truth is more e.rciting Written and directed by Bo Widerberg. With Thommy Berggren and Pia Degermark, Winner, Best Actress. 1967 Cannes Festival. A Bo Widerberg-Enropa Film Production, I Truman Capote's IN COLD BLOOD "LEAVES ONE. CHILLED1" -N.Y Times Writen lot the screen and dreced by Richard Brooks Positively no one under 16 admnited unte~S " accompanied by a parent or guardan HILL AUD. 8:30 P.M. CLOSE LY WATCHED TRAINS A Carlo Ponti'prbes.tation. fr ibuztd' 1- :3ig ma III-A Filuway. Company I I THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC AND DEPARTMENT OF ART I A .Q'umbio rictures iReleose In Pnovisiorr I From The Manila Times, Friday, June 9, 1967 "Within the Philamlife Hall fast night all was cozy cheer as the some seventy-strong University of Michigan Glee Club poured song after song from a wide repertory mainly distinguished by its bright American character. "Of the college glee clubs that have come here-Harvard, Yale, Cornell-the boys from Ann Arbor, Michigan, appear most rep- resentatively American in their program and style. "The men from Michigan sing a style reflectively American- bright, positive, humorous, utilizing only a soupcon of sentiment --and above all, engaged precisely in the pursuit of 'excellence. Be it the traditional Latin hymns, baroque music, traditional ballads, concert chorales, popular medley, novelty numbers, Negro spirituals, or varsity songs-each comes off in all its com- ponent parts precise and polished to an excellent degree. "As long as romance lives and college boys pursue girls, the world remains young and croons itself to dream through popular songs in taste and character as refreshingly American as The Michigan Men's Glee Club." 4 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GILBERT & SULLIVAN SOCIETY Presents PRESENT SMET ANA'S COMIC OPERA "THE BARTERED BRIDE" (English Translation by Josef Blatt) March 21-24, 8:00 P.M. T .VI A MW1nTb1 .QwQftMI TW A T A I 11 I