Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, January 28, 1972 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, January 28, 1972 U 'Dirty H ary': An audaciously good flick By NEAL GABLER If you're anything like me, you'll go into Dirty Harry ex- pecting, in the critics' patroniz- ing words, "a good action pic- ture," (as distinguished, I guess, from a 'good picture, period) or, much more damning praise "a good Clint Eastwood picture." I don't think you or I can be en- tirely faulted for our precon- ceptions. Dirty Harry does fea- ture Clint Eastwood, it is made by Don Siegel, and it was ori- ginally planned for Frank Sin- atra, before Frank injured his hand and decided to retire. Not very auspicious. And yet Dirty Harry is as far from tacky, TV- type detective stuff as the Mal tese Falcon is. I'll go even fur- ther: It is the best piece of film- making I've seen since McCabe & Mrs. Miller opened last July, and considering how I feel about McCabe that is a high accolade. Perhap~s I should make it clear that I'm not speaking here as an auteur critic, trying to talk up inferior goods into something admirable. Good foreign films have a certain gentility, like good parlor conversation. But good American films, and Dirty Harry is one, are more raucous, gritty, muscled, vicious auda- cious. They come on like gang- busters and never let up. So it's easy and, in fact, standard prac- tice, to see our own fast-paced films alongside the Europeans' more subdued products as pulpy and ill-mannered, which of course they are. It's similarly easy to mistake all this action for anti-intellectualism or even fascism - a charge leveled often against Harry - which, again, much of it is. Harry, however, is emphatic- ally not anti-intellectual or fas- cistic, even though there are two rather pedestrian motifs in the film that undoubtedly give rise to these accusations. The first is. the Archie Bunker Syndrome - the acceptance of the bigot as a kind of lovable know-noth- ing who really harbors no malice toward anyone. Detective Harry Callahan Is one of these. On principle, we're told, Harry doesn't discriminate; he hates everybody. In action, however, he laconic shamus is practically a humanitarian. His doctor is black and his sidekick is Mexi- can-American. In short, under- neath the tough crust, Harry is really a regular fellow; and if this is bigotry, so be it. Director Siegel's critics 'may appear to be on firmer ground attacking thefilm's second mo- tif, what I call for want of a better label, the Anti-Hitler Theory. This is the notion used by every President of mod- er times to justify huge defense expenditures - that force only understands force; consequently, society must hire killers of its own to combat fanatics both for- eign and domestic. There is, un- fortunately, a nub or truth to the theory and also to the charge that it's in Dirty Harry. By ded- icating the picture to "the police officers of San Francisco who gave their lives in the line of duty," Siegel comes off like a flag-waver, and probably Sieg- fried Kracauer, the German film CEREMONIES IN DARK OLD MEN Mendelssohn Theatre THRU SAT. Box Office open 12:30 'I aesthetician who traced the rise of Nazism by examining Weimar movies, would have a field -day yanking this strand. But what the accusers gisS; it seems, is the film's third mo- tif, the one which at least blurs any fascism and the one on which the movie stands or falls intellectually: Harry as existen- tial hero. In American drama, thanks to Brando, 'ye ce to think of the existential' hero as a brooding motorcyclist, inartic- ulate and misunderstood, or as an aimless youth drifting from commune to commune in search of final answers he knows ar n'.t there. But if anyone qualifies for the title, it's the policeman, like Harry,. whose. life is frac- tured into little episodes of ac- tion and violence without any link of rationality dr overall-pur- pose. He must act or die. If you look past all the gun- fire, then, you can see .Iarry as an extroverted (or American- ized) Meursault, all instinct and apoliticism, and he says this quite explicitly:: "When I see an adult male chasing an adult fe- male with intent to commit rape, I shoot the bastard. That's ny policy." Comparisons might be, made with Bogart's Sam Spade, but Harry has thirty years on Spade, the difference between the 40s and the 70s. Spade, cyni- cal pragmatist, is deep down an-, other soured . romantic, while Harry is beyond cynicism and well beyond romance. He lives and he acts. Nothing more. In lesser hands this - existen- tialism usually becomes black angst bunting tacked onto a thriller for relevant decoration. For Siegel, however, it is the ex-. tension of Harry's role as ana- chronistic sheriff, as' self-ap- pointed Leviathan less fascist. than individualist. Early in the film Harry saunters down Main Street and . . . blam! blam! blam! .. singlehandedly he ap- prehends three bank robbers All while