PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. OCTOR tr 99, 1 k PAGETWOTHEMICHGANDAy }. VA f I WIlf1D~h IQ9 1Z0 Footlight Parade' Provides Light View of D epression FEW GOOD CHILLS: Fu Manchu' Inspires Yawns, Smiles, Indifference; Fails To Create Terror Have YOU gotten your date yet? Lyohov MICHIGAN UNION NOV. 12-8:30 By DAVE KNOKE At The Cinema .Guild "Footlight Parade" is the sort of vintage film which, when view- ed thirty-five years later, con- vinces nostalgic old folks and im- pressionable young folks that the Great Depression was really all fun and games. The movie is an outstanding specimen of a now-, defunct cinematic genre-the mo- vie musical about the making of movie musicals. The thinly veneered plot gives the composer-choreographer Bus- by 'Berkeley an opportunity to show off some of the gaudiest routines to splash across the 1930 screen.k James Cagney is Chester Kent, big-time producer of musical '"prologues," struggling to pre- vent the medium from falling prey to the inroads 'the talkies", are making upon the mass enter- tainment market. The cliches unroll in a sequence that makes imnortal camp to- day. The'characters are familiar: a harassed work-horse stage di- rector, a hill-billy youdler (Dick Powell) who actually can sing and finds true love with a birdy sec- retary who becomes a stunning beauty by removing her glasses; the ne'er-do-well company lawyer owing his position to the nepotism of his great aunt.V The story line is predictable. The two other partners bilk Cag- ney of his just profits by juggling the books. A doxie traps him into a marriage proposal and runs out when wife number one refuses a divorce. The faithful secretary, platinum Joan Blondell, pines un- requited for Cagney, plays sleuth to save his career, and inevitably wins him in the end. * The dance company is hard pressed to compete with the movie theaters offering instant, dreams for a small fee. Cagney must think up new skits for the weekly prologue dance routines, but na- turally there is a leak and a rival producer beats him to production every .time. Then comes the chance to stage three extravaganzas in one night before a film magnate who just might put them on the screen if the rival doesn't steal them first or the magnate's indigestion does not put him out of humor. There- by hangs a tale, a tenuous one to be sure, k but excuse enough for Bubsy' Berkeley to go the full route-alley cats, water sprites, Shanghai saloon. All of which adds up to pro- duction that is thankfully free of any moral overtones, psychologi- cal undertones and eventually even musical tones. The viewer can let his mind go blank, let his eyes wander over hundreds of pulchritudinous chor- us girls romping, slithering or swimming across Cecil B. de Millish sets, then get up from his seat and leave the theater without nagging questions about Deeper Significances plaguing the mind. By ALAN J. GLUECKMAN At The State Theater "He's cruel, callous . . . and brilliant. He's the most evil man the world has ever known. His name is Fu Manchu," and he's the most tedious villain of all time. Resurrected from the Sax Roh- mer dime novels of the Thirties and splashed across the Techni- colored, wide, wide screen of the State theatre, "The Face of Fu Manchu" inspires not the, hoped- for terror in the hearts of men, but yawns. One expects evil incarnate from Christopher Lee's Fu Manchu, but except for a; few marvelous ,mo- ments of malevolence, you find yourself smiling, or even worse, indifferent. Lee, who was superb- ly chilling as Dracula a few years back, has not been allowed by the confines of the script to do more than glower on several occasions. There is no evidence of the hyp- notic power, the dread, the sug- gestion of evils past and yet to be committed, that one associates with Rohmer's Fu Manchu. Indeed, when this supposed mas- ter of menace announces his plan to rule the world