Page 6-Friday, March 23, 1979-The Michigan Daily The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLB 3 Friday, March 23 THE KING OF HEARTS (Phillippe de Broca, 1967) 7 & 9-MLB3 Our most popular film. A Scottish soldier in WWI is sent to a French town, evacuated except for an asylum, in which the Germans have planted a time bomb. The asylum inmates escape, taking on various costumes and roles. A very funny comedy and anti-war film-the sanity of insanity, and vice versa. ALAN BATES, GENEVIEYE BUJOLD. In French, with subtitles. Cinema- scope. Tomorrow: DELIVERANCE & THE GODFATHER, PART I WIMWENDERS KINGS OF THE ROAD 196 Wim Winders (ALICE IN THE CITIES) is one of the most brilliant, original film- makers of the "German New Wave," and his KINGS OF THE ROAD is the most critically acclaimed foreign film of the year 1976, winning the Grand Prize at the Chicago Film Festival and breaking box office records across Europe. "The King of the Road" (Rudiger Vogler) travels Germany in his van, repairing movie pro- jectors. He picks up "Kamikaze," who has just driven his VW into the river, and they travel the East German border, raising hell and reminiscing about the women they can't live with or without and singing American rock songs. German w/subtitles_______________________ Sat: THE LAST WALTZ In Dolbyl I I " Sun: GOODBYE COLUMBUS & DIARY OF A MAD HOUSEWIFE TONIGHT at Angell Hall Aud. A 7:00 & 9:15 $1.50 ATEHSMICHIGAN THEATRE ANN ARBORs grand showplace SUNDAY, MARCH 25th AT 1:00 P.M. YES! NOW YOU CAN RE-LIVE FOR PERHAPS ONE LAST TIME THOSE WONDERFUL EARLY MOVIE DAYS AT THE MICHIGAN All the iw! _ __ _ _ _ "' stars that have thrilled University Students at the f Michigan Theatre for over 50 years ALSO BEGINNING AT 1:00 AN ORGAN OVERTURE WILL BE PLAYED ON THE ORIGINAL GOLDEN VOICED BOARTON THEATRE PIPE ORGAN DON'T MISS THIS NOSTALGIC FILM, PLUS A CONCERT ON THE ORIGINAL THEATRE PIPE ORGANI I I A DELIGHTFUL AFTERNOON RECALLING THE GOLD OLD DA YS A T GOOD OLD FASHIONED PRICES 15 FRESH POPCORN ..ALL SE*ATS $1.00 PER PERSON SAT-SUN -WED. ADVANCE TICKETS NOW ON SALE 1to 9:30 AT MICHIGAN THEATRE BOX OFFICE MON.-TUES.-THURS.-FRI. s 7 to 4:0 WEDNESDAY IS MONDAY IS "BARGAIN DAY" "GUEST NIGHT" EYE t HOIAY $1.50 until S:30 2 Adults For $3.00 ALL MATNEE 5250 Except Wayside &State Except Wayside H CHEECH & CHONIG'S FRI & SAT LATE SHOW "UP IN SMOKE" 1 i I MON, TUE, THURS 7 & 9 MON., TUES., THURS. 7 & 9 FRI. 7 & 9:25-SAT. 1-3-5-7-9:25 FRI. 7 & 9:25-SAT. 1 -3-5-7-9:25 Academy Award Nominee S ACADEMY AWARD "BEST FOREIGN FILM" ' NOMINATIONS INCLUDING BEST FILM BEST ACTRESS OF THE YEAR R EST SCREENPLAY -National Society of Film Critics Ellen Alan A GEM! Burstyn Alda -Rex Reed GET OUT YOUR ' ame fme, HANDKERCHIEFS 'Next ",ear" SPG PIPE ORGAN EVERY NIGHT "A smashing cerebral thriller." gr1r 'M LAuSOK DayROM * NIURDER BY. S. 1-3-5-7-9:a D EC EE SAT. 1-3-5-7-9:125 MON. to THURS. 7 & 9:10 NO WEDNESDAY MATINEE p No posses on weekends AVCO EMBASSY PICTUS Wi"a" L. TONIGHT AT MIDNIGHT TICKETS GO ON SALE AT 7:00 BRING A FRIEND AND GO. . "UP IN SMOKE" at Midnight! First time on Campus!. 'THE DEER HUNTER': A sweeping, djfficult epic film By CHRISTOPHER POTTER Language is the light of the mind. -John Stuart Mill Michael Cimino's The Deer Hunter is a self-styled American epic of honestly epic proportions. It is a film that can safely be labeled "important" without the dour, ponderous stigma traditionally attached to that word. The Deer Hunter fairly throbs with a passionate, creative energy. It is a huge, unwieldy, erratic yet often magnificent work; it's a film that almost cries out aloud for love, yet in the last reckoning is grievously, perhaps fatally flawed by the very element that makes human beings most human. Throughout its three-hour running time, The Deer Hunter remains won- drously removed from the dime-store polemics - of its recent cinematic counterparts. Though Viet- nani