munching a hot dog! The secene, a parody, obviously has trappings of a Western - the= lonely walk to- meet the thievin' varmints; the cowering towns- folk; the. gunfight as.the vil- lains try to speed away; Harry's, huge 44 Magnum, "the .most powerful handgun in the world"; and a little battlt of wits in which Harry outfoxes, the lone survivor. Afterward, grazed by a bullet, our hero limps over to the Doc to get patched up, the cli- max of a perfect charade save blowing smoke from the gunbar- rel cowboy fashion. Here again, Siegel might have, opted for a simple 70s Western thrusting the sheriff into a sportsjacket and patrol car; but he aims instead, with astound- ing ambition, for a giant conflict of values 'between old-fashioned, rock-ribbed individualism and new-fangled, weak-kneed con- formisni. Harry operates person- ally, man to man; 'Scorpio, the films.' villain modeled after the reai1ife. ZodiA filler, is an im- personai-l assassini sniping from rooftops. Harry is only super- fieoally. prejudiced; Scorpio's bigotry belies his long golden tres es and -'peace medallion. Eay .is tough and flinty; Scor- plo is more 'ndrogyne than bar-, 'room- brawler. Harry relies on instinct; Scorpio is frighteningly 061culating, taking .cover in le-, gal loopholes. And sharpening the contrast in even minor de- tafWs, Siegel has the antagonists engage in' a running battle of technological one-upsmanship, in which-Scorpio. as technologi- cal man nautrally holds the up- per hand - pistol vs. rifle, rifle vs, machine gun, knife vs. auto- matic. It is certainly no accident that Siegel 'plays out this conflict against the backdrop of San Francisco. One of the centers of the new West, Frisco still hasn't outbred its Dodge City origins, and this film carefully chronicles. The rolling hills, the North Beach go-go spots, the prostitutes - all are reminiscent of the old Western landscape with its saloons and world-wise bargirls. What has changed - and this is Harry's agony - is man's relationship to his town. 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Fin- ally they find themselves in a dusty grey quarry where the last shoot-out begins, this time with nothing to get in, Harry's way (shades of OK Corral). And when it's all over, Harry sets his jaw, grimaces and flings his badge out into the river. He's won the battle but lost the war. If there were a pantheon where great moments of film symbolism could be enshrined, Harry's hurling away of his badge would surely belong there. Although I may be waxing rhap- sodic, it seems one of those rare bits of social poetry in which large events are miraculously encapsulated in images. His ac- tion asserts his position as an- achronism and misfit, a man whose values are out of synch with his time. We can mytholo- gize people like Harry, and the film itself is such mythology. We can even justify these peo- ple's violence. But we cannot use them unless they are willing to obey the rules, an impossible price for Harry. So in his de- mise we are seeing nothing less than the end of the great mythic figure of sheriff, lone and in- stinctive. The old West has un- dergone a conversion, and Harry is much more the victim than Scorpio, It's an interesting theme (Dare I say "relevant"?), but I wouldnt want to contend that it's an en- tirely novel idea, nor would I deny that dozens of recent, cheesy movies - including most of Siegel's - snuggled a com- parable theme in between the fist fights. The difference, a very big difference,,'is the im- pact of the vision. Siegel isn't giving us a nice, zippy action- picture - with - social - under- tones which we can slide over for two happy, sadistic, cathar- tic hours. Wow! What a chase scene!: His picture is so damn shattering it sucks us into its value system and practically smothers us with its dying myth- ology. This is powerful stuff. You may see better films this year, but I doubt if you'll see anything quite as devastating. Why? Mainly because Dirty Harry's aesthetics - its gore, its fast-cutting, Lalo Schifrin's great heart-beat score, East- wood's solid mumbling perform- ance - are part and parcel of its value system, and its energy is as much a function of indig- nation as of kinetics, If this See DIRTY, Page 8 -GRAND OPENING 1962 U. of M. Groduate introduces Snoopy's Restaurant 1211 S. UNIVERSITY across from Campus Theater 10% OFF WHEN YOU BRING IN THIS AD. Expires January 30th 4 WI 4* I Rachel, Rachel dir. PAUL NEWMAN starring: JOANNE WOODWARD 75c JAN. 27, 28, 29 9 P.M. STOCKWELL HALL Tonight MAN WITH THE MOVIE FAST, EASY CASH.! GENEROUS PEOPLE ARE BUYING BOOKS FROM FOLKS LIKE YOU, RIGHT NOW! IN THE BUY-BACK ROOM NEXT TO THE BARBERSHOP IN THE UNION BASEMENT 9 to 5 -the U CELLAR I 0 I Hungari an Folk Dance Workshop v ANDOR CZOMOS Fri.--Jan. 28-8-11 p.m.--Barbour Gym Elementary & Intermediate (no experience necessary) Sat, Jan. 29-10-12 aim.-Women's Athletic Bldg. 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