Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 1, T968 }ag To.TE.ICIGAIDIL Fridayv. N vemerr . Iy19r .1 cinema Tom's other bastard brother Benjamin By HENRY GRIX Benjamin, now showing at the Fifth Forum, makes you long for the days when "love was like the unicorn, when beautiful women cried if you lied and told them they were ugly, when there were two pairs of legs in every basket and two bodies in every bed. Sound like Tom Jones? It is. But not so good because Benja- min does not really mean it. The film is a satire on the sat- ire and finally ends up unsure of and .not believing in itself. A movie .that fails to trust the obvious merits of sumptuous colors, bare breasts and Cath- erine Deneuve cannot be all good. And, of course, it can't be all bad. Benjamin is hilariously bawdy' during its first half. Although it lacks the remarkable camera which inspired the.English land- scapes of Tony Richardson's film, Michel Deville's chateau country is revealed as a sort of pastoral paradise, an unreal world of picnics on the grass and orgies in the barn. If you were raised in this at- mosphere, you might become "a French Tom Jones." But Ben- jamin (Pierre Clementi), "an early orphan,l' has spent his 17 years alone, with his mentor, - ± U.S. war deserters find Sweden livable and it is not until he visits his aging, but ravishing, aunt (Mi- chele Morgan) that he realizes his tutor taught him nothing. Thus he is Jones' antithesis, and his story is "the diary of an in- nocent young boy." Benjamin is the perfect pawn for satire on satire. What he doesn't know mocks the lewd. satirical suggestions of Tom Jones. "What is desire?" he e. wonders. "I a will teach you to desire passion like an apple," the buxom servant pants, and her downcast eyes suggests she means two apples. "How can one 'make' a senti- ment?'' Benjamin asks the Ma- dame de Chartres. She stares at the adolescent, dumbfounded. Since the opportunity is too perfectly available for Benja- min to learn how to "make" a Isentiment, he never manages to share his bed until the end of the film. This is appropriately ironic, and it provides the di- rector with a chance to have some fun. Indoctrinating Benjamin in the way of the libertine, the boy's uncle (I'm not your un- cle,: I'm your aunt's lover) be- comes his pedagogue. A Tom Jones, twenty years later, the rogueish "uncle" (Michel Pic- coli) reflects the brooding bore- dom of a man who "always eats before I'm hungry" and hun- gers after women he does not love because they are the spice of life. (while Benjamin is struggling to lose his innocence, in the straw). "Uncle" acquires a ter- rible passion for Anne, who re- sponds. The countess cries and cuts her hand on a goblet (It was only a scrotch). 'You don't mind my not loving you," Miss Deneuve sighs as she sleeps with Benjamin to spite the adoring rake. "I wasn't thinking of it," Benjamin an- swers. All this would be the most pungent satire, if it were not played for phychological real- ism. The cast do not mimic themselves, or deadpan; they actually "feel" their parts. Such bitterness is out of place in a pagan garden of pleasures. The beginning was better. CINEMA II "THE LOVED ONE". JONATHAN WI NTERS ROD STE IGER "Va Va Voom"-Wanda NOVEMBER 1-2 Fri-Sat.-7-9 CINEMA II Aud A Angell 75c Jon-heDalySprtSa--~- Join The Daily Sports Staff H ILLEL DELI HOUSE 1429 H il l Street SUNDAY at 6:00 P.M. "JEWISH ISSUES IN 1968 ELECTIONS" $1 Members; $1 .25 Non-Members 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti ond.Ann Arbor This is a Remarkable Motion Picture Based on fact THE BOST'ON STRANGLER (Continued from Page 1) And so they became readers, not just the former college students-- who by no means are the domin- ant group-but "even those who probably hadn't read more than one whole book in their entire lives." But reading certainly isn't all. They have, as well, lives to live, and much has to be done. Few think very much about the distant future, expecting to live in Sweden for some time, but all expecting to return to the United States eventually. But the necessities of life in Sweden don't give them, that much time to think of it.. Despite receiving benefits from the government-eighteen dollars Despite receiving benefits from the government - eighteen dollars a month plus a housing allowance -it 7s little more than a sub- sistence allowance and work has to be done. The governments of France and Sweden are the only two which are open about granting asylum to re- serters and, resistors - they have about 40 and 150 deserters, re- spectively. Other European coun- tries (Belgiun, Netherlands and Italy) are known to have some de- serters, but