Page T'wta THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 1 , 1972 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fridoy, February 11, 1972 C QQ Q d . s_ 1_. . , Box Offices Open at 6:30 Show Starts at 7:00 YUL I BRYNNER WAL I ELI. LLACHI JANE BIRKIN Editors note: these reviews were Compiled by thenDaily's reviewing Staff Kyle Counts, ,Neal Gaber, Richard Glatzer, and Peter Munsing. The French Connection FOX VILLAGE The French Connection, like * The Last Picture Show, is a standard-bearer. in the current move away from quivering so- cia drama back to cinematic roots. Who says they don't make m>ovies like they used to? Con- niection is enjoyable, innocuous, vastly overpraised, and in a few -years, with its language scrubbed and a glimpse of derriere snip- ped, we're likely to find it on TV which is where it really be- longs. The story is simple. Two rough New York cops, Ed 'Pop- eye' Doyle and Buddy Russo, are out to crack a huge international dope ring headed, naturally, by a suave, sinister Frenchman (Fernando Rey). The French- man, not surprisingly, doesn't like the cops' idea and tries to lose his tail.There are a few chase scenes, a couple of close scrapes, some false alarms, a lot of waiting, a big gunfight and a postscript. That's about it. Two or three years ago, given the frazzled temper of the times, this film might very well have passed unnoticed, a .nice little .jiicture, nothing special. But 'these days we're all so desperate for good escape that a lean ac- tibner like Connection is instant- ly canonized and patronized. If you're looking for a rationaliza- tion, what seems to half elevate the picture from its genre is "irector William Friedkin's talent for chiseling hard, sharp edges and giving his film the look, sound, and feel of reality, at least as we've come to know it .n 'the movies. The credits, sim- =ple white on black, whip by in =thirty -seconds. No music. The language is raw and natural. Slamming car doors, growling ignitions, tire screeches, heel clicks punctuate the soundtrack. The photography is grainy, and -the colors are flat, dulled, smog- 'ged over. The composition is practically all one-dimensional. The cutting is standard action with no tricks. And most of the ,:actors look as if they were just .rounded up in some agent's drag- niet. * All of these touches make the film seem lived-in, but the larger brushstroke of realism and the film's centerpiece is Gene Hack- .man's Popeye lumbering around in- his porkpie hat, chomping his gum, rubbing his nose, and look- .ing g e n e r a 1lly inconspicuous. ,,hackman is not a bravura actor, primping and showing off as if he were doing Hamlet every * time out. Instead he contours himself to a role, loses himself *n it and makes the character seem touchable right down to the beard stubble. So his Doyle is almost a documentary crea- tion - bestial, bawdy, bigoted ("Never trust a nigger." "He could -have been white." "Never trust anybody.") .. . and cynical. A mean cop doing his job. But -unlike another mean cop, Clint Eastwood's Dirty Harry', jDoyle is no transpalnted sheriff and The French Connection is : no updated horse opera. Far from the old-fashioned Western 'individualist fighting the System and moralizing with his gun, Popeye cruises the streets (mod- ern mobility is so important to the action that the auto is really Haekman's co-star) hoping to win his superior's favor by rounding up the. villains-an ambition, I might add, less noble and prob- ably more fascistic than Harry's instinctive violence. So while Harry grouses about having to stop a bank robbery on his lunch hour, Popeye initiates his in- vestigation after-hours on his own time. That's how eager he is to please. Contentwie, if anything is im- plied by Doyle's dogged determi- nation and even ruthlessness, it's that he is only a police-badge away from being criminal him- self. In the film's very first se- quence the Frenchman's hired killer plugs a pursuer, presum- ably a gendarme. Then, in point- ed juxtaposition, a quick cut to Brooklyn where Doyle and part- ner Russo chase and finally rough over a black junkie, a le- gitimate thing to do; after all, if you're a policeman. Later we see a tough, tough, tough bar- room'bust that makes us banish the thought of Doyle as public samaritan. Aren't these the real victims of the dope ring? And still later we find Doyle at the scene of a horrible auto acci- dent, ignoring the bloody corpses and selfishly arguing with his commander (played by former cop Eddie Egan, real-life pro- tagonist of the