F1 The Michigan Daily-Saturday, January 6, 1979-Page 5 ying the frien sies wi Superman I By OWEN GLEIBERMAN It's been said countless times that the seventies are the fifties in disguise. While that sort of catch-all charac- terization generally distorts as much as it brings into focus, it's becoming the newest banner of American movies. Star Wars, if you'll recall, has something besides fun special effects; hearkening back to the Flash Gordon- Buck Rodgers corny space epic for serious inspiration rather than as a camp mine, it offers its frenetic thrills glazed over with self-consciously nostalgic charm. Though creatively light-years ahead of Star Wars, Close Encounters of the Third Kind boasts a storyline right out of a thousand pulp science fiction plots of the fifties. And a 'large chunk of the current enthusiasm over Grease, Animal House, and the wave of war movies is nothing if not nostalgia - or, at least, the homogenized brand of nostalgia that came into its own with American Graf- fiti, where everyone could wax ecstatic over a time through which none of them actually lived. Consequently, nothing strikes me as a more appropriate choice for Block- buster of 1979 than the story of Super- man. In this shiny new version of the Man of Steel saga, attention to the kind of modern ingredients George Lucas and Steven Spielberg mixed into their galactic formulas - the Force in Star Wars, say, or the awesome visual gran- deur of the end of Close Encounters - has been all but thrown to the winds. In- stead, we have the classic Adventure of Superman, straight from the comic book and television show - a pure, unadulterated nostalgia fix. We don't have to worry about the story or the characters; taking off from what we already know about Krypton, Lois Lane, and other fragments of pop mythology, Superman strives to make up for what it lacks in flourish and in- vention by reassuringly delivering just what we expect. OF COURSE, some of the details have been given a modern twist, in the tradition of the disastrous 1976 King Kong remake: Metropolis is a thinly- disguised New York City; Lois Lane is sexy, and dizzy in an attractively up-to- date way; and Clark Kent, seeking a hiding place for a quick change of costume, can only find a modern, open phone booth. But these are merely amusing trifles in a film that preserves refusal to abandon stale old concepts, I doubt extensive modernizing would have been very feasible. When our hero informs Lois that he's here to fight for "truth, justice, and the American way," his stalwart patriotism rings so feebly in the cynical seventies that one realizes the only way to do Superman justice is to deal with him as he was created, or not deal with him at all. Word has it that the original script (by Bonnie and Clyde screenwriters David Newman and Robert Benton) was a paean to high camp, with inciden- ts such as Superman scouring the city for a bald villain and mistakenly swooping down on Telly Savalas, who greets him with a resounding "Who loves you, Baby?" But that concept was abandoned. The film includes several lame attempts at camp humor, as well as some dumb sexual innuendoes (Lois to Supes: "How big ... er, I mean, how tall are you?"), but they don't add up to a coherent comic style, because the story has been played straight. ARGUABLY THE film's strongest part, in fact, is the quasi-ecclesiastical opening sequence on Krypton, with Superman's father, Jor-El (Marlon Brando), swathed in glowing white robe and mouthing pithy God-like incan- tations to the planet's council of elders. Two things happen in the opening: three treasonous Kryptonians are sen- tenced and carted away by a magic' mirror (supposedly, they reappear in Part II), and Brando sends his superson to Earth before his doomed planet is destroyed by a nearby nova. Director Richard Donner's Krypton is one of the few strikingly original con- ceptions in the movie; the planet is a foreboding fortress of crystal palisades, a futuristic society in which wondrous technology and raw nature have fused with awesome and elegant mystical power. Some of the Krypton scenes are inexplicably shod- dy; the spaceship in which Jor-El and his wife (Susannah York) bundle their infant son resembles nothing more than a huge plastic Christmas. tree or- nament. But the aura is ethereal and other-worldly next to Star Wars' stolid technology. When Brando begins ran- ting about dispatching his only son to save the earth, it's clear enough that we're in Heavenly territory. THE CURRENT reigning objection to Superman concerns its stylistic schizophrenia, which is undeniable. Immediately after the impressive opening on Krypton we are plunged into the Portrait of the Farmhand as a Young Superman, with Clark Kent modestly entrenched in a placid coun- trified existence that is a bit of wholesome Americana. Clark's homespun Earth