The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, March 14, 1979-Page 5 CRITICS' A TTA CKS UNFO UNDED: 'Hard Core' fille with ferocious magic By CHRISTOPHER POTTER Though I would like td be a rich, famous and influential film critic as much as any eager aspirant, there are moments when such a position of in- fluence seems so misused that I find myself yearning to be a veterinarian, a CPA or some such blandly non- controversial niche. That's my feeling about Paul Schrader's Hard Core - a film faintly praised by a handful of critics as "an earnest effort," but condemned by twice that number as an opportunistic hustle lacking even integrity of pur- pose, much less artistic merit. Their accumulated hatchet job has had its ef- fect: Hard Core will slink out of Ann Arbor and elsewhere at the end of this week, a box office exile done in my media forces myopically insensitive to the innovative, even courageous con- tent of Schrader's work. THESE WORDS come much too late to help reverse an already lost cause, but for the record, I think Hard Core is one of the most thought-provoking, cinematically stimulating films in recent memory, and a breathtaking counterbalance to the Grease-Foul Play-California Suite anti-think monopoly which now gluts the American screen. To dismiss it as cavalierly as most critics have is not only myopic, but judgementally irresponsible. Hard Core reaches far beyond its much-publicized foray into the murky depths of the sex-pornography business. It delineates nothing less than a cosmic, cataclysmic collision of cultures diametrically and permanen- tly alien to each other. It's a symbolic death knell to the concept of global community, and I'm not sure I've seen anything quite like it in American movies, either in conteptiop or execution. MUCH - TOO MUCH - has been made over the parallel between Hard Core's midwestern protagonist, Jake VanDorn and Schrader's own Grand Rapids strict-Calvinist roots. The fact is that Schrader has not used his film as a tool for personal exorcism or other such nonsense. He has utilized the life he knows to tell a corking good, often terrifying story of ideals in conflict. Right from the opening credits, which show a Grandma Moses-like sledding scene with the film's blood-red title superimposed over it, you know some incalculable evil is going to render this pastoral asunder. The palpable menace hangs over snowbound Christmas-time Grand Rapids, like an imminent in- vasion from another planet - which, in a sense, is just what it is. We're introduced to Jake VanDorn (George Scott), a successful furniture manufacturer, secure in the predestination conception of his Dutch Reformed Church. He's strict, but defi:ly a nice guy as well. We watch as he lovingly sees off his teenage daughter Kristen, bound for California on a church youth group bus trip. A WEEK LATER, during Sunday dinner, Jake gets a phone call. Kristin has disappeared. Jake walks entranced back to the dinner table, his careful en- vironment suddenly shattered. It's a whole other world out there, and for the first time in his life, Jake is forced to face it. He flies to Los Angeles and hires a private detective (Peter Boyle) to find Kristen. Returning to Grand Rapids, he sits and waits silently, hoping for some news. Iranians protest Carter's mideast role The days pass into weeks, then into months. Then Jake gets a call from his detective, who's just flown into Grand Rapids. Escorting Jake into a local peep-show porn store ("They've even got these in Grand Rapids," he tells him), the private eye sits him in a darkened theater and puts on a hard core sex film. The film is of Kristen. Jake, who has never seen a porno film in his life, disintegrates - his beliefs and faith suddenly challenged as never before. DESPITE THE detective's assuran- ces that his daughter is probably all right, Jake can no longer stand his agony. He flies back to California, fires the slimy investigator and sets off into the porn world to find Kristen himself. Though shockable and unsophisticated, Jake has the single-minded desperation to adapt to his environment. Rebuffed by the skin trade regulars when being himself, he assumes guises - first as a would-be investor in porn movies, later as a hard core director supposedly casting for a film. Schrader displays an amazing proclivity for black comedy and stark drama laid side by side; many of these scenes make you want to howl with laughter at the same moment you're cringing with revulsion, as Jake sinks deeper and deeper into a neon Hades, trying to maintain integrity threatened on all sides. I have no idea what critic Pauline Kael means when. she asserts "there may never have been another American director as lacking in spon- taneity as Paul Schrader." How does she define spontaneous? Do the sterile android-like works of a Herbert Ross or a Sidney Lumet - works so calculatingly, cynically geared to a box office optimum - actually transmit some great pleasures, while Schrader's very original concoctions do not? I CAN'T think of another director currently working who can capture the gritty ruddyness of Middle America quite so well as does Schrader. His