The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 12, 1979-Page 7 'LIFE OF BRIAN' The pitlls o plot and purpose .j NI r By DENNIS HARVEY The Life of Brian is very amusing - a tidy and well-structured comedy, with its solid laughs shrewdly placed within the framework of firm plotline. Terry Jones' direction keeps things rollifig at a steady clip, the production work is unexpectedly slick and attractive, and Peter Biziou's painterly camera com- position lends the film considerable visual class without smothering the satire in banal prettiness. This description would be assuring if applied to the latest imported bedroom farce or Pink Panther entry. But somehow one expects less - and a good deal more - from the Monty Python troupe. One doesn't necessarily expect, or even hope for, the sort of technical slickery and smooth flow that the sup- posedly more "professional" and con- siderably duller folks in Hollywood can offer. What one does expect is exactly the opposite: A free-form explosion of ideas; a state of comic chaos in which any attempts at coherent plotting are quickly shoved off the nearest cliff. AT THEIR BEST, in much of Monty Python and the Holy Grail and especially in the Flying Circus series, the six-member team managed to dive so far off the edge of agreeable insanity that the idea of working with a less- fragmented structure seemed not just unnecessary, but potentially disastrous. Like the Marx Brothers in their early movies and Woody Allen in parts of his, the Pythonites were anar- chists in a world that was only as sane as it needed to be. Margaret Dumont's top-heavy society matrons may have seemed comparatively realistic when assaulted by Groucho, but in her small way she reached dizzying heights of silliness on her own. 4Likewise, the various working-class twits and upper-class imbeciles of the Flying Circus shows may have seemed' like recognizable human beings when suddenly tortured by the dreaded "soft cushions" and infamous "comfy chair" at the hands of the Spanish Inquisition, or when abruptly carried out of a scene and stuffed into the digestive system of some fantastic winged breast-monster out of animator Terry Gilliam's night- mares. These genial idiots were great parodies on their own, their actions providing a background of muted in- sanity for the more bizarre deeds of the real Python heroes: the Inquisition; ten-foot carnivorous cartooned feet; transsexual nuns; and ordinry English housewes withstrange desires to imprison dozens of gover- nment'workers in the attic. ;ON FLYING CIRCUS, and, to a ' sser extent, in the slightly more plot- ted holy Grail, reality and sense scar- cely ever intruded. Scenes barged into one another without warning and characters often stopped the action to make hilariously baffling observations. Scattered title cards merely compoun- 'ed confusion, and animation frequen- tly created abrupt and usually destruc- tive interruptions to the live-action. By piling madness upon madness, the Pythonites constantly ran the risk of plowing their ideas into the ground. In- deed, each Circus show tumbled along recklessly from high spots to dismal lows, often taking the fatal leap from flit to shit within a few seconds. But the highs were dazzling and the lows - momentarily depressing - soon got buried in the general rush. The Life of Brian, alas, is a very or- derly film. While it has none of the dismal moments one dreads in which bad taste and bad comedy meet and make terrible music together, it also avoids entirely the terrific high points for which one waits. Those who found the TV series "nonsensical' and the Grail movie better but still too disorganized will love Brian. The film makes frustratingly good sense from beginning to end. SURE, IT'S funnier than most of the year's other comedies lumped together, and there's still a fine edge of lunacy here (if in somewhat diluted form), but the old full-tilt craziness is nowhere to be found. Horror of horrors, this movie is logical! You can leave the theatre and actually describe the plot coheren- tly to a friend. Could you pull that stunt after seeing Holy Grail? Not likely. Could you ever relate to anyone just what went on in any episode of Flying Circus? God forbid! Life of Brian is a very professional piece of work, a neat comedy that undoubtedly deserves the, polite applause of Middle America and all the New York critics. But Python addicts, starved for new material since the 1977 arrival of Gilliam's decidedly substandard Jabberwocky, will probably find themselves feeling subtly let-down after sitting through an hour and a half of screen antics without laughing themselves into exhaustion even once. The opening sequence - in which the Three Wise Men arrive from the east (amid some appropriately sappy Christmas-card imagery) and grandly offer their gifts to infant Brian and his hardly-virginal mother only to take the gifts back and give Ma a rude shove when it is discovered that the real messiah is in the manger down the block - sets the tone for the whole film. The sequence is ingeniously conceived and very amusingly staged, but at once it is clear that the humor is more dependent on situation and less on ver- bal nonsense and rude slapstick than the Python material of yore. AFTER THE promisingly chaotic opening credits (which mark the only appearance of Gilliam's wonderful animation, unfortunately) and the amusingly idiotic title song, the film settles contentedly into a plot structure of amazing tidiness. Brian grows into a likeably befuddled adult (Graham Chapman), leads commando attacks on the local Roman palace with the aid of the Judean People's Front, and, by unintentionally