parents (Glenn Ford and Phyllis Thaxter) might have come straight from "American Gothic," and their brief humble scenes together are ney to the North Pole, has a pseudo- religious encounter with his long-dead father via a giant all-ice video cassette, and we are suddenly in the buzzing of- fices of the Daily Planet, where rapid- fire reporter chit-chat and low comedy reign supreme. Christopher Reeve's performance as the mild-mannered Clark Kent, played here as the con- forts to wring laughs out of a character whose funniest quality is believing he's smarter than anyone else. I wasn't as bothered by Superman's stylistic disruptions as much as some people were, but I thought the film' stumbles in an area that has received nothing but the most glowing praise: the special effects. The sequences with Superman's figure matted onto the Manhattan skyline (with a few crane- and-pulley shots awkwardly mixed in for good measure) are doubtless a vast improvement over the laughable flight tactics on the television series, but they're still nothing to get excited about. Maybe I'm being unrealistic to ask for special effects as convincing as those in Star Wars or Close Encounters, but at four bucks a shot, I demand per- fection. STILL, THE wizards over in special effects obviously gave their all. One wonders if the same can be said of the screenwriters. Along with the dynamic duo of Newman and Benton, Mario Puzo (The Godfather) and Leslie Newman worked on the screenplay. It's surprising that these talented in- dividuals concocted a story with no more finesse or invention than a good episode of Mission: Impossible. Lex Luthor's plan is to divert an American missile to a strategic point along California's flimsy San Andreas Fault, so that half the state falls into the ocean and he can reap the profits by developing the useless land east of the fault (whic he's bought at rock-bottom prices) into the "new California." By trapping Superman with deadly Kryp- tonite, Luthor lands the missile and starts a major earthquake. But Super- man escapes, saves a small community from an impending flood, then dives to the earth's molten core to replace the faulty fault. Working with a virtually limitless budget, it is a shame that the makers could not have devised a story (or criminals) more befitting the movie's grand scale, instead of a predictable, protracted television show. (Perhaps they simply went overboard in their judgement of how much tackiness is endemic to the Superman saga.) But for all its flaws, Superman is enjoyable and intermittently exciting, and even the cheapest laughs are obviously not the work of an exploitive manipulator like Foul Play's writer-director Colin Higgins. AND SUPERMAN has something else going for it. While the need for myths like this one is certainly long dead - American mass culture, drivel as.much of it is, has become too cynical and sophisticated - there remains something inexplicably appealing about the simple idea of Superman. One of the film's highlights is the first time Clark Kent dons his red-and-blue jum- psuit and journeys through the air over Metropolis to right some wrongs. First, he saves Lois from a deadly fall, then indulges in such acts of supergoodwill as rescuing a tree-stuck kitten and trapping a slimy thief on the side of a skyscraper, Batman-style. A scene with Superman flying Lois around with a birds-eye view of the Western Hemisphere is intentionally corny, too much so, in fact - the poem Lois recites in voice-over sounds like vintage Rod McKuen. In his other scenes with Lois, however, Christopher Reeve's ludicrously confident Ladies' Man stare amusingly belies the stam- mering of Superman's other identity. Superman is, and probably always will be, a vehicle for vicarious greatness. Perhaps the one legitimate extension of the 1930s Superman comes at the end, when Superman is trapped by a hefty philosophical dilemma: Should he let Lois die by obeying Jor-El's command that he never tamper with human history, or should he reverse time and heed his earthly father, who claimed his adopted son was sent here for a pur- pose? The end has Superman defy Jor- El's dictum, and presumably the See SUPERMAN, Page8 i e%.A O k ~a6 n1 e Christopher Reeve pays a call on Margot Kidder in "Superman," the latest $3() million epic currently playing at the Fox Village Theater. effectively juxtaposed with Krypton's glowing brilliance. The movie's second half is beset by bigger disruptions yet. The most glaring of these is an unheralded shift in tone from serious story-telling to wacky comedy. Young Clark Kent takes a portentous philosophical jour- far more than it updates. the claim that Superman And despite sinks by its R-ECORDS summate shy bumbler, is extremely amusing - by far the most polished and affecting comedy in the movie. On the other hand, his constantly befuddled