is the force which transforms the movie's characters, the war serves merely as the film's catalyst, not its motivating force. As Cimino has said, The Deer Hunter could be about any war at any time or place; its true sub- ject is the bonds of human friendship and love, and how well or badly those bonds endure when menaced by forces and events alien to all that is familiar and good. THE FILM tells the story of five blue collar friends from a Russian Orthodox neighborhood in a grimy Pennsylvania steel mill town. The time is the late 1960's. There's Nick (Christopher Walken) - boyish, exuberant, sen- sitive; Stan (John Cazale) - loud, quirky, insecure; Steven (John Savage) - young, immature, the "baby'' of the group; Axel (Chuck Aspergren) - huge, joyously beer- guzzling, given to use "fuckin A"nearly every other sentence. And there's Michael (Robert De Niro) - brooding, introspective, a leader among equls, given to thoughs and actions the others admit they don't always understand, though they respect him most 6f all. . Michael is obsessed with the notion of a perfect, self-controlled life in which courage, loyalty and sacrifice are preeminent. Michael can live it up with his buddies, yet some dark element deep inside sets him apart. We meet the five friends on Steven's wedding day. Buoyant, bawdily joyful, dena R ED Tru~l txxi rn R(Y( 1 r I'M ROSES UInertiil Sh xHC;i c v' Prodiiut7in.7 FOR in The Michign Leage S764.450 they plunge into the festivities with a fervor given ominous scope by the fact that two days hence, their secure moun- tain-surrounded camaraderie will be broken, perhaps forever; Michael, Steven and Nick are about to depart for Vietnam. STEVEN'S MARRIAGE seems tremulous even before it begins: His bride is already pregnant - by another man. Yet the close-knit community whoops it up far into the night, in a reception, that turns into a kind of celebration of ethnicity. In the sobering early-morning hours, Nick makes Michael - his best friend - propnise that if anything happens to him in 'NamjMichael won't leave him there. Michael promises, and the the shadow of their friends' absence, they unite first out of mutual loneliness, then out of a love they've long felt for each other, though each was afraid to admit it. Gradually, Linda brings Michael back into the world. Yet what of his two fallen pals? Some time later (the story's chronology gets very hazy at this point) Michael finds Steven, now a near-helpless paraplegic in a VA hospital. Steven shows him a drawer full of hundred dollar bills, which he says arrive every month from Vietnam. Michael puts two and two together - Nick is still alive. Michael hasn't forgotten his promise. In rather melodramatic fashion he returns to Saigon, now on the verge of destruction, to rescue Nick from the 'Cimino seems smitten by the bizarre duality of what an author once called 'the terrible beauty of war.' He transmits scenes of absolute and unflin- ching horror, yet laces them with a strange, almost perverse lyricism quite unlike any war film that came before it. ' following morning, the remaining four friends set out into the mountains for a final deer hunt. Though the others con- tinue their drunken reverie, Michael is consumedby the almost mystic ritual of the hunt. Now heis a man of steel, determined to fell his prey with "one shot" - a symbolic concept expressing his idea of the perfect existence. "If I had to die in the mountains, then I'd be okay," he tells Nick. MIchael bags his deer, and the group returns to town late that night. We see them sitting soberly, their raucousness muted into sober reflection, as a bar- tender friend haltingly plays a classical piece on his piano. WITHOUT' WARNING, we are in Vietnam. Separated in battle, Michael, Steve and Nick are reunited just as they are being captured by the Viet Cong. The three are taken to a prison hut built into a river, where they