PAGE TIVO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDTAY. APRIL 11. 1967~ FILMS Walirol Experiments: Invitation to Critical Analysis i VJUO7ju"1 Al 1 , /1 ,1 0 I Profile By ANDREW LUGG For the first: tine since I have been writing for The Daily I find I have to review a performance in terms of explaining away the fact that although a large number of the audierice: walked out and al- though about 80 per cent of the re- Xnaiing viewers were hostile to the show, the Warhol/Velvet Under- grot d's "Exploding Plastic In- evitable" was one of the finest "film.pieces, Ann Arbor has wit- nessed for a long time. The show opened with the "New Generation' from Detroit. This group, contrary to 'populair be-' lief" has nothing to do with War- hol and. I will restrict my remarks on these characters to simply noting that their "light show" was extremely pretentious, overt andI uncointrolled. Andy Warhol began his part of the evening with an. halfhour ex- cerpt from his new film, "Sin," which, when,. assembled, will run 25 hours on two screens. It is worth noting, here, that due to the abysmal projection facilities at Hill,° the audience heard only one of the two sound tracks, that the two films, projected one on top of the other, have. "Sin" is a film dealing with love, and the section we saw con- cerned Judge Ondine pontificating over a group of lovers, some self- conscious, others oblivious to all that is going on. Superimposed on this are scenes of 'Nico waiting, looking on sadly and attempting to sing a Dowland-like song against background sounds pro- vided by. the Velvet Underground. Technically the film is an ex- tension of "Chelsea Girls," Warhol using the zoom lens and fast pan much more extravagantly than he has done ever before. These tech- niques are used beautifully, com- pletely within the decorative tone to the film-decorative, that is, both as baroque and as with fash- ion models. Then Nico' and The Velvet ap- pear on stage. Nico takes up the chant from Nico-on-screen, The Velvet begin to produce "sound," and Gerard Malange lies on the floor listening. "Sin" finishes and a black-and-white film of Nico and The Velvet is projected to- gether with slides-large patterns' filling the stage area. A huge light is shone at the audience and Ger- ard begins to dance with, and against, the strobes. The Velvet play "Venus and Furs,"' "Run, Run, Run," "Heroin" . . . . And then its all over. The "per- formers" move off and you won- der what sort of performance this has been. Gerard, Nico and The Velvet seemed just there; they seemed to say "here we are, super- stars, what more do you want?" And this is the first question, namely "what is the nature of kperformance?" People used to say that the superstar bit was a parody on Hollywood. Not at all, they estab- lish a reality which is peculiarly theirs, which requires no explana- tion, or perhaps all the explana- tion in the world. Two hours of their real live time and two hours of yours, too has been expended. The actual fact, that it has been expended is all that matters; not how or why -that is the tradiional notion of entertainment. Warhol says, "if, the audience can take it for ten minutes, I show it fiteen min- utes." What does it mean, then, to have an aesthetic of the ex- crutiatingly bad? And how is it that this aesthetic produces such magnificent elegance, as in "Sin" and such exquisite beauty as in duroy pants. His black Beatle boots are clean and new. I won- R eview der if they will ever get dirty since he seems to be floating two By LARRY KASDAN inches above the ground. The reporter is a smoothie who The show is terrible. It goes looks right at Warhol's face while on and on and on. The New Gen- he makes notes in his pad. Warhol eration accomplishes the almost responds to many questions with impossible task of making Beatle nods of his head that are barely music sound bad. The light show noticeable. When he does answer, is mediocre. The movies are long ;his voice is so soft that the re- and boring-true Warhol. The Vel- porter must strain to hear. I am Vet underground is totally un- ny impessve.Eah oe o thirsongs standing ,a foot from him,, yet I impressive. Each one of their s cannot hear most of his replies. seems to last about three hours. He doesn't seem to say more than The audience, filled with frus- three words at a time and it is tration, starts to produce its own hard to tell if they are words at entertainment. While one man all plays harmonica, others create "What do you think about poll- moving jungle yells - many just tics. Mr. Warhol?" hiss. I take some pictures. Maybe His shoulders move a fraction this is