presence, not to mention Superman's thinly disguised sexual banter with Lois Lane (Margot Kidder), is at odds with the stoic seriousness of the first half. THE THREE villains Superman faces - criminal mastermind Lex Luthor (Gene Hackman), his blub- bering idiot assistant Otis (Ned Beat- ty), and concubine-mistress (Valerie Perrine) - make even the Daily Planet scenes look like the essence of high drama. Hackman and company operate out of a luxurious spacious headquarters in what looks like a discarded basement of Grand Central Station, and their flippant little scenes are the film's worst. They are not sim- ply pure Batman, but worse than Bat- man, because there is no comic focus to them, no central gimmick. All we get are Beatty's tiresome facial ticks (method: the more the funnier), Perrine's by now tedious satire of a sultry bimbo, and Hackman's vain ef- The Bramble and The Rose Mary McCaslin and Jim Ringer Philo 1OS BY ERIC ZORN It says a great deal for their mighty talent that Jim Ringer and Mary Mc- Caslin couldn't even spoil their latest album for all that they played the pimp to plastic tastes. The Bramble and The Rose, released in late December on the Philo label, exhibits, for the most part, sweet and catchy folk songs sparked by precise and interesting harmonies. When Ringer and McCaslin sang together at the Ark in early November of last year, they only needed the ac- companiment of their two guitars to stir the crowd with the raw power and grace of their music; somewhere along the line they decided that it takes a touch of slickness to sell vinyl, and ad- ded relentless drums, a string backup no doubt stolen from the Longine Sym- phonette Society, and the sliding sounds of that most irritating of acoustic in- struments, the dobro. MARY MCCASLIN said that she and her husband have been touring together for the past six years, singing separately and together afterwards. "Over the years, we've sung together more and more, yes, but we'll never be a duo," she added firmly. The recor- ding and concert market may be bigger these days for a single artist, and the possibility for mercurial rise more definite, but The Bramble and The Rose confirms what a Ringer and McCaslin concert suggests: These two belong together behind the microphone. The title cut, a special arrangement of a traditional love song, is easily the best song on the album in spite of numerous instrumental offenses. The melody is infectious and McCaslin's voice rides effortlessly over Ringer's in harmony: It's the kind of song that might be very popular with the youmgger set if not for the "country" effect of the drums and syrupy strings which drive so many to the brothers Gibb. "GERONIMO'S Cadillac" is another great song which carries a nasty stret- ch of pedal steel guitar, leaving the cut somewhere in that nebulous middle- ground between folk and country, in- deed dangerous territory because good, hard country tends to make lousy folk. Herb Pederson's "Copperfields" suf- fers somewhat less at the hands of the pedal steel and artless fiddle accom- paniment, but it has a sensational melody and snatches of the slightly ar- cane lyrics are wistful and provocative. Someone slipped up at the studio, because "Oh Death," the penultimate song on the album, is scathingly clever in its vocal and instrumental arrangement. A synthesizer buzzes in the background as McCaslin frails her banjo tuned to sound two major note drone strings against the eerie, modal melody. The drums add the proper funereal touch to this traditional dialogue-song between the Grim Reaper and his victim, and there is no attempt here to add a dash of the old Porter Waggoner. YES, EACH song on The Bramble. and The Rose is pleasant and worth hearing over and over again (with the exception of Ralph Stanley's tired old gospel tune, "Rank Strangers," which, for my money, should be laid to rest along with Carter Stanley). From the purity of the a capella "Canaan's Land" to the bluesy guts of "Mama Lou," Ringer and McCaslin impose compelling vocals upon excellent songs. Even "I Don't Believe You've Met My Baby," sounds like a very good song if you've never heard the Louvin Brothers do it right, and you don't care that Jay Ungar's mandolin work is lifeless and unimaginative. See FOLK, Page 8 JOHN HUSTON'S 1941 THE MALTESE FALCON Brigid (MARY ASTOR): "I haven't lived a good life. I've been bad." Sam (HUM- PHREY BOGART): "You're good. You're very Qood." impressive debut for Director Huston and a fine adaptation of the Dashiell Hammett novel. Bogart is as tough as hard-boiled good eggs come. With Peter Lorre and Sidney Greenstreet. Short: Superman-Max Fleischer Sun: Hitchcock's NOTORIOUS * Winter Cinema Guild Schedules Available Everywhere * TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. CIN7EMA GUILD :&.:05 $1.50 I CINEMA "lq presents SH A MPOO I &i 1!'7 i rr