falling on the head of a babbling marketplace prophet, is mistakenly proclaimed the messiah by the brainless masses. The rest, as they say, is history, or at least vaguely close to it. Those' looking forward to a musical-comedy Crucifixion climax will not be disappointed.. As good as most of this is - and a lot of it is very good indeed - the expected soaring moments never quite arrive. The film has dozens of funny situations, but it's a slight disappointment to find that all the laughs rise logically out of specific events rather than by spon- taneously leaping out of nowhere and magically disrupting the entire storyline. Everything is carefully set up, from the rather tiresome speech- defect jokes to perhaps the single best scene, in which Pontius Pilate (Michael Palin) talks about his friend "Biggus Diccus." Even more upsetting than the lack of comic surprise is the fact that even the wildest jokes have a slightly familiar ring to them. Perhaps four years of ex- posure to Saturday Night Live since the last major Python project has saturated audiences with attempts at "outrageous" comedy. It's more likely that the humor on display in The Life of Brian really is milder than expected. Despite the R rating, condemnation from the Catholic Conference's Office for Film and Broadcasting, and the oc- casional naughty word of dialogue, the movie never comes close to the genuine shock of Holy Grail's grisly medieval world. THERE IS ONLY one jolting sequen- ce, a total surprise because it's the sole moment of sheer nuttiness and liberation from the mechanics of the plot. Brian falls from the top of a Roman tower to certain death, but in a split second, wholly without ex- planation, a gleaming silver spaceship whizzes by and breaks his fall in mid- air. For the next minute our hero flies through space with two marvelously grotesque aliens. After some dizzyingly brief Star Wars spoofery, the ship crash-lands ... and Brian is back exactly where he was a moment before on Earth. The idea is a little contrived, but there's a sense of exhilarating anarchy in this "purposeless" sequence that the rest of the film sadly lacks. All six Python members contribute very funny characterizations in various major and minor roles. Chapman, for- ced alone to play things reasonably straight, is an endearing hero. Everything falls into place well ... all too well. Sober adults would often shake their heads in dismay at the muddle of Monty Python's Flying Cir- cus. The saddest thing that can be said about The Life of Brian is that.this, alas, is a Monty Python flick that even your parents could understand. m IIR The Ann Arbor Film ooperative Presents at MLB: $1.50 Friday, October 12 14th International Tournee of Animation 7. 1:20-MLB 3 A n eclectic array of highly-sophisticated short animation films make up this remarkably entertaining program. Assembled from Academy Award nominees and international prize-winners, the TOURNEE films range from deadly serious to hilarious. "The best recent animation from anywhere in the world."-L.A. TIMES. HOLLYWOOD CARTOONS: 4.ony-ML33 Just for fun! You owe to yourself to see this potpourri of twelve choice cartoons from Hollywood's golden years of animation, featuring the faultless performances of many of that era's most beloved celluloid characters. Viewers age matters not for these star-studded shows; these rich works of art, with their energetic characters, and multi-talented creators, will entertain and amuse even the most cyncical and dour. See Bugs, Woody, Daffy, Felix, E. Fudd. Porkv. Heckle, Jeckle and others. Credit and a sincere aooreciatinn to the creators: Tex Avery, Paul Terry, Walter Lantz, Ub Iwerks, Chuck Jones, BobClompett, Pat Sullivan, Otto Messner and hundreds of loyal. fun-loving and richly talented assistants. Tomorrow: Robert Young's SHORT EYES in MLS MAJOR EVENTS PRESENTS THE SING ACAPELLA IN CONCERT OCTOBER .25 8 PM POWER CENTER ALL SEATS 6.50 AVAILABLE AT MICHIGAN UNION BOX OFFICE OCTOBER 4 10AM 7633.O71 lnth e Arts Page, Giveus h ea ds! We are looking for the biggest Dead-Head in Ann Arbor, and we need your help. As part of our package on the November Grateful Dead concert, the Arts page is conducting a sqsrch for the most dedicated local fan of this rock group. Sure, a lot of people have seen the Dead five or six times and have all the albums, but we're looking or true gonzo maniacs. WHO WENT TO EGYPT to see the group? Who got in line five days in ad- vance for concert tickets? Who followed the Dead across the country on a recent tour? Who has tapes of every single concert? Let's get those nominations for biggest Dead-Head in to the Daily Arts Desk by October 22. No casual buffs, please. SECOND C1NRCE 994-5350 mie'ram st; arring Burt Reynolds and JON VOIGHT TONIGHT 7 & 9 p.m. (note location change) 100 Hutchins Hall, Law School (S. Univ. & Monroe) 1-f IL a Gargoyle Films presentation BL m6 1 (IVEZSITY cUSICA L $8OCIETY presentc Homecoming Court AptA ictionare due in C offices on oct. 19th. o~e c~s~ eMPIRe All University Students Encouraged to Apply Information Meeting 6:30 in Kuenzel Room on Octo- ber 19th. Questions: Call 764-4700, 763-1107. Vouri Egorov Thursday, Oct.18, 8:30 Rackham Auditorium Egorov is more than a young man with a pretty face, fast fingers, and a headline-catching history of defection in Rome (from his native Russia) and failure-become-triumph in Fort Worth. His platform manner is modest, his personality self-effacing. He seems to be a Baryshnikov, not a Nureyev, of the concert world." Andrew Porter, The New Yorker Tickets Available: $4, $5.50, $7 at Burton Tower, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 I