PAGE Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. RCIV25.1AnR PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIBAY~ MARflM. 9~ inca a ------ -- - -.-----V- -l' *,, c.,,I. r FILMS Fellini's Juliet': 'Flamboyant, Eye-Filling, But a Kaleidoscope of Trivialities' Across Campus By PAUL SAWYER Fellini's "Juliet of the Spirits" is "81/2" gone mad. The disturbing thing is not so much that the later film is so obviously an imitation, but rather that it imitates the superficial brilliances of the ear- lier film without retaining any of its virtues. That "Juliet" is flamboyant, eye-filling and visually impressive cannot be denied; but a continual stream of ever-changing surface appearances, however glittering, is never enough. The film amounts in substance to little more than a great kaleidoscope of variegated trivialities. Much of the trouble is no doubt due to the temptations of color. As long as he worked in black and white, Fellini was able to give free range to his imaginative pow- ers without letting the purely spectacular element of his films impinge upon and obscure the thought content. I am not cate- gorically against spectacle for spectacle's sake. But in "Juliet" the many-hued fantasy scenes with their surreal- istic orgies and stupendous sets, and the endless stream of fan- tastic and grotesque characters, seem too often to run away with themselves and to lose all sense of function or coherence. This is a shame, because Fel- lini has such great talents as a visual artist. Visually, this film is the most beautiful I have ever seen, and I must recommend it for that reason. Nearly every frame takes on the sensuous magnifi- cence of a full-blown oil painting; in color and composition, it is exquisite. The interiors and cos- tumes are stupendously sensuous, a combination of Dail and De- Mille; the outdoor scenes are like a Disney cartoon come to life. Flowers are a motif and are used throughout with splendid variety. Much less can be said for what lies underneath thissglamor. The theme of the film is the inner torments suffered by a lonely woman as she learns more and more about her husband's infi- delity. Like Marcello Mastroianni. in "8%1/2" she does not reason things out, but thinks through a succes- sion of daydreams., She also has the advantage of being visited by a spirit. Her heavily populated fantasies are not so much a means of escape from her problems as they are a way of keeping her company. We learn, for example, that she was never close to anyone in her child- hood except for an eccentric grandfather who died while she was still young; and in her day- by-day life she is totally neglected by her "hard-working" husband. The fantasies express the de- sires and decisions that flood her mind. For example, the alternative of self-sacrifice and despair is represented by a childhood friend who drowned herself for love; her desire for freedom and experience, by several fantastic orgy scenes; and the whole motif of love, through the manisfestations of carnal desire, religion, and physi-, cal strife. The "objective" story of her abandonment and loneliness is touching for what there is of it, but there is not enough to gener- ate much subtlety and depth of character. Moreover, the fantasies themselves, unlike '8%," fail to tell us enough about the woman to make her very interesting. Giu- lietta Masina is acceptable in the role, but she is not required to do much more than pass from scene to scene in wide-eyed amazement. The ending tries to impose Fel- lini's old solution of resigning the characters to "being themselves," stoically accepting their fate, "being spontaneous," etc. But it does not work. The film poses no important piroblems and explores nothing be- low the surface. The symbols and images are not new with Fellini; they come too fast and furious to excite or create a lasting impres- sion. DIAL 662-6264 SHOWN AT 1:00 3:00-5:00-7:00 & 9:05 2nd BIG WEEK! FRIDAY, March 25 8:30 a.m.,-A seminar on "Orien- tation to Programmed Learning" will be held in the Michigan Union, 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. - Fellini's "Variety of Lights" will be shown in the Architecture Aud. 8:00 p.m.-The Newman Stu- dent Association will present Father Philip Berrigan, S.S.J. speaking on "Pacem in Terris and the Problem of War" in Aud. A. Father Barrigan has been a' fre- quent speaker on the war in Viet Nam and has participated in the civil rights movement. 