are forced to play each other in a game of Russian roulette with a loaded pistol. It is surely the most terrifying war sequence ever filmed, and the ultimate test of fire for Michael. Calling on all the strength of mind he possesses, he eventually out- wits and outguts his captors by means as savage as they are ingenious. Yet it becomes a pyrhic victory at best: Steven is horribly injured in a botched helicopter escape attempt. Nick, his mind and senses ripped asun- der by his grisly ordeal, descends catatonically into the Saigon under- world and vanishes. MICHAEL RETURNS home, alone. Beset and twisted by his experiences, he fearfully avoids a welcome-home party; even when he re-unites with his remaining friends, he stays more morose and aloof than ever. Even the deer hunt brings him no release - he finds he can no longer bring himself to kill. Into this aching void steps Linda, Nick's girlfriend (Meryl Streep). Under jaws of Hell. Beset by terrified city dwellers fleeing the onoming enemy, Michael engages his now-withered, drug-ravaged friend in a final game of Russian roulette, which proves to be the supreme test of harrowingly unselfish love. The Deer Hunter is unashamed1ly complex in concept, and the fact tnat so many things in it work brilliantly makes all the more infuriating the many things that don't. Writer-director Cimino is blessed by the eye of cinematographer Vilmos Szigmond, a free-flung cinematic poet who can per- form the most herculean feats with a camera and make them seem ab- solutely effortless. Steven's wedding celebration, oft- criticized as too long, is carried off nicely by its dynamic, almost non-stop vigor. At times the whole affair seems so ethnic the film almost ceases to look American, even stylistically; you get the feeling you're lost in the middle of some Eisenstein narrative, surrounded by smiling, singing peasants. The effect is a bit unsettlingly operatic, but in- vigorating once you're tuned into it. But if The Deer Hunter has a legitimate claim to greatness it lies in its Vietnam segment, which, quite sim- ply, contains scenes like none other in the history of film. Cimino seems smitten by the bizarre duality of what an author once called "the terrible beauty of war." He tran- smits scenes of absolute and unflin- ching horror, yet laces them with a strange, almost perverse lyricism quite unlike any war film that came before it. FROM THE safety of a Pennsylvania barroom, we are suddenly hurled into the midst of a pitched battle in a Viet- nam hamlet - no prelude, no warning. We see Michael stretched out on the ground with others, apparently dead. Suddenly he begins to wake up - as if out of a dream and into a strange and evil universe. He hears whispering - an arcane fairy tale gibberish hanging over his misty perception. He lifts his head and listens. We see a figure skirting silently across the grass. A trap door flings open, and we see a group of women and children huddled inside. The man throws an object in with them, then slams the door shut. A second later the shelter explodes. A lone survivor emerges from the depths, cradling her baby in her arms. The Cong points his gun at her. Michael rises, picks up a flame thrower and immolates the man a second after he shoots; the mother and child fall dead. It is a phantasmic ballet of horror, dan- ced out in the incongruous beauty of the forest-thatched Vietnam countryside. A short time later, Michael, Steven, and Nick find themselves captives in the river prison. As their agonies proliferate, the film maintains its veiled, supranormal quality. The three TAPESTRIES WALL HANGINGS for your rooms Persian House 320 E. Liberty-769-8555 friends stand bound, waist-deep in water beneath the Cong hut, witness to the aural horrors of the Russian Roulet- te game continuing ghoulishly above them. Macabre sights surround them: Through a pounding rain, dead bodies slide