THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, January 10, 1969 I I r a - f _ l ,. ... cinema 4n abominable box of 'Candy' Medical Science I: Seventeen years late Candy, now at the Fox Vil- lage, teaches you lessons. Number one: American movie- goers have advanced to the point where sex for its own sake is no longer to entertain. Number two: The bastard- ization of fine literary proper- ties by leering, box office-mind- ede producers is continuing on a repulsively large scale. Number three: A normally fine screenwriter like Buck Henry (The Graduate) is never- thless given the right come-on, able to flop abysmally and em- barrassingly. Number four: Even a totally tasteless, inept director like Christian1-Marquand cannot ruin ,the performance of an excep- tional actor. And of all of Candy' lessons, only number four is a happy one. Richard Burton, Walter Mat- thau, James Coburn, and Mar- Ion Brando were given the op- portunity in this wholly repul- sive vehicle to prove that despite the greatest collection of insur- mountable obstacles, they could still shine for their brief mo- ments on screen. That it had to be that way is really a shame. Never before had I wanted to like a movie as much ae I.wished to with Candy; the Terry Southern-Mason Hof- fenberg book was a comic mas- terpiece that I've long cher- ished, and there seemed to be little reason for it to be a fail- ure as a film -especially with that kind of cast. But the mat- Hunter play postponed The world premiere of Evan Hunter's new play, The Con- juror, has been /postponed until the week of Nov. 3, Robert C. Schnitzer, executive director of the Professional Theatre Pro- gram, announced yesterday. A major star, who was not able to reschedule current com- mitments to come to Michigan for the previously announced February date, plans to partici- pate next fall. Hunter, author of The Black- board Jungle, will come to Ann Arbor in the autumn to work on the preparation of his play with director Marcella Cisney. Both director and author felt that the production would benefit by additional time for script revi- sions arid casting. Work on film- ing required for the complex production, which employs rear screen projection integrated with live staging and utilizes a large cast, also requires further time. Patrons who purchased tickets for The Conjuror at a discount by subscribing the New Play Series will. still get the discount if they hold their tickets for the production next fall. Re- funds may be obtained at the PTP ticket office if desired. ter-of-fact irony that so char- acterizes Southern's work was perverted into cheap burlesque; the good performances of the four actors mentioned above al- most drowned in the remaining muck. What Marquand and his Rome-based staff did, basically, was pander to the kind of humor that should be confined to lock- er rooms and the back of the expensive magazines at the Blue Front. Aunt Liv, who in the book was a gross-cut gem with a super-suburban libido, in the film is expected to score simply by tossing off ill-timed and banal one-liners that appeal to sniggering voyeurism, not to humor. Candy talentless, but pretty, Ewa Avlin herself is a character blown to the super- human qualities of an Every- woman by Marquand's framing of the film in a starry trip through the cosmos-in the book, she became universal en- tirely on her own merits. And the four good perform- ances: Burton's brilliance as Mac Phisto the Welsh poet (re- member? The character was once the subline Prof. Mephisto) sufers by the needless intrusion of non-actor Sugar Ray Robin- son as a shuffle-mah-feet chauffeur. Matthau is a new character, a right-wing Air Force general, and he plays the role well; but it is a direct crib from George C. Scott and Keen- an Wynn in Dr. Strangelove. Coburn is given the best ma- terial, and performs ably; that it goes on too long can be blamed only on the director. The best of the lot, though, is Bran- do, who is a fake guru who lapses into hilarious Bronxese when his transcendental genti- lity flops. But his scene drags too long, comes too late, and is diluted by a massive collection of incidental irrelevancies that merely allow the producers the chance to shove in a relieving intermission. There's so much to say, but the film just isn't worth it. (Continued from Page 1) been enlarged. The nursing school has tripled in size. One important advantage of the new Medical Science II building is that for the first time since 1869, when the whole Med- ical School was on central cam- pus, both the science and the clinical departments will be to- gether. When Medical Science II is completed, hopefully for next fall, the science departments- physiology, anatomy, and micro- biology-will be able to move there from the East Medical building on East University Street. The College of Pharmacy will then move into East Medical from the Chemistry and Phar- macy building. The Pharmacy Research building is connected to East Medical and it will be more convient for the college to be located near it. x Subscribe To ITHE MICHIGAN DAILY poetry, and prose Kos-inski coming on Monday This year's first writer-in-res- idence, Jerzy Kosinski, will takej up residence in Alice Lloyd begin- ning Jan. 13. Despite the bill- boards which proclaim his arrival yesterday, Kosinski will not begin his week of lectures and discus- sions until Monday. The 35-year-old author of two novels and