8:30 p.m. - The University Chamber Choir, conducted by Thomas Hilbish, will give a con- cert, free of charge, devoted to the choral music of Bach in Rackham Lecture Hall. 8:30 p.m.-The Packard Avenue Playreaders will appear in the Theatre of the Frieze Bldg. 8:30 p.m.-The University Sym- phony Orchestra, conducted by Josef Blatt and Theo Alcantarilla, will appear in Hill Aud. SATURDAY, March 26 9:00 a.m.-A workshop on "Pro- grammed Instruction" will be held in the Rackham Bldg. 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-The "Petri- field Forest" will be shown in the Architecture Aud. 7:00 p.m.-Karen Fine, cellist, will appear in the Recital Hall, School of Music. 8:30 p.m.-The Packard Avenue Playreaders will appear in the world premiere of Alfred Jarry's "Ubu Cornutatus" in the Little Theatre of the Frieze Bldg. 8:30 p.m.-Cornet and Trumpet Students Will perform in the Re- cital Hall, School of Music. 8:30 p.m. - The University of Chicago Contemporary Chamber ...... . . . ..::. .............v.. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an Seminar-"Orientation to Programmed tionnaire to all persons currently hav- official publication of the Univer- Learning": Michigan UnIon, 8:30 a.m. ing an academic appointment at the sity of Michigan for which The University. The questionnaire deal: Michigan Daily assumes no editor- School Board Members and School with staff members' opinions about lal responsibility. Notices should be Officials Conference - Registration. University physical facilities, personne' sent in TVPEWRiTTEN form to Rackham Bldg., 8:30 a.m. policies, services, salaries and fringe Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- benefits, leadership, freedom of expres- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding Cinema Guild - Fellini's "Variety sion in teaching and research, and publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday Lights": Architecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m similar topics. for Saturday and. Sunday., General It is possible that some academic staff Notices may be published a maxi- Dept. of Astronomy Visitors' Night- members may have been missed. Any mum of two times on request; Day Freeman D. Miller, professor of astron- person holding an academic appoint- Calendar items appear once only omy, "Comets and Fireballs" to observe ment that does not receive a question- Student organization notices are not the Moon and Jupiter: Aud. D, Angell naire by thec end of the week should accepted for publication. Hall, 8 p.m. call the Office of Institutional Re- search, at 764-9254 and one will be FRIDAY, MARCH 25 School of Music Concerto Concert - sent to them. University Symphony Orchestra, Josef_____ Blatt and Theo Alcantarilla, conduc- Doctoral Examination for Robert Ar- Calendarrs: Hill Aud, 8:30 p.m. thur Kavelman, Education; thesis: "An Buieau of Industrial Relations se- Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Four Bau o Instial Rlatwins S r 1 AFreshman Orientation Techniques at inar-"How to Install a White-Collar G.,eneral .tVO uces~ Foothill College." Fri., March 25, E,. Grievance System": Michigan Union, Council Room, Rackiam Bldg., at 3 8:30 p.m. Academic Affairs Questionnaire: Over the weekend,. the office of vice-presi- pm. C inRd ong. Programmed Learning for' Business dent for academic affairs mailed a ques- (Continued on Page 6) 4 world premiere of Alfred Jarry's Players will present a "Uba Cornutatus" in the Little the Union Ballroom. concert inI I NOW! What really went on when the} girls got together at Vassar THSi s THIS PICTURE IS RECOMMENDED FOR ADULTS i Shows at 1:00-3:40- 6:20-9:05 An absorbing and gripping movie about that exclusive 'Group' I"-Det. Free Press 4 Byp f CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL presents UBU CORNUTATUS by ALFRED JARRY storring DONALD HALL THOMAS J. GARBATY LITTLE THEATRE, FRIEZE BLDG. (Room 2065) MARCH 25. 8:30 P.M. MARCH 26. , . 8:30 P.M. 0, Trouble with Harry: Hitchcoek Disinterred SYMPOSIUM MARCH 25, 10 P.M. ADMISSION FREE 4 1I _ - 11 'i _--.