Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, December 6, 1968 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY _ cinema-- -- Chicago: The good guys propaganda ii _ . ji L i ,1 i t FRIDAY, DEC. 6 NOON LUNCHEON DISCUSSION BUFFET 25c XEBOX COPIES F~as--Cheap 21i S. State 769-420-12 1217 S. University 769-O6 By HENRY GRIX The Seasons Change, a 60- minute .documentary on last summer's "police riot" in Chi- cago, develops the proposition that America is a totalitarian state, even if it doesn't look like it on Veteran's Day. This seems absurd from the curb of State Street, across from Angell Hall. But the sights and sounds of Chicago's State Street and Michigan Avenue last Au- gust are repulsive and stirring enough to make you believe it. You'd better believe it. The film, made with the joint resources of the American Civil Liberties Union and the Na- tional Mobilization to End the War in Vietnam, and showing for the first time (anywhere) in Ann Arbor this weekend, is, plainly, propaganda. It is an answer to Mayor Daley's television short white washing his police force; it amounts to a whitewash of the demonstrators. It is calculated to convert the conscience-strick- en who would still chose to be- lieve that it can't happen here. It did happen in Chicago for at least a few days last sum- mer. Unfortunately for Mayor Daley and the conscience strick- en, it did happen on film. The whole world has been watching ever since. No matter how 'many times you have heard it, the apparent totalitarian character of Amer- ica is a startling thing to ob- serve. The ACLU-Mobilization films are compiled from CBS footage and their own camera workers. There is nothing real- ly new to see if you watched television, but the juxtaposition of the events in Chicago with the demonstrators and dele- gates make a forceful presenta- tion. Of course, the demonstrators' provocative actions "which took the form of obscene epithets, and of rocks, sticks, bathroom tiles and even human feces hurled at the police," (accord- ing to the Walker investigation report released Sunday) are, conspicuously absent. All the protesters are revealed as "Om" breathing, watermelon-munch- lng gentle folk, harrassed by police brutality. But according to the Walker Report, and clearly; on film, the demonstrators were indeed bru- talized by police. Despite the propaganda quality of the do- cumentary-indeed because of; it-the film should be seen. "Chicago was the last gasp of those who want to suppress so- cial change, or the first step of the unraveling of this country," one demonstrator asserts. Structured with such sensa- tional comments, the document- ary derives its punch from the fact that the speakers are come- ly, serious ministers, a wide- eyed plump teenager and a soft- voiced McCarthy aide who calls himself "politically naive." There is even Ann Kerr, a member of British Parliament whose arrest would have been a ludicrous sham if she hadn'it been maced by the cop who shoved her in the paddywagon However, the fihn is notable for not taking sensaionl ot shots at personaliies involved. Despite apparent blunderings, Daley is never maligned, nor is police operations director Depu- ty Superintendent Rochod And significantly,. te oly character to call the police "pigs" is a slight'y d:unk busi- man, who was shoved fro a bar. "I'm not one of those Yip- pies," he says. The Yippies, incidentally, have their "official statement" tagged on the end of The Sea- son Change. Following the awe- somni social comment, the Youth International Party is able to make slapstick fun of the head- splitting acts of the police., Chicago is turned into a modern myth, juxtaposed with Vintage sequences from D. W. Grifitlfs