they allow them only on the condition that they refrain from publicizing their presence. Sweden, oit the other hand, despite cordial relations. with the, United' States, is at least decent to the deserters, if not actually encour- aging. Recipients of "humanitarian asylum," the status deserters re- ceive, have complete political free- dom in Sweden, but not in France where they are barred from any political. activity. Besides having few common denominators personally, their sources are diverse. There were deserters from all the services, but the Marines seemed to be rep- resented out of proportion to their numbers. Blacks also seem to be repre- sented well, roughly in proportion to their numbers in the services- about 20 per cent. Sax says they did not seem to have any special difficulties. Life is not easy in either coun- try. Jobs are hard to find both in Paris and Stockholm, and many of the jobs available are menial. Language is a problem in both countries, one which the Swedish government is working actively to overcome. It is willing to pay stu- (dents a stipend, larger than the benefits they would ordinarily re- ceive, for learning the language. "They're encouraging the resisters to become 'productive citizens'", Sax says. And they are admittedly lonely. "They were really glad to talk to us,'" Sax says, "They really wanted to know that someone in the States cared about them." Despite the problems, perhaps or because of them, the .deserters and resisters seem to be, psycho- logically at least, on solid ground. "I had expected them to be in a kind of stupor," Sax admits, "but there is about them, as a whole, quite a feeling of vitality. They have satisfied themselves, after much thought, that they have done the right thing. It gives them a certain sense of personal secur- ity. That's' what they have in com- mon." I SATURDAY, NOV. 9 7:00 and 9:30 Hill Auditorium LAST DAY OF BLOCK SALES Hill Auditorium Box Office I. The film's funniest moments follow Piccoli and Clementi on Open 8:00-6:00 Mon-Sat a one day romp through the countryside. Benjamin learns MAIL ORDERS STILL ACCEPTED how to insult the lovely, lyingSa orphan, Anne (Miss Deneuve), Send checks and Self-addressed envelope to: seduce the nymph-like Madame Michigan Men's Glee Club de la Tour, invade the orphan's bedroom, and then ask "What'll 6044 Administration Bldg Ann Arbor we do next?" Please Specify 7:00 or 9:30 Performance What we do next plagues the director. Deville shifts gears, $2.50 $2.00 $1 .50 changing his film from a bawdy satire to a more subtle and life- INDIVIDUAL SALES START MONDAY, NOV. 4 less comedy of manners. Tragic things happen. The barn burns --_-- COMMANDER CODY And His LOST PLANET AIRMEN 000000'000G I E COUNTRY and WESTERN SWING etc. at 6}IERBU Y") OUSE TON ITE and Sat. $1.00 doors open at 8 p.m NOW ! DIAL 5-6290 NOW! _______3 _____________ Shows at 1, 3, 5,7,9 P.M. This is the story of the self- confhssed Boston Stran aler .. SrIarkahle motion picture based on fac! This is the madness. The panic. The search for answers. Why this man? Why did 13 women open their doors willingly to him? The result is a film that is not what you expected. c5MarqcArqx Gieceart is a'Londy'Hunte JA;Z , SAC OX C0V~li-I*IMPU W"I SONDRA LOCKE os~egageer~~s~l aurrwgtuStw1ttMS C + ga usan aMm sr wo.grt aUxft Ew ,~e foML~ 01 M~gMS~m + INDIA STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION, ANN ARBOR. INVITES YOU TO ITS ANNUAL FUNCTION Deepawali Celebration THE FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS. Enjoy Indian Music, Dances, and Sweets Everybody Welcome. Bring Your Friends, Too. Admission: 50c per head 7:00 P.M. SUNDAY, NOV. 10 at FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH of Ann Arbor, 1432 Washtenaw Ave. 1 :oE- :00-A:0 7:10-9:30 BIG erd WEEK NO 2-6264 TATE Ilj I I i Unlike other classics West Side Story grows younger! 4 PICTURE!" tyiner of tC Academy Awards! _ -, w 2 EXCITING NEW PLAYS! A powerful and prophetic An imaginative and platy by the dainzigyoung provocative new play by hliberaleader.the author of 1Blackboard Jungle. THE WORLD PREMIERE:OF 00 byb IVAN KLIMA b Adaptedby RUTH WILLARD EVAN HUNTER TUES., DEC. 3 -SUIN., DEC. 8' MON., FEB. 3 -SAT., FEB. 8 M*&M SU O,''WEST SIDE STORY" ROBERT WISE 'o.,cso. AS5,.4NATALIE WOOD NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORTO FOX EASTERN THEATRESm FOHVILLe6E 375 No. MAPLE RD. 769.1300 MON.-FRI. 8:00 SUN. 1:00-3:45-6:30-9:15 SAT. 3:45-6:30-9:15 FRIDAY-NOV. 1-ONE SHOWING 11:00 P.M.. A Realistic Film that Could Happen Julie jOskar ChristieJ Werner first role since her & winner of the 20hCer-Faxpreent I WAr Directed by I l I I