Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 5, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 5, 1969 cinema The very model of the modern major film maker . POT SHOP SEMI-ANNUAL SALE 25 OFF ON ALL HANDMADE Ceramics; Stoneware, Mugs, Plates, Bowls, Teapots, Vases, etc., etc. "Come SEE and SAVE" Sunday, March 2-Morch 10 619 Packard 9-5, 7-1 1 Some people make movies for profit. Your parents make them for fun. But when you put the two together you get the new low-budget-commercial-under- ground-adult film, like Greet- ings. Greetings, a $40,000 film about draft dodgers in New York City has been drawing audiences in that city for 15 weeks. Scheduled to hit Ann Arbor this week, Greetings will probably clean up at the Fifth Forum. Lucky Charlie Hirsch, who di- rected the film considers h i s success seriously. "We pulled it off," he says. In Hirsch's mind "honesty, as in Greetings just doesn't exist. People are no longer accepting pictures made for 13-year-old truck drivers." A N.Y.U. dropout, Hirsch feels low-budget underground s t y I e films, if well made, can be commercially successful. "Even commercial moves are better now because they've had three or four years to get 'hip' ". "A major company can't just make a movie for $25 million dollars with Burton and Taylor and expect it will be good," Hirsch says. At the same time, he feels cheaper films can gross more, if well done. At least the New York Times saw fit to pan the film on a first viewing. But Stanley Kauf- man and Pauline Kael, veteran critics for the New Republic and New Yorker, gave the film fav- orable reviews. Hirsch was pleased. "After 15 weeks in New York, we will be happy to pay back our $40,- 000 in debts and then make $5- 10,000 for DePalma (his direc- tor) and myself." Indeed, films like Hirsch's may become big money makers and box office draws. Not only are they easy and cheap to make, but they are easy to sell: Stu- dents here have already begun sporting the promotional "Un- cle Sam" Greetings buttons passed out by the Fifth Forum. Technically, Hirsch employs the appealing visual tricks as- sociated with underground films. Quick cuts and flash- backs, some scenes speeded, others slowed and interspersed titles. Above all, the lack of any inhibitions in dealing with such matters as sex, the draft, Vietnam and the Kennedy as- sassination are rarely seen in films from major film com- panies. Because of budgetary limita- tion, Hirsch and Palma were forced to rely mainly on inno- vation. The realism of the dia- logue can be attributed to the fact that there wasn't any script - only a 30 page plot outline. As DePalma and Hirsch p u t their cameras on the actors, whatever they said was taped and edited into the film. Actually, Hirsch says this was more controlled than it appears. "We didn't look for actors to play certain characters, we just look for certain characters to be in a move." And to keep production costs down, the actors were not paid. "People are dying to be in films -whether they get paid or not doesn't kill their interest," Hirsch says. Although Hirsch prides him- self on the artistic and cultural merits of the film, he does not accept it for those values alone. Rather, his eye is set on captur- ing the potentially lucrative college market., "If you had the funds to line up two or three good honest movies, movies college students would like, you could make a fortune. Look at The Graduate -that movie saved Joe Levine," he says. So while the money and the favorable reviews keep rolling in, Hirsch and DePalma are working on two new movies in EXCLUSIVE SHOWING-NOW! NOMINATED FOR ' I ACADEMY AWARDS! records Itching for a new ;disc? *1 'Greetings': Report for service immediately By R. A. PERRY An empty purse," wrote Henry Fielding optimistically, "causes a full heart," and for many this could be no more true than when the purse has been emptied to purchase music. To those who with painful pleasure deplete their pockets in the itch for the disc, the following brief opinions may prove helpful. Westminster Records, holding a catalog rife with, rare treas- ures (e. g. Hugues Cuenod re- citals), has released two record- ings that feature top-rated op- era singers. On WST-17148, Barry Morell presents familiar arias from Verdi, Cilea, Puccini, and Meyerbeer in a strong and well-focused voice. Unfortunate- 1y, Morell, a top tenor at the Met, does not do anything in- teresting with t h a t somewhat unflexible voice and his singing lacks compelling conviction and urgency. His recital is not dis- pleasing, just innocuous. On WST-17143, Westminster presents the debut recital disc of the soprano in today's New York spotlight: Beverly Sills. Sills' colouratura voice has been compared to Galli-Curci, a n d this recital of Bellini and Doni- zetti (who else?) proves t h a t Miss Sills does indeed possess all of t h e colouratura equip- ment: tight trills, precise upper register decoration, sustained climaxes (without the superhu- man oscillator sound of Mado Robin)*, a nd a strong middle register. (I. suspect tape splicing at one spot in the "Ancor non giurise.") Yet, perhaps with Sills one hears training and accom- plishment, while with Galli- Curci one feels an uncanny nat- ural marksmanship; a moot point to be surehAll that this important Westminster d i s c lacks is variety and cleaner sur- faces. Columbia has squeezed all of Dvorak's ebullient S51 a v o n i c Dances onto one disc (MS 7208) with lithe, precise, and mildly jolly readings by Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra. It is a good buy, well recorded, but I shall continue to cherish t h e really idiomatic renditions by= Talich and the Czech Philhar- monic on Artia. Any lover of brass music should not miss Columbia's new recording (MS 7209) that fea- tures the brass ensembles of the Cleveland, Chicago, and Phila- delphia Orchestras in the anti- phonal "canzoni per sonare" of Gabrieli. So replete with design, tempo, and texture changes, these pieces' demand superior stereo recordings to fully cap- ture all the effects. Columbia manages masterfully; let it suf- fice to say that in an "echo can- zon" you can really hear three distinctly placed ensembles. Nonesuch, that company which has revolutionized the record in- dustry in so many ways (price, format, repertoire), continues their "Master Works for Organ" series with a collection of 17th century works from the Nether- lands (H71214). Included is a Fantasia by the important and a1w a y s satisfying composer (poorly represented in SchwannY Jan Sweelinck, a moving Psalm by Speuy, a piece by the English expatriot John Bull, and works by more esoteric composers. Jor- gen Ernst Hansen provides sen- sitive readings and the None- such engineers supply clear and rich sound. For those for whom the name Ralph Vaughan Williams con- jures up pastoral or nocturnal Bargrain prices For Moscow State Concert A special concert of the Mos- cow State Symphony will be presented Wednesday evening, March 12th. The virtuosic young pianist Nikolai Petrov will play the Prokofieff Concerto No. 3. Variations on a Roccoco Theme shall feature cello soloist Feor- dor Luzanov. The Shostakovich Fifth :Symphony shall be con- ducted by the composer's son, Maxim Shostakovitch. For this special attraction all balcony seats will be priced at $1.00 and $2.00. Thursday eve- ning's performance of the Mos- cow State Symphony is sold out. moods a la "Greensleeves," a h e a r i n g of the composer's Fourth Symphony should prove corrective. Written in the early 'Thirties, this work w a s then considered exceedingly violent and course; today less perjora- tive words such as "powerful" or "vigorous" might be more ap- plicable. The symphony is very well-written; by that I simply' mean that eschewing much of the activity of similar works- such as Elgar's Second Sym- phony - which consists of bus- tle without clear intent, Vau- g h a n Williams convincingly trims excess and lucidly directs the progression of music a n d emotion. Sir Adrian Boult's-new record- ing (Angel S-36557) of this score captures all of the controlled barbarism of the music; Boult reveals endless details without in any way vitiating the thrust of the larger structural move- ments. Futhermore (can you take another panegyric?) Angel has