of two works of non- fiction under the name of Joseph Novak, has won glowing praise for his work. Born in Poland in 1933, Kosinski learned no English until his arrival in the United States in 1957. Nevertheless considerable attention has focused on his shiovels,, The Painted Bird and i6teps. The first is the horrifying "first person, presumably autobiographi- cal narrative of a young boy's brutalizing experiences in Poland during World War II. It evoked a landscape and people-not Nazis but Polish peasants, anyone-who had become almost wholly devoid of compassion and whose nurtur- ing instinct such as it had ever been, had been almost wholly dis- placed by a kind of mindless, call- ous sadism," according to a New York Times book review. In his own pamphlet on The Painted Bird, Kosinski described the work as "the author's vision of himself as a child, a vision not a revisitation of childhood . . . the result of the slow unfreezing of a mind long gripped by fear .st Stanley Kaufman flatly stated "It is one of the best works of literature to have come out of the European horror." Undoubtedly due to the success of his first novel, which came out in paperback in 1966, critics paid careful attention to the release of Kosinski's newer work, Steps, re- leased at the end of last year. Kaufman reserved homage for, Steps, as a book "so scorchingly personal that it is unique. "It pushes into extraordinary inner chambers, echoing and ap- paling. . . Some of the episodes suggest Babel, some a darker Din- esen, some de Ma'upassant. .It is a strongly sexual novel; it is also a novel about terror, killing, fear, politics, and the scraping-out of some little plateaus of tranquility in a sliding-climbing existence. .. The physica power of Kosin- ski's prose is reflected in the au- thor's varied artistic interests. Part of his lecture time will be spent exploring parallels between film and fiction. Kosinski is scheduled to discuss the German classic M which will be shown from 4-6 p.m. in the Architecture Aud. next Monday and Tuesday. His evening lecture Tuesday will also be pre- ceded by a film, Eisentein's fam- ous Odessa steps montage from The Battleship Potemkin. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan,.48104. Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. FRIDAY, JANUARY 10 RABBI JAMES GORDON OF YOUNG ISRAEL OF OAK WOODS SPEAKS at the FIRST HILLEL SABBATH SERVICE OF THE SEMESTER 7:15 P.M. on "PREMARITAL SEX AND THE JEWIISH MORAL, CODE" SATURDAY, JANUARY 11 RABBI GORDON ALSO SPEAKS AT SHALOSH SEUDOT at 12:30 on: "WHAT INGREDIENT DOES JUDAISM OFFER A HAPPY MARRIAGE?" TO ATTEND THE LUNCHEON, AS WELL AS THE TALK, RESERVATIONS MUST BE MADE IN ADVANCE WITH THE KOSHER KO-OP 663-4129. SUNDAY, JANUARY 12 ISRAELI FOLK DANCING at 2-4 DELI PLUS at 5:30 FIRST DELI OF THE SEMESTER PLUS AN INFORMAL MIXER GRAD MIXER at 8:30 BEER WILL BE SERVED - YOU MUST BE 21 TO ATTEND 1i Kosins ki NATIONAL 6ENERAS. CORPORATION __ HELD OVER 4TH WEEK NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN THEATRESmmi 3FO.AVILL6E 35 No. MAPLE RD. "769.1300 MON.-FRI. _7:00-9:20 SAT.-SUN. 2:00-4:20- 6:45-9:10 good grief i6i caredy! and S94"PWciwel Corp. pVeW Chaies Aznavur.Mcidon BmMndo WRkhard Burton-James Coburn John Huson WakerFtthau.Ringo 5tr A EwAurin4 ItESTMtTED M ted, Unless16 ftompny by.a Parent of Gwua'd. B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION * 1429 Hill St. ,' 00 1 La-- WRITER-IN-RESIDENCE PROGRAM PRESENTS t "ARTISTRY&EROTIC SM" JERZY KOSI SKI JANUARY 13-19 4 Cue Magazine N.Y. Times "THE MOVIE HAS THE CAREFUL TEMPO OF A MINUET, WHICH COUNTERPOINTS ITS DESPERATE EROTICISM!" N.Y. Times r.SURELY THIS IS .AMONG THE MOST EROTIC OF MOVIES! The movie's artistry raises the subject matter to the level of personality exploration. THE EXPERIENCE IS BIZARRELY COMPELLING 1 Cue Magazine 6'LEAVES NOTHING TO THE IMAGINATION! GOES TOO FAR!"5 'A HIGHLY EROTIC FILM! IT SHOULD BECOME A CAUSE CELEBRE WITH THE WHATEVER-TURNS- YOU-ON SET! Glenda Jackson is really tremendous! ENGROSSING! OFFBEAT AND DIFFERENT!"99 WINS Radio "6SEXUAL AND INVECTIVE AND PERFORMANCES OF MEMORABLE QUALITY!" N. Y. Post MONDAY, JANUARY 13 8 P.M. Opening Lecture "The Painted Bird: A Metaphor of the Twentieth Century" Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Reception Following TUESDAY, JANUARY 14 10 A.M.-Noon Office Hours 4:10 P.M. "The Writer and Collevtivity: The Soviet Dilemma"-Aud. D 5:30 P.M. Dinner with Russian Center 8 P.M. "Montage in Cinema & Modern Fiction" Rackham Amphitheatre WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15 *10 A.M.-Noon Office Hours Noon Discussion-"Contemporary U.S.A., The Marxist View"-Canterbury House 5:30 Dinner at Bursley 2E D kAISc ~~en nn a THURSDAY, JANUARY 16 10 A.M. on Novelists' workshop at Canterbury, 1 P.M. Prof. Ingram's English Class 3 P.M. Hopwood Tea, Hopwood Room, Angell Hall 4-5:30 P.M. Prof. Welsh's Polish Lit Class 3040 Frieze Bldg. 5:30 P.M. Dinner and Discussion at Markley Hall FRIDAY, JANUARY 17 9 A.M. Prof. Diamond's Anthropology Class Subject: "Children of Europe 1939-45" 229 Angell 2 P.M. Prof. Wolf's Class "Peasant Society" 2402 Mason 5:30 P.M. Dinner and Discussion at Alice Lloyd SATURDAY, JANUARY 18 2 P.M. A Reading and Discussion in Living Room of Stockwell SUNDAY, JANUARY 19 0% n 11 1'I D 1- - l~ xaY:iri i 4 N.Y. Daily News A BIZARRE MODERN DRAMA OF A MAN AND TWO WOMEN LOCKED IN A SENSUAL GAME OF SEX. III I I