Page Two THE MICHIGAN GAILY Thursday, March 16, 1972 P a e w oT E I C I A N D A L Thursday, March 16, 1972 Cinema: Straw By RICHARD GLATZER Thanks to the recent contro- versy over violence in movies, Straw Dogs has been tagged as an action movie about the de- structive nature of mankind and in one respect it is just that. David Sumner, an American mathematician (D u s t I n Hoff- man), 'and his Cornish wife Amy (Susan George) move to rustic Cornwall for peace and quiet only to encounter violence and horror. Not exactly a tale about the tranquility found in getting back to the roots. Then too, there is so much tension and excitement in Straw Dogs, courtesy of Sam Peckin- pah's direction and his fine trio of editors, that it is all too easy to char'acterize the film as a blood and guts thriller and neg- lect the other equally important aspects of the film. For Straw Dogs is a love story -an, unusually action-packed and suspenseful love story, but a love story all the same. The film's opening sequence immediately establishes a classic romantic triangle. First we see David, struggling with packages as he walks towards his car, parked in the town square. Next the movie cuts to Amy, blonde and sexy, her hard nipples pushing against the soft, clingy fabric of her sweater. David is too busy to notice those nipples, but Char- lie, Venner (Del Henney), an old boyfriend of Amy's, is not. Right there the movie's ten- sions are established. Amy is the Cornish conception of the allur- ing woman-promiscuous, impul- sive, childish. She puts a wad of gum on her husband's black- board, changes a plus sign to a minus when David isn't looking, and rarely knows what to do . with herself when her husband is occupied. Yet she must re- spect David's intellect some- what; why else did she marry him? David is an outsider, an in- tellectual in a world of physi- cality. He likes ice in his scotch, a heater. in his study, and soli- tude. David likes sex-why else did he marry Amy?-but he's not physical enough, not man enough to keep his wife satis- fied. And here's where Charles Venner, the walking phallus, comes in. In spite of Venner's appeal, Straw Dogs is a sentimental enough movie to have these two poles, Mr. Intellect )and Mrs. Sex, gradually meet and satisfy each other. Amy tries to culti- vate her mind to please David. She reads a book on chess and, when David uses a word she doesn't understand, consults a dictionary. "You know, you're not so dumb," David tells her, and she earnestly responds, "Sometimes I need help." David is not very willing to admit he "needs help yet he changes considerably more than his wife during the course of the film. He's complacent enough at first, but he soon realizes that while he is tripping over stones and getting in the car on the wrong side, Amy is comparing him to those earthy, masculine, better drinking Neanderthals, the townsfolk. So he tries to change. When asked to go hunt- ing he accepts in spite of him- self, and he gradually becomes more and more dominating, more the man the very unliberated Amy wants for her husband. Finally, he makes a moral de- Dogs: An cision to shelter Henry Niles propriet (David Warner), the town mental almost case, from\ blood-thristy villag- intruder ers, and in the climactic half- manner hour fight that ensues, he dem- his hon onstrates enough violence and the pri primitive force to keep his wife emerge satisfied for life. five tou Where does the strength and And f guts come from? Peckinpah partlyb would say that they were there his lair all along, though David was ig- because norant of their existence. It's man, h Peckinpah's belief, and one of can ac the, themes of Straw Dogs, that behind the veneer of civiliza- tion, man is part animal. In one of the first shots of . the movie, as out of focus overview of the town square, the village children playing look like' ants scurrying to and fro. Later, Chris the rat-catcher David has hired, tells his boss, "I feel closer to rats than I do to peo- ple. Rats is life," and a manB trap used to catch poachersvis yThe c compared to a rat trap. The vil- Symlph(; lagers, like animals, commum- brought cate more through sounds and the aud gestures than words. And, at last nig the end of the film, once David phony( has acknowledged his own prim- Univers itivism, he communicates to cert und Henry Niles not so much through liam St words but through nods and Thel shaking of his head. Further- Wagner more, whenever Amy acts horny, tersinge David tells her,, "You're an sympho: animal." by Hindi Like Amy, the townspeople are calculat particularly animalistic when it pression comes to sex. They'll make love somethi to anything they can get their though. hands on, although they'd prefer perhaps Amy to a knothole. Sex is on C their minds 24 hours a day; they Critic steal a pair of Amy's underwear, plainedt talk about buggering, and dis- a need i cuss another man's liking of have re shee . And Janice, an adoles after la cent nymphomaniac, will take