THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, ( i cinema. N. Y. Festial Some enigmas By I. ALAN SMOKLER Bernardo Bertolucci Before the Revolution announced at a pre-screening press conference at the N. Y. Film Festival that his second film, Partners, was 'so obscure that he didn't understand it. Everyone smiled knowingly-silently thinking how some directors love to anticipate the nits' questions about 'meaning', etc. Surprise-Bertolucci was right. No one had a chance. Parts of this film were so arcane that a dozen viewings might reveal more fine points but it seems that one's quest for coherence is doomed. Surprise again-it didn't matter. Loosely based (very) on Dostoyevsy's The Double, Part- ners recounts the meeting of a timid drama teacher with his alter ego, a fiery revolutionary (both played by Pierre Cle- menti). Again and again, the revolutionary humiliates the hero by proving successful in every endeavor, each of which is precisely what the inhibited ego had only dared to phanta- size. The ego "is shattered and prepares to destroy itself. The entire film follows a pattern ofinsanity intercut with' phantasy, phantasy which phantisizes with the phantisizer, and carefully contrived irrelevance. Shot in color, Partners is pictorially beautiful in parts, dreadfully hammy in others and uses what appears 1o be the thread of the film to strangle the viewer who chokes pleasantly. Actually, the film is more properly an experience. Bertolucci's rhythm, cutting, and timing cannot help but remind one of Godard (which comparison is denied). It seems however that Bertolucci suffers here by comparison for while Godard's technique always has the undercurrent of direction, Partners oftens seems aimless, at other times overdirected or not aimless enough. These are minor points, however, for Partners carries through the miasma with cinematic excel- lence. Pierre Clementi again displays tremendous virtuousity and there is one scene with a door to door dptergent saleslady which becomes an orgy of sex, suds and satire that is worth the price of admission. Tropics, the audience was told by director Gianni Amico (who helped Bertolucci with the screenplay of Partners) is a study about the 'third world', the world of underdevelop- ment and poverty. It is filmed as a fictional documentary; Man, Wife' and two children of Brazil's impoverished North- east drift from city to city looking for work. Intercut are var- ious historical narratives of the Northeast, almanac-type comparisons of per capita income and readings from con- temporary newspapers designed to heighten the characters' plight by focusing on trivia taken, seriously. Capitalism has glibly been assigned the role of culprit for nearly every woe of the peasants: Constantly the viewer is subjected to shots of signs announcing the presence of some large American company whose wealth we must assume goes to the wrong places. This gimmick was so frequent and so oppressive that the mind boggled when it was discovered that the final irony of the film used the very same one. Hero fin- ally finds work under a large sign of the Hilton Hotels. Tropics drifts as aimlessly as its peasants who always seem to be going somewhere which is always nowhere. The single theme is handled with the sledge hammer delicacy presumably necessary to awaken one from'the periodic stupor induced by tedium and cinematic vacuum. BEST IN THE FIELD NET calls Ann Arbor home NEW YAROOUEHI "I am convinced that there is moeereal masic in RoseverantZ and Guilen stern live By MIKE WILLIS Ten years ago, when the plain states farmer or the Applachian miner were asked to name their favorite play, the most probable answer w a s "The Grand Ole Opry." But ten years ago there were few Broadway productions that played Cairo, Ill. or Williams- burg, Penn. Today those same towns can boast of local productions from Othello to West Side Story, sym- phonies conducted by Fiedler and Bernstein and other vari- eties of cultural arts, because of the efforts of a group of men w h o began a small television tape warehouse in Ann Arbor 16 years ago. The television tape distribut- ing house has since grown into the world's largest educational mass medium - the National Educational Television network (NET). The NET, originally funded by a 1952 Ford Foundation grant as the Elucational Television and Radio Center (ETRC), lo- cated its headquarters in Anne Arbor "in order to keep the net- work in an intellectualtatmos- phere," according to its first president, Harry Newbern. Though t h e headquarters have since moved to New York, a vital part of the NET opera- tion still remains here.