PAGE T ; THE 'MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. AUGUST 31. 1967 PAtENTEMCIA AL TTRfA T~TT2 .a s ar uc i 7. 171Vi7 Jl AI1 i & J 'il a M m vkA- an k JL;;P3V*f3lS4Eb3r3LIV95 70 Imo}' =El Ji E 1 Qj THURSDAY and FRIDAY ...SATURDAY and SUNDAY ... At 7 and 9:05 P.M. AUG. 30, 31 & SEPT. 1 (Wednesday-Friday) BLACK ORPHEUS dir. Marcel Camus, 1959. Color. In response to popular demand-"the Best Foreign musical and colorful, and horrifying-the Orpheus the slums of modern Rio. Film of 1959"; legend retold in SEPT. 2, 3 POINT OF ORDER- 1964 (from 1954 telecast) Rt. Duncan, editor. The Army-McCarthy Hearings-known at the end of that era ... SEPT. 7, 8 THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS dir. Orson Welles, 1942. From a novel by Booth Torkington-Academy Award Winner starring Joseph Cotten and Agnes Moorehead. SEPT. 9, 10 THE RED DESERT dir. Michaelangelo Antonioni, 1964. (Color). The film before "Blow-Up"-starring Monica Vitti- revealing cinema's promises for color. SEPT. 14, 15, 16, 17 Janus New Film Program, Part I (Due to high rental prices there will be a $1.00 admission charge.) Michigan premiere of the best new short films, including work by Richard Lester ("The Running, Jumping and Standing Still Film"), Trufrnut, ,Rolanksi, Borouczyk and others. "A veritable textbook on the art of contemporary cinema." SEPT. 21, 22, 23, 24 Janus New Film Program, Part 11 ($1.00 admission again, regrettably) Another premiere weekend, featuring Jean-L,uc Godard, Hugh Hefner, Samuel Beckett and others. Work of dazzling virtuosity and imagina- tion. SEPT. 28, 29 THE BURMESE HARP dir. Kon Ichikawa> 1956. Japanese, subtitles. From the director of "Fir.es on the Plain"-a tale of pacifism in a World War II prison camp. SEPT. 30, OCT. 1 OCT. 12, 13 THE MUSIC ROOM dir. Satyajit Ray, 1958. The great Indian director presents Chekhovian's tale, with music by Ravi Shankar. TIME on Ray: "each of his works is a version of per- fection." OCT. 14,15 Marius Trilogy, Part III: Cesar dir Marcel Pagnol, 1936. French, subtitles. OCT. 19, 20 STORM OVER ASIA dir. Vsevclod Pudovkin, 1928. Russian, subtitles. Exciting picture of the destruction of imperialism in Asia. OCT. 21,22 GRAPES OF WRATH dir. John Ford, 1941. From Steinbeck's classic comes this Academy Award Winner starring Henry Fonda, Jane Darwell, OCT. 26-29 ANNUAL HALLOWEEN FESTIVAL OCT, 26 FRANKENSTEIN dir. James Whale, 1931. The original with Boris Karloff, Clive Brooke. OCT. 27 THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD dir. Howard Hawkes, 1951. OCT. 28 CURSE OF THE CAT PEOPLE dir. Val Newton, 1964. OCT. 29 KING KONG dirs. Marion C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsach, 1933. NOV. 1-12 SERGEI EISENSTEIN FESTIVAL Cinema Guild salutes the great Russian director with a retrospective showing of ALL of his completed feature films. OCT. 31, NOV. 1 OLD AND NEW (1929) Eisenstein's ". . . hymn to the coming mechanization." NOV. 2, 3 ALEXANDER NEVSKY (1938) Brutal drama of medieval Russia-with the most exciting battle scene ever filmed. Music by Prokofiev, NOV. 4,5 THE BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN (1925) Voted "The Second Best Film of All Time" by the International Film Critics. NOV. 7, 8 TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD (1928) Eisenstein's vivid account of the events of the Bolshevik Revolution 50 years ago-November 7 NOV. 9, 10 IVAN THE TERRIBLE, PART I (1945) The regal splendor and awesome power of the first Moscow czar. Music by Prokofiev. NOV. 11, 12 IVAN THE TERRIBLE, PART 11(1946) Eisenstein's last film. Car Ivan's growing madness and perversity. Partly in color. NOV. 16,17 THE MAN ON THE FLYING TRAPESE dir. Clyde Bruckrman, 1935. Starring W. C. Fields! NOV. 18, 19 ON THE WATERFRONT dir. Elia Kazan, 1954. America's hero with gangsters in a longshoreman's union. 8 Academy Awards-with Marlon Brando, Lee J. Cobb, Rod Steinger, Karl Mal- den, Eva Marie Saint. NOV. 30, DEC. 1 -GREED dir. Erich Von Stroheim, 1924 (silent) With Zacu Pitts, Jean Hersholdt. Filmed from Frank Morris' novel, McTegue. DEC. 2, 3 f\ GRAND ILLUSION dir. Jean Renoir, 1937. French, subtitles. Is loyalty to one's class or to one's country the more compelling? Marius Trilogy, Part 1: Marius Marcel Pagnol, dir. 1931. French, subtitles. Part I of Pagnol's literary-film work of Marseilles. OCT. 5, 6 THE. IRON HORSE dir. John Ford, 1924. Uncut version of Ford's monumental epic on the Winning of the* West. Showing at 7:00 and 9:45. OCT. 7, 8 Marius Trilogy, Part II: Fanny dir. Marcel Pagnol, 1932. Wine, Women and Song featuring Raimu. OCT. 11 (Wednesday) FREE SHOWING FREE NOSFERATU dir. F. N. Murnau' "Dracula"-just as Bram Stoker's book told it. DEC. 7, 8 SUNRISE dir. F. W. Murnau, 1927. Probably the most beautiful and powerful film of the silent era. DEC. 9, 10 DIAL M FOR, dir. Alfred Hitchcock, 1953. Hitchcock at his chilling best, Robert Cummings. MURDER with Grace Kelly, Ray Milland and DEC. 14, 15 SINGIN' IN THE RAIN dirs. Gene Kelly and Stanley Donan, 1952. "Just about the best Hollywood musical of all time."--Pauline Koel. With Gene Kelly, Debbie Reynolds and Donald O'Connor. DEC. 16, 17 MONKEY BUSINESS dir. Norman McLeod, 1931 Story by S. J. Perlman. The Mark Bros. as stowaways and body- guards of feuding gangsters. P ARCH ITECTURE TAff vsRIUIVI II I