Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY .Saturday, November 9, 1968 __eT.TH IHGA AL ,..t.,,d.,. . November. 9. .,. '1968.. cinema Bunuel s bitter Bach's cantatas fare well at Hill with Chamber Choir unclear passion N- ONAL eENFPAI COR~PORATON FO-x -ASTERN TiIATRE-,I 10H VILLarE 375 No. MAPLE RD.769-1300 MON.-THUR. - 8:00 FRI. ---6:30-9:15 SUN-i :00-3:45-6:30-9:15 SAT-3 :45-6:30-9:15 Unlike other classics West Side Story" grows younger! By HENRY GRIX The haggard Christ figure is a fixture of contemporary art, crucified most recently in the APA's Hamlet and in Cool Hand Luke. That Luis Bunuel's bitter re- telling of the myth of Jesus of Nazareth pre-dated Paul New- man can perhaps explain its heavy-handedness, but it cannot save it from seeming uninspir- cd. Nazarin, now showing at the Fifth Forum, is a smeared car- bon of the Old Testament, which preaches an overheard gospel; Christ was really a mas-' ochist whose philosophy of self- denial promises only self-des- truction. This time, the Nazarene is from Spain, transplanted in Mexico and living, as always, in an unreal world. Unfortunately, the director never fully defines and develops the credibility gap which exists between Christians and their Christ even in the mystical world of nineteenth century Mexico. Bunuel's forceful characters are the products of the real world: the saintly whores; sweat- ty colonels and petty bourgeois who populate the Mexican pro- vinces. However, the camera fails to exploit the detail of peasant hovels and merely scans the panorama of cathedral plazas, which from the vital backdrop for Bunuel's updated p a s s i o n, play. The acting is at times second rate, which must be expected with the prosaic lines the play-' ers are given to recite. Bunuel, who helped adopt his screenplay from a noval, and quite evident- ly\ from the Spanish idiom of the New Testament and the Quixote, staged his drama to the point of denying its life. The Nazarin's great flaw is that Father; Nazaro and, his world arehdead from the begin- ning. Isolated episodes like the fight between the whores, the Last Supper dialogue between priest and disciples, the over- whelming ending, are moving and vital, but they stand alone, distinct from what precedes and what follows. This episodic approach is, of course, in the manner of the New Testament. Bunuel illustra- tes in Biblical style that the Christian life is a series of meaningless segments, not even united ,by a consistent or satis- fying philosophy. But the di- rector succeeds at displaying, above all, incoherence. Seg- ments end; tales intertwine; the characters travel from town to town, do good, are beaten, pray, all without cause and effect. Part of the film's problem is obviously a skimpy budget. The disappointing camera work, the choppy editing and poor acting are the result of Bunuel n o t having enough money to make an elaborate, Belle de, Jour in 1958,. However, much of the poor camera work, the dull screen- play and stagey acting point more clearly to Bunuel's inept- ness in 1958. At the same time, Bunuel's pessimistic Christ myth has its redeeming features.,Notably, the film avoids becoming trapped in satire on the pharasaical clergy, and concentrates instead on shooting barbs at the earnest Father Nazario (Francisco Ra- bal - ironically the aging con- man of Belle de Jour). As the film progresses, Rabal's straightforward and impressive acting acquires the psychologi- cal complexity of a man yearn- ing, but hesitant, to play God. At first, he spouts platitudes with regularity and sincerity and is repulsed when adored as a saint by hysterical women. Al- though the camera work and subplots undercut Rabal's por- trayal, he is perfectly, passively Christ-like for most of the film. Blissfully ignorant of the cor- ruption around him, the priest lives with his two female dis- ciples and preaches sermons of love. Never does he realize it is not the Word they want, but the Word made flesh. However, in the final minutes of the film, to the terrifying, exciting drum beat of a Spanish