over the radio, he sounds like George Fenniman selling Lipton Tea, and about half as convincing. The few really good chills in the film came from Ling Tang, Fu Manchu's daughter, smoothly played by Chinese actress Tsai Chin. A stunning Oriental beauty, Ling Tang carries out her father's nasty orders with an obvious relish, revelling in their evilness render- ed all the more menacing by her delicate grace. The film is unpleasant,= and leaves you with a blahafeeling, because the murders and the evil deeds just aren't any fun. This is a serious defect in most films of this kind. To be successful, murders, however nasty and shocking, must be entertaining. People must be dispatched with style, like the ganster in "Gold- finger" or Janet Leigh in "Phy- cho." Otherwise it becomes tedious and tasteless. My advice is: Don't fool with numerous fight scenes that popu- late this film. While there are a few inventive moments, most of the slugging, strangling and grap- ling is photographed in long shots which remove the action from the audience. Won't some director somewhere film a scene close up, with the audience pulled into every shot? The impact would be stunning. One cannot review this film without saying a few words about the hero, and Fu Manchu's foil, Nayland Smith of Scotland Yard. He is utterly boring, humorless and uninteresting. If the hero's not heroic and the villain's not villainous, then 'you haven't got much of a picture, right? Right! My advice is :Don't fool with Fu Manchu. Wait for "Bunny Lake" or "Repulsion" for your thrills. Better yet, wait until the Cinema Guild shows the Boris Karloff 1930's film versions of Fu Manchu. Now that was real evil! If you do decide to see this show, by all means do not miss the 10 minute 'preview of the "War Lord," the new Charlton Heston opus that threatens to be coming soon. This is the funniest short subject since that musical travel- ogue about Dallas. One last word: at the end of "Fu Manchu," as the hero and heroine ride out into the sunset (they really do) after supposedly blowing up the evil Oriental with nitroglycerine, there is super- imposed on the screen the face of Eu Manchu, uttering these fate- fuil words: "The world will hear again from Fu Manchu." Let's hope not. School Time is OLYMPIA' TIME 04w University Typewriter Center Home of OLYMPIA, the Precision Typewriter 613 E. William St. 665-3763 m NOW THRU'SATURDAY Shows at AT THE STATE 7.00n00- 900' THE FACE rOF RI MRCH11 --1966.Yamdhas available now with Yamaha's injection system, 5 sp trans 27 hp 75000 rpm. -Holder of the quarter mile drag record 95.74 mph Holder of speed record for 250 c.c. class 173.00 '-World grand prix champion -Two years in a row ('64 and '65) 250 c.c. class winner of safety and engineering award -Ride a winner ride Yamaha Sportcycles NICHOLSON M/C Sales-224 S. First-6627409 CHOICE SEATS FOR SATURDAY" MATINEE SPTR4IPMHOF NIX 0 I Across Campus I I i - .o.o. HELD OVER DIAL 5-6290 FRIDAY, OCT.29 Noon-William Delhey, Wash- tenaw County prosecutor, and Pe- ter Darrow, attorney for the 39 demonstrators arrested in the draft board sit-in, will discuss "The Student and the Law" at Guild House. 4:15 p.m.-Floyd Mann of the psychology department will speak on "Effectiveness in Scientific Work Groups" in Aud. B. 4:15 p.m-Prof. Jerzy Kurylo- wicz of Harvard University will lecture on "What is Morphonol- ogy" in the Rackham Amphithea- tre. i 4:15 p.m.-Prof. Floyd Mann of the psychology department will speak on "Effectiveness in Scien- tific Work Groups" as pat of the Psychology Departmenrt Colloqu- ium in Aud. B Angell Hall. 7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild will present "Footlight Parade" at the Architecture Aud. °.30 p.m.-University Registrar Edward Groesbeck will be speak- ing on the topic, "Personal Iden- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan, for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- iiA responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organiation notices are not accepted for pubica tion. