THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fririnv F +hri inrv Fi 1 9701 ,. - r f #UGy f CU UUf / p I ti / V arts festival Fuller films: Lessons in syrupy cinema By FARGO BERMAN Samuel Fuller's films use an eclectic barrage of "B" movie characters and stories and wrap them up with filmmaking tech- niques culled from the past and future to punch your mind into. a neurotic limbo. Fuller fin- ished his schooling by age 14, and had gained three years of newspaper experience as a crime reporter by the time he was 17. His movies, which he writes and directs, often focus upon char- . acters and situations p e r f a c t for headline coverage. In fact, a favorite method of counter- point in Fuller is a shot of a newspaper headline; describing - in its depersonalized manner - events which we have just seen happen in a "reality" that is as emotional as Fuller can make it. The reformed prostitute in The Naked Kiss comes to the house of her ultra-rich husband- to-be (Grant) to show him her wedding gown. He is a lover of poetry and music as is she; un- fortunately the ex-hooker (Kel- ly) .learns at .this moment that. Grant also loves molesting little girls - he wanted to marry her because of her past; not in spite. of it, since a .prostitute would obviously understand his odd tastes. Kelly' shows her feelings. for Grant by fatally slugging him with a phone receiver. Flash to a newspaper. headline =- GRANT DEAD: MURDERED BY PROSTITUTE. Fuller is very conscientious about creating contrasts with- in his movies. The Naked K i s s opens with a fight between a whore and her pimp, followed by funny scenes about Kelly dis- playing her wares and a bordello where a madam named Candy peddles her bonbon girls. Af- ter a light-hearted look at prostitution : we are confronted with a child-molester and a murder. And in Verboten!, a brutal fight, climaxed by a fire, is intercut with a happy do- mestic scene. The central characters of Ful- ler movies are all non-heroes, motivated throughout by p e r- sonal desires on a solely emo- tional level. Sgt. Zack, In The Steel Helmet, is a perfect sold- iefr who goes:.berserk just once; when the little Korean kid tag- ging along with him is shot. A prisoner laughs at the boy 's affection for Zack, and Zack, in a powerful outburst of fury,, chops him with 'bullets. Tolly Devlin (Underworld, U.S.A.) eradicates the gangster king- pins who long ago killed his worthless father;., he un d e r - mines the nation's top crime syndicate, but only out of re- venge and with no motivation Barry Sullivan was to have kill- ed Barbara Stanwyck to get at her brother in Forty Guns. Some of these changes might have im- proved the works or added ano- ther thrill, but essentially t h e gritty stories and shallow char- acters of Samuel Fuller are hor- ribly overladen with didacticism and schmaltz.. Why then do Godard and Truf- faut think so highly of the man claiming him as a maor in- spiration? I like to believe the effects of the dialogue upon their ears is mitigated by their insufficient knowledge of Eng- lish - perhaps they concen- trate on subtitles which might alter the flavor of Fuller's ver- bal syrup. Apart from devastat- ing story-lines, though, Fuller wields a masterfully controlled camera, shifting back and forth between close-ups and longer shots. He moves the c a m e r a fluidly to give actions maxi- mum impact. For the Naked Kiss fight he put the camera on the pimp, had Kelly swing at the lens, then attached t h e camera to Kelly to divulge her point of view. Fuller's frequent- ly unusual camerawork creates shock elements that are a treat - the revelation of Kelly's bald- ness is priceless. In Steel Helmet the' camera effectively draws upward from the Korean boy worshipping at the base of Bud- dha. Having the medic put a transfusion bottle on the loom- ing sculpture's hand, and a soldier shooting over the Bud- dha's shoulder while standing on the sculpture's arms are very FRIDAY SPECIAL MIKE'S STEAKS 1313 S. University FISH & CHIPS with COLE SLAW 99c Delicious CHAR-BROILED STEAKS and HAMBURGERS REMEMBER! SUNDAY'S SPECIAL Strip Sirloin Steak with Potatoes, Salad, Bread & Butter Incl. Your Favorite Drink $1.80 successful bits. Even as a film's storyline becomes increasingly depressing, attention is held by Fuller's visual competency and the anticipation of the director's shockers, which are present in every one of his films. Fuller can make good movies. If one saw his three or four best, especially his favorites, Shock Corridor and 'Ihe Steel Helmet he would appear quite favorably. Samuel Fuller movies are us- ually very bad stories, yet just as often are visually interest- ing, and for filmmakers they are a particularly fascinating les- son. Mr. Fuller will speak in Archi- tecture Aud. tonight at 8:30 after the 7:00 showihg of Pick Up on South Street. The Fuller Festival continues through Sun- day night. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 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- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier. $3.00 by mail. PRESENTS TONIGHT & SATURDAY -8 P.M. ON FREE FLICKS Buffalo Bill, Chaplin (2); Laurel & Hardy; Indy Race of 191 l; Great Train Robbery; Our Gang. OUTLANDISH MUSIC &SOME SILENCE 330 MAYNARD ST. PHONE: 665-0606 Order You WDaily No- Phore 764-0558 I Come To The -W FridayEvenings 9:00 to 2:00 A.M. After a Game, Dance, or Show LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Free Coffee, Tea, Cookies and Donuts 35c admission Bring your tambourine I' t from the criminals' present crimes against society. .Everyone acts as he does because he must. Tolly acts out of a need to avenge his father. Bob Ford murders his leader and friend, Jesse James {I Shot Jesse James), to get an am- nesty and reward so he can set- tle down with his girl; he is completely controlled by his need to fulfill his love. In Shock Corridor, the reporter subjects. himself to the terrors of an in- sane asylum because he is tot- ally driven by his desire to win a Pulitzer Prize. Social commentary is always present in Fuller's works - us- ually far too obviously present. O'Meara, a frustrated Confed- erate rebel who cannot accept the North's rule, joins a Sioux tribe in Run of the Arrow. He is lectured by a ,U.S. officer on the need to accept his fellow Americans in a banal moral speech which perhaps O'Meara required, but which the aud- ience certainly did not. At the end of the drama, his Sioux wife tells him (in totally out of character English platitudes) that one can not run from one's people (strangely, enough s h e leaves with him). Moral teach- ings run rampant to the point of nausea, often in dialogue, often an entire film - Verboten! shows that not all Germans are Nazis as forthrighatly as a "See Spot. Spot is a do ." lesson. A Fuller flick is either about crime, war, or the "old West." Characters come from gangster and war films of the 1930's and 40's. Kelly's Naked Kiss some- what recalls the shady but gold- en-hearted ladies of hundreds of 1940 romances and mysteries. She is Fuller's version of Die- trich in Shanghai Express, cast in a uniquely Fullerian p 1o t. Fuller likes non-heroes, loves shocking moments, digs card- board people named' Griff, Candy, Cuddles, Zack, a n d Soapy, people who say "h o 1 y smoke," and men who smoke cigars (like himself). Shock treatments: In Forty Guns (not at the festival), Barry Sullivan has to shoot through Barbara Stanwyck (who he loves) to kill her brother who is using her as a shield. And he does. In the fight which opens Naked Kiss, Kelly's wig comes off revealing a bald head - a guaranteed crowd-pleaser. At the end of Run of the Arrow an of- ficer is realistically skinned alive. -Daily-Jay Cassidy across so badly that it hurts- us. We are supposed to see how characters are driven by their situation, but the personalities are so superficial that it is im- possible to become involved with ,them. The soldier known to us only by a medium long-shot of his back for two seconds be- fore an arrow kills him, means as much to us as any character in Run. One dimensional char- acterizations come off well in Shock Corridor and The Steel Helmet because of the peculiar stories. However, in most other cases the people are not deep enough to hold our interest, and excesses of "meaningful" dia- logue and action grate very harshly on the viewer's intelli- gence. Fuller could not always do what he wanted because of a lack of funds or censorship from the front office. Merrill's Mar- auders (not at the festival) was to have had a scene where Amer- icans shot their own men 'be- cause of their panic; originally, i he BACH CLUB wishes most emphatically to announce that under no curcumstances what- ever will any program of any kind ever again in its utter entirely last even one iota past 9:15 P.M. I .1 s fi r *1 Love, Randy r ~II 'I From the country that gave you "I,AWOMAN" "INGA" and "I AM CURIOUS" (YELLOW) 'Fanny Hill' is a "porno-classic!" -ARCHER IVlNSTON "In there with sex and love all the way!" - N.Y. Post + h .', Joe Nickerson "Fanny is played by Diana -° - Kjaer, who has a nice body, lots of red hair, big blue eyes, and a lovely soft mouth into which she often sticks a finger." -N.Y. Times from the Library of Congress Folk Music Division J.H. is one of the main sources for releasing most of the folk songs you have heard. If you like folk music, don't miss him. °, ' ;.. :-t ' '. .': ..~ . ? ++ +w 1 I Jerry Gross and Nicholas Demetroutee new... and from Sweden TUES.-Baroque Chamber Music TH URS.-T-Lab PERSONS UNDER 18 NOT ADMITTED for beginners 8 P.M.- DIANA KJAER - Hans Emback -Keve Hjelm Written and Directed by MAC AHBERG 'GW ] Produced byTORE SJOBERG for MINERVA-EUROPA Distributed byCINEMATION INDUSTRIES -COLOR by Deluxe O f I on oNAL RA C AR i first 24 accepted HELD OVER AGAIN ry r aVNFa HAYIY-a 3rd BIG WEEK FRI.-7:15, 9:00, 10:45 SAT. 5:30, 7:15, 9:00, 10:45i U I Held Over Again For A I r Program Informotion-5-6290 SHOWS "HOcW T QD AY An ar ATQWill C 1 :00Grand 13:00 Miss F 3:00 so IS' 5:00 7:00 9:00 EVENTUALLY "VIVA MAX" "Rollicking with New Yorke 7th Delightful Week! )neen acts as he hasn't before t f ul wily bumpkin . Geer mademe wish he'd been my df ather, and I hope to see more of Farrell. T'hey're all mighty good and The Reivers!' "-LOOK MAGAZINE . e. ... .. "Excellent One" I .4' .. ....; , Sharon For J f Will Gee "I r rrell I UJt # Ifunujn '2Iina MoZe1rs~. tI .r . .. .,A1 I h A 1 D( R f~iA L6t R/" i U ,..