Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fridav Mov 16 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY --Y/ I-y , cinema Finney:' 1 All art Vacuum-packaged satires melodrama By DAN BERMAN The most powerful feature of Finney is its theme-song, "Little- boy," sung at the film's ,outset by the Arbors to get the film off to a syrupy and embarrassing start. Throughout the rest of the film the audience remains tense, worried over the possibility that the insipid background music will lead to another vocal outburst by the Arbors, but p'roducer-director- writer Bill Hare is too sensitive to repeat this mistake; instead we are treated to some fair folksinging by Joan Sundstrom (as Joyce Finney) along wtih the insipid background music. Not that there aren't other problems to keep the viewer on edge. When football player-star actor Robert Kilcullen (who plays Jim Finney) goes to a football practice there is always the chance that he will sprain an ankle, and his wife could break a string on her guitar at any moment.{ Our story, melodrama lovers, is of professional football player Jim Finney. He is too old to play with the big boys anymore and doesn't know what to do with himself. He struggles with the no- tion of becoming an artist but something is hampering him until Eureka!, hg discovers his forte is doing works of art about foot- ball-although it seems that only half an hour earlier in the movie he had refused a coaching job because he wanted to get away from the game.r But despite his personal vision of his function in the inter- planetary cosmos, the art dealers say "no." Frustrated with his moping, the little woman makes the big time with just a voice and a guitar. The marriage fizzles. And now what was once a proud, noble athlete is an apathetic bar- tender. Sob. Yawn. Lead actor Robert Kilcullen actually was a defensive tackle with the Chicago Bears. As an actor he is not just a defensive tackle, at his high points -you could- swear he was a halfback. The rest of the cast manages to maintain his pace. And so the only real questions that arise are whether or not a guitar string or an ankle will snap. The non-existent tension of Kilcullen's non-acting makes it difficult to believe that anything happens at all., As it becomes clear to Finney that he is going nowhere, his realization seems to signify that he has realized that his bus will be a few minutes late. i Finney is a shoestring movie made on a shoestring budget. For $140,000 Hare's production is technically all right, but ir- relevant landscape shots and meaningless stop-actions do not fall into the advertised category of "beautiful photography." Film- maker Hare is now deep in debt and I do not belittle his plight, but Fellini and the Grateful Dead are also in debt and they have something worthwhile to offer. --music CONGRATULATIONS! to Daily contributing editor and ace music reviewer R. A. Perry and his wife on the birth yesterday of their new daughter, Claire. son's comment: that man must be aware of all the processes that lead to the product, all the processes that influence man himself as a product, a conse- quence of the paths of commer- cialism. Simpson's "Rolling Grassy Hill" is made of artificial green grass, reminiscent of the rolling western part of Nebraska. He says it is a 500-mile chunk of Nebraska, scaled down. This is where the hills are sloping to- wards artificial commercialism, not natural to the land. Upon the grass there is a mobile or- *gan in erection, which can be moved anywhere on the grass, or even removed. Philosophize to your heart's content - see it as the sperm of the land, see it as the elements of man and na- ture, or see it as the farce of an- ticipating growth and life from artificality. Anyway it is view- ed, the piece is dynamic, involv- ing, Simpson has just completed graduate study at the University and will soon complete his term of teaching at Flint Col- lege. x Also exhibiting at the gallery are Bill Davison; a teachet at the University of Vermont, and Michael M a z o r, a teacher at Brandeis. Davison has just received a University scholarship to con- tinue his work in lithography. He uses mixed medium of silk screen, carborundum, emboss- ment and flocking, among many others. He has won m a n y re- wards and national recognition for his me'thods. The "Throne" piece is an excellent example of his technical proficiency, al- though the lighting in the gal- lery works against h i s subtle displays., Mazor, a Yale graduate, is ex- hibiting primarily large etch- ings which are of interest be- cause of the different shaped plates he uses. He cuts his own plates according to the size he wants. The exhibition funs, through Sunday. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an ian. ;l'arolnen for police force. Police official publication of the Univer- Admin. aide sity of Michigan. Notices should be Co unty of Calhoun Community Ac- sent in TYPEWRiTTEN f o r in to tion A:gency. Inc.. Battle Creek, Mich. -- Room 3528 L.S.A Bldg., belfor' Executive Director, recent exper admin. 