slowly into the water as river rats swirl about them. A battered GI, strung up like a Grunewald Christ, stares spectrally at the trio across the water THE ROULETTE game becomes a pageant of sustained, incalculable, wrenching tension, a test of human emotion and resourcefulness pushed to their absolute limits. Through the chaos, Michael emerges as a tower of near-demonic resilience - comforting the hysterical Steven, boosting Nick's confidence, scheming how to beat his captors at their own game, then psyching them out through his own unleashed yet controlled fury. Once they've made their escape, the three men float silently, fearfully down the river clinging to a huge, gnarled branch, their twisted faces lumped together like grotesqueries from a pain- ting by Breughel or Bosch. Moments later, Michael and Steven plunge from the rungs of a GI helicop- ter back into the river, climaxing a chilling, failed rescue attempt. Steven has been badly hurt by the fall; Michael carries him ever so tenderly onto the shore, the surrounding forest radiating a stillness so heavy that one is at once overwhelmed with the inexorable, un- predictable sadness of war - a cold god that destroys man's children with a savage indifference. Yet all wars must end and most of their participants return to their homes, and it is at this point that you realize The Deer Hunter is about to run into deep, insoluble trouble. Some philosophers think that ver- balization is nearly obsolete and will someday be scrapped altogether; yet for the forseeable present language remains the noblest, most direct.form of human expression, and an indispen- sable ingredient for such an exercise in gritty (though often gorgeous) realism as The Deer Hunter. And it is here that this otherwise extraordinary motion picture falls flat on its face. I CAN'T RECALL another film which so glorifies an entrenched verbal inex- pressiveness. While striving to recap- ture faithfully an archetypal "blue collar" idiom, Cimino and his helpers have managed to produce a script con- taining not a single line of memorable, or even insightful dialogue. The film's characters grope and mumble, sear- ching plaintively, often loud and stridently for words to match their restless feelings. They never succeed, no matter what the situation. Linda to Michael upon his return from "am: "Howare dh?" "I'm fine. How are you?" "Im fine. I go along, you know, I work at the market. How're your wounds?" "They're OK." Linda asks about' Nick; Michael an- swers: "He'll be back." "Henever wrote to me, he never called. . aMaybe you were out. "Yeah, maybe." Later, Michael greets Axel and Stan; "Hi. " "How are you guys?" "I'm great." "I'm great." "So how have you been?" "Hangin' in there, y'know." "What's it like being shot?" "Don't hurt." The unintentionally Pinteresque ring of all this might be rewarding in another time and place, but not in the presumed American Epic. Much of the dialogue has the sond of grade B im- provisation much like the boorish, self- congratulatory excesses of John Cassavetes' Husbands, with Cimino's tongue-tied characters repeating phrases (often obscene), then breaking into hysterical giggles of the aren't-we- being-clever variety. RUNNING RAMPANT through it all is the insulting notion that certain classes of people are incapable of ex- pressing themselves with the remotest touch of eloquence, no; matter how wrenching the situation, no matter haw imbedded the stolid ritual of machismo. See CIMINO'S, Page 7 Walt Disney's in Color DUMBO What can you say about a stupid elephant that flys? Only that it was beautiful and you loved it ... A sure cure for the spirit- ually hungover. including dynamite bill of Disney cartoons. A com plete evening of animanaia. SATI MURDER BY DEATH (with Peter Falk & S'ellers) SUN! BRANDO IN THE WILD ONE CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 (children $1) ML"qm A P4 Lk a.l 6i: