Page 6-Friday, February 2, 1979-The Michigan Daily George Cukor's 1949 ADAM'S RIB Dubbed the "women's director" for his skill with portraying actresses in good roles, Cukor is more than qualified to handle this very peppy battle of the sexes with dramatic dispatch and comic overtones. Defense. lawyer KATHERINE HEPBURN decides to come to the aid of Judy Holliday-a woman accused of the ottempted murder of her wayward husband. Prosecuting attorney SPENCER TRACY is Hepburn's husband and court fight become a personal one as Hepburn tries to puncture the myth of male superiority. SAT: Wertmuller's SEVEN BEAUTIES Acting sustains family drama CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 BY JOSHUA PECK The University Showcase Produc- tions In Celebration achieves, I think, In Celebration David Storey Trueblood Theater Jan. 3-Feb. 3, 8:00p.m. Steven Shaw...... ............ Kirk Johnson Mr. Shaw ......................... Loren Bass Mrs. Burnett................. Karen Keckler Mrs. Shaw.... ............... Candice Cain Andrew Shaw.. ................. Terry Caza Colin Shaw ...................Jon Hallquist Mr. Reardon.................... Ted Badgerow Steve Reynolds, director; John Woodland, sets; Cheryl Perkins.costumes. Susan Benderlighting. its primary objective: It beckons its audience members to reflect - on themselves, on the way their families might have shaped them, perhaps on their very notions of sanity. Along the. way, though, it churns through more ups and downs than a ship in a sea squall. Most of these undulations are brought about by the remarkable range of talent in the show's cast; from Terry Caza's and Candice Cain's capable and pointed portrayals of troubled son and troubling mother, all the way down to Karen Keckler's and Ted Badgerow's The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLB 3 Friday, February 2 The Tall Blonde Man With One Black Shoe (Yves Robert, 1975) 7 & 10:20-MLB 3 Buggings, break-ins, and surveillance are the objects of this timely satire. A young violinist unknowingly becomes the decoy in a cutthroat battle between spies who turn his life into total mayhem. "This is one of the funniest movies in recent memory. It's so crammed with funny moments it's impossible to pick a favorite."-L.A. Times. In French, with subtitles. THE THIEF OF PARIS (Louis Malle, 1967) 8:40 only-MLB 3 When an orphan (JEAN-PAUL BELMONDO) is cheated out of his inheritance by an uncle anal is jilted by a beautiful cousin, he robs the family jewels of the cousin's fiance. That starts him on his career as a professional thief. "The film has more political wit and amplitude of observation than any period film since Visconti's THE LEAPORD. It persuades you that this is exactly what it is like to live in France through the 1890's."-Penelope Gilliatt. In French with subtitles. TOMORROW: Fantastic Animation Festival and Supershorts, Featuring Devol stylized and utterly phony imitations of North Country old folks. The "celebration" is the wedding an- niversary of Mr. and Mrs. Shaw, a working class couple who make their home in Northern England. The Shaws' three grown sons arrive to spend the joyful day with their parents. It turns out not to be so terribly joyful a day af- ter all. Eldest son Andrew (Terry Caza) is maddeningly bitter over, well, every- thing. His whole family serves as vic- tim to his vitriolic attacks, .aimed at stirring up any painful memory he can. In Celebration has its melancholy, occasionallygmiserable waywith its viewers, largely owing to the mar- velous work of Candice Cain (Mrs. Shaw), and Caza. The other family members, while they have their moments, are at best inconstantly believable. Cain's first moments on stage incon- trovertibly establish her age in itself a feat,, and a firm grasp on her charac- ter's many sides soon follows. See IN, Page 12 Happenings For the week of February 2 to February 9 AUDITIONS February 78, 1979 University of Michigan SHOWCASE SERIES RED. ROSES FOR ME .rr FRIDAY SHOW- February.2 TIMES. Carnal Knowledge (Hutchins Hall 6:30 Rm. 100, 7 and 9 p.m.) Screenplay by Sat., Sun. -Jules Feiffer. S4s Adam's Rib (Old A&D, 7 and 9:05 6:30 p.m.) Spencer Tracy and Katherine Ti:0e0s Hepburn play twoattorneys, husband on sale and wife, who find themselves working prio for opposite sides of a murder case. show The Tall Blond Man With One Black _PG United Artists Shoe (MLB 3, 7 and 10:20 p.m.) A Fren- ch screwball comedy, featuring a con- U.ERMAN SHOW cert violinist who unwittingly becomes TIMES involved in an espionage ring. Mon .Fri. The Thief of Paris (MLB 3, 8:40 only)' MF 7Directed by Louis (Pretty Baby) Malle. '.9:4s Which Way Is Up? (Nat. Sci. 7, 8:40 Sat., sun. and 10:20 p.m.) Starring Richard 13Pryor. Obsession (Angell Aud. A, 7 7:00 and 9 p.m.) Brian DePalma tries to be 9s45 Alfred Hitchcock in this ponderous, dull Tickets thriller. on sale SATURDAY prior to showtime February 3 The Red Balloon, The Blue Dashiki BRIAN DePALMA 1976 OBSESSION OBSESSION DePalma's (director of CARRIE) tribute