Page Two, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, March 11, 1969 ,a.:T.TE IHGA AL Tuesday. March 11 1969 I I cinema THE Film Festival: Bringing America By ELLEN FRANK Lately it seems that everyone from TIME Magazine to your art history professor look down and around our America to con- clude that yes, everyone is mak- ing movies these days. But if that Great Everyone is making experimental, films, where arg they all? Canyon Cinema in California distributes mainly West Coast films to film socie- ties, and theatres life Detroit's Repertory Cinema. In New York, Jonas Mekas, whom someone long ago named King of the Un- derground (the appleation has stuck) runs the Film Makers Cooperative, a distribution out- fit that supports film makers like Stan Brakhage, Gregory Markoupoulos and Jack "Flam- ing Creatures" Smith. However, Canyon Cinema and Film Makers Cooperative , are distribution o u t f it s, handling many of the same films each year and never touching upon the majority of films made in America. More than any distri- bution, company, it is the Ann Arbor Film Festival that dis- plays current film making in America. The twenty five or more hours of film to be pre- sented in this week's Festival amounts to the world's largest showing of experimental film. To see all or even part of the Festival amounts to an instant insight into what type of films people are making - whether they are northern California dope movies or southern Cali- fornia extended variations on the television commercial or animation from Kansas City. There are consistencies running through the hundreds of films, which seem the best gage of the tastes and aversions of America. For example this year there was almost no nudity in the entering films. Robert E. Davis, professor of film making and film theory, of the Department of Speech, aptly commented that young film makers have reacted against the commercial- ized sex movies, a la Campus Theatre. The Festival orients itself to- wards getting as many films as possible from across the coun- try. Five thousand announce- ment brochures are sent each year to film schools and film makers. Approximately two hun- dred fifty films were received this year, nearly twice the num- ber entered last year. The num- ber of public screenings has been appropriately increased, with 11 p.m. showings Tuesday through Friday. -Daily-Jay Cassidy George Manupelli A panel of (clear your throat) distinguished jurors will see twenty five or so hours of film, Sunday the panel selects the award winning films, as well as those that are to go on tour. This year's jurors are: Shirley Schnell of Ann Arbor; Nicholas C. Bertoni, technician and author of theatre events pieces; West Coast film maker Bob Giorgio; Steve Paxton, choreo- grapher and performer; and Jill Johnston, dance critic for The Village Voice. The Ann Arbor Film Festival is financed by and held at Cinema Guild. Co-sponsor is the Dramatic Arts Center. Awards money this year has come main- ly from Cinema II, Cinema Guild and the University Activi- ties Center, with contributions and special prizes from Plaster of Paris, Dominick's Restaurant and Student Book Service. A number of individuals have also given awards. The man behind the Festival is George Manupelli, professor of. film in the School of Archi- tecture and Design. Manupelli is on leave this year at the Univer- sity of Illinois. With some aid from a secretary, Manupelli or- ganizes nearly all of the Festi- val-from the mailing of bro- chures to the last screenings. His work on the Festival brings out a virtuous man who believes more than any of us in the im- portance of the independent film. Without him, the Festival would not exist. A special highlight of this year's Festival is the premiere of George Manupelli's Dr. Chi- cago on Wednesday at 9:00 p.m. Dr. Chicago is the first in a projected twenty film series which "in seemingly low humor, comment on complicated con- temporary social problems." The series is a new American literature. Dr. Chicago himself is the Hamlet, the giant char- acter of our tip es. The following to you films in the series will be pre- pared over time. Chicago No. 2, Dr. Chicago Goes to Sweden ("A Radio Program," "A Foreign Film") is nearly completed now. At the close of the Festival, the jurors select a program of films to go on tour of various schools and other institutions. Also film distributor Mike Getz selects two programs of films that will be shown at twenty three theatres across the coun- try. Festival fims are also avail- able by special request to George Manupelli. This post-Festival distribution amounts to a size- able national audience of ap- proximately 40,000 people. The tour, together with this week's extravaganza of twenty five hours of film indeed does make the Ann Arbor Film Festival the country's most important show- place of independent, films. ti Wednesday & Thursday 4:10 P.M lepartmaetnt of Speccha St udent La boratIory, ThealIre presents IEAi OUT T II EISrE by William Saroyan DIAL 5-6290 Arena Theatre. Frieze Building SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY BENEFIT FOR DIONYSUS '69,, Artaud's THEATRE OF CRUELTY "It is not a question of the cruelty we con practice on one another '. . . but the much more terrible and necessary cruelty that things exercise against us. We are not free. And the sky can still fall down on our heads." TUESDAY, MARCH 11 9:00 P.M $2.00 -Once- "AN OVERGROUND SEX-PROTEST