Page 6--Friday, September 28, 1979-The Michigan Daily LA CA GE A UX FOLLES' Triumph of the wit 0 Amm By OWEN GLEIBERMAN LA Cage Aux Folles is bound to unleash the ire of stauncher gay rights supporters. Though this bittersweet comedy about gay life is openly sym- pathetic to homosexuals, it trafficks in some disarmingly out-moded cliches: The gays all dangle their hands from half-cocked arms, suspend pinkies in mid-air while daintily sipping their tea, and parade about in silky chemises and outrageous undergarments, dyed lavender and hot pink. Still, La Cage shouldn't be-dismissed as a bundle of anachronisms. Beneath its more obvious sociological shor- tcomings flows an engaging com- passion for people trapped in something less than the best of all possible worlds. Even after parades of mincing tran- svestities and a farcial guess-who's- coming-to-dinner scene, the characters emerge not as walking comic stick- figures but as real human beings. Given the setting-a ritzy Saint- Tropez nightclub that features flam- boyant female impersonators - the filmmakers could have done worse. The club's two proprietors, Albin (Michael Serrault) and Renato (Ugo Tognazi), are a "happily married" middle-aged gay couple who've taken on traditional husband-wife roles: Renato is the sweet but somewhat gruff "man" of the house, who's dickered with heterosexuality (producing a son in the process) and learned to act straight for the world at large; Albin, Renato's lover of 20 years, is the club's headlining drag-queen, and so ef- feminately cuddly that one fastforgets he looks like the head of a local chapter of the Teamsters. La Cage opens with an eerily beautiful sequence, a grand tran- svestite tango that might have come from a Bertolucci .remake'of Cabaret. The nightclub, La Cage Aux Folles (Which I've heard translated as both "Cage of Crazy Ladies" and "Birds of a Feather"), is saturated with the lascivious grins of lipsticked men, and the seedy thrill of voyeurism. It's too bad the filmmakers didn't give us a bet- ter look at the patrons, or pour more razzle-dazzle into the stage acts. But there was no holding back on one count: The performers are so deliriously out of their closets that the rest of society seems nowhere in sight. Actually, its just around the bend. Renato's son wants to marry the daughter of the Secretary of Moral Or- der, a sternly conservative stuffed-shirt under the delusion that his future son- in-law's father is a high-ranking public official. Should he get any idea that the boy's "parents" are two aging homosexuals who decorate their apar- tment with phallic statues, the marriage is finis. La Cage uses this rather shopworn farce of a plot to summon up some of the more poignant problems of gay life. The story turns on whether Renato and 'Albin can bluff the Secretary, but direc- j. 2.tolkier's FR I. "f SAT. the O6 h 12:00R 16,__ L i - PG s. lqmlb_ ~SW ' Stanley Kubrick's Classic '4 CLOCKWORK ORA 'MONDO VIDEO iyS SPECIAL R R MR. BILL SHOW tor Eduoard Molinari is sensitive to ask, Should they even lave to? Albin's refusal to play the game by the straights' rules, even br his "son's" marriage, seeme selfishV petty at first, but later a noble asserthn of personal identity. Albin isn't a crusader. He's just so thoroughly himsef, right down to his ultra-delicate buttering of a slice of toast, that he's irresistaile. Some of the humor falls grey to bom- bast. The mincing black maid, who em- bodies every flitty gay stereotype in the books, is an unwelcome exaggeration, even for farce, and unfumy besides. The Secretary, a raving, foaming-at- the-mouth homophobe, is an equally. useless caricature, who's set up for a'~.. huge, sprawling pratfall when Renato and Albin try to pass themselves off as husband and wife. Forcing him to saunter through the nightclub in drag is nothing more than a psychological tar-' and-feathering, a contrived excuse to', see the oppressor with his pants down. STILL, most of the movie's 'less socially redeeming humor is hilarious. As Albin, an earnest bon vivant with a streak of infantile exhibitionism a mile wide, Michael Serrault gives a brilliant' comic performance. Aping John Wayne's macho Strut, he's sublimely