-- -----Mmopp- , Page 6-Sunday, October 22, 1978-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily-Sunday, Oci ROOkI ay Critic Truffaut plays cat and dog 'No nukes!' Protestors challenge atomic By Anne Sharp THE FILMS IN MY LIFE By Francois Truffaut Simon and Schuster 345 pp., $12.50 EST KNOWN to American audiences as the B wistful, understanding French UFO expert in Steven Speilberg's Close Encounters of the Third World, Francois Truffaut is a true man of the cinema. Like the hero of his early masterpiece The 400 Blows, Truffaut spent much of his childhood in the local movie emporium, playing hooky from his lycee; he later made his living as a film critic, and finally a director of films.- The Films of My Life, published originally in 1975 and newly translated from the French, is an an- thology of reviews Truffaut wrote for various cinema magazines in France. The articles cover a time span from the mid-fifties to the mid-seventies, and in reading them we discern a literate; gentle and enthusiastic film lover who can be non-caustic, even affectionate, in his critiques yet still point to valid, perceptive aspects of film. What a pleasure it is to discover Truffaut's essays after years of put- ting up with Gene Shalit's hollow quips and the ob- scure menanderings of the New Yorker's Pauline Kael and Penelope Gilliatt. "No film is a total success," Truffaut remarks, "and it's awfully easy to criticize what it's not. It's our job to try to discover what it is." This man knows his subject well, in all its various aspects and origins. The six chapter headings in Films of My Life illustrate this: "The Big Secret" about direc- tors who started their careers during the silent era; "The Generation of the Talkies," both French and English-speaking;. "Hurrah for the Japanese Cinema;" "Some Outsiders," which includes pieces on the unclassifiable Ingmar Bergman, Federico Fellini and Orson Welles; and a tribute to "My Friends in the New Wave." Truffaut, of course, is referring to the beatnik-era "New Wave" movement among European cinematographers, not to the new rock and roll institution. "With time," Truffaut writes in the introduction to The Films in My Life, "artist and critic settle into their respective roles; maybe they grow to know each other, and soon they consider each other, if not exactly adversaries, in some simplistic image-cat and dog." 'No film is a total success and it's awfully easy to criticize what it's not. Our job is to discover what it is., -Francois Truffaut .J Fellin i criticism: neo-realism, leering priests and Casanova By Anne Sharp N ewport, Michigan is a rambling, disorganized jumble of houses and ,farms just outside of Monroe. There are a few cultivated fields and most of the land is given over to pastures and woods, with some fields left fallow. The rolling, brown land looks somewhat like the skin of a potato. It is here that workmen broke dirt several years ago to construct the Enrico Fermi II nuclear reactor. Because of the area's proximity to Lake Eric, with a shore marred by clumps of factories, it has always been important to business in Michigan. Businesses such as the commercial fishing industry have operated for years in the region, although pollution has cut back their growth. A group of utility companies, lead by Detroit Edison, chose Monroe as a site for nuclear reactors largely because of easy access to Lake Erie. In the late 1950's plans for building a reactor in Monroe first surfaced. The result was the Enrico Fermi I reactor, an experimental form of "breeder" reactor.. It was hoped that Fermi, I, America's first commercial breeder, would shed light on this potentially earthshaking area of atomic study-for the breeder reactor, in a sense, can "produce" more fuel than it uses. There. was talk of industry and government plans for the creation of a "nuclear park" which would have included several more reactors in the area. These dreams, however, were shattered on October 5, 1966. As workers ran through tests at the sitesof the uncompleted power plant, there occured perhaps the most publicized nuclear accident since the birth of the industry, when former President Eisenhower first put the adjective "peaceful" in front of "atom." - T he plant' went through a "partial meltdown:" a failure of the reac- tor's cooling system to carry off heat from the core of the plant. If enough heat builds, radioactive materials can melt through the constrictions of the plant's core and seep into the environ- ment. While the mishap at Fermi I did not leak radioactivity, it was serious enough for one plant official to remark, "We almost lost Detroit." Later, in spite of many attempts to make the reactor safe, the plant was closed down. But Detroit Edison is confident it has its nuclear problems licked. It has committed itself to building the Enrico Fermi II plant in Newport, slated to run over one million kilowatts of electricity for Michigan by 1980. Members of the Arbor Alliance would rather see fields lying fallow there, and ground that looks like potato skin. The Alliance, born out of a demon- stration in front of Detroit Edison of- fices on Main Street in Ann Arbor last summer, is dedicated to halting the use of atomic energy, for weapons or for reactors. "We are trying to teach people how little control they have over their lives," explains Alliance member Howie Brick. "People are going to realize that a real little number of people control things that affect them." As they marched last October 7 at the site of the 80-per cent completed Fermi R J. Smith is a member of the Daily Arts staff, By R. J. Smith rnoto by WAYNt ABLE FEDERICO FELLINI: ESSAYS IN CRITICISM Edited by Peter Bondanella Oxford University Press 314 pp. $4.95 POOR FEDERICO Fellini, who someone once labeled "The Busby Berkley of metaphysics", has often found himself chased up a tree by slavering reviewers. In editor Peter Bondanella's Federico Fellini: Essays in Criticism, we find several typical at- tacks on Fellini's artistic style. Fellini came out with his 1954 masterpiece La Strada when the major Italian film auteurs all followed the doctrine