French Connec- tion story) that he needs a little more time to catch the French- man. In short, if you'll permit the understatement, Doyle is not very likable, and yet for all his heathenism he doesn't seem to upset people the way Harry does. A large part of the reason why, I think, is the film's 'reality' which mutes Doyle's roughness and excuses him on the premise that if it really happened we can hardly moralize about it. I'd never blame a film for the sensi- bilities of its audience of course, but Connection plays up to this feeling, going to great lengths not to take sides. Just the facts. Now some people mysteriously regard neutrality, as distinguish- ed from ambivalence, as a sure sign of Art (witness Patton); but I regard it as .an easy way out and more, a sign that some- where along the line the film stopped affecting me. For better or worse, in real life and in real art we do take sides, and though a movie is certainly entitled to stay out of the fray it does so at a risk. Connection took that risk and I feel it lost-not everything but something. Because the police- men's scheme is never laid out for us there is a certain tension at times, if not thrills and nail- biting suspense. When will they grab the baddes? And the film does have several undenably fine parts-a cat and mouse game in Grand Central Station, a loud shooutout, a chase that's rea- sonably hailed as one of the best in movie history - but these parts, good as they are, never coalesce into anything larger. The wallop is missing. And if you think that's a small gripe foir an action picture, you may be right. Personally, I have mixed feelings. -N.G. " * * Dirty Harry STATE Manny Farber in his famous e s s a y "Underground Movies" suggested that "the sharpest work of the last thirty years is to be found by studying the most unlikely, self-destroying, uncom- promising, round-about artists," by which he meant the Holly- wood action directors. Auteur critics have stretched the point too far, but after seeing Dirty Harry I can almost forgive them. Harry is not, as some misguided liberals and law students believe, fascist propaganda; it is not, as some Art Film cultists be- lieve, an empty-headed exercise in blood-letting; and it is not, I confess, the kind of picture I usually find myself praising. What it is is powerful modern mythology, no less affecting for all its moral repugnance. The hero dirty Harry Callahan, is an individualistic misfit in the Don Siegel tradition (Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Baby Face Nelson, Madigan, Coogan's Bluff), but unlike Coogan he has no place to escape to, no place in which to ply his trade unimpeded by criminal-coddling laws. So he sneers at the liberals. in power and sets out on his own after the sniper-villain. In the end San Francisco finds itself with one less sniper and one less cop. It's not a very inspirational tale and the controversy will probably rage on, but I haven't changed my mind: Harry is the best American movie of the last six months. -N.G. * * * 81/2 CINEMA II I don't know of any film that resists criticism quite as much as Federico Fellini's 8, so I'm not even going to try to sort it out in this small space. The film is a pastiche of present- tense, past-tense, a dream-tense, and few more tenses thrown in for good measure, all of it spun from the mind of film director Guido (Marcello Mastroianni). Guido's problem is a mental block: he's due to make a giant heavily - financed spectacle but the movie is stuck somewhere inside him, and neither the pro- ducer's pressure nor the critics' gibes can get it unstuck. For all the film's confusion and tem- poral juggling - which make it seem like a parody of the For-_ eign Movie-8 is Fellini's best. Moving( funny, totally outrage- ous. A masterpiece, and there are few enough of those., -N.G. * * * Together FIFTH FORUM Together is the worst film I've ever seen. At first I thought it was a parody like Is There Sex After Death? No such luck. From the sententious aims stated at the beginning to the incredibly sacharine end the film is a cine- matic definition of kitsch. This film doesn't have every cliche in the book, it is the book. See Dr. Roland Curry's Sex Institute: Listen to him explain "Our civil- ization is going a mile a min- ute!" Hear one of the people's he's helped say-"When you look_ at a person it makes your heart go 'boom'-then you go to bed and you make love." But this is no mere porno film; this is a film about feeling, with a capital F. "If you want to be with someone you love you have