provided the clearest, clean- est, most dynamicalls wide yet undistorted sound I have ever heard from that company; For those who still prefer the "Greensleeves" genre, the idyllic "Norfolk Rhapsody," an early Vaughan Williams work, has been added as a "filler." the quest for another commer- cially successful but artistically "honest" movie. Their next, being financed by Filmway distributors is an at- tack on the easily satirized "si- lent middle class that elected Nixon." This, Hirsch says, will be a little larger than Greet- ings, "but still sort of cheap." -L.W. STEAK and EGGS with hashbrown potatoes, toast and jelly $1.10 STEVE'S LUNCH just west of SAB NOW OPEN SUNDAYS, TOO ~~.~ I 4 PrduesJOHN WOOLF wCAR by E Tickets at Box- Office or By Mail! Also at Sears, Hudson's Major Stores, Marwill Book Stores BOX OFFICES OPEN 1:00 - 9:00 P.M. Wed., Sat., Sun Other'Days 4:00-9:00 f i __ _ -.. .. 1 NATIONAL OENERAL CORPORATION H EL D OVER FOX EASTERN THEATRESS 4TH WEEK FOX VILIBSE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-"769.1300 The Theatre Will Be Emptied After 7:00 P.M. Showing Fri.-Sat. Nominated for 2 Academy Awards BEST Picture * BEST Director * T PARAMOUNT PICTURES panea e 4 WtE tI{.V The FACO ZEFFIRELLI ROMEO { ULIET Al RPORT LIMOUSINES for information call 971-3700 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union 32 Tri slDv MATINEES. Wednesdays, 2: Saturdays A Hi Sundays, 2:040 SCHEDULE OF PERFORMANCES AND PRICES: EVENINGS: :00 PM (except March 5) $2.00 Monday thru Thursdi lidays, 2:00 PM......2.50 Fri.,. Sat. & Holidays, PM ............... 3.00 Sundays .00OPM.... ay, 8.00 PM. $2.50 8:00PM.. 3.00 .........3.00 4" 0) Showings Daily 1:30 4:00 7:00 9:35 Forth.at.pestiesand groups; phone ANN SQUIRES, 963-1251 and LO MFIELD i 44E UPtE lfEIU$S f in BIRMINGHAM on WOODWARD IST N ! 1670 / 2 Ikis S. .N ISMi. MI 4.60 HIS WE K1 is the last week of voter registration for the April City Election REGISTER- City Hall (2nd floor) Huron and Fifth Mon.-Fri. 8 A.M.-8 P.M. r< ps vay TVl RETAS No Deposit FREE service per month.Required NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 SERVING BIG 10 SCHOOLS SINCE 196 Special Added Concert MOSCOW STATE SYMPHONY MAXIM SHOSTAKOVICH, Conducting Soloists: NIKOLAI PETROV, Pianist FEODOR LUZANDV, Cellist lI HILL AUDITORIUM * 4 ENDING TONIGHT 1 j '1 , E WNNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS including BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! COLUMBIA PICTURES preents FRED ZINNEMANN'S FILM OF A MAN FuR ALL u SEASONS S From the I gAY by . "Today showing at 9 p m. only ff you have been refused registration, try again (and again) , * UNCLASSIFIED* "LUSTY, GUSTY, COMEDY!" -Washington Evening Star ." 1399n ',-ms~ vK4T ETom,. is DoKE I OnRE Today shown at 7 p.m. only this week. Many students are successful on their second try. SGC VOTER REGISTRATION-662-7394 go MN 1111 a..., t -THURSDAY p 2 ACADEMY AWARD "RACHEL, RACHEL" Best Picture * Best Actress Joanne Woodward Best Supporting Actress Estelle Parsens Best Screenplay from a Book NOMINATED FEATURES "HEART IS A LONELY HUNTER" Best Actor Alan Arkin Best Supporting Actress Sandra Locke em mm: SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY BENEFIT FOR DIONYSUS '69 Theatre of Cruelty Presents The Final Performance of "PADUMA" A BURMESE EPIC OF APOCALYPSE A Cast of Thirty-Five Crazed (but talented) Actors Featuring JON KAISER and EMILY WATTS With the voice of Roger Maneld and the GAMELAN Wednesday, March 12, 8:30 PROGRAM: Overture to "Russlan and Ludmilla"........... .... Variations on a Rococo Theme for Cello and Orchestra, Op. 33 Feodor Luzanov Concerto No. 3 in C major, OpI 26..................... Nikolai Petrov Symphony No. 5, Op. 47 .............. .. ......... Shostakovich ..... . G. : Glinka .Tchaikovsky, Prokoficef E 11111 * *1 4 iI I HELD OVER! SHOWS AT: 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00 & 9:05 Info: 662-6264 Student 198200624 Was Officially Designated Missing.. . DITV DANfD 9 M ,iZ ,m ql Act--A-nxr t" f J"11'J I JI J'f!'l it Mania; Petrov. bianist 1111 I j mtaim1 1311taxohviI..L, (.(IILIL i .'?i '~iX~t14a. z'."VV JM1* Hill