passion play, Nazario is crush- ed by the brutal futility of his imitation of Christ. Deprived of his apostles (who are better off without him), the father tries to act dignified, priest-like and avoid the temp- tation to beg ("All things be- long to those who need them.") But he succumbs, and marches on, a prisoner, condemned to die stupidly, worthlessly. Bun- uel has made his point. By JIM PETERS, The University Chamber Choir was on the wrong road in its concert last night at Hill Aud. But, in time, conductor Thomas Hilbish found a road map and things turned out pretty well. The chorale music of Bach was the fare in three cantatas from a relatively late series, numbers 130, 150, and 191. With these works the troubles which can arise are many. Due to the really professional level of the' singers, most of the vocal troub- les, however, were non-existent. I found much fault with the orchestra in the beginning of the concert. The awful intona- tion of the violins was enough to destroy the first cantata at its very beginning; I listened to the singers and ignored the or- chestral group until they found their proper place. Thankfully it didn't take them too long. The first cantata, "Aus d e r Tiefe," starts out with a slow orchestral and then choral in- troduction, moving quite grad- ually into the main body of the piece with a very careful trans- ition to a fast section. 4 Bass Joseph Long's w a r m lyrical voice conveyed the pow- er of Bach's musical line in his bass aria. His warm tones were sure, and he was dramatic enough to be completely suc- cessful. But this was the problem with the tenor aria which fol- lowed. Jerrold Vandershaaf has a beautiful voice; it is clear and clean in the low tones and nev- er sharp even in high sections. But he just stood there and mouthed the lyrics and followed the score to the letter without any emotion or expression. He was a real disappointment, but the chorus itself remained fairly capable throughout the first piece. Both of these arias are backed by choral comments and Hilbish kept the balance, intact. Despite the problems in the strings, there were some stars in in the orchestra. The continuo was excellent; both the harp- sichordist and the cellist did some perfect work last night. I marveled at some furious cello lines which were executed with ease. ,Cantata 150, "Nach dir, Herr, verlangt mich," called for more violins with no viola part at all. This cantata with its aus- tere instrumentation begins with a. strangely emotional opening chorus; starting and stopping, hesitating, it changes tempi in an almost conversa- tional style. Soprano Linda Oakley has a small fragile voice; her aria, however, was short, and her voice never strained in the quickly turning sections of her piece. The final offering, termed Cantata 191, is an adaptation of the "Gloria" from Bach's Mass in B minor. Fusing the opening section from this piece with a short "Gloria PatriV' sec- tion based on the "Cum Sancto Spiritu" of the "Gloria," Bach had another cantata to use when he was pressed for time. With full ensemble and full 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsildnti and Ann Arbor This is a Remarkable Motion Picture Based on fact chorus, the piece moved along with power and stateliness. Fin- ally all the diverse and warring elements came together; every- one was working together and working Well. But when you give dedicated people the music of Bach, good things usually hap- pen. ARK FILM SO(IETY Jean Renoir's THIS LAND IS MINE with Charles Laughton J Maureen O'Harq George Sanders MONDAY, NOV. 11 7:30 P.M. MIRISCH PICTURES presents PANA VISIONk TECHINICOLOR Re-released thru United Artists at the ARK 1421 Hill Read and Use Daly "Classifieds *1 D.IAL 5-6290 JfMT Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:05 Young at Canterbury THIS IS THE TRUE STORY OF THE SELF-CONFESSED BOSTON STRANGLER. 20th ntury-Fox presentts TH wlth BOSTON STRANGLER TONY CURTIS HENRY FONDA Next: "CAMELOT" eil Young, former singer/comp uffalo Springfield, appears this Canterbury House. Many respecte retrospect as one of the best Ame Young, with an anticipated album own. 