The Michigan Daily-Saturday, November 3, 1979-Page 5^ The man of a thousand effects By OWEN GLEIBERMAN Destroying the Eiffel Tower isn't everyone's idea of an honest living, but when Linwood Dunn got the assignment he didn't bat an eyelash. A veteran special effects person, he annihilated the Parisian landmark for a scant $7.00 - the cost of a plastic scale model - and saw the fruits of his labor on film at the end of The Great Chase. Dunn, who created the special effects for Citizen Kane, Airport and It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, was in Ann"Arbor Thursday, and in addition to bringing along a batch of his best film clips, he presented his audience at the Old Architecture Auditorium with a legacy of Hollywood history that spanned the half-century since he went to work for RKO Radio Pictures.' "It's the one field in motion picture production where you know more about what you're doing than the people you're working for," said Dunn, a calm, affable gentleman with a shock of thick white hair. Holding down the floor for three hours, Dunn let his audience into some of the tricks of the special effec- ts trade; recalling the times directors came to him with scenes they wanted "saved." When shooting was almost completed on John Huston's The Bible, Dunn was called in to touch up a scene in the Garden of Eden, in which Eve was wearing shoes. More recently, director Martin Scorsese had Dunn tone down the bright-red color in Taxi Driver's ex- plosively bloody climax. According to Dunn, there are three major categories of special effects: Reality, fantasy, and repair - "the fixing up of scenes that have been ruined for one reason or another." He placed movies like King Kong or Star Wars in the fantasy category; realism, he said, is any effect that's at its best if completely concealed, adding that creating purely realistic effects is the most challenging task. "Reality is visually more difficult to do," he said, "because if it doesn't look real, it isn't a good shot. In fantasy, usually whatever you come up with is unreal, so who can say if it's wrong?" Dunn spent the most time demonstrating matte painting, an effect whose prominence has diminished with the advent of bigger budgets and on-location shooting. The technique involves pain- ting a background scene - a panorama of skyscrapers, say, or' mountainous scenery - and joining it to a piece of live-action footage. The Hun- chback of Notre Dame, for instance, concludes with a memorable shot of Quasimodo clutching a stone statue on the front of Notre Dame, then pulls back to reveal the cathedral in its majestic entirety. Ex- plained Dunn, everything in the shot - with the ex- ception of the Hunchback and the statue - was ac- tually a five-by-seven foot painting. In a similar vein was the farcical final set-piece from It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, the special effect (a term Dunn says is a "misnomer") of which he's the proudest. In the scene, Spencer Tracy and assorted other aging comedians fall off a 12-story fire escape before a crowd of thousands, was ac- tually a composite of seven different elements - in- cluding crowd scenes shot on a studio backlot, foot- age of traffic shot on Hollywood's grungy Venice Boulevard, and a three-foot model of a fire-truck ladder. The different sections were amalgamized by an optical printer, a machine that won Dunn and Academy Award in 1944 when he brought it into commercial use. Throughout the presentation Thursday, Dunn was obviously proud of the ingenuity with which he and his colleagues performed miracles on film. At one point, though, he said that he would have liked having some of the modern electronic devices. Said Dunn, "It really hurts when you push a few buttons and do something it used to take two weeks to do." """ """'NY''1978 Paul Mazursky's 17 AN UNMARRIED WOMAN Jill Clayburgh gave a widely acclaimed performance as the attractive wife and mother enjoying the American dream (great sex, high tech apartment and fashionable friends)-until her husband announces that he's in love with another woman and wants a divorce. Just as she's mellowed from shock, grief, and anger to acceptance of her "loss"-her husband asks her to come back. With Michael Murphy as her Madison Avenue mate, Lisa Lucas as her troubled teenage daughter and Alan Bates as a rumpled action-painter. CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:15 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 2 The Ann Arbor Film#eoperatve , "Presents at ML: $1.50 Saturday, November 3 Pomp and psyco-stances (Woody Allen, 1977) ANNIE HALL 7 a10:20-MLB 3 With this film, Woody Allen proved that he could make a comedy with depth. "Annie Hall" succeeds on all levels-as good filmmaking, as fine acting, and as an intelligent, probing love story. WOODY & DIANE KEATON (who won an Oscar for her performance) co-star in this chronicle of a rela- tionship between two lovable neurotics. "Annie Hall puts Woody Allen in the league with the best directors we have."