2 p.m. of the day preceding publi- in public or private social welfare. cation and by 2 p.m. rid f health, education or business, masters Saturday and Sunday. (general in related a rea. Admninistrative issist- Notices may be published a maxi- art.RNA in adl bu mliorbsrteducation mum of two times on request; Day area. recent exper in mgmt. of agency Calendar items appear once only. pMrograms preferred, kniow of federal Student organization notices a re rout. priecedres pref. not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9w70. M]anagement Consultants, N.Y.C. area - Director of research project for ma- Jar TV network on the impact of vio- ay y Calen ar lence depicted on TV. Ideally younger man with PhD in a r e a s related to Friday, May 16 P)sycl-soc. theories, indiv. and group behaviior, child dev. theory, mass corn- Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- 1munication a, n d social research me- inar - "Management of Managers. Pro- thodologies and tech -of stat. analysis, gram No, 89": North Campus Commons, May consider near PhD with view to 8:15 a.m. doing research for thesis. Institute of Continuing Legal Educa- State of Washington - Various posi- tion Seminar - Student Protest and tions in areas of admin., financial, bus. the Law - Rackham Lecture Hall, 9:00 ngmt., staff services, educ. and info., a.m. employ. security a n d social services, Cinema Guild - Dan O'Herlihy and ned., nursing, lab, engrg_ arch., fish James Fernandez In The Adventures of anidgame. MS and BA levels. Robinson Crusoe :" Architecture Audi- Big Brothers of Saginaw, Mich-Case- torium, 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. worker for agency working with father- less boys, psych, soc. soc. wk. BA. GENERAL NOTICES State of Connecticut - Welfare Dist. Director BA plus 5 yrs. or MA plus 3 The Computing Center will s h o w yrs. and consultative exper for higher three half-hour films at 3 p.m., Tues- level position. day, May 20, in the Seminar Room of Personal Products Company, Wil- the Computing Center. (1) Basic Use mington, N.J. - Process Control engr., of the IBM 029 Card Punch (2) Ad- Mgr. Office services in controllers of- vanced Use of the IBM 029 Card Punch, flee Asst. Mill ingr. ME, IE, Oper. Supv. (3) Introduction to the Use of the Tel- State of Arkansas - Accountant, de- etype in t 4 e MTS System. Incquiries gree. may be addressed to Professor Al Em- State of Texas - Appeals Analyst, de- ery, ext. 44143. gree and 1Iyear social wk. type work, E or law degree, Walker Manufacturing, Jackson, Mich. Placen ieiI -Employment Manager, a 11 areas of personnel, small organization, bach. de- GENERAL DIVISION gree in any area, 0-3 years exper. 3200 S.A.B. City of Minneapolis Sanitarian, BS with min. 21 hrs. in public health Current position openings received by or sanitary sei. general division by mail and phone, not State of Washington - Psychiatric interviews on campus, please call 764- Soc. Worker, MA plus 2-3 years coun-r 7460 for complete information and ap- seling mentally or emotionally disturb- plication procedures. ed. Psychologist, ,MA and 0-2 years ex- City of N.Y. - Engineering techni- per. in psych. If 4 By DEBORAH BERKSON The art of L. C. Simpson, now on display at the Editions Gal- lery on Washington St., is funky and satirical-commercial vac- cuum packed pieces with decals and sexual symbols. But Simpson's art at the same time is serious. He has taken man-made objects out of their usual context, and placed them before man to view again in a different manner. He displays banquet plates and bronze chal- ices not just as objects for eat- ing and drinking "from, but as symbols of their inherent beau- ty; Yet simultaneously they re- main as symbols of our porce- lain personalities. Simpson's creativity is not the sterile, passive museum art for which we cap feel admiration but no involvement. It is not the art we can view only from be- hind ropes, and is beyond our touch- One example is the form of a woman, hollow, sucking in the angular mixed media parts of man. The entire piece is striking in its contrasts of an- gles, colors and materials, such as foam rubber and flocking. Most exciting is the base of the piece, which Simpson has surrounded with the hard, black vinyl that usually borders the floor' bases in large institutional rooms and schools, to protect the walls. It is durable and fuwic- tional. It is commercial, a far cry from the delicate bases of marble statues that are not to be handled. Simpson's art is involving. He is not - like others - simply striving to express and to prove his own originality. He sees what is happening in the envir- onment, what is being created, and he places this before the viewers. He is "making a slam at the people who have a wrong idea of what it's all about, and if what is all about themselves daily." All his media are commercial, and the results are satirical and funky. ("This, is a new low in funkiness," reads a comment by Sylvia Turner in the gallery guest register.) He uses com- mercial glazes. artificial grass, decals, and plastics. His themes are topical. His Jesus Christ ser- ies is vaccuum formed and pack- aged in plastic, by the same pro- cess by -which everyday commo- dities are packaged. The grass is green paper, the sky glitter. Paradoxically, the Christsrare both stylized and fundamental. 'the packaging is stylized; yet the pieces consist only of the Christ figure, the earth,,-the wa- ter and the sky. This is Simp- SAVE MONEY-Advertise With Us--THE MICHIGAN DAILY I Wxwmmmml ; .r The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students of the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michi- gan,; 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $9 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. 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