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29 Day Calendar Dept. of Linguistics Lecture - Jerzy Kurylowicz, Harvard University, "What Is Morphonology": Rackham Amphi- theatre, 4:15 p.m. C.inema Guild-"Footlight .Parade": Architecture Aud.,'7 and 9 p.m. Pr ofessional Theatre Program Per- forinance-APA Company in Archibald acLeish's "Herakles": Lydia Mendels- schn Theatre, 8 p.m.' Musical Society' Concert-The Czech Philharmonic, Karel Ancerl, conductor: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. General Notices Woodrow Wilson Fellowships: Mem- bers of the faculty are reminded that the deadline for nomination is Oct. 31. Letters postmarked. Oct. 31 will be accepted. They should include the field of study agd the local addresses and phone numbers of the students nomi- nated, and should be sent to Prof. Otto Oraf, ;Department of German, 1679 'Frieze Bldg., Campus. (Continued on Page 10) ICE CREAM Caramel Corn Castle Libert at hompson 2:3-11P.M. Closed Sunday ROASTED CHESTNUTS tity in the Multiversity" in the UGLI Multipurpose Room. The lecture-discussion is sponsored by the Michigan Christian Fellow- ship. 8 p.m.-The Professional Thea- tre Program will present the APA' in "Herakles" at Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre. 8:30 p.m.-The Czech Philhar- monic conducted by Karel Ancerl will give a concert at Hill Aud. SATURDAY, OCT.30 2:30 and 8 p.m.-The Profes- sional Theatre Program will pre- sent the APA in "Herakles" at the Mendelssohn Theatre. 4:15 p.m.-William Whitehead of the music 'school will give an organ recital at Hill Aud. 6:-30 p.m.-The India Students Association Banquet will be held at the Michigan Union Ballroom. 7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild will present "Rififi" at the Architec- ture Aud. 7 and 9:30 ji.m.-The University of Michigan Men's 'Glee Club, di- rected by Philip A. Duey, and the New York University Men's Glee Club, direpted by Alfred Greefield, will give a concert at Hill Aud. DIAL 8-6416 th fH OLDI NG OVER Record Week "YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS IT f!-New Yorker Magazine ROO STERH DIE PAWNBROK[R Ph..483-4680 ( - O . C R E T R O - Entae Or CARPENTER ROAD ' "'THE IPCRES S FILE' ISWA THINKING MAN'S 'GOLOFINGER' IN THE WORLD PREMIERE OF hewakles The Pulitzer Prize playwright's provocative new play byARCHIBALD 'MAC LEISH Directed by Alan .Schneider Set Designer: James Tilton AL;S'O: Costume Designer: Nancy Potts KRAPP'S LAST TAPE THE COMPANY. Joseph Bird - claribal Baird by SAMUEL BECKETT Patricia Conoly " Clayton Corzatte KeneCrtuisGordon Guld~asi "FaciatngY hetr Jennifer Harmon "' Rosemary Harris oFaseiatng theatre Betty Miller " Donald Moffat.. Nat Simmons of the absurd Dee Victor . Sydney Walker Paulette Waters " Richard Woods O.2- 3 o.- 7 r, SUNDAY MONDAY 0 TUESDAY and STE UN6...see the best of 3bth' FILL WAYS presents d EIAedyr MELINA PETER MA9MILIAN i r -~MERCflURI JULES DASSIN MERCOURI USIINOV SCH[LL t !A "A TAUT, TINGLING FILM!" ) McCALLS TECHNICOLOR' TECHNISCOPE P.M. I I JOIN THE MICHIGAN DAILY STAFF Box Office OpensSat. and Sun., atI Phone-668-6300 1 1 TONIGHT at 7 and 9 r 1 r I 1 1 C; 1 r r ar 1 I I I 1 1 1 I 1 r 1 I 1, f E 1H AC TCTR UDTRU A' BUSBY BERKLEY TCT musical of 1930vintage 1 r I r 1 1 r r r 1ri[7 / r W ., 1 I SPECIAL NON-SUBSCRIPTION EXTRA PERFORMANCES I/ I PROFESSIONAL U FREE CAR FIRST RUN HEATERS 'NOW SHOWING THEATRE PROGRAM presents I an incredible orgy of sights and sounds APA REPERTORY COMPANY THE WILD DUCK Wednesday, Nov. 10 (8:00 P.M.), Thursday, Nov. 11 (8:00 P.M.) Narrated by GEORGE SANDERS TUCHNICL flR RDMA You Can't Take It With You TONIGHT - ...... ... Friday, Nov. 12 (8:00 P.M.) Saturday, Nov. 13 (2:30 P.M. & 8:00 P.M.) 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