Mediatrics Presents: (rberf Ross) Shirley Maclaine and Anne Bancroft portray ballerinas who have taken different directions' in their lives and later confront themselves about the choices they made years ago. Mikhail Baryshnikov and Leslie rown also appear as ballet dancers. Fri. April 6 Nat Sci Aud 7:00, 9:15 STEPPENWOLF (Fred Haines) Max Von Sydow stars in the title role as a loner who is torn between bourgeois respectibility and his wolfish impulses. Based on the novel by Herman Hesse. Sat, April 7mNat Si Aud 7:00,8:45,10:30 admission $1.50 .':$ > F'UHeld Over! .1 " " H1 Held Over! FRI & SAT SUN' 7:30 & 9:30 5:30, 7:30, & 9:30 NOMINATED FORU ACADEMY AWARDS BEST PCURE BEST ACTOR BEST DIRECTOR WARREN JULIE JAMES [c BEATTY CHRISTIE MASON he Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLB 3 FRIDAY, APRIL 6 EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX, BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK (Woody Allen, 1972) 7 & 10:20-MLB 3 The perfect parody of pop psych, Dr. Rubin's book, and movies themselves. EVERYTHING takes hilarious shots at Italian neo-realism, schlock horror films, notorious army training films, and the sexual misinformation we all learned behind the swings. Manic, messy, and marvelous. Stars WOODY, JOHN CARRADINE, LYNN REDGRAVE, LOUISE LASSER, and LOU JACOBI. WHAT'S UP, TIGER LILY? (Senkichi Tanizuchi and Woody Allen, 1966) 8:40 only-MLB 3 A Japanese agent named Phil Moscowitz (l) searches for a stolen formula of the perfect egg salad sandwich. What happens next is anybody's guess, as Woody Allen gives the gold finger to the James Bond epic in this hilarious jumble of a movie (a real Japanese thriller which Allen rewrote and redubbed). Allen's most anarchistic film, with some of his best one-liners. Tomorrow: Kubrick's FATHER OF GLORY & THE KILLING Page 6-Friday, April 6, 1979-The Michigan Daily 0arts entertainment Hair': BY ANNE SHARP I never thought that the musical Hair would ever make it to the big screen. It would be niee; so far, not one decent film has been made about the hippie era, and Hair, although it was no sociological document, had a lot of the look and feel to it of the "tune in, turn Bounce but n on, drop out" generation. Certainly it captured its music (several of Galt MacDermott's songs written for the play became Top Forty hits) and its sardonic, drug-inspired sense of humor (e.g., "Marijuana is nature's little way of saying "Hi!"). But Hair like Godspell or A Chorus Treat Williams makes like Bariyshnikov amongst the wine and the finger- bowls, disrupting a ritzy New York dinner party, in a scene from Milos For- man's "Hair." FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT'S 5977 SMALL CHANGE A precocious 3-year old pushes the family cat out the window; a teenager is infatuated with his best friend's mother; two brothers sell a classmate's hair-a few of fhe humorous (and ultimately human) but eloquent and sincere depiction of the world of children in a small French village. SAT: Ann Arbor Premiere of Mikhalkov's SLAVE OF LOVE SUN: Polanski's REPULSION CINEMA GUILD 700&90 T OLD ARCH $150 Line, was a theatre piece, constructed around bits of stage business which would never translate to the cinema. Besides the rather meagre bits of plot which held together the play, which is really no more than an assortment of songs and vignettes, would .hardly sustain a two-hour film. Nevertheless someone, somewhere along the way decided that Hair must become a film, A screenplay writer fir- st of all junked the play's stagy script. Next, he selected about half of Galt MacDermott's Sixties musical num- bers and had them Dolbyized to take out their rough sound, then selected the names of a few of the play's major characters and made up a new story around them. The result, Hair: the Film, directed by Milos Forman, bears no resemblance whatsoever to Hair the musical, or to the Sixties for that mat- ter. It is a cinematic sitcom, pure and simple, in its own right. CLAUDE HOOPER-BUKOWSKI, the cool, rock star-like blond glamor boy of the stage play, has become Claude Bukowski, a stereotypical hayseed with a buzz cut, who arrives in the big city a few days before being inducted into the army. He runs across a group of strangely-dressed young persons in the park doing what looks like an elegant, sinuous version of the Freaky Deaky (choreography is by Twyla Tharp, who alsohas a small role as a priestess in Claude's acid