'rTv.:v::" : s r.. ...S.....vv.. . . DAILY OFFICIAL Bi . . ..... . . . ... .................. ....... . The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication;of the Univer- sity of lMichigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3528 L.S,&A. Bldg. before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publi- cation and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General No- tices tay be published a maximum of two times on request; Day Cal- .endar items appear only once. Stu- dent organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more ,information call 764-9270.' SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9 tives and friends in Michigan League Ballroom at 4:00 p.m. Please enter League at west entrance. Tickets: Four to each prospective{ graduate, to be, distributed from Mon- day, December 2, to 1:00 p.m. Saturday, December 14, at the Diploma Depart- ment, 555 L. S. & A, Building, except on Saturday, December 7, when office will; be closed. Saturday, December 14, office will be open from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Academic Costume: May be rented atj Moe Sport Shop, 711 North University Avenue. Orders should be placed im- mediately, and MUST be placed before Noveniber 29. Assembly for Graduates: at 1:00 p.m. in Natural Science Auditorium. Mar- sheals will direct graduates to proper, oser/guitarist for the vanished weekend as a solo performer at ed critics view the Springfield in rican bands of all time, and now a, is doing some nice stuff on hisA .m SATURDAY and SUNDAY ULLETIN VIVRE SA VIE written and directed by Jean-Luc Godard Follett Corporation, Easton, Pa.: Pro- .<"Vivre Sa Vie is a tour duct Design Engineer, BSME and 3 de style almost as start- yrs, design on appliances, office or iong as breathless f vending machines. I "o snetiles Wayne County Health Department eNot Since Stllers came Mich.: Nurses in Public Health, R.N era turned to store at regis. in Mich., BS in Nursing, exper GarbO has a man made not necess. Monroe County Council of Camp such searing love with a Fire Girls, Monroe, Mich.: Executive lens Director, BA and 3-5 years work in personnel or related agency, or a MSW or MA in approp. area and 2-3 years exper, some supervisory. Other positions of specialist, and director na- Starring ANNA KARINA, SUMMER PLACEMENT Mde. Godard (above) SERVICE The storyof a Porisienne 212 $.A.B., Lower Level sales epartment Of The Interiod. A girl forced by pov chorage, Alaska. Fir~e Control, Smoke erty to turn to prOstitu- Jumper, and surveying aid applic. .ac- tion. ceped from now through Jan. 1. General Electric Co., Chicago Heights, Ill.: Assembly line work for men from 7:00 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE Dec..6 to Jan. 9. Good pay. Must live6 in south-suburb Chicago. 662-8 AUDITORIUM Next application date for summer jobs in federal government agencies is )ec 6. 6 X i t i i --SEE-- guitarist -singerof the Buffalo Springfield alive and in person at ALSO: SingOut magazine with BOB DYLAN TOIEFREE exclusive and 8:00 EATS interviewonsale NOW! I SUNDAY-..--W! SU 20th Centwy-Fot STRANGLER Pana.s,o,' Cocos tOe ue -MA'~ Da Cstatis Day CaQndarPrograms: will be distributed at Hill Auditorum.- Football: U-M vs. $llinois: Michigan Candidates who qualify for a doc- Stadium, 1:30 p.m. . toral degree from the iGraduate School Cinema Guild: Jean-Luc Godards and who attend the graduation exercise Vivre Sa Vie: Architecture Auditor- .ill be presented a hood by the Uni- ium, 7:00 and 9:05 pm. versity at the ceremony. School; of Music Joint Conicert: Uni- versity Men's Glee Club - Philip DueyP Conductor; University of Illinois Men'sG Glee Club: Hill Auditorium, 7:00 and ' 3200 S.A.B. 9:00 p.m. GENERAL DIVISION School of Music Degree Recital: i ii ;i i i1 Michael Jones, Viola: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. Russian Circle Movie: "Peter the First," Part I, Multipurpose Room, UGLI, 8:00 p.m. eneral Notices (9roadcastilng