-Vincent Canby. (Mel Brooks', 1968) THE PRODUCERS 8:40 only-MLSB3 Mel Brooks first move and one of his best. ZERO MOSTEL plays the producer. When his accountant (GENE WILDER) shows him how producing a Broadway flop will make more money than a hit, Zero buys a horrible, hilarious musical called "Springtime for Hitler"! Academy Award, Best Original Screenplay. "Pure lunocy."-TIME. MADAME ROSA (Moshe Mizrahi, 1978) 7 & 9-MLB 4 Egyptian-born Israeli director Mizrahi won an Academy Award (Best Foreign Film) for this story of a dying Jewish prostitute (SIMONE SIGNORET) who runs a one-woman orphanage for Paris prostitutes' children. SAMY BEN YAUB is Momo, her favorite, a brooding Arab boy who shares both her fantasies of the past and the reality of her impending death. With glimpses of her former sexuality intercut with the grossness of her physical decline, Signoret draws a portrait of her own life in this sentimental, elliptical film of Arab- Israeli reconcilitation. "IN MADAME ROSA," Simone Signoret plays the most courageous role as an actress can play. . ."-Molly Haskell. Next Tuesday: Sergei Eisenstein's POTEMKIN and Edgar G. Ulmer and Robert Siodmak's PEOPLE ON SUNDAY (Menschen Am Sonntag) at AUD. A. Heads don't only talk By MARK COLEMAN "We play now." With this terse in- troduction, David Byrne typifies Talking Heads efficient, meticulous approach to music and life. Visually they are the most unassuming rock and roll band around; three average- looking weirdos and one healthy preppy type on stage with only their instrumen- ts, bathed in stark white light. Musically, they are assuming as hell. They've embellished the intellec- tuallized funk of their first album with the effects of Eno, the whoosh and tap- click-tap of synthesized instruments embedded in a rich, sometimes over- powering production. Talking Heads don't just recreate the fullness of sound on their records, they re-charge it with a vital electricity en- tirely their own. Jerry Harrison's keyboards add the expected texture to the funk attack 'of bassist Tina Weymouth and drummer Chris Frantz uniting behind the nervous, riveting stage presence of David Byrne. From the first song, "For Artists only," Byr- ne skips all over his vocal range, alter- nately singing, speaking, squawking, snorting, and squealling for emphasis. This song is an interesting appraisal of the creative process (I'm cleaning my brain!"), resulting in an unusual asser- tation of artistic integrity (I don't have to prove that I am creative!") that rocks in convincingly quirky fashion. WITH THE aisles filled by dancing, enthusiastic fans, the band launched in- to a seven song set from their most recent album. While the record seemed overly reliant on electronic novelty and production effects, the songs are per- formed live with enough dynamic aplomb to alleviate any musical shor- tcomings. Lyrically, Fear of Music seems thin also, straying from the educated universality of David Byrne's emotional concerts to personal conceit. At times in concert the strength of the music seemed to overcome the ar- chness of the lyrics, especially on the rollicking "Cities"; other times it fell prey to them, as in the self indulgent "Electric Guitar." Byrne still turns phrases of deceivingly simple profundity, i.e. "Heaven is a place where nothing ever happens," or "air can hurt you too." But the utilitarian structure of the music seems to have invaded his songwriting, eclipsing the emotional peretption of earlier songs like "The Girls Want To Be With The Girls" or "The Book I Read." THE NOTABLE exception here is "Mind." Behind an eerie but insidiously funky backdrop, David Byrne stares, blankly addressing the audience: "Drugs won't change you / Religion won't change you / What's the matter with you? / Everything seems to be up in the air at this point." The last line -Attention All Uookworms: Now that your midterms are over, TAKE A BREAK! says more to me about the prevailing atmosphere in this society than the reams of end-of-the-decade prose already being written. Regardless of lyrical contentions, Talking Heads combination of tightness and expressiveness overwhelmed the audience at Masonic Auditorium. It's hard to believe this same band played to a half full Mendelssohn theater in Ann Arbor last fall. Since then, they've had a hit single, been on national television, and had their album played endlessly by partying college students. Along with the appropriately attired punk contingent, there was a wealth of wholesome looking college aged people at Masonic that seemed to enjoy the show more than anyone. AND IT'S college students to whom Talking Heads' intellectual approach naturally appeals. On "Found a Job" David addresses career ambition, an obsession among most current studen- ts, admonishing the audience that "if your work isn't what you love, then something isn't right." During the funky rhythm guitar polyphony towar-N ds the end of the song, David breaks out in a jerky, spastic dance; looking like an introverted, slightly reptillian nerd finally rocking out. This nerdy image is carried to the logical extreme on "Psycho Killer," where the introvert loses touch and strikes out blindly. This song ex- presses desperate alienation with an uptempo beat