Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, Morch 14, 1970 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, March 14, 1970 cinema -4 All the world's a dan By NEAL GABLER It all began back in 1932, with Grand Hotel - the world as .hotel. Later, we got Ship of Fools - the world afloat, Now, we have Sydney Pollack's They Shoot Horses, Don't They? based on Horace McCoy's de- pression novel and playing at the State Theater. It is the same premise with a new geograph- ical twist. The sights have been lowered slightly to encompass not the whole world, but, Amer- ica as dance marathon. The object of these endeavors iS to present a kind of Noah's Ark of humanity. As a result, dragging themselves over the worn dance floor of the Pacific Ballroom are a sailor, a preg- nant woman, a collegian, a star- let, a fat person, a skinny per- son, an Italian, a Jew. What, no midget! They shuffle and slide perpetually with only ten minute rest periods breaking the hours-into-days-into-weeks of dance. It's 1932, the depres- sion, and there are 1500 silver dollars to the one lucky couple who persevere and remain hoof- ing when all others have fallen exhausted. The marathon is more than a contest; it's a grand show with bleachers where persons with a sadistic streak can munch their hot dogs and cheer for the con- testants' collapse. The audience really isn't any different from those among us who go to Indy subconsciously hoping for a flaming wreck or the hockey fan who would rather see fisticuffs than a goal. The master of cere- monies (Gig Young) tells one of the contestants, "They just want to see a little misery out there so they can feel a little better. They're entitled to that, aren't they?" Sadism. Tawdriness. Forfeit- ing pride for prize. These tired lives are pinned on a treadmill that literally won't let them find peace. They suffer cramps, heart attacks, delusions, illu- sions, but on they press for the money; there is no other way. They're "battling to win and isn't that the American way, folks?" Since it strives for nothing less than showing the American Way, They Shoot Horses is an extremely ambitious film. It takes some skill to avoid the pit- falls that accompany efforts such as this, and the picture doesremarkably well. For one thing, it isn't a showcase for name stars in cameo roles as these things often are, and it will probably bore those people who get their Around-the- World-in-Eighty-Day thrills by pointing at the big screen and saying, "Isn't that Lee Marvin. Yes, I'm sure that's Lee Mar- vin." It is also more substantial than junk like Ship of Fools. There is the distinctive Amer- ican underpinnings of lives compromised to dollars. But there is really no way to avoid melodrama. Movies that focus on systems almost always detract from the characters. Hardbitten, loose-living Gloria played with expert wryness by Jane Fonda, and her naive part- ner Robert (Michael Sarrazin), are not full-blown, believable people. They are suffocated by the film's compulsion to give us Life, big, bold and brassy. Life, however, can't be infused into something by sheer numbers. The picture is destined to fall short of its mark because, like itscharacters, it doesn't realize thiat there is more to success than the show of things. .hNevertheless, thishissa good film if you are able to accept the fact that it over-reaches its capabilities. The direction is taut despite the flash-forward bogeyman. The screenplay is well-written s a v e occasional FOXAVILLAGE 375 No. MAPLE RD. 769413OO lapses into the banal. The photography by Phillip Lathrop is flawless. Besides all this, the film is well-performed, especial- ly Gig Young's sagging-faced, bleary-eyed MC, with his "yow- sa, yowsa, yowsa. The marathon goes on and on and on ...' They Shoot Horses is not a "story about people" in the tra- ditional sense. Sure, there's a murder tale nested in between the fox trots, but it isn't enough to sustain a film. Rather, it ad- heres to the Kesey notion of movie as expounded by Wolfe in his Electrical Kool-Aid Acid Test.