to Hitchcock, tells the story of Michael Cortland (CLIFF ROBERTSON), an ambitious New Orleans businessman, and his obsessive guilt for the deaths of his wife and young daughter in an unsuccessful kidnap rescue. Sixteen years after their deaths, on a business trip to Italy, Michael meets a young Italian woman who is the image of hid dead wife. Like the James Stewart character in VERTIGO, Michael sets out to turn the woman, Sandra (GENEVIEVE BUJOLD) into this dead wife. Filmed in New Orleans and Florence by Vilmos Zsigmond, with a cathedral-filling score by the late Bernard Hermann. (98m) SAT-LOONEY TUNES REVIEW Part 61 SUN-WORD IS OUT Tonite at Angell Hall AUd "A" 7& 9:00 $1.50 (Pound House Childrens' Center, 1024 Hill St., 12:45-3:30 p.m.) Shampoo (Markley Hall, 8 and 10:30 p.m.) Warren Beatty is perfect as a whory hairdresser, with Julie Christie and Lee Grant, among others, as his clients. Seven Beauties (Old A&D, 7 and 9:15, p.m.) Directed by Lina Wertmuller. Fantastic Animation Festival (MLB 3, 7 and 10:20) Sixteen short animated films, including Will Vinton's Academy Award winner Closed Mondays (which won a small prize at the Ann Arbor Film Festival). Supershorts (MLB 3, 8:40 p.m. only) Some of the best, funniest, and weirdest short films ever made, like Hardware Wars, The Dove, and a film by Devo which tells "The Truth About De- Evolution". Are we not men? ,Silver Streak, (Nat. Sci., 7 and 9 p.m.) Comedy about the old murder- and-intrigue-on-a-train schtick, with dear old Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor. Looney Tunes Revue, for all you Bugs Bunny fans, returns to Angell- Aud. A, this time with a completely new selec- tion of Warner Brothers cartoons. Program A starts at 7 and 10 p.m.; Program B at.8:30 only. SUNDAY, February 4 The Last Picture Show (Old A&D,7 and 9:15 p.m.) Undoubtedly Peter Bogdanovitch's finest film, but not a cheery one. It's a bleak, sad, stark look at life in a small Texas town during the, fifties. Word is Out (Angell Aud. A, 7 and 9 p.m.) Twenty-six videotaped inter- views with gay persons. MONDAY '9:15 p.m.) A good adaptation of Dickens' novel, with John Milles as Pip. A Man Escapes (Angell Aud. A, 8:30 p.m. only) A true adventure story, about a French resistance fighter's escape from the Nazis. The Married Woman (Angell Aud. A, 10 p.m. only) Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. WEDNESDAY February 7 Shoot the Piano Player, (Old A&D, 7 and 9:05 p.m.) With Charles Aznavour in the title role. Directed by Francois Truffaut. Rashomon (Aud. A, 7 and 10:20) Akira Kurosawa's fable about a rob- bery, rape and murder, seen in quite different ways by the criminal, the murdered man, and his wife. The Man Who Skied Down Mt. Everest (Angell Aud. A, 8:40 p.m. only) Academy Award-winning documentary about Yuchiro Miura, the man who conquered Mt. Everest on skis. THURSDAY February 8 From Russia With Love (Old A&D, 7 and 9:15 p.m.) This installment of the 007 spy series finds James Bond (Sean Connery) in Istanbul. Robert (Jaws) Shaw plays-the bad guy: , Cries and Whispers (Angell Aud. A, 7 and 8:40 p.m.) Ingmar Bergman once again brings together his stock bevy of exquisite, eloquent Swedish actresses (Harriet Andersson, Ingrid Thulin, Liv Ullmann) for this film about a woman dying of cancer and those who attend her. The Velvet Vampire (Angell Aud. A, 10:20 p.m. only) The Ann Arbor premiere of a kinky little film about a modern-day vampiress. The Best Years of Our Lives (Michigan Union Assembly Hall, 7 and 9:30 p.m.) William Wyler breaks out of the escapist wartime Hollywood mold in this opus about ex-GIs returning from World War II. by Sean O 'Casey Auditions, by Appointment Only. See Sign-up Sheet Outside of Room 1502 in the Frieze Building. Read all of the Instructions Carefully. 4 February 5 American Shoeshine, Men of Bronze (Old A&D, 7 and 9:05 p.m.) Two documentaries on Afro-American life. Edgar Ulmer night at Angell Aud. A; Bluebeard at 9:30 p.m., and Murder is My Beat, at 10:45 p.m. TUESDAY WEDNESDAY IS MONDAY IS ADULTS FRt.,SAT., SUN. "BARGAIN DAY" "GUEST NIGHT" EVE. d HOLIDAYS $3.50 $1.50 until 5:30 TWO ADULTS ADMITTED LMON.-THURS. EVk. $3 FOR PRICE OfONE ALL MATINEES $2.50 Ai ~ ~ C O O N J CHILD TO 14 $1.50 KCAMPW STARTING FRI., FEB. 9th "LORD OF THE RINGS" i February 6 Great Expectations, (Old A&D, 7 and .......................................................................................~4 ........................................................................................... ............................................................................................ . . ........................................................................................... A GO BANANAS! THURSDAY"S.T-HE NIGHP- t Thursday, February a is Grand Opening night at the I most exciting new disco'in town! The Bananas Disco. 'j A throbbing, inviting new light in the night. See it. Hear it. Feel it. Love it, The Bananas Disco. 2800 j Jackson Rd. (adjacent to Ramada Inn) 1-94 and Jack- j Y