that is undeniable; a catchy song about a psychopathic killer that left the audience startled but clamoring for more. WHEN AL Green does "Take Me to the River," it has a revivalist fervor, the audience basking in the sensual ex- pression of spirituality in both Green's voice and the image of baptism. In Talking Heads encore the song goes beyond subjective celebration to an up- dating of salvation through ethereal musical technology. Talking Heads didn't leave the audience in a gospel thumping fervor, but more than one person was heard to say "I can't wait to listen to their albums now." Sometimes seeing is believing. S~yxslynks on the Riverfront By TIMOTHY YAGLE Ever since the release of The Grand Illusion just over a year and a half ago, Styx has slid in a virtually uninterrup- ted path toward mainstream of "for- mula" rock. Many have lamented that the five heavy-metal practitioners from Chicago's south side may never return to the "real" Styx form evident on Styx II and that they are catering their music more toward AM radio. But unlike other hard rock bands, Styx doesn't play just hard rock. The band's three front men, guitarist/vocalists Tommy Show and James Young and keyboardist/vocalist Dennis DeYoung, are diverse enough in personality and musical philosophy to create three different kinds of music. Perhaps the most visually intriguing of the three on stage is DeYoung. Most of the time, he is camped behind his gleaming white grand piano or syn- thesizers. But when he steals the spotlight for such romantic ballads as "Lady," "Suite Madame Blue," or "Come Sail Away," he commands the stage with the grace and aura of a Shakespearean actor. Young is the main axe-grinder and songwriter for such hard rock tunes as "Miss America," "Great White Hope," and "Queen of Spades." Shaw, the pint- sized Alabama pretty boy, sings and plays doubleneck and acoustic guitars on such cosmic numbers as "Foolin' Yourself," "Crystal Ball," and "Sing For The Day." This triad of styles gives Styx its distinct style. As if three different personnas weren't enough, to observe on stage, the band tries to keep your eyes moving by throwing gimmicks and theatrics in- to their stage show which make it one of the more delightful to watch in rock. Touring to support their brand new LP Cornerstone, Styx stopped in at Detroit's Cobo Arena Thursday night to give the Motor City another taste of the same show we've seen the past two years. The only real changes were the ab- sence of flash pods during "The Grand Illusion," and the new songs which replaced the old ones. One disappointing aspect of the show was the decibel level. Styx was the loudest I have ever heard them, and this added noise only detracted from the quality of the songs. One of the three encores, "Blue Collar Man," was so loud all the instruments blended into one loud noise. Most of the other songs weren't quite as loud. The single aspect of Styx's show which really stands out is their use of spotlights and stagelights. In the ab- sence of Kiss-like gimmicks (flame- throwers, explosions and the like), the group tries to put on an elaborate and theatrical stage show using the lights as much as possible - and they succeed admirably. Whether spotlighting one person or highlighting a particular part of a song, the colors and the timing add spectacular and dramatic dimensions to the show. Styx's other distinguishing charac- teristic is the band's coordination on stage. Shaw and Young use both their substantial height difference and their energy while skirting across the expan- sive stage (the speakers were hung from the ceiling), taunting the audien- ce. While Young is the ultimate macho guitarist and often looks ridiculous while assuming several pseudo- intimidating poses, the pair ham it up and are quite photogenic. Bassist Chuck Panozzo, on the other hand, always looks like he's ready for a post mortem. While playing most of their hits, noticeably absent was their usual en- core, "Miss America." They opted in- stead to play "Blue Collar Man," which became totally lost in the cranked-up amplifiers and sounded terrible. They also did a song DeYoung said they were playing because they hadn't played it in three years in Detroit, "Light Up, Everybody." While Styx certainly has become one of the more popular bands in the coun- try, they aren't one of the best. Even though their stage show is spectacular, their music has become too program- med, predictable and plastic. Some of their songs also sound as if they were recordeta in a fire hydrant. It's almost as if the guys in Styx are beginning to act like politicians. They are trying to please everyone and thus are com- promising their musical integrity. ENERGY. We can't afford to waste it. 1 ' 4 f The Lion L1and The, Jewel By Wole Soyinka U-M Dept. of Theatre & prama SHOWCASE PRODUCTION TONIGHT AT 8:00 TRUEBLOOD THEATRE Tickets available at the PTP ticket office-Mich. League OR at Trueblood Box Office prior to performance. (764-0450) GH SATURDAY T R Jf TONIGHT THROUG 1 5th Avenue at ab St. 7s1-97OO F Fl fth oumTheater MONTY PYTHON'S LIFE OF BRIAI FINAL 13 DAYS! THE $1.50 BARGA IN! I