*Kesey saw life as anala- gous to film. It has a plotline which from the looks of things must have been written by Sam Peckinpah}, character, symbol- ism, colors and, who knows, maybe even a spectacular climax. Sydney Pollack has turned the tables on Kesey. He's made a commerical movie which tries to' be the Film We Are Living. What Pollack is saying is that we're all on the dance-floor dancing for those dollars, and none of us is willing to admit what we all vaguely sense-that, as Gloria says, "they have the whole thing rigged from the be- ginning." Of course, all pictures of this, kind attempt to put the world' on the screen. But the world- hotel of Grand Hotel is Holly- wood's glamorous globe, a new, more sparkling world to slip into. The oceanside dance hall is much different. There is no gloss covering the worn walls and worn-out bodies. There are no romantic vignettes to set the ladies' hearts aflutter. There is nothing mitigating the cruelty, sadness and stupidity. Just like Ralph Edwards used to say, "This is your life." Ain't it rot- ten? The same remarks apply to Z. Although it probably isn't intentional as it is in They Shoot Horses, Z is not just a story about an assassination and the pursuit of justice. It IS our lives. The villains aren't the colonels anymore than the Sfloor heroes are the Opposition. The villain is the System, uncon- trollable and menacing. The System wins out in the end, and it is neither undue fatalism nor pessimism to say that in the end it just might be true that the System always wins. How do we know? We are living this story, that's how. That's why Z is so relevant and so good. It transcends even our political identifications and dramatizes the macabre fiction we have all been living since. Kennedy was assassinated? Ton- kin Resolution was passed? Nixon was elected? The Chicago 7 were tried? Maybe because we're conspiratorially minded, or maybe because Greek colonels are a better personification of evil than a one-time pretty-boy MC, Z achieves what They Shoot Horses sets out to be; it is Kesey's life-movie. Tom Hayden said it to Judge Hoffman: "For a lot of people who feel the way I do, we are in the movie Z, I mean there is not going to be a higher court." It is tragic, but he was right on. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN --r --?' --.v.-:vv.::a-- }}' The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o rm to Room 3528 L. S. A Bl d g., before 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- tion notices a r e not accepted for publication. F o r more informa- tion, phone 764-4270. SATURDAY, MARCH 4 Day Calendar National faculty sminar on computer- assisted instruction for reference lib- rarians: Center for Research on Learn- ing and Teaching, 1315 Hill St., 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Teach-in on the Environment: Ralph Nader and Senator George McGovern, Keynote speechs on citizens and poli- tical action, Hill Aud. 1:30 p.m. Teach-In on the Environment Panel Discussion, Man's Futur: Struggle for Survival, Dr. Slobodkn, moderator; Dr. K. Boulding, C. Luce, D. Brower, Dr. R. Levins, participants, Mayor R. Hat- cher, Gary, Indiana, closing remarks: Hill Aud., 7:30 p.m. Chamber Music Honors Recital: Dorothy Woster piano, Sch. of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. Contemporary Directions: Jack Fort- ner, SydnevtHodkinson, conductors: Rackham Lect. Hall, 8:00 p.m. University Players: "Life Is a Dream" Trueblood Theater, 8:00 p.m. (Continued on Page 6) 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor NOW SHOWING Nominated for Seven ACADEMY AWARDS includinq " Best Picture " Best Song 20th CFN! i~s H CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID Sell a POT in Daily Classifieds ANN ARBOR BLACK THEATRE, Inc. PRESENTS 3 ONE-ACT PLAYS " "A SON COME HOME" and "CLARA'S OLE MAN" --by ED BULLINS- "AND WE OWN THE NIGHT" -by JIMMIE GARRETT-- MARCH 18-21-8 P.M. Schorling Aud., University School, E. Univ. and Monroe General Public $3.00-Students $2.00 TICKETS AVAILABLE at Discount Record Shop on State St.. Centicore Bookstore, Ned's Bookstore, Ypsilanti. and at the door. -I I Ui I "The last womrd in thrillers. Terrific." -Gene Shalit, Look Magazine film festival Complimenting film styles, By BRUCE HENSTELL My thanks to John Allen for filling in during my absence. How can one argue with a review that uses your name thrice in the first two paragraphs and spells it correctly all three times? Mr. Allen's honesty, as well as his dex- terity, is to be admired; he is the only indi- vidual I know who can type with both fingers and pat himself on the back at the same time. A cut above the normal indeed. Friday's fes- tival was highlighted by a fortuitous arrange- ment of films whose complimenting styles gave the 7 p.m. performance the distinction of con- taining a number of outstanding films. One film is sure to be an award-winner. It is Airplane Glue, I Love You by Howard Lester of Los Angeles. In narrative form, the film treats a normal adult maniac with