T anything with pants-even her There own brother. David's struggle to keep Amy is much like a lion trying to ward off competition, and Peckinpah intentionally con- structs the climactic fight so' that David in Amy's presence must battle two men who have made love to his wife; the 214 beasts' fight to the death for the sexy female. Yet the mathematician turned ferocious animal i is protecting more than his mate when he finally faces the townsmen-he's protecting his lair. He tells us bluntly, "This is where I live. This is me. I will not allow vio- lence against this house. . This is my house!" Sam Peck- inpah is a big fan of Robert Ardrey, the noted anthropologist and playwright, and here he has Co translated into movie terms part of Ardrey's theory of the terri- torial imperative. As Ardrey puts --ioft it, "PossessIon of a territory lends enhanced energy to the* unusual love story tor . . . the challenger is invariably defeated, the expelled." So the mild- ed mathematician, once me is threatened, allows meval beast in him to and he alone takes on ugh townspeople. fights wisely and well- because he is protecting r and his mate, partly he is now a balanced alf, brain, half brawn. I cept Peckinpah's theory that the man best fitted for sur- vival is a thinking man who acknowledges his own primitiv- ism, though I'd rather not be- lieve it, I can even accept his belief that deep down, all men contain a jungle beast trying to escape. What I can't accept is Peckin- pah's approval of what he sees as man's essential nature and his view that the non-animalis- tic, non-violent man is incom- plete and silly. A moral man los ton Orchestra: Mleasurable chills can believe humans are violent beasts, but a, moral man can't a p p r o v e of our destructive poWers. It's not until the last quarter of Straw Dogs that I realized just where the director stood on this issue. Then Dustin Hoffman, a man who earlier shrunk At the sight of a dead animal, smiles at having killed several men and proudly says, "Jesus, I got 'em." It's very rare that one false touch, one bad line, can make me dislike a film I was enjoy- ing, but, "Jesus I got 'em," did just that. Have You Heard The Rumor? 9:00 Sot.-March 1 50c Couzens Hall Cafeteria Leon Tholnhmas "Without question is the most interesting, exciting, and innovative s i n g e r to come on the scene in many a year." Pauline Rivelli, JAZZ & POP ''. .he must be seen to be believed." VARIETY "He should not be missed." RECORD WORLD LEON THOMAS-Brilliant vocalist-percussionist performs one night only in concert with ALICE COLTRANE and The Contemporary Jazz Quintet THIS FRIDAY NIGHTL March 11-8 p.m.-HILL AUD: Reserved Seats: $2.00, 3.50, 4.00, 4.50 at Michigan Union12-6 p.m. and SALVATION RECORDS on Maynard St. PLEASE NO SMOKING IN AUDITORIUM COMING APRIL 21st (day classes end) : KRIS KRISTOFFERSON Reserved seats go on sale Monday, March 20, 12 noon Mich. Union. $1 .50-3.00-4.50. SORRY NO CHECKS. UAC-DAYSTAR PRESENTATIONS It By DONALD SOSIN closing chords of Brahms' ony No. 4. in E minor a rousing ovation from fence in Hill Auditorium ght as the Boston Sym- Orchestra concluded its ity Musical Society con- ider the direction of Wil- einberg. program also included 's Prelude to Die Meis- r von Nurenberg and the ny "Mathis der Maler" demith, all standard fare ted to make a strong im- . I would 'have loved ng more out-of-the-way, Like a Toch symphony, s who have recently com- that the orchestra shows for some discipline would peated their statements st night's performance. were some uneven spots, Sunrise 4 E. Washington iles Leather A rt Objects Handcrafted by Sunrise iinuinal Farth curious cut-offs and a lack of tight ensemble that was all the more evident for the few cli- mactic moments where every- thing was just r i h t. The orchestra's sound still causes pleasurable chills and under Steinberg's masterful hand there is sweep and drive that make the inattention to details an- noying, when one realizes what potential the group possesses. DIAL 668-6416 TWO HIT ENCORES NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS "Summer of '42" BEST EDITING BEST SCREENPLAY BEST PHOTOGRAPHY BEST SCORE AND JANE DONALD FONDA SUTHERLAND kiutea JANE FONDA BEST ACTRESS BEST SCREENPLAY 4. I DIAL 665-6290 I: I -- _______________________________ -_ W STUDENT RATES! I 10th ANNUAL ANN ARBOR FILM FESTIVAL in the ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM FOR INFO: 662-8871 Feature fifteen minutes later. _ ; ... 1 W p Are You interested in Preserving Jewish Traditions 1 Temple Beth Emeth has openings in its Religious School for 72-73 for elementary and secondary teachers. Call Mrs. J. Gottleib, Assistant to Director, 662-8893. ECONO-CAR SPRING WEEKEND SPECIAL Get with it . . . it's springtime! $hed the coats and boots and head for the country in a new Ford or Chevy. From Friday noon through Monday noon pay only: 'I *' I 1 I ! I i f f' $17.5O and only I I II I I .......... . ..... ...... .. ....... .. .. ..... ... ........