ridiculous; in drag, he comes on with all the decadent spelendour of Pink Flamingoes' infamous fag-hag, Divine. Like most of the French movies that reach these shores, La Cage is light fare, a spiffy dessert of a movie. Mere' lip service is paid to Albin and Renato's sex life, as if depictingthe complexities of a physical relationship might cloud the film's simple, gay-is-good message. Still, by cater.ng'to a f ew mid= die-class notions of honosexual styles, La Cage may prove more immediately vital to the gay cause than a purely realistic portrayal. Gays tempteqd to write off a film of this much warmth and honesty as an offensive cliche would be wise to remember one thing: In a few years, they'll probably be get- ting their own sitcoms. t PRESENTS ALl: FEAR EATS' (WERNER FASSBINDE Fdssbinder's most accessible film to date.1 woman and a 30 year old Moroccon work must face the spectrum of reactions toc societal taboos. Perhaps the best film to+ last 20 years. German, with subtitles. (94 mi ANGELL HALL . Tomorrow: SLAVE+ Applications being taken for New Members. IAI T HE SOUL Ir R. 1974) I The story of a 60-ish cle ker who fall in love but a relationship which vio come out of Germany it n) oning then lated n the 9:00 .50 7:00 &' OF LOVE mass U... / Frida Spt 28e~ PM Arbor Jazz Festival Fri. Sept. 27 HOURS: MON -SAT; 10 -6 ,SUN; 12 - 8 '6523 E. Liberty 994 -8031 ~,j 7~pe5 514Y E. William 6(upstairs) (Please bring EMPTY record jackets for autographs) British star 'Our Gracie' dies at 81 ROME (Reuter) - British enter- tainer Gracie Fields, who died today at her home on the jsland of Capri at the age of 81, was so much a part of the English scene that she was known to millions of Britons simply as "Our Gracie." Born over a fish and chip shop in the drab industrial city of Rochi iale, she became a giant of the British nfusic hall and a talented singer-comedienne who appeared in films and on television. SINGING IN a croaky Lancashire dialect or with the clipped voice of Britain's high society, Fields., had the gift of moving audiences from tears to laughter in minutes. Although she was always identified as a "very English performer," she had lived in Capri for many' ears and two of her three husbands were not British. She made only occasional visits to her native land but invariably received a rapturous reception. Fields was best known for her nostalgic songs about the late Victorian period into which she was bprn on Jan. 9, 1898. Her song about the lowly aspidistri plant - a symbol of Victorian households - was so successful in modern Britain that horticulturists claim she helped the broad-leafed plant become popular again. SHE SANG IN public for the first time at the age of seven at a music hall in her native Rochdale, where she was born Grace Stansfield. Her success brought a change of name and an ambition to become an in- ternational star. Some of the songs she made famous were "Sally," "The Biggest Aspidistra in the World," "Bless This House" and "Alfie." Her films included "He Was Her Man," "We're Going to be Rich," and "Sally in our Alley." 5 EL CINE POLITICO SUN., SEPT. 30 8:00 P.M. AUD "A" SUN., OCT. 7 8:00 P.M. AUD "B"(note change) BURN! (Quelimada) Mar'on Brondo ploys Sir William Walker, a cynical Tree-,ance secret agent and adventurer who is hired by the British government to dismantle Portugal's sugar trade monopoly in its caribbean Island colony of Queimoda. Sir William came to the same strotetic conclusion in the 1840s as did the Pentagon in the 1960's, that the way to fight a guerrilla movement with a broad popular base is to fight the people themselves. Thus in both cases we see used as routine weapons widespread torture and executions, the recruitment of native mer- cenarv armies to kill their own people, the razing of villooes. the destruction of crops. And both colonial warmakers were forced to learn the some lesson, that the bottle against an ideal cannot be won by force of arms. Nicaragua: Patria Libre 0 Morir Film beings with scenes of Fall 1978 uprising by FSLN explores history of intervention in Nicaragua and role Os Sandino-Eden Pastoro (Commandante Cero) discusses organization and armed struggle interviews women and men Fl MM, > V