Intolerance. What they're objecting to, the Yip- pies complain to their candidate (a Pig) "the American dream has been betrayed." In other words, both films are memorable, if distorted, slices of history that no one should forget. Both will be shown tonight, Saturday and Sunday at the Fifth Forum at 11 p.m. Earlier showings will be at 7 and 8:30 p.m. in the First Meth- odist Church on State Street. And Saturday, the film will show at the same time at Tap- pan Junior High School. FRIDAY EVENING 6P. M. L GUILD DINNER (at cost) FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 662-5189 I I THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 11:00 P.M. separate admission !WORLD PREMIERE! * r "SEASONS CHANGE" THE BengATTLE OF CHICAGO0 Feature length-revolutionary I ;> MAD MARVIN PRESENTS UNDERGROUND FILMS AT THE Vth FORUM 5th Avenue at Liberty 761-9700 Daily-Andy Sacks i *! THURSDAY and FRIDAY Directed by Joseph von Sternberg 1930 GARY COOPER MARLENE DIET RICH 7:00 & 9:05 NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN TIITRE . LIMITE D F1H au-a~~ Pra ENA GEEN 375 No.MAPLE RD.-769-3 E AN J EGA AEtu Mobilization and A.C.L.U.'s answer to Mayor Daley's telecast This will not be shown on T.V. in this area ! PLUS ON THE SAME PROGRAM: " OH DEM WATERMELONS-highly acclaimed film that turned thousands on to the underground film movement. An examination of stereotyped Negro sensual- ity. Starring "The Watermelon." " PORTRAIT OF LYDIA-first prize 1964 Cannes Film Festival. A succession of sexual images and symbols. "A rmust for any art overM.M. " KENNY S FIRST VACATION-recommended for liberal minded adults; 2nd prize 1967 Chicago Art Institute. W. C. FIELDS at his guaranteed best in: "THE FATAL GLASS OF BEER" c UNDERGROUND NEWSREEL-"RIOT CONTROL WEAPONS" the first in a continuing series our continuing BUCK ROGERS Space Serial-Chap. 2 COME EARLY TO BE GUARANTEED A SEAT "This is our best program yet"-Mad Marvin benefit for Committee to End the War in Vietnam NEXT WEEK: PROTEST FESTIVAL I st Time in Ann Arbor BLACK POWER and BLACK PANTHER with Huey Newton, Eldridge Cleaver, and Stokely Carmichael f ' _and other anti-war films IS A GROOVY MOVIE WAS MADE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE WAS MADE WITH YQUNG PEOPLE STARRING RICHARD HARRIS 2 SONG HITS ON KEENER ALSO STARS VANESSA REDGRAVE STAR OF "BLOW UP" CO-STARS DAVID HEMMINGS WHO ALSO STARRED "BLOW UP" & "BARBARELLA" IT'S A MOD-MEDIEVAL LOVE-IN HAPPENING NOW AT THE MICHIGAN THEATRE 41 P SIT Y ~ E UN IR'1 ADMITTED TO TEE T S 4G THE SHOWING MOVIE! RAYMOND SI. JAlUVES KEVIN MON FR O- 7 5-9:2- FEATURE Mh.-FRI.--i-:20 TIMES SA .- 3:00-5:10-7:5-9:20 TIMESSUN.---1] :00-3 :00-5S :10-7 :15-9 :20 *p IiPA I ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 662-8871 75c KAPPA PHI ALPHA present N I English Language Film Festival NO LOVE FOR JOHNNIE p FRMATUE AUDIENCES I and MEN 0 WAR 9:00 P.M. Sat.. Dec. 7 Only 75c Newman Center Basement 331 Thompson TAKE AN EXAM BREAK Ann Arbor Junior Light Opera Presents '4 NEW}tMUSICAL JUST RELEASED FROM BROADWAY! (eud on the film, "The World of Henry Orient' Wednesday--Saturday 11-14 December TRUEBLOOD THEA TRE-8 P.M. Box Office Open Daily at 1 :30 P.M. beginning Mon., Dec. 9 .L Ii Long Day's Journeyt Into Night" by EUGENE O'NEIL I 9f C ! " i 'd :- $,~ f Wild, bizarre, free wheeling. Howlngly funny."-N. Y. Times Fri., Dec.6 The Endless Summer Dazzling ode to sun, sand and surf."-Time Sat., Dec. 7 Elvira Madigan "Perhaps the most beautiful movie in history." New Yorker Sun., Dec. 8 I! S Waved Goodbye "A marvelous movie." The New Yorker Mon., Dec. 9 -Nothing BAMan 'A great mouie. A revolution in the cinema."--Life Tues., Dec. 10 ', ~0 3 ' .NT7 M:: sip. Em~~ -N 4