Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 17, 1972 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 17, 1972 Straw Dogs Michigan Theatre Most people I've spoken with seem to be generally disgusted with Straw Dogs for reasons I don't really understand. All the complaints I've heard criticize the film's violence, yet Straw Dogs is not' needlessly graphic. In fact, the film is much less nauseating than I had expected -little blood, no guts, and I never once had to look away from the screen. Furthermore, the movie's concern with vio- lence is secondary-its main ten- sions are sexual. David Sumner (Dustin Hoffmari) is an Ameri- can mild-mannered mathemati- cian who moves to Cornwall with his physically oriented, alluring wife Amy (Susan George). The violence arises from the towns- men's desire for Amy, their envy of her husband, Amy's ambigu- ous feelings towards David and the villagers, and David's at- tempts to satisfy his wife. Admittedly; I too find Straw Dogs revolting, not because it depicts violence, but because it approves of violence and views it as an aspect of mature, ethical men that should be encouraged. Peckinpah's 'film's philosophy is disgusting, not its rare gobs of catsup. -Richard Glatzer. Such Good Friends State Theatre Such Good Friends, for much of its 100 minute length, is Pet- C lCQ~ QQ Q d ronius Arbiter come to New York. Like other recent films, SGF satirizes the upper middle class this time by depicting an affluent artist and children's book author (Lawrence Luckin- bill), his. wife (Dyan Cannon), and the friends and institutions that surround them. But what makes Preminger's movie super- -ior to stuff like Diary of a Mad Housewife is its unusual comic tone-hard, black, and bizarre. This tone occasionally falters, more occasionally once Luckin- bill enters a hospital to have a, minor operation and Dyan begins to realize how perverse her life is, but the screenplay (written by Elaine May under a pseu- donym), is full of funny, maca- bre bits, and the fine cast help make this the best of the urban life lampoons I've seen. -Richard Glatzer * * * KMute Campus Theatre While Klute bills itself as a hooker's love story, I found it better as a murder flick. A man disappears, his family and cor- poration hire a friend, John bars of Michel Legrand's title Klute (Donald Sutherland), to find his whereabouts. The last person he is known to have seen is a prostitute, cheesily named Bree (Jane Fonda); they fall in love, find a murderer, and in the last scene are about to set off for Tuscaurora, Pennsyl- vania, where the whole thing started. This raises the obvious ques- tions, how did a basically nice girl like this get into the pro- fession and why does she leave her, big apple pimp for small- town boy Klute, all of which would make for an interesting film. The trouble is that the film tries to answer these ques- tions with a couple of scenes in her psychiatrist's office, which tell us little. As a result the film falls back on the mur- der part of the plot which works out well as the characterization is there to create the tension. -Peter N. Munsing *, * * Summer of '42 Campus Theatre The all-pervasive mood of Summer of '42 can be magically summoned by humming a few theme. Like the movie, it is wistfully soft, lyrical, and ting- ed with a measure of nostalgic sadness. One can almost see young Hermie running around anxiously on the island, trying to ignore his taunting friends, getting a fleeting glimpse here and there of the beautiful mai- den, played by Jennifer O'Neill, The only possible criticism one could muster against this movie would entail donning a black hat and growling Bah! Sentimentalism! Humbug! But director Robert Mulligan avoids t this pitfall by keeping his tongue, for the most part, firm- ly lodged in his cheek, concen- trating on making several parts of the film very funny in their tense, innocent charm, as when Hermie goes to the drug store to buy contraceptives. What Hermie encounters at the age of 14 is rare. While his eag- er buddies are still preoccupied with feverishly delving into books to find pictures of cou- ples "doin' it," he has drifted away to a distant plateau. In that summer he does more than just "get his end in"; he learns something about the potential for unifying sex and emotion into a whole. And he learns it in a way that sets him apart forever from the old "Hermie," as well as from his friends. . Bruce Shlain Hospital Fox Village Cynicism is not worrying about crime because you expect it to happen. However once you've been robbed there is al- ways the chance that you will survive with hospitalization - the last resort. Hospital com- pletes the cynical circle with a hospital that kills its patients in a bureaucratic quagmire, a world where "It is axiomatic that nursing home doctors are wrong." The film centers around a ser- ies of murders and their event- ual solution by the medical di- rector of the hospital (George C. Scott), alternating between black comedy and good potboil- er. However the events are all plausible, and the plot moves quickly enough so that it never degenerates into a soap opera- there are too many things going wrong to have long stretches of unadulterated angst. The tone is cynical but not despairingly so - life may be a shitsand- wich, but if you keep on chew- ing you'll eventually finish. At least you won't starve. Peter N. Munsing Wide variety at Film Festival