- The departments of duplica- tion and distribution of pro- grams remained at 2715 Pack- ard because Ann Arbor is con- sidered to have a central loca- tion, good transportation acces- ses, and a pool of engineering talent. The Ann Arbor branch hous- es the country's most modern machines for checking and dup- licating master video tapes of programs sent in from affiliat- ed stations. This duplicating operation, the largest in the world, takes up the majority of NFT's space in its offices. But besides duplicat- ing the tapes, this office branch is NET's central command for reshipping the new video repro- ductions to its stations across the country. The-videotape library in the Ann Arbor offices is also the largest of any television network in the world. The library lends NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN TEATRE FOX vilLaGi 375 No. MAPLE RD.-"769-1300 ENDS THURSDAY MON.-THURS.-,7:15-9:15 JUU IEOPGE(. ..the uncommon movie. * STARTS FRIDAY * "HOW TO SAVE A MARRIAGE" video tapes of NET programs to stations that request them. In the past, NET videotapes have been seen in Australia, Japan and Germany, as w e 11 as through the facilities of the British Broadcasting Company. Originally funded as a net-. work simply for the exchange of programs, ETRC developed in a time when many new educa- tional television stations needed programs, and thus soon be- came deeply involved in produc- ing its own. One of its first pro- ductions was a concert by the Minneapolis Symphony. However, though the network worked diligently to produce quality programs, a 'lack of at- tention to the technical aspects of production led to poor quality. According to Howard Town, NET vice-president and Director of Engineering in Ann Arbor, this neglect of the technical aspects of production resulted in programs that were "ama- teur, childish," from a teach- ing standpoint. As a result, NET gained a reputation for dull shows-something that persists even today. After Newbern's resignation in 1958, an attempt to rid the network of its dull reputation began and ETRC was substan- tially reorganized under the leadership of the new president, John P. White. NET moved its programming department to New York and since 1959 it has expanded greatly. In 1960, it had 45 affil- iated stations; in March, 1968, it had 140 and is now growing at the rate of two new stations per month, The Ann Arbor technical branch has experienced a cor- responding growth: in 1959 it employed six persons; now, it employs 50. Though NET"s expansion has been rapid, the network still, faces challenges. The main technical objective at the Ann Arbor branch for' the next few years, according to Town, is to build up a system of cables like commercial networks that will enable NET to transmit pro- grams live to their affiliates. NET would then not have to rely exclusively on the slower 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor NOW SHOWING Feature Wed. -Sat.-Sun. 1-3-5-7-9 Mon.-Tues.-Thurs.-Fri. process of mailing videotape copies to its stations. Steps have already been taken in this di- rection: in January, 1967, NET carried a live broadcast of the State of the Union address and a following commentary by po- litical experts. The network is now pioneer- ing what NET officials consider one of the most ambitious at- tempts to harness television for the public good. Based on sta- tistics which indicate that pre- school children three to six years old watch television 26 hours a week, "Children's TV Workshop" hopes to channel their interest in TV to interests in learning. The one-hour pro- grams, to be about twice a day, will cost eight million dollars, and are targeted for fall, 1969. Glenn 's natural voice than in any composition I've ever ated." .ROD McKUEN S 4 Name Address - , REVOLUTIONARY MUSIC from CHINA on 33!/ LPs Quotations from Moo Tse-tung Set to Music 10" 1.95 -Red Lantern 12" 4 set 11.95 ..Sel. Red Lant. 10" 2 set 3.95 White-Haired Girl 12" 4 set 11.95 Highlights W-H Girl 10" 2 set 3.95 ...._$fichiapang 12" 4 set 1 1.95 .-Six Giant Posters in Color: !'