to feel it-right at the gut-that's where it's at." Everybody strips off their masks and relates, re- turning to a child like state be- cause that's where we had all the fun. No sex, just fornication. Together lets you know what it feels like to have had a lobo- tomy. As Roy Rogers said in National Enquirer: "I wouldn't let my horse, Trigger, see some of the movies that they've got out today." -P.M. * * * Billy Jack CAMPUS Billy Jack, the sleeper of '71, overcame its seemingly insur- mountable odds (shoestring bud- get, no stars, scattered distribu- tion) and proved so successful for Warner Brothers that a se- quel is on the way. Husband and wife Tom Laughlin and Delores Taylor wrote, produced, directed it and play the leads as well. Delores runs an experimental 'freedom' school for outcast kids and Billy Jack (well realized by Laughlin), a surly half-breed, protects it from the hateful townspeople nearby. There's much pleasure in the glimpses of the kids working creatively in the school, the natural acting by the cast and the funny comic improvisations, which helps to overshadow the film's naivoe and sluggish social consciousness. It's nothing terribly remark- able or intelligent, but B i I I y Jack is fun, well-made enter- tainment that for once offers us optimism in place of sarcasm. -K.C. The Gospel According to St. Matthew CONSPIRACY This highly acclaimed, intoler- ably boring passion play features two hours and sixteen minutes of soulful wounded-dog peasant faces and southern Italian land- scapes. Having sat through King or Kings and The Greatest Story Ever Told, critics understand- ably championed Pier Paolo Pasolini for the external realism of his film-non-professioi tors, the Good Book itsel screenplay. Pasolini has e ed much time and effort tempting to render Jesus dane. He has succeeded. * * * nal ac- f as a xpend- in at- mun- -R.G. C'owboys MICHIGAN When The Cowboys rolled into Radio City Music Hall, I guess we all expected a shot 'em up John Wayne western, but with our hero The Duke getting killed off early in the movie, Cowboys sounds like a shocker, Radio City's Easy Rider of the year. Directed by Mark Rydell (The Reivers, The Fox), written by the people who wrote Hud, and starring a cast of pre-15 year olds, The Cowboys could turn out to be anything, though I have a sneaking suspicion it's a Disneyesque Lord of the Flies. (Friday, not reviewed at press time). -R.G. The Three Penny Opera CINEMA GUILD This film verison of the Bertolt Brecht-Kurt Weill play left both men dissatisfied. Directed by G. W. Pabst and starring Lotte Lenya and others from the stage cast, Three Penny Opera has been charged with having top- pled a house of cards; it sup- posedly spoiled the play by bring- ing cinematic realism to an es- sentially fanciful treatment of gangsters and degeneracy. (Fri- day's, not reviewed at press time). -RG. Children of Paradise CINEMA GUILD Marcel Carne's film deals with theater myth, and fittingly the circumstances under which Chil- dren of Paradise was made have given it a mythic aura. France, S1943, was not exactly an environ- " ment conducive to filmmaking. Out of this chaos came a large, romantic, legendary f i 1 m of French theater of the 1840's, one often found high on critics' all- time best lists. The story con- cerns Baptiste Deburau, France's greatest mime, during the years of his rise to fame, focusing on his idealistic love for Garance (Arletty), a pragmatic woman of experience. I personally find the film over - praised; Jean Louis Barrault's highly touted portrayal of the Sensitive mime is unsubtle, occasionally taste- less, unsympathetic. And though there are many good things in the film (almost all the perform- ances, for example), I can't help but feel that history has influ- enced critical opinion. (Saturday and Sunday). -R.G. 1 1M Thu ffP eRD "ROMANCE OF A HORSE THIEF" E PLUS THE MOST SAVAGE HUNT OF ALL... 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UAC-DAYSTAR presents Delaney, Bonnie & Friends, Billy Preston also IRIS BELL SAT., FEB. 19 8 p.m.-H 1LL AU D. :.<°E $4.50 $3.50 $2.00 IF YOU'RE NOT HIP TO BILLY PRESTON READ ON: Rolling Stone says of his new solo album: "START TO STOP, it's charisma "IT SHOWS HO WBEAUTIFUL PHYSICAL LOVE CAN BE" "IT PUTS THE POETRY BACK INTO LOVE."l Look for Yourself! Judge for Yourself! See What Your Children Can Show You About Love! "WHERE WERE THE POLICE WHEN THEY WERE SHOWING THIS FILM?" "I'M GOING TO SEE IT AGAIN AND BRING MY WIFE." 0 MUSIC MAN Robt. Preston 75c FEB. 10,11,12 9 P.M. STOCKWELL HALL 1 ® 1 e