The Stewardesses Fifth Forum A porno movie doesn't have to be graphic to be stimulating, but even so The Stewardesses wasn't all that it could have been. Though it's the only X rated 3-D film I know of, it's 3-D usage consisted of a number of feet sticking out and some fairground scenes; considering the sexual protruberences and cavities of human body a lot more could have been done. The non-plot concerns the vari- ous loves of a group of steward- esses on leave. There's lesbian- ism, anal intercourse, rape and masturbation, a large amount of which is footage of ecstatic faces with enlough gasping for a nation of astonished housewives. There's also social commentary -a girl trips on acid (taken with non-fat milk) and maturbates with a bust, another gives a Vietnam-bound soldier a piece of her action, and there's some pointless violence as befits a drama of these troubled times. The film winds up with a dy- namite murder and suicide, due to the sexism of an advertising executive with a homosexual past who sought a young girl's acting ability between her legs. In the best porn tradition the dialogue is distilled banality and the sets look as if they were picked up at Meyer's Thrifty Acres. All of which is to say it's very funny soft core porn. Not great porn, but then again bow often do you get to see a 3-D porno flick? -Peter N. Munsing End of August at the Hotel Ozone Cinema II Friday and Saturday A little known film by Jan ARTIST GUILD presents THE BEST IN BLUES! HOWLIN' WOLF AND HIS BAND TON IGHT FRI., MARCH 17 8:30 P.M. I.M. BUILDING OAKLAND UNIVERSITY ROCHESTER, MICH. Tickets: $2.50" Available at Salvation Records, University Cellar, and at the door. Information call 377-3030 Schmidt showing life after an atomic war. A tribe of women roam the earth, destroy the lust vestiges of civilization and prove we're all animals dawn deep. Ozone is supposed to be a pes- simistic, stark, depressing movie. More than that I can't tell you. -Richard Glatzer * * * The Conspiracy The Conspiracy is showing three reputedly classic films this weekend. Man of Aran (1934) and Nanook of the North (1921) are Robert Flaherty documen- taries about an Irish fishing vil- lage and Eskimoes respectively and are considered to be the best of their genre. Rene Clair's A Nous La Liberte (1931) is a satirical attack on modern tech- nology that predates Chaplin's Modern Times and is occasional- ly found on critics' all-time best Sfolen Tickets,!. Buy tickets from ' AC- Daystar outlets only, or from friends you know. Call 763-4553 to check. The following stole n tickets for Ma rch 17 Alice Coltrane show will not be honored:. Sec. II, Row H, seats 11, 13, 12, 10, 8, 6; Row B, seats 1, 3, 5, 7. Sec. ill, Row D, seats 6, 4, 2; Row L, seats 12, 10, 8, 6, 4, 2. Sec. IV, Row 1, seats 1, 3,'5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 12, 10, 8 Subscribe to lists. The Michigan Daily J -Richard Glatzer r CAMP SHOMRIA THE CAMP WITH THE UNIQUE JEWISH CON- TENT BASED ON THE PIONEERING VALUES OF THE KIBBUTZ IN ISRAEL July 1st-August 13th Ages 9-16 6 weeks-$3$0 3 weeks--$200 or $70 per week For Further Information Call: 665-8576 i - I ,, BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:30 SHOW STARTS at 7:00 By PAUL TRAVIS Arts Editor The Ann Arbor Film Festival is happening again in the Archi- tecture Aud., with over 30 hours of experimental, avant-garde films made by people from all over the country. - Co-sponsored by the Cinema Guild and the Dramatic Arts Center of Ann Arbor, the fes- tival has gathered judges from inside and outside of the Uni- versity, who will dole out about $1,500 to the respective festival winners and select about 12 hours of film to go on tour across the country. If last night's showings are an accurate sampling, festival goers can see a wide variety of styles, topics and camera tech- niques - all of which are very enJoyable. Last night's 7:00 showing had nine films of varying lengths, mostly under ten minutes, which kept the audience's attention through most of the showing. The longest film, Dreamwood, lasted 45 long minutes. Recount- ing dream sequence after dream sequence the film charts the main character's wild search for a beautiful woman through woods and mountains. The wo- man never appears as a solid being, only as images nicely super-imposed on trees and rocks and in lakes. Dream after tedious dream, he chases her until he finally realizes that she is in reality Mother Nature. So he digs a small hole and screws Mother Nature. The film might have been nice if it had been cut in half. In contrast to Dreamwood was the first film Construction Job, a four minute film using Beatle music and old film clips to gen- erate a completely absurd at- mosphere. Quick cuts from a man setting a building on fire to a group carrying lumber and pushing wheelbarrows to no- where, interspersed with other The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. t ion, rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. crazy antics provided a very weird and very funny beginning for the audience. The second film of the even- ing was a short special effects feature called Meditations. Us- ing vividly colored water and swirling smoke that changes to the resonance of a deep gong, Meditation brilliantly explodes across the screen with flourishes of color, color, ever-changing color. And then came one of the strangest films I have seen in a while. There is