non- Californian roots turn out to be his prime aesthetic asset - there is no touch of the hip, the slick or the bland in his work. He has eschewed much of the technical awkwardness of Blue Collar, yet sacrificed none of the electricity, the excitement. His images of solid, staid Grand Rapids are cloaked in such a homely, rock-ribbed gingerbread security that the eventual transition to its very antithesis is gruesomely memorable. Schrader's eye serves him no less well in the porn scene. Time critic Richard Schickel complained that here he visuallymissed the target, that "he does not know (the porn world) in his bones, as he does that other world." Schickel misses the point: Hard Core is meant to be an outsider's perspective - distorted, heightened, bigger-than-life. Jake's view is a phantasmagoric, pilgrim's-eye view of a demonic new world, a world that strikes us head-on with garishly-lit, 20th century urban ghouls and goblins. As Jake's quest winds from city to city, Schrader and master cinematographer Michael Chapman (Invasion of the Body Snat- chers) lead us on a journey through a sensual hell, a red and purple montage that builds with an almost unendurable tension. Jake's odyssey is rubbed to an even more jangling edge by Jack Nit- zsche's terrifying score, which subtly transforms church hymns into elec- tronically distorted perversions. SOME REVIEWS have criticized Schrader's failure to focus more on Jake's family, on Kristen's reasons for fleeing her environment (we find out much later that Jake's supposedly dead wife also deserted him years earlier) Such exploration would have been ruinous. The search itself, the collision of cultures, is the guts of Hard Core, and an extended examination of the "Daddy, why don't you love me?" syn- drome would almost inevitably devolve into dreary soap opera. Schrader wasn't "ducking the issue" - he merely knows how to tell a well-paced story. Hard Core's drawbacks lie in some of its specific characterizations, an area where Schrader's awkwardness still in- trudes on his conception. Scott's brilliant, wrenching performance as Jake is enough to carry the film by it- (Continued from Page 1) Time was the only magazine he men- tioned by name in this context. Time reporter Roland Flamini said at the briefing that the magazine had already denied such charges. MEANWHILE, firing squads executed two generals, a legislator, the former head of the national news agen- cy and eight other men yesterday in the purge that has killed dozens of former supporters of the shah. Eleven men were killed by firing squads in Tehran and one in the holy city of Qom, 100 miles to the south, after secret trials without the aid of defense attorneys. Islamic revolutionary courts are known to have ordered the execution of 57 persons, including 12 generals, for alleged political and sex crimes since the shah's government fell Feb. 12. The shah is exiled in Morocco. THERE WERE indications that the new government is having success in bringing the economy back to life. The National Iranian Oil Company announ- ced production in the country's oil fields had reached 2.5 million barrels daily, up from 1.6 million barrels a day last week. Before anti-shah strikes paralyzed the economy, Iran exported about six million barrels daily. The company said all but 700,000 barrels daily was earmarked for foreign consumption. The company said it will resume selling Iranian crude on a contract basis to American, European and Japanese companies April 1. In recent weeks, oil has been sold on a spot basis to the highest bidder. Spot prices are in the range of $20 a barrel compared to the OPEC price of $13.55. IRAN YESTERDAY also confirmed it was withdrawing from CENTO, the Western defense alliance for west Asia as the first move towards its intended membership in the non-aligned movement. The confirmation came as another,13 men were executed by firing squad afte swift sentencing by Islamic courts. Nine of them were from the shah's police and armed forces. Western diplomats said the with- drawal, anticipated two months ago during the shah's final government, would probably lead to the collapse of CENTO (Central Treaty Organization). Pakistan said last weekend it was pulling out of CENTO. The only remaining full members are Britain and Turkey. The United States is an associate member. George Scott agonizes over the loss of his daughter in Paul Shrader's hard-hitting film "Hard Core." self; yet Peter Boyle's sleazy detective never seems to develop beyond the ac- tor's standard semi-kook schtick. Ac- tress Season Hubley, playing a young prostitute who accompanies Jake through the later stages of his journey, seems only a slightly older version of Jody Foster's Iris in Schrader's Taxi Driver, and a fast-talking porno film producer remains a stale comic-relief stereotype. SCHRADER STILL has trouble with intimate conversation scenes, a few of which seem so clumsy that they oc- casionally bring the film almost to a halt. Yet his overall conception, his sense of cinematic pace and flow, or colors and emotions, has become en- thrallingly skillful. Hard Core's tex- tures, its visual and emotional density radiates