-Ten Mao Picture Badge' ~> * * * 2.00 0 "With every ,age 'Hamlet' takes on a new perspective," according to APA artistic director Ellis Ralb who is directing a startling new version of the play for the seventh Fall Festival of the APA Reper- tory Company here. Rabb's unor- thodox approach to the Shake. spearean 'work opened a two-week run last night at Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre, under the spon- sorship of the University's Pro. fessional Theatre Program. Commenting on Rabb's "Ham- let," which APA may present on Broadway later this season, on Los Angeles critic termed it "a savage and youthful ferment straight out ofa university sit-in or protest march. I found it .a c9mpelling and powerful experi ence." The New York Times also reviewed the new concept With bravos. "In 1968, Hamlet remains a man astonished with the corrupt ed world in which he lives, ternr- fled and amazed by the complex- s ity of values which he has in- herited," Rabb says. , "'Hamlet' the play, like Hamlet V the man, remains as contemporary as the day in which it was writ- ten. Like a prism, the play reveals new aspects of itself as the chang- ing light of time alters the world, and its events reshape the lives we lead." Rabbis creating the new "Ham- let" with three leading players alternating the title role. The unconventional Hamlet will -be portrayed alternately by Marco s St. John, Richard Easton, and e Rabb himself. "Hamlet is subject to many shades of interpretation," Rabb comments. "Different theatrical - values will, of course, be evident with the different artists playing the role." This is merely an extension of ithe 'alternate cast' system that APA has 'been using for years. Just as opera company would not have only one Faust or Madame Butterfly, an experienced repertory theater company should be able to provide more than one artist worthy of, playing Hamlet." "Dressing the production in a mixture of modern and period clothing is a simple device through whicheve hope to suggest a world for the play that is as modern as it is ancient, specific as it is uni- versal, surprising as it is familiar. Shakespeare costumed his pro- ductions in the clothes of his own day, adding to them- only those theatrical elements which would help the audiences define the so- cial position; and emotional cli- mate of the characters. Tickets for "Hamlet" and for third APA production, Sean O'Casey's "Cock-A-Doodle Dandy" (Oct. 15-27), are available at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box office. (Review tomorrow) Send payment with order to CHINA BOOKS & PERIODICALS 2929-24 St., San Francisco, Calif. 94110 Licensed importers and distributors Free catalog on request EACH OF US ALONE Glopi Yarbrough WS 173 WARNER BROS. - SEVEN ARTS, RECORDS INC. .- THIS WEEK Thursday and Friday LA TERA TREMA dir, Luchino Visconti, 1948 Listed as one of the all time ten best by Sight and Sound J1962). Saturday and Sunday PATHS QF. GLORY dir. Stanley Kubrick, 1957 Starring KIRK DOUGLAS From the director of DR. STRANGELOVE & 2001 662-8871 Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558 Signs of Life, directed by Wern- er Herzog, is a mysterious parable of our people (three Germans and one Greek) stationed on a Greek island during World War II. The four are assigned the lonely and boring task of guarding unusable but dangerous ammunition in an abandoned fort - Gradually their leader (Peter Brogle) goes insane and the film culminates in his final and obscure act of defiance. Ierzog's camera has captured light and shadow so effectively that the lethargy of the Greek isles permeates the entire film. But odd and obviously allegorical things continually happen: a gypsy''king' seeks admission to the fort for a night's rest 'after searching for his people for four- teen years', Stroszek (Brogle) wanders into town and discovers a soldier playing the piano which somehow unnerves him, children torture a hen. - - -- Phone 434-0130 .-Aamm Om CARPENT E ROMD OPEN 7:00 P.M. 2k Color by Deluxe Asrwaiw au nO mp" AND... v SHUTTERED} FRM WNER BSS.SEVENARS..RVCOL0R , ;a PUL NEWMAN podcion of :'S F ME ! o Fw wcc~1 l.CRI FROM WARIER BRGSSEVERARSE 'I U m I IMAN NOWl ZMRTTN an 1TTOI ...hsbI~i ~ Andz r...thsFwh'p'. I I I JAWAWLS so NOW I M Mb tm;Jkjldt'jj!j TODAY AT 1, 3, 5,7,9 p.m. "BRILLIANT! Luis Bunuel, a master of cinematic erotica!" -Saturday Review I I SIEY~~S*Mc61YA1"'~ MiFjlA SN RW1DY .. A A aDINTI an a i E Ellis Rubb ROBERT ad RAYMOND Wig present BENUE'' I dE OUR WINNER BEST PICTURE VENICE FILM FESTIVAL f ASTMANGOLOR " Released by AIM AMSTSS' GCES(£0 E09 ATUEE AUOiEH ES ffX!'FN L FUN WORKING IN EUROPE TONIGHT and Every Wednesday at A A HOOT, An endless evening of musical variety with Pamela Mites, Barry O'Niel, Dave Johns, Dave Siglin, Pat Reynolds, Jack Quine and many 4 i others. 1 Hit THURSDAY PETER MEYERS recent executive director of P.A.R. (People Against Racism) speaking on "Protest and Violence: Radical View." FRIDAY and SATURDAY DAVE SIGLIN and PAT REYNOLDS singing traditional and City folk music actompanied by 6 & 12 string guitars and autoharp. i1 SHOWS AT 1:00-3:00-5:00 7:10-9:20 (Feature 10 minutes later) d.ATE PAPER LION t 11111 seemesmpes Wednesday thru Saturday OCTOBER 2-5 GUARANTEED JOBS ABROAD! Get paid, travel, meet people. Summer and' year 'round jobs for young people 17 to 40. 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