/, THE MICHIGAN DAILY I Friday, January 30, 1970 I cinema By BRUCE HENSTELL :a Th e odds are that you've seen at least one Fuller film and the odds are that you don't remem- ber it. It was the film where the Commie officer in North Vietnam is a former school- teacher who when asked about his old ideals responds "do you know how much money I made teaching?'" Movin' on up. Or it was the f i 1 m where an Irish Southerner joins the Sioux. Far out. Samuel Fuller directs film and there are those that feel he does it well enough to be considered one of the greats. This direct- or's fans include Godard, Truf- faut and m o s t of the other young French directors. The English think enough of him ,to have made him tle guest of honor at the prestigious Edin- burgh Film Festival. He is well- known enough to be asked to play the archetypical Holly- wood director in the new Peter Fonda-Dennis Hopper brouha- haThe Last Film. And Cinema Guild is bringing him to Ann Arbor. The Guild sponsors events like the Ann Arbor Film Festi- val and . smaller mini-topical festivals. This is the first time in recent memory, perhaps the first time since the early 1950's, that Cinema Guild has been in- volved with bringing a director and showing an extended dis- el Fuller: play of that director's works. For one week, Feb. 2 through Feb. 8, the Guild will present el'even of Fuller's 16 films "us- ing not only the home base Architecture Auditorium, b u t Cinema II's Aud. A as well. All for Sam Fuller who makes what another generation used to call "B" films. You know the kin d. Action - packed titles The B movie with punch A Steel Helmet, Fixed Bayonets, Hell and High Water, Forty Guns maybe with a little touch of the risque. (The Naked Kiss, House of Bamboo, Crimson Ki- mono). Actors you might not see again until you catch re- turns of "Wagon Train" with Ward Bond. The kind of film that wh.en you saw it at the the- ater you knew it c o s t under half-a-mill and that included the butter-corn. Still and all, that particular film, any of Fuller's sixteen, manages to do it in style. The camera movements are hardly standard and include 'fantasticf little "tricks:" like w h e n' the camera looks down the barrel of a gun. The stories aren't any- thing you've seen before either. When the bad guy takes refuge behind the good guy's girl, the good guy promptly guns. them both down. After all, that's what you have to do. His stereo- types could hardly be any more stereotypical, nor any more American. Park Row, Fuller's pagean American Journalism has a title which reads "THIS F I'L M IS DEDICATED TO AMERICAN JOURNALISM." You mean people still do that? It's the same, after all, as the cardboard push-out and stand-ups that assailed us from the screen of Easy Rider. Easy Rider is one of those films which Wants To Make A Point but ends up more Kooler than cool. Fuller tries so hard and with such consumate skill that even {I Two hundred rush tickets will be available for tonight's Joan' Sutherland concert. These tick- ets, which are $1.00 each, will go on sale at 4:00 p.m. today at the Hill A:d. box office. All seats which have not been sold as regular tickets will be sdld as rush seats. Excellent seats are still available. his excesses, unavoidable owing to Fuller's sheer exurberance, are informative. His films are hardly "new" or "fresh" 1i k e public relations is trying to tell you Good-By Columbus or Ro- meo and Juliet ar e. It's the same old stuff now in Fuller but there's a difference. Part of it is skill and style: Fuller turns your head with the way in which he uses a camera. Part of it has to do with Fuller's excep- tional insight into American so- ciety. Mostly it has to do with .i'uller being an outstanding ar- tist with a cold, clear eye. Fuller is the last American. Born in New England, he spent his youth on newspapers (just like in the movies!). In t h e thirty's he ended up in Holly- wood writing what they called tilkies and then movies. In the war he served with the Big Red One, the first infantry. Like any artist of the first war he man- ages to bring this all into his work. His battle films celebrate war but only because the devil needs to be recognized to be ex- orsized. The cops and the FBI in. Pick Uip on South Street are at just the same level as t h e pimps, pushers and pick-pock- ets. It's the prostitute who's the hero in Naked Kiss and the re- spectable father a, creepo. It's all the American dream. Why hasn't Fuller received the note in this country that he has abroad? Popular culture, culture that isn't connected with the elite, has always been suspect, or suspect until very recently. Poe, for instance, or American gangster films both have far greater audiences in France than in Washington, D.C. At one point in time and through one man - Walt Dis- ney in the 30's - critics em- braced the so-called mass cul- ture only to be profoundly dis- illusioned in the McCarthy era. Intellectuals, the men w h o write film criticism, always thought the movies were great- school-houses and never liked what was being taught. Adult The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: ?64-O 952. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day thrcugh Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tian rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail, extension was always the Euro- pean film. The native American product was so close-in on the culture that, these critics" reas- oned, the kids could only be reading behind the gym, or roll- ing and smoking it at the sock- hop. Fuller was part of the low- . est common - denominator, a concept Americans have always distasted. Street theater, participatory democracy, Chicago, t h e con- spiracy, all of which have now thoroughly diffused o u t in American Society have, what- ever else their effect, m a d e more people aware of the cul- tural environment. The increas- ed notice that Fuller has re- ceived is in part owing to this new awareness .If this were all that was up with Fuller it might be enough, but there is a I I , iI --auy-Jay Cassiay pleasant surprise. He is an ex- cellent artist. The Fuller Retrospective Feb. 2-10 will brizzle with action- packed excitement. Who knows, it may even spill out into the streets. f MICHIGAN UNION Noon to Midnite Voiriety Show 3:00, 7:00, 9:30 p.m. Admission $1.00 Variety Show 50c evE UNI and TED TODAY and TOMORROW -READ AND USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS- , DAlLY OFFICIA L BUL LETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S. A BI d g ., before 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication aid1 by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday andSurnday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- tion notices a r e not accepted for p"blication. F o r more informa- ti 'ii, phone 7 64-9270. FRIDAY, JANUARY 30 Day Calendar Wrestling: U-M vs. Illinois: Events Building, 4:00 p.m. - Astronomy Colloquium: C. K. Kumar, "Isotopic Abundance of Magnesium in the Sun", P&A Colloq. Im. (296), 4:00 p.m. Geography Seminar: F. E. Ian Hamil- ton, Northwestern, "Regional Economic Analysis in Britain", 4050 LSA, 4:10 p.m. Slavic Department Russian F i I m Series: Farewell, Doves: Multipurpose IRoom, Undergraduate Library, 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Professional Theatre Program (Phoen- ix Theatre): The Criminals (U. S. Pro- fessional Premiere): Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre, 8:00 p.m. University Players (Department of Speech): Dark of the Moon: Trueblood Theater, 8:00 p.m. Choral Union Series: Joan Sutherland, soprano and Richard Bonynge, pianist: Limited number of tickets still avail., Hill Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 s.A.B. Current openings are received by gen- eral division fromemployers through- out the country, coem in and browse through these: Servomation of Ypsilanti seeks Food Manager, degree not specific require- meni, but require 1 yearin food mgmt, preparation, or handling. SUMMER PiACEMENT SERVICE ping, dramatics, dance, music; unit and asst. unit supv caseworker, truck- bus driver, nurses, couns. with emo- tionally disturbedand Marionette thea- tre, kitcher-porter. ANNOUNCEMENT: Standard Oil Company, Cleveland, openings for Cleveland area residents in Travel Bureau Dept. ORGANIZATION BECAUSE OF THE OVERWHELMING RESPONSE TO THIS PROGRAM WE ARE BRINGING BACK THE BEATLES MOVIES FOR SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY BEATLES DOUBLE FEATURE FAREW ELL, DOES SOVIET FILM (1960) about the conflict between generations FRIDAY, JIAN. 3 1 and 9 P.M. Multipurpose Room, UGLI 75C DONATION II Michigan Nationality Clubs Presentation NOTICES Department of Aerospace Engineering -AIAA undergraduate seminar, 4:00 p.m. January 28 1970, room 1042 East Engineering. "Research on Gaseous Core Nuclear Rockets", by James W. Clark and Thomas W. Latham, United Aircraft Research Labs. U of M Bahai Club fireside, Jan. 30, 8:00 p.m., 1474 Jewett, topic: "Action for Humanity". STOP WORRiYING I IS ON THE WAYI TheColfl Aidventures of ~THE BEA hE eremobiltre hn evr...iCOLORI ' EASTIAlGR LlAUITED ARTISTS RELEASE 11 i. ..... , f <. V, < < ~q , ,,,. fM Hf rft Corporytton t 'I i TIRE IA F THE Sel IF ",. : t; P ZZA a POT in Daily I I Classifieds Try the Best.. 1751 Plymouth " . " " U U U L '0) 21? sAJF Lewer Level ast Day Camp Tamarack is here, Jan. Cabin counselors, spec. in water- nt arts and crafrs,nature craft, trip- MICHAEL virtosit in Ui II everything" -Broadside ,t SHOWS TODAY AT 1:00 3:00 9:0 1 COR. UPLAND 1 near Broadway 665-8626 5 WWW CoUPON 7 AONAMEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA PIE at Li ttle Cae a Pina gv COUPON svggvegg 65'0FF tON A SPORTSMAN OR PARTYTIME PIZZA PIE little Caera' P 1751 PLYMOUTH 665-8626 Expires Feb. 6 rnt UvV RY 1N nMtNUbTE5 .SOON "VIVA MMAX" tc.,e c'I . I I U.. . New Yorker. L ' . '.d :;:.:, U i