a talent for as- sembling model kits in the film placed un- der the direction of a city "administrative off i- cer." ("What," the character tells us, "they used to call a truant officer.") Our hero has been absent from school-for the past ten years, or so it seems-and now his life comes to be cen- tered around Miss Dixie Box (What a perfect name!), his new sixth-grade teacher. The officer and the teacher, each in their own way want to be one of the kids and this 28-year-old sixth grader is the entry. Our hero is at home, with the simplicity and honesty of his fellow students who are at an age where not all the spontaneity has been bred out of them. To them, and to them alone, can he talk and it is only them who understand the depth and character of his talent for model kits. The administrative officer is the man of liberal principal who wears his heart proudly filed under "H." It is he who is finally affected Joining our hero in his favorite past time: sniff- ing airplane glue. It is a comedy, but a pointed and meaningful one. Runaway was another film submitted by Yale film professor, Standish Lawder. It was an old image; a "found" film-in this case a scrap of old animation, repeated over and over. The image was well worked and entertaining. Pat Oleszko did another of her "strip" pieces last night, this one entitled "Earth, Water and Air Strip." Miss Oleszko took a fear- less stand in handwritten signs for clean air, pure H-2-0 and good grass. She is the festival's answer to Arthur Godfrey. If only Axion would get wise and pick up on Pat. The remainder of the 7:00 program con- tained three films all worthy of mention. Pre- lude, b Andrew Burke, is undoubtedly indica- tive of a trend in thematic material: In this case, the resister whose disaffection toward his society is mirrored in his relation with his wife. The film is too long and wanders at points, but it is, at least, a competently handled narrative. The Trench is a science fictional treatment of a third war and owes much to Chris Mark- er's La Jetee and a John Hubley cartoon en- titled The Hole. The presentation of the war through an encounter with a single soldier is well handled and the film is a visual pleasure. Brandy French, the heroine of last year's winner, Brandy in the Wilderness, has made Penelope. The story concerns a Latin girl in New York and has a definite sentimental under- tone which works to its detriment. The film contains much of the simplicity of Brandy. There are definite winners in this group, and what is more significant is that these films are consistently interesting and well-made. The festival, indicative of larger trends, is showing a definite John Allen one-cut-above-the-normal. I 0 PANAVISIONS COLOR BY DELUXE m M AAud Join The Daily Sports Staff SHOWS FRIDAY - MONDAY at 6:45 and 9:00 DIAL 8-6416 SATURDAY - SUNDAY at 1:45 - 3:45 - 6:15 - 8:45 -3 I "One of the Year's 10 Best" -Judith Crist, New York Magazine// Bob Salmaggi, Group W Network;/ Dan Lewis, The Record / Bruce Bahrenburg, Newark Evening News / Mrs. John V. Lindsay and children / John Simon, The New Leader / Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times/ Charles Champlin, Los Angeles Times/ Stanley Ei- chelbaum, San Francisco Examiner / Buffalo Evening News 401 1~ ENDS TUESDAY Mon.-Tues.-7 :00, 9:00 Sat.-Sun-1 :30, 3:20 5:10, 7:00, 9:00 H. PR LOVECRAFTS cu so 'P"ALEG J ORL OR SMAND B EE-DWAS M CKWEL Subscribe to The Michigan Daily f "A GUSTY UNCOMPROMISING LOOK BEHIND THE SCENES OF SKIING! A POWERHOUSE OF A MOVI.E!" -BOB SALMAGGI, New York Column Knickerbocker "A CONTRAST BETWEEN THE ATHLETES VACUITY BELOW SKI LEVEL AND THEIR DEMONIC ENERGY UP ON THE SLOPES! A BEAUTIFULLY CRAFTED MOVIE! JOSEPH MORGENSTERN, Newsweek "A SCATHING CONSIDERATION OF 'COLLEGE BOY' VERSUS 'COLD PRO' PRINCIPLES . . . OF THE 'JUS- TICE' OF SPORT AND OF WINNING. THAT RARE SPORT STORY THAT . . . DEALS WITH UNIVERSAL EXPERIENCE! THRILLING . . . TERSE, INTENSE FILM!" -JUDITH CRIST, New York Magazine "A PERCEPTIVE UNSENTIMENTAL PORTRAIT OF A YOUNG ATHLETE ON THE MAKE! ELECTRIFYING!" -TIME Magazine "SHOWS THE CONTRAST BETWEEN THE WAY rnnAWkI1I I ArimkI.i i( C'n ANDfl TH- WAY THAT 44I PRESENTS CANADA'S YAL WINNIPEG BALLET IN HILL AUDITORIUM Sunday, Mar. 15 at 2:30 PROGRAM Les Patneurs (music: Giaco 0)/K)l eyerheer) i ,, , ir 1 , ROBERT REFORD / GENE HA CKMAN/CAMLLA SPARV /'DOWHILL RACER IIW.OTCIAROGfGSA a M CHAERIR II nW,'mAWSSALTER lMuaW91* _JM ,Irf FkIDAY AND SATURDAY 7:10- 9:00- 10:50 * STARTS WEDNESDAY * A FRANM4WICH dO, SUNDAY -7 . 1 n Q-nn 1111 1 i I