a man drink- ing lighter fluid, lighting a match, and then spitting out the fluid while holding the match in front of his mouth. The ef- fect - a blowtorch. As the star of. Gemini Fire Extension did this over and over again, a sliver of another picture appeared on the left side of the screen and slowly grew larger. It was the same man doing the same thing, sometimes succeeding in making a huge flame erupt from his mouth, sometimes failing. The point of it missed me but it was fun to see if the man on the right made a bigger flame than the one on the left. Then it was cartoon time with Everyduck Versus The Spectre Of Communism. Crude- ly drawn, Everyduck fights the forces of the Commies who have already taken over the east coast. Everyduck fights by pray- ing hard and in the end he is answered by a bolt from heaven which knocks off the nasty Commies. Duck then goes to his reward in the sky - a ham- burger shack. Absurd and some- times funny. The next film was called Ono starring John Lennon, Yoko Ono. and many nude bodies. Ono was made by Daniel Seymore while Lennon and Ono were audition- ing bodies for Ono's movie Fly at Seymore's flat. You get to see John strumming a guitar, Yoko strumming a guitar, Yoko rapping, and lots of flys walk- ing around on naked bodies. So What. Also shown last night was a fine slick pseudo-promo for Sun City Arizona called the Best of Your Life. Shot on location, the film has the resident of Sun City tell you about how great it is to live there. A fine funny movie. Belt was another change of pace. Consisting of eggs moving on a conveyor belt to the time of a man laughing, Belt offered some interesting footage from different camera angles, with different lighting, and with the eggs moving at various speeds. The laughter was infectious and the audience was thus prepared for the grand finale - the eggs reach the end of the belt and smash pn the floor. ' To wrap-up the 7:00 show was a very funny film called Ser- geant Swell of the Mounties. Swell fights sissy Indians and Billy the Creep, and he gets medicine for an old man while galloping across the country- side without a horse. Billy the Creep, with three sets of guns strapped to himself and a knife in his mouth, along with the In- dian chief, armed with lipstick in his bandoler instead of bul- lets, were just two of the crazy types in this completely absurd movie. Extremely funny and thorougly enjoyable. While I don't feel entirely comfortable in judging the qua- lity of these films, I feel no hesi- tation in saying that they were all enjoyable and entertaining. Ifyou find yourself unable to sit through six hours of films a night during this week's fes- tival, you should at least try to catch one showing to check out what's going on in films today. The winners will be shown this Sunday and if last night was a representative sampling, the judges will have a hard job. XCZVZCXVZCXCXCZV!? The most unpronounceable word to an English speaking person is the Polish word chrzaszcz. It al- legedly rhymes with thrzasez and it means a may bug. Circle-K Club presents O RAY SMIT Sun. - 7:30 p.m. 3rd floor S.A.B. U o-y<:y<-oe-o- r" " THE FINAL DIMENSION IN SHOCK! "T HE COR PSE GR INDE RS" "UNDERTAKER & HIS PALS" "THE EMBALME R" Like spending a night in the grave, baby. 4 -,tA41OIkel A __________ff. FRI.-SAT:-SUN. ow Of ur_ SHELLY WINTERS RALPH RICHARDSON "WHO SLEW AUNTIE ROO" (PG) "MURDER IN THE RUE MORGUE" Plus "HORROR HOUSE" -Daily-Tom Gottlieb Ann Arbor Civic Theater presents ANTIGONE by JEAN ANOUILH March 22-25-8:00 P.M. March 26-7:00 P.M. TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM TICKETS AVAILABLE AT STANGER'S, ANN ARBOR III Sunrise 4 214 E. Washington Candles i .. .. III Leather I realize that if the less fortunate animals of this community are to be helped, it's up to people like me through our Humane So- ciety of Huron Valley, 3100 Cherry Hill Rd., Ann Arbor, Mich. 48105. Please enter my tax deductible support as follows: Art Objects Handcrafted by Sunrise Communal Farm a Membership $3.00 Life Member $100.00 Name Family Membership $10.00 Contribution Other $ Address I I nonprofit conspir ECy cooperative coffeehouse theater 4 10th Annual Ann Arbor FILM W.,,FESTIVAL in the Architecture Auditorium FRI DAY-Shows at 7, 9, and 1 i SATURDAY-Special afternoon show at 1 P.M. Evening shows at 7 & 9 only SUNDAY-This is winners night. Shows will be in BOTH the Architecture Auditorium and Auditorium A. Leon Thomas, "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 CLASSIC FILM WEEKEND -TONIGHT- Robert Flaherty documentary double-feature Nanook of the North 1921. ". . . it is primarily the sense of rela- tion to the people that is so keen . . . this beautiful film was the beginning of the docu- mentary film, the creative process applied to real material." - Busley Crowther, GREAT FILMS. Man of Aran 4 ,d 1934. "a truly exalted work . . . undoubtedly the greatest film tribute to man's struggle against hostile nature . . . achieves a truly epic auality, a celebration of heroic tradi- tions."--Pauline Koel, BANG BANG Nanook 7:00 Man of Aran 8:00 Nanook 9:30 LEON THOMAS-Brilliant vocalist-percussionist performs one night only in concert with ALICE COLTRANE and The Contemporary Jazz Quintet THIS FRIDAY NIGHT, March 17-8 p.m.-HILL AUD. 7:30 Saturday March 18-19 Sunday 9:30 Rene Clair's -classic satire- A Nous La Liberte 1931 I I - -easily amona the ten best films ever made-- i