Service: W.UOM Radio (91.7 Me.) 11. a.m. to 11 p.m. daily. Sunday 12 Noon to 6 p.m. Saturday 1:15 p.m. Football: U-M vs. Illinois, with Tom Hemingway reporting from Ann Arbor. Saturday 9:30 p.m. The Record Collector, with Prof. Warren Good. Sunday 1:30 pm. What Must Be Done - "Money Sources" (Part 1), with Osborne Elliott, Newsweek;, Dr. Vivian Henderson, President, Clark College, Atlanta; and Dr. Dick Netzer, N.Y. University. Sunday 2:00 p.m. Cleveland Orchestra Concert - Louis Lane con- ducting. - TV Center program: On Sunday, No- vember 10 the following program pro- duced by the TV Center will have its initial telecast in Detroit: 12:00 Noon, WWJ TV, Channel 4 - "The Aphasia Story." An account of a tragic disease and efforts to rehabilitate victims at U-M Speech Clinic, WINTER COMMERCEMENT,. EXERCISES December 14, 1968 To be' held at 2:00 p.m. in Hill Audi- torlum. Exercises will conclude about 4:00 p.m. All graduates of the 1968 fall term may attend. Reception for graduates ,their rela-I Current Position Openings received by General Division by mail and phone, not interviews on campus, call 764-7460, or come to Placement Service for ap- plication procedures, I Mt. S ixyi Hospital of Cleveland, Ohio : Positions ' for Chem.,Bio. Bacteriol., Physics, for med. technicians, and dieti- tianS, in areas of Nursing, 0cc. and "Phys. therapy, Social Work, Lab, and research. Electro-Mechanical Corporation, of Sayre, Pa.: Project Design, Electronic,h Stress Anal., and weight engineers, 2-4 years and approp. degrees. National League for Nursing, Inc., N.Y.C,: MA and several years teaching in specializations of maternal-child, medical-surgical, psychiatric nursing,, and nat'l. sci. areas. MA necess. Jackson County, Missouri, Kansas City area: Social service worker, MSW, superviser counseling' and placement activities. Girl Scouts of U.S.A., Chicago, Ill.: Assistant Personnel Specialist, BA. and! admin exper. in this area. Methods' and Procedures Analyst, BA and work in manual syst. Systems Research Laboratories, Day- ton, Ohio*: Multidiscipline R&D work for BSE/MSE in electro-mechanical, in- strumentation, data syst., engrg. serv., adpoduct operations. an prMarn Incorporated, Southfield, Mich.: Seeks engrs with some expert for project work. IStateof Washington, Microbiologist, BA and lab work, 3 yrs. exper. State of Connecticut: Staff Develop- ment Instructor, MSW and 1 yjar supv. work with case supervisors, Schedule of the Ni fty 650 I1 Sun Noon 6 pm 7 pm 7:30 9:00 11:00 11:15' 11 :30 Signoff Mon Tue Wed Thr Fri Sat ROCK FORUM news sports folkways ROCK FORUM':* news sports S NEWS R O C K NEWS SPORTS ROCK C E L L A R NEWSN SPORTS NEW NEWS SPORTS OLD MIDNITE HITS SPECIAL FORUM "NAZARIN is one of the great films of Bunuel's career.. . And made me remember something Bunuel once said: 'To show with a cold white eye what they have done here on earth in the name of God."' -Penelope Gilliatt, The New Yorker "STUNNING-A movie that really glows ... the thing for you to see!" -Judith Crist, Today S owWNBC "An amazingly strong film with earmarks of a classic. It should endure as one of his best, most significant works. An exception- al film to savor more than once. -William Wolf, Cue "More Bunuel than 'Belle de Jour' . . Bunuel is one of the most audacious, single minde dand creative directors in the history FEROCIOUS NSATIRE ...A 'MUST SEE' TOP GRADE PICTURE!" -David Goldman, WCBS plus classic short by Luis Bunuel and Salvador Dali The ANDALUSIAN DOG'j A I s ice! i _.... ! -' ! I I I I 1,%" : 1i F' WE DON'T DISCRIMINATE! -But you'll have to wait your turn-! of the cinema." ---N.Y. Times I.-" I I "The enormous power of NAZARIN will leave you limp ... it shouldn't be missed by any lover of fine cinema art." -Frances Taylor, Long Island Press "No one interested in cinema today, can af- ford to miss it ... a starkly, simple, beauti- ful parable, which is visually' a Goya etch- Sat & Sun, 3, 5, 7, 9 ti0 4r '"C .1. THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD * ng - -Bernard L. Drew, Hartford Times ,LIlS RIJNIF L3C