dream later on). Claude, for some unexplainable reason, decides to spend his lastfree hours hanging around these shiftless creeps. He sees a rich girl riding a horse, and falls tn love with her. In a scene straight out df the worst sort of French comedy, lead shiftless creep Berger (Treat Williams), no relation to the witty madman of Hair the play, suggestswthat they crash the girl's coming-out party. They do, annoyingly, and are thrown in jail. From then on, the hijinks come along fast and furious, and so do the songs. Taken out of their original context, the lyrics of such songs as "Sodomy" or "Ain't Got No" or "Where Do I Go?" have no particular meaning. The actors toss them aside as they prance maniacally about the screen; they are background noise, that's all. THE LYRICS still deal with social R.C. Players presents: BETWEEN WOMEN: FACES OF FRIENDSHIP April 5,6, 7-$2' E.Quad -8pm Sbody issues of the sixties - drugs, politics, the War, race relations - but the film does not really make use of this. As a matter of fact, it does not bother to ex- plain who Berger and company are, or why they choose to burn their draft cards and live in the park. When Hair was first staged, there was no need to explain who the hippies onstage were, or their value system, because hippies were a common phenomenon; a few hippie panhandlers probably accosted audience members on their way to the theatre. The hippies were frustrated with bourgeoise, con- formist life, and they refused to fight in a war which they considered wasteful and immoral. BERGER AND company, in the film, seem to behave as they do for the sheer hell of it. True, one character does mut- ter something about "cosmic con- sciousness," and a sarcastic Berger makes, for him, a strenuous, eloquent effort to talk the rustic. jerk Bukowski (Lord knows why) out of complying with the draft board: "What's the mat- ter? You have to be a big macho man with a gun?" T here is no attempt to recreate the Sixties visually. (I have mentioned how the acid rock music of the original has been processed until it sounds like tracks off the latest Toto album.) One of the characters drives what- is un- mistakably a 1978Olds. The clothes, especially those of the ingenue, Beverly D'Angelo, are straight out of last year's pattern books. HERE IS an interesting contrast between musical and film: When the play came out in 1967, audiences were shocked and outraged by the now notorious "nude scene" at the end of Act I. By today's standards, the scene was tame; a few actors stood nude on a darkened stage, with a strobe light flashing across their bodies, for a grand total of 60 seconds. In Hair: the Film,, actors doff their clothes constantly, on the flimsiest excuses. Supporters of Hair the musical argued that nudity was essential to the dramatic intent of the scene, and so it was, giving touching emphasis to the words of the song that accompanied it: "Why do I live? Why do I die? Where do I go?" The nudity in the film, however, is gleeful, unabashed gratuitousness, and the audience accepts it with slightly bored elan. We've come a long way, I suppose, from our prudish ancestors who caused such an uproar when John and Yoko appeared bare-bottomed on the cover of Two Virgins. Even such a sedate artist as Judy Collins can do a nude album cover nowadays, and there's hardly a murmur of protest. HAIR: THE FILM is an amusing lit- tle comedy caper on the order of Con- voy or Heaven Can Wait, and light en- tertainment like that is catnip to children of the seventies. But anyone who can still remember the sixties with a clear, nostalgic vision, who ever ex- perignced the excitement of the stage play when it was new and meaningful, who ever really knew what the hippie movement was all about, will be em- barrassed and disappointed by the film. My advice: Stay at home, put on your love beads and bell-bottomed jeans, settle into a nice, comfy chair, light up a reefer, and listen to the original cast album of Hair through a good set of headphones. It's the best way to let the sunshine in. Lq N I All Ladies come and get your Bananas T-shirts * U " " * " " " GO BANANAS SUNDAY AND MONDAY NIGHT! Announcing Second Grand Opening Sunday, April 8th and Monday, April 9th will be the Second Grand Opening . of the most exciting Disco in town. If you thought the past Bananas' was exciting come see the NEW BANANAS. Featuring * A new enlarged sound system * * Records to your request