of neo- realism which, I gather, demanded the artist's strict attention to working class reality La Strada, a poetic story packed with religious and psychological detail surrounding a simple, Chaplinesque girl and her bestial master/husband, infuriated the neorealists. Guido Aristarco, a Marxist film critic in- cluded in this volume, intending to in- sult Fellini's fresh, subjective outlook, complains: "Transcribing certain memories, contacts, moments, 'moods of his life - and on a sentimental level at that - is already in his view tan- tamount to the creation of poetry. His Anne Sharp is a member of the- Daily Arts staff. participation in reality is episodic, fragmentary, only sporadically enriched by realistic elements and at- titudes; in Fellini we do not have the sense of our actual experiences." But Fellini retorts, "For me, the story of one man who discovers his neighbor is as real and as important as the story of a strike." Many essays included in the an- thology, especially the later ones writ- ten by northerners, take Fellini's part in his ridiculous struggle with the in- dignant neorealists. The old tug-of-war seems particularly futile now, since the issues at stake have been dead for twenty years and each side has left behind monumental films which tran- scend artistic and political theory: The neorealist Bicycle Thief and Open City, and Fellini's La Strada, La Dolce Vita, 8 ... Even today Fellini tends to alienate viewers with his "irrationalism" and his "baroque tendencies," with his never-ending parade of leering priests, cripples, and fat whores. One writer analyzes his use of musical themes, constantly aided by his composer Nini Rota; another char- ts his symbolic - use of color in Satyricon; a third compares the enigmatic director to T. S. Eliot. They have many interesting things to say about this strange and wonderful artist, up Ato his last , much-despised film Casanova. II reactor, however, at least one person scorned the group's opposition to nukes. W RILE HER husband chased dem- onstrators away from his property bordering the plant, a woman laughed and called out, "You can protest and picket and complain all you want, but you can't stop it. It's the government." Like scores of groups across the country, the Arbor Alliance is hoping otherwise. The anti-nuke movement germinated when 1,414 demonstrators were arrested at an occupationof a plant at Seabrook, New Hampshire in April, 1977. With a conservative governor enlisting the aid of five state trooper squads to squash the rally, and the publisher of the state's largest newspaper calling the demonstrators "communists" and "perverts," New Hampshire was an unlikely place to spawn a nuclear opposition. But the occupation at Seabrook proved that the anti-nuke movement is perhaps the strongest political mobilization since the anti-war movement. Opposition to the construction of the plant at Seabrook was based largely on environmental issues. Several months before the Seabrook incident, New Hampshire coalition called the Clamshell Alliance quietly organized. "The Clam," as the group became known, began staging several marches and non-violent sit-ins that culminated in the April demonstration. Since then, more demonstrators have protested at the plant, and the government has consistently waffled on its plans for the plant's fate. Today the Clam is a model for anti- nuke organizations. Divided into small affinity groups that stress non-violent methods of civil disobedience, the Clam has gained support from members of the New England community who refused to join the violent anti-war movement. HIS HAS been the case across the nation, as groups including the a metto Alliance, the Crabshell Alliance, the Armadillo Coalition and dozens more have sprung up and gained support from all sections of society. "It's much more a grass-roots thing now," said Arbor Alliance member Dan Uselmann. "During the war it was so much just students. There was a lot of uncivil disobedience, stone-throwing at police, general violence . . . to get an anti-nuclear movement - a revolution- ary movement - to catch on, we have to get the support of the people. That's what they are doing," Uselmann ex- plained. The Clam's impact in Ann Arbor has surfaced in various ways. While groups such as the Friends of the Earth and Science for the people were- around before the occupations, they have expanded and often followed the example of the Clam. And organizations like the Detroit-based Safe Energy Coalition or the anti-nuke group forming at East Quad might not be in existence, if not for the demonstration at Seabrook. And if there had been no Clamshell Alliance, there would be no Arbor Alliance, which is by far the best example of the Clam's influence in this area. "I'm really happy to see this," said Keith Gunter as he stood alongside thei Dixie Highway watching members of the Ann Arbor Alliance and the Safe Energy Coalition demonstrate at the Fermi site. "A the mobilizatic England it's j "This is rea organization ti two or three y who has work whose brother For Arbor Gunter's wo: indeed. S UPPORTEE often say t sparkling-cle Occasionally, incidents arise. Such an oc the Russian i south Ural n 1957. From td Soviet scien references, a curred: a nuc how exploded cloud over mil number of dea but allegedly ] thousands -- were jammed plosion. Acres plowed under, area was destr Ten years la to abort fetus to deformed ci And the Am has had its cal At a stora, Washington, discovered wo been dumpir plutonium int plutonium wa amounts, a warned, the s and explode "li "The nuclea existence sinc said Alliance "They, to this c a solution to waste is in stor "One of the threat of the putting things be guarded for no single gove nearly that lon a complete coll INDUSTRY that the pr is a serious on be solved. Sol treatment of t which would b stored substa waste would b underground f half-mile below But so far, p not come to frui sent underg industries, ove waste has le storage tanks. considered put' the ground in was stopped wl survey discove authorities had No energy s counter indus spokespersons, out that a nuck See NI. IV