Warhol's mission-drive the of an inch, implying that Mr. audience to creation through des- Warhol doesn't think about poli- peration. tics Wandering upstairs to the bal- "And have you ever taken any, cony I notice the projection booth Mr. Warhol?" Like in the last half from, which the light show is em- hour the reporter's look suggests. anating. As I reach the door, a man comes out. He barely misses Aitremor moves his hasig- me, but doesn't seem to notice erfin that Mr. Warhol has nev- our earcollsio. Wh ishe r taken any. our earcolisio. Wy i he "What are you doing now and wearing sunglasses in a dark pro- what are your plans for the fu- jection booth? Wait a minute. ture, Mr. Warhol?" Great doubletake. Andy Warhol. He wanders among the glass Th ovies,"ieiehes cases of ancient musical instru- hol's Newporter finshes, gets War- ments. A newspaper reporter stops hlsNwYr drs n evs him and begins an interview, Two One of the students takes off his students move up to him to hear Tibetan prayer shirt and asks the interview. I move in with my Warhol to sign it. When Warhol camera like in "Blow Up." He agrees with a smile, he quickly doesn't seem to mind my snap- adds-"All over it." ping. I come up close. Warhol signs on front, back and Warhol looks older than I had in each armpit. I am too embar- expected. The hair in the front rassed to have him sign my Ann of his head is bleached almost Arbor no-iron study shirt, so I white. The rest of his hair is settle for an autograph on a slip - of paper. ' GERRARD MALANGA does a flag dance with the Velvet Under- ground. the Nico performance. Again Warhol's choice ing for The Velvet sho' master of "the visual" it, perhaps, as a monun fort to suppress visua with the common-place, banality. And yet again, wha place in cinema does W mand as he gradually his own repertoire of niques, or as he (compl vious of the cinema-ar establishes a whole tradi liar to himself. And if you accept th what do you define ar the other hand you ma the whole thing a put-on this does not deny the of the abovequestions (d out of context: "No ar art-), nor does this impress me, since the Warhol's critical insight, plete devotion to his ."vi the phenomenally fast ment of that vision" ("i1, "Empire" are only a few, deny any such assertion It is too easy to say have to get inside th( of light-t ws what at he is. Seer mental ef-a l masteryk even intoa t sort, oft tarhol de-t builds upr filmtech-t etely obli-i rt norms)t tion pecu-o is as art,t t as? Ons y considert . But even world to understand the vision, but is is important to see the con- tinuity within his "ouvre," to ap- preciate that that world does exist and to attempt to investigate its bases. Finally, maybe, it is simply a world of paradoxes, austere and insoluble. Nevertheless these ques- tions-questions, that in a spe- ialized sphere are ones of form and more generally are concerned with the nature of art itself-need some, investigation. This makes Warhol{ the most important film-maker. operating in America today. No- body else is changing the conven- tions of films so radically and pre- senting such a pressing invitation to sophisticated critical analysis. PROTEST HEMISPHERIC SUMMIT Pro-Cuba students and workers march yesterday toward Punta del Este, Uruguay. Some 100 persons are marching to protest the Inter-American Summit meeting that begins Wednesday. The striped flag in center is Cuban. (See story on page Z) 'r~iIMA ei -t U1LUM Lu u , 1 u, 4j pears unnatural. There are deep lines etched in his face. Light pur- ple veins meander across his nose. His skin is an unhealthy red, a little blotchy. He is wearing a mod blazer, bright tie, and cor- U 'PRETTY DECENT': GNew Garg Issue: All-American Spoof By DEBORAH LINDERMAN There- is nothing at .all "dis- gusting," as one of its subscribers charges in LETTERS, about the April Gargoyle; some of it is pret- ty "decent,". If fault be' found, it ies in the magazine's "repetitive- ness," to quote the same letter, and in its inconsistent tone. Thus; though .the All-Ameri- can Issue is consecrated to spoof- ing America's "public enemies," and though some unity around this theme is obviously ,.called for, by the time one has reached the terrific back cover (better than the front one) and come through several jokes apiece about Hoot Gibson, LBJ and Ronald Reagan, one grows bored. Not that they are boring targets; as promulga- tors of the- "in your heart you know it's right" ethic, they are inevitables for a, mock of "ALL Americanism." But enough is fun- ny enough, and a certain insisten- cy implies limitations either of the magazine's staff or of its readers. The Hoot Gibson