---- By JAMES SCHUTZE Some people will not trust Cinema II for a long time. The absence of surly gatekeepers and the presence of consistently good films will cause many moviegoers to wonder if Cinema II can ever really, become a lasting part of student moviedom's staunchly of- fensive tradition. Hopefully, doubters will be won over by good movies like Hitch- cock's "The Troube with Harry" to trust Cinema II and perhaps to hope that the mess set and Cinema Guild will one day be forced to emulate their new competitor. Harry's trouble is the same we must otherwise wish on the Cinema Guild. Harry is dead. He remains faithfully dead from the first beautiful frames of his movie until the last, but he nevertheless manages to cause more consterna- tion to the sleepy New England town near which he is dead than has probably been caused by any- one living since the Revolution. No ohe in town has ever seen Harry before, almost. The only logical conclusion regarding his lack of life is that he has been, killed by a little boy's ray-gun, a spinster's shoe, the rifle of a ship's captain, an artist's brush, a widow's milk bottle, and. an in- visible murderer's . blunt instru- ment. The only means of dealing with so unusual a corpse as Harry is to inter him, disinter him, reinter him, disreinter him, undisreinter him, deundisreinter him, and put him in the bathtub. The entire sweaty afternoon of excavation and so forth is charmingly stinted with elderberry wine and blue- berry muffins, and the evening's outcome is predictably unforeseen. "Harry" embodies that disre- spectful wit and straight-jowled mirth which started Hitchcock on +his successful way. . Post-card photography and neater than, life settings lend Harry's dilemma that careful off-handedness it needs to be funny rather than merely macabre. One can hardly help regretting that horror sells better than wit and that Hitch- cock has accordingly altered his style since making Harry. Cinema II's showing tonight is definitely worth seeing. Don't ex- pect, of course, to take Harry by the hand and be led off into a wild Hitchcock horroroscope of psy- chotic entertainment: you'll find that placing Harry in that posture only encourages him to drag. Just leave Harry as he lies, and see where he ends up. Cinema II's presentation of this film may con- vince you that a movie can be good without being entirely under- ground. MASTERPIECE HIS FIRST IN COLOR! FATHER, PHILIP BERRIGAN, 1S.S.J., "PA CEM IN TERRISAND THE FATHER BERRIGAN has been ordained a priest for ten years, eight of which have been spent in the South. He is noted nationally for his lectures on race, peace, and the Christian layman. He is a member of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, .co-founder of the Catholic Peace Fellowship, and has worked in civil rights with the Urban League, NAACP, CORE and SNCC. His first book, "No More Strangers," was published in April and deals with race, peace, lay witness, and ecumenism. His other works have appeared in Commonweal, Jubilee, Worship, Continuum, The Catholic Worker, and Inter-racial Review. Currently, he is a parish priest in the Baltimore inner-city. FATHER BERRIGAN is also a poet and participated in a recent debate at Georgetown University on Vietnam. The article, "Vietnam and America's Conscience" is a reprint :f his part in that debate. 41 PH. 483-4680 SEnhAnce 00,CARPENTER ROD FREE IN-CAR HEATERS BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:30 --NOW SHOWING- ,plfnG FASOWA70& 'tIOUJRCOOL? M G M .v. in PANAVISIOt- And MEROCOLOR Shown at 7:14-10:3d ELVIS PRESLEY ANN-MAR RET ~\>~ ACK WMM IOS 6EIRGE SiDNEY PROUCTION ALSO-At 9:00 Only 2 Cartoons & Featurette NOW OPEN EVERY NITE JAM[S COBUVRN"[E[ 1. COBB GILA GOLAN "[EDARD MULUARE POducedby SAUL DAVID-OecedbyANIEL MANN Screenplay by HAL FHMBERG and BEN STAR COLOR by DE LUXE - CINEMASCOPE Next Attraction OEAN MARTIN as MATT HELM, THE sniLEN S ANGELORIZZOU FEDERICO FELLiNI ; JUUETf iOF THE GIULIETTAMASINA TECHNICOLOR SANDRA MILO SYLVA KOSCINA MARIOPISU.VALENTINA CORTESE- LOU GILBERT.-CATERINA BORATTO ."SILVANA JACHIN4 LUISA DELLA NOCE - JOSE DEVILLALONGA - WALESKA GERT - FREDRICH LEDE .UR OWGIAL sroaxyFEDERICO FELLINI - TULLIO PINELLI SCREENPLAY FEDERICO FELLII TODAY at IlkzT. tl 6:45 & 9:00 alkLL ' FR[StNiA[IQ~4 Fri., Mar. 25th, 1966. Auditorium A Angell Hall 8 P.M. ;'i1 4'w I I __ _ I CINEMA GUILD FILM DISCUSSION On "VARIETY LIGHTS" FRIDAY, MARCH 25 . .9 P.M. Room 101, Architecture Bldg. George Overstreet Quartet IP'IEJER GYNTl~ at NO DANCING JUST LIVE MUSIC AND FINE FOOD PLUS a film by DONALD ROTHMAN starring PROF. ALEXANDER ALLISON 0' the great miastrivorlz by Henrik, Ibsen April 6-9-8 PM TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM Box office ovens W '1T II #I - \ flF I I11169 U WWIUIvw ! 11166 UJ mIutu UUIUIIUbSP -