FILM!" -Archer Wisfn New York Post March 12th & 13th ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE BEST ACTOR- CLIFF ROBERTSON Admission Free Arthur Grumiaux: Nothing less than best By R. A. PERRY If someone were to ask me the rhetorical and rather inane question as to who is the great- est performing violinist today, I would probably answer Arthur Grumiaux, a preference that in- deed indicates personal sensibili- ty rather than inviolate truth. The Belgian Grumiaux, who stu- died with Enesco and Ysaye, has certainly been unmitigating- ly satisfying throughout his recording career. His performances in the fif- ties with Clara Haskill on the Epic label of the -sonatas for violin and piano by Beethoven and by Mozart remain standards to which comparisons of more recent performances are in- evitably made. On the Philips label, his rendition of the Bach Sonatas ,and Partitas for Unac- companied Violin balance most beautifully the precise intensi- ties of Heifetz and the cool elegance of Szeryng. It is to his peformance of the Beethoven concerto, with Van Beinum, to which I somehow find myself returning over all others. The list of his satisfying recordings would be lengthy. A re-issue on the budget- label World Series line (PHC 9103) of Schubert's Opus -137 Sonatinas and the Opus 162 Sonata should allow many peo- ple unfamiliar with Grumiaux's style to acquaint themselves with the artist in the most pleasant of circumstances. While the .music represented may not be monumental, all of the pieces are exceedingly lyrical and easy to listen to. Furthermore, they reveal, for all of their simplicity, those qualities which make Grumiaux great. The Opus 137 Sonatinas were written when Schubert was twen- ty and working as a school- teacher; composed as they were for students, they consequently make few demands on the solo- ist's virtuosity and imply little metaphysical import: they are melodic, folk-tune oriented exer- cises. Ironically enough, this very lack of an involved musical content has foiled many major violinists who have genty tac- kled the pieces; it requires a. great artist to make the simple relevant-as Jorge Bolet did last summer. in Ann Arbor with Mendelssohn's Songs Without Words. Grumiaux throws away not one note; he regards no phrase with any half-minded concen- tration. On the contrary, he im- bues each movement of each small piece with a total aesthetic commitment that charges these works previously heard as trivia with the full singing joy of the, S c h u b e r t. ..Orumiaux's tone, warm without being fat and sloppy, is always expressive and never perfunctory. The Duo Sonata stands as a more important work in the Schubert oeuvre, with implica- tions more personal and de- manding. Although this sonata has received many fine record- ings, few are as satisfying as the Grumiauz at hand, and I in- clude the old Szigeti-Hess edi- tion. All of the charm, all of the cantabile lines and rhythm- ical variations, all of the inef- fable musical meaning Grumi- aux captures in his singularly communicative phrasing. The involvement that hall- marks Grumiaux's performance is well-shared on this World Series disc by pianist Riccardo Castagnone, of whom I know nothing except that he has re- corded previously with the vio- linist a splendid recital of the Debussy Sonata for Violin' and Piano and the rarely heard but lovely Lekeu Sonata in G Ma- jor, both on Epic LC 3667. For once, electronic rechan- neling for pseudo stereo has not proved pernicious and "the re- corded sound remains focused and clear. I enthusiastically en- dorse this "sleeper." Arthur Grumiaux has also recently recorded the Vieux- temps Concerto No. 4, the Chausson Poeme, and Ravel's Tzigane, all on Philips PHS 900- 195. Vieuxtemps, a recincarna- tion of the devil Paganini, com- posed wedding cakes of virtuosic effects, .but all of the fancy, technically demanding icing has always seemed to me to be built on a cardboard core. Be that as it may, Grumiaux tightens his tone and, in true fashion,, injects as much expression as humanly possible into the work. C~fALy TECHNICOLOR' TECHNISCOPE I 4-. 3020 Washtenow, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor BREAKING ALL RECORDS Feature Wed., Sat., Sun. 1 -3-5-7-9 Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 7-9 inDAVI70/N WEN SA-~kMg C -7A Z .Bes 3t ~oV~ 6ACAD~HELD 01 y E D including,,4 t Actress-Joanne Woodward, Best Actor-Alan Arkin VER I I NAMED ON459 "TEN BEST" LISTS cfMaxn c5kiddxl 'Ge Ileait is a CLondl 'Hunter E . . r . SCREENPLAY. BY CHARLESNIRSCH AND IRIA E PALMA DIRECTED ,Y BRIN DEPALMA PROUCEO BY CHARLES IRSCN ' EST END ILMS PROOUCION - A INSIMA IIIRELEASE AN COtC* X no one under 18 will be admitted 6:30, 8:05, 9:40 I I I :t 4 f 4 I, I Cy-.clIes sell in Classifieds - . B d 10 r in the PAUL NEWMAN production of rachel. rachel Best Picture ONE SHOW ONLY TONIGHT AND THURSDAY "RACHEL" at 7:15 * "Heart Is A Lonely Hunter" at 9:05 I *i * ! ~" STARTS TOMORROW FEATURE TIMES Wed.-1:00-3:10- 5:20-7:30-9:40 Thurs. & Fri.-7:00-9:15 Eyery Wednesday is LADIES DAY All Ladies 1-6 P.M. 75c CINEMA GUILD Presents THE SEVENTH ANN ARBOR FILM FESTIVAL MARCH 11-16, 1969 Architecture and Design Auditorium SCREENINGS at 7:00, 9:00 and 11:00 P.M. (excluding Saturday) SATURDAY MATINEE at 3:00 P.M. Each program is different except Sunday when the Award-Win- ners ore-repeated at 7:00,-9:00, and 1 1:00 P.M. liii a U WALT DISNEY'S . - 77 mrnvArmdrn Nln;Ptav-hatt, f' . I II A