the touch and control of a newborn master. There are dozens of magic images: Of Jake asleep like a baby in his safe Grand Rapids bed just before his existence is shattered; a slow pan away from a youthful chorus on a TV religious show across the windowed perimeters of stark, secular LA; a nighttime fight between Jake and a murderous pimp slowly progressing down an impossibly tilted San Fran- cisco street, with Nitzche'% music throbbing almost silently in the background. Hard Core simmers, alive in the thrill of a director's art. AND YET THIS is the film that Pauline Kael says "looks like a film made by somebody who has no joy in moviemaking." Did she and I see the same film? Was I stoned at the time? Was she? Could she spot no moment of inspiration, of thoughtfulness, of courage? I'm not claiming intent is tantamount to success. If good intentions were everything, then the politically noble but aesthetically incompetent Stanley Kramer would be judged the greatest film director of all time. The point is that Hard Core succeeds on all counts: It is an immensely ambitious, perhaps radical thematic undertaking, coupled with a surpassing, burgeoning cinematic intelligence. How can there be "no joy in filmmaking" in this con- suming, astonishingly tender work? ' ROBERT MORLEY was probably accurate when he said that "If the critics were always right, we should all be in deep trouble." The problem is that if they're often completely, tragically wrong, then the film industry and its at- tending public are going to be in a lot deeper trouble than they're in already. By the not-too-distant future, when we're all saddled with a strict diet of Superman-Part Six and Star Wars-Part Twelve,we may long for a Paul Schrader. But by then he'll probably have concluded a CPA's life is both richer and safer - and certainly less misunderstood. The Ann Arbor Film Coorerstive presents at Aud.A WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14 LAST TANGO IN PARIS (Bernardo Bertolucci, 1973) 7 & 9:15-AUD. A MARLON BRANDO in his famous role as a sexually-aggressive expatriate who embarks on a three-day affair with a young, modish Parisienne (MARIA SCHNEIDER). The affair is purely physical, isolated experiences, and the apart- ment an island in which certain aspects of human relationships are examined. "A film that has made the strongest impression on me in almost twenty years of reviewing."-Pauline Kel. Music by Oliver Nelson and Gato Barbieri. In French ana tnglnsf, with subtitles. TOMORROW: Fellini's 81A China threatens Laos TL,. s. . I u i Now Sho .EwiFT Cau-TT- A r in r.. i Teatre 1 I .llllllllljVlWhlJUVWIFIYJa. ..U mpvofill. I - u..111~sl I (Continued from Page 1) THE DECISION, made public Mon- day, was a note sent to Chinese Foreign Minister Huang Hua by Laotian Acting Foreign Minister Khamphay Boupha, asking the Chinese to "suspend the road construction in northern Laos and to withdraw all its building units as soon as possible." The newspaper said after the com- plete liberation of Laos in 1975 Chinese workers continued with the construc- tion of Highway One and other roads in northern Laos. The work was suspen- ded after the Chinese launched an at- tack against Vietnam on Feb. 17. China said Sunday that Laos, under Soviet and Vietnamese pressure, had torn up Sino-Laotian agreements. It ac- cused Hanoi and Moscow of "enslaving the Lao people." ESTIMATES'OF Chinese technicians and others in Laos vary from below 3,000 to 5,000, most of them building roads in the northern provinces under an agreement made in late 1961. Meanwhile, intelligence officials in Bangkok said the Chinese still were withdrawing slowly across the Viet- namese border. But a highly placed source has quoted Chinese officials here as saying Chinese troops would retain some Vietnamese territory. Meanwhile, in Moscow Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev said yesterday China had been forced to halt its Vietnamese offensive by the actions of Vietnam, the Communist countries and the pressure of world opinion. SPEAKING AT a Kremlin dinner for Polish leader Edward Gierek, Brezhnev renewed the Soviet pledge to stand by its Vietnamese allies. "At present the Chinese rulers are forced to sound the retreat. This is the result of the staunchness and courage of the Vietnamese people, of the combat solidarity with Vietnam of the Soviet Union . . . and other states of the Socialist community and of the support of world public opinion," Brezhnev said. Purdue's football players were originally called either "Blacksmiths," "Rail Splitters" or "Boilermakers" and wound up settling for the last of those three. WEDNESDAY IS MONDAY IS "BA RGAIN DAY" "GUEST NIGNV" $1.50 unti 5:30 TWO ADULTS ADMITTED FOR PRICE OF ONE ADUETS FRI., SAT., SUN. EWE. t HOLIDAYS $3.50 MON.-THIURS. EVk. 5340 ALL MATINEES $2.50 CHILD TO 14 $1.51, amvw - - CHILD TO 14 51.5. - ~ I U FRI. and SAT. LATE SHOW STAT E "UP INSMOKE" 3 different shows nightly £A 7, 9 & 11 through Fri. /> l& Sunday. Saturday 1:00, 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. At the Old Architecture Auditorium. tickets: $1.75 series: $20.00 Michael Cacoyannis Festival N1O% A TLJI dEI'