Revival motif -good scoundrel Bogart being re- placed by goody good Gibson, un- trusser of our "alienation and anomy" C",. standing but 5'9"; like any of ussreally, Hoot be- comes 10 feet of hell-for-leather when forced to fight, and some- times even when he's just pissed off.") is too much respun else- where. So is the obvious joke about Reagan ("we're concerned about the effect that the .talent drain might have on our high quality television industry"). LBJ is already getting "his" from the press so that it's hard to be fresh about him. An adver- tisement for "Bird" cigarettes and entries about "Ladys Bread" are just clutter, but there are a few really good caricatures of "LBJ AS SEEN BY, . ."(especially ehrough the eyes of "Lady Broad," 'George, Linc In Rockwell," and "'the Uncommitted Nations"). Good satire' may demand big,' well-known targets,, but a humor magazine in an ingrown Univer- sity community has other possi- bilities, namely the small, local targets, and Gargoyle: has dealt well with,. sorne- indigenous sons. Reflecting the American scene are: a serial cartoon of cop being eat- en by "driver" as he dispenses 15 minute parking ticket; Arthur Mil- ler's characteristic straight-from- the-shoulder "Sesqui-visit" deliv- eries ("I was the only student on campus who could draw. I was god-awful, but I had confidence"). Unless I misconstrue, there are also these arrows: one at a local merchant in the "Draw Fielding. F. Raalf Contest"; some at the local merchantry in the ads them- selves. And a photo of-from the magazine's own thematic point of view-local "heros," twits them with the device of the incongru- ous :caption: "Mom?" Amply surrounding the good things are some joke columns full of corny "old ones," a lot of soggy writing that just lacks wit (e.g., "The Foxman Story") and a lot that is sapped of its potential by over-explicitness (e.g., the Gar- goyle Philosophy on over-explicit "bosom ads"). - Phone 434-0130 EnLane o CRPENTER ROAD OPEN 6:30 P.M. NOW SHOWING S nPFeaturewn 7 sonat9PM.Ol I cl. THIS WEEK Thursday, Fridc SALT 01 THE EARl directed by Herbert Biberman, 1953. American. First tim in Ann Arbor- revolutionary worki film for which the writer, producer an director were black Saturday, Sund THE WILD ON directed by Laslo Benedek, 1954. Marlon Brando, Le( Marvin. The celebr motorcycle morality SHORTS: 3 Magoo Carton 7.00 & 9:05 P.1 ARCH"TECTURE) STILL ONLY 5 relevance 7FaueTms eKooning, LAST Feature Times: tists, only 1 1 1:00-2:50-5:00 put-down UE7:05-9:15 whole of DAYS! T his co- sion" ande sleep" and E~ N DCS2AO(P years old) 1 r that you CaDet ° ..s. OM1 e Warhol# tT HURSDAY asiaa "v"'h k r.:.i':' n. 'lP.N,:+iL. d Ci AX, F TH er' er's d listed. ay NOMI NATIO N S,. 4 E INCLUDING "BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR"! Best Actress e ated Best Actor y play. Best Supporting Actress ans Best Supporting Actor Best Director M.j AUD. Best Screenplay 0c.. Best Cinematography - Best Film Editing Best Costume Design' Best Art Direction Best Music Score Best Sound Direction t IN ERNEST LEHMAN'S PRODUCTlON OF M I ' EDWARD ALBEE'S TS I U' IiwSmi Cinema I presents RITA TUSH INGHAM in Richard Lester's "THE KNACK .. .& How to Get It" FRIDAY and SATURDAY 7&9-P.M. TUESDAY, APRIL 111 THE FILMS OF ROBERT BREER with Mr. Breer ir person & THE SEVENTH SEAL in. . "FOUND FILM" by George Manupelli with Pat Olesko, Nick Bertoni & Leslie Coutant as Teenie Chiffon & The Incredible Fog Machine & Gerard Malanga as Baron Manferd Von Richthofen, April 21, 1918. Henry Chapier as his OberKommandar Proceeds contributed to the Artistic Program of Dramatic Arts Center of Ann Arbor ARCHITECTURE AUD. STILL ONLY 50c 7:00 & 9:Q5 Angell Hall, Aud. A *1 50c I 0 I ; ii~lii. 111 i irj11 PRESENTS THE a REPERTORY COMPANY It "Nations's Finest Company *th FALL FESTIVAL 3 NEW PRODUCTIONS * 7: "TAKES YOU SEE... RIGHT UP TO THE THE 10 STORY BEDROOM DOOR" LEAP FOR LA. Examiner LOVE DIAL 5-6290 FLINT STRIKES AGAIN!l In the Virgin Isands ,F where the, bad guys l are girls! r *2MthCENTURY-FOX PRESE?' I _ - - -- --- SEPT. 19.24 SWt. 26-OCT. 1 'The brilliant Belgian dramatist Michel de Ghelderode's "farce to make you sad." OCT. 10-15, 17-22 The AMERICAN PREMIERE of Eugene Ionesco's -1-^ 0~ OCT: 24-29, OCT 31-NOV. S.I One of the classic American comedies of the Twenties. by Pulitzer Prize-Playwright George Kelly ; :. °^: j, .AST TWO DAYS 4qM1'l [IJ DIAL 8-6416 "VIVID AND IMAGINATIVE ... HIGHLY ORIGINAL AND THOUGHT-PROVOKING!" --Strda"v Review II I A superb, harro ing,. nostalgic drama of the death of Everyman. Distinguished success of the 1967 Paris Season. I U +Trn.,alc+e..l by Tknnl.# tXlnto I