PQge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 31, 1972. PaeT--H IHIAALYFiay ac_3,17 The Godfather Michigan Organized crime is not usually thought of in terms of a tight- knit family affair. But this is the perspective with which The God- father approaches the ruthless underworld struggles for power. The story, adapted frpm the popular Mario Puzo novel, is about the fall of the Cosa Nostra Don, Vito Corleone, and the rise to power of his son Michael. In the process of unwinding the tale, which spans fifteen years and moves from New York to Las Vegas, director Francis Cop- pola has flipped "the gangster movie' on its ear. To say that The Godfather is merely better than the gangland-oriented mov- ies which precede it, would hard- ly touch upon its uniqueness. For it has largely transcended its genre and moved into the realm of 'powerful cinematic achievement. In its elaborate pains to reproduce the period paperwork. At the wedding, all of the other main characters are in- troduced. In a shorter movie with a lesser cast, Brando would have dominated the movie. But the other characters are far too powerfully conceived. Sonny, Don Corleone's eldest son, is played by James Caan, who conveys a perpetual aura of brashness and energy, even when standing still. The movie, though, ultimately revolves around Michael, the other son, played by Al Paciso, who has the most difficult role, in the movie, for he is the only character who is not static. When first seen he is a sheltered, smooth-faced, sensitive young man who has returned home as a war hero. By the end of the movie, after a long gangland tribal war, his hair is slicked back-he has become the cool, heartless Don, taking over the role of his agipg father. Michael's gradual conversion The rest of the film follows the gang in their various attempts at getting hold of the elusive diamond over and over and over again. A novel "caper" plot? Perhaps. But also a tiring and eventually a predictable one. In keeping with the film's kitchen sink aesthetic (the more shtick you throw in, the more the folks'll like it), Goldman has added sex and comedy to the suspense the plot is sup- posed to generate. Sex in the person of Topo Swope (Doro- thy McGuire's daughter) who, playing Segal's wife, is on screen for two or three minutes, and comedy through various bits, such as the two broadly humor- ous performances of Segal and Ron Liebman as one of his co- horts. Some of the comedy is funny - Liebman grooving to drag race records with his Ma, the crooks flying a helicopter over New York, landing on the wrong roof. But many of the jokes fall flat. William Goldman throne. Moses falls in love with the beautiful Nefertiri. Moses unknowingly ' saves his real mother's life. Just when DeMille runs out of material, he turns to the Good Book for guidance. Water turns into blood and rods into snakes, and finally we're ready for the great exodus. Here's where the film is at its best. That cast of thousands that had been pretty much held in re- serve troops out in all its glory. "More than your eyes have ever seen on the screen," the ads boast, and it just might be. Which is not to say that the film is particularly good tech- nically. For some strange rea- son, DeMille has shot most of the movie indoors. Many of the scenes are poor process shots - the sand of the Arabian desert contrasting with the sand of the Hollywood lot. The editing is abominable, most of the special effects are transparent, the act- ing is tremendously obvious and cinema weekend cat's pajamas of life. If Room Service isn't as good as Horsefeathers or Night at the Opera, it's probably because it was adapted from a successful Broadway comedy, with the Marx Brothers playing some- thing other than the Marx Brothers. However it doesn't have any of the long musical interludes that are more camp than good humor. Better than most, not as good as some . . . That was no movie, that was my wife . -Peter Munsing * * The Ra Expedition Campus Theater Nominated for an Academy Award for best documentary, Thor Heyerdahl sails a raft across the Atlantic to prove the Egyptians could have done it many centuries ago. * * * Le Million Cinema Guild Friday One of the earliest (1931) screen musical comedies. Michel (Rene Lefebvre) is dead broke andehis creditors want their money. Just in time, though, he discovers he has won a fortune in a lottery. Where is the win-' ning ticket? In his coat pocket. But where is his coat? Rene Clair throws something for everyone into the ensuing search for the missing coat: mistaken identity, satire, chases, romance, suspense, and wit. (Not viewed at press time.) --Richard Glatzer Re port on the Party and Its Guests Cinema II Friday and Saturday An artsy, Kafkaesque political allegory about a group of bour- geois picnickers who allow them- selves to be abducted by a strangely menacing gang of men. The film was made in Czechoslovakia in 1966 and was banned soon after in that coun- try for containing too many critical contemporary allusions. Beware of inaccessibility; those allusions might be lost on an American audience. (Not viewed at press time.) -Richard Glatzer Genesis 4 Creative Arts Festival Friday These are twelve experimental films by new, young filmmakers, many of them the recipients of various cinematic awards. Fea- tured are Silent Majority, "a so- cial comment on 'Middle Amer- ica'; about people who speak, but have nothing to say," I Don't Know, "a love story be- tween a boy who thinks he's a girl and a girl who thinks she's a boy," and This is the Home of Mrs. Levant Graham, "a sen- sitive portrait of a black urban mother and the large, loose- knit family which surrounds her, reflecting the problems, as- pirations and culture of those in the ghetto existence." See MORE, Page 7 $1.50 SATURDAY NIGHT, APRIL 1,9:00 P.M. Bursley Hall Enterprizes Presents MICHAEL CAINE and SHELLY WINTERS in the Baudy & Sordid r 5c popcorn charge (at door) FOR ALL THE POPCORN YOU CAN EAT! Admission Complimentary-Bursley Hall West Cafe.teria MANCE LIPSCOMB-"Age aside, he', a wonder; age considered, at 76 he's incredible."+-Downbeat Magazine See MANCE LI PSCOMB, along with SON HOUSE and ROBERT PETE WI LLIAMS APRIL 15th at the POWER CENTER Tickets are all $3.00 and are available at the Michigan Union daily 11-2 P.M. I S4 costuming and setting in detail, and in its three-hour length, it resembles a revolutionary "epic" in many ways. It has done to the gangster movie what Bog- danovich did to the soap opera with Last Picture Show: through the deft manipulation of superb acting, it has explored so many new aspects of its subject that its cinematic antecedents be- come barely recognizable. To be sure, the gangster stere- otypes are still there, but the approach is different. Take the dumb Punjab-like assassin, for instance. In almost every gang- ster movie there is such a. type, an inarticulate, hulking body- guard who is adept at inflicting pains and drooling. But when we see this man in The Godfather, we do not see him breaking someone's neck; we see him at the wedding of Don Corleone's daughter, sitting by himself, practicing over and over the thank-you speech he is going to deliver to the Don for inviting. him. A sentimentalized version of the Mafia? Perhaps. Although it concentrates on the ritualistic, dignified aspects of the under- world,athe horror of the inevit- able acts of violence is hardly passed over lightly. And besides, The Godfather makes no claims on having a monopoly on real- ity. Sure, there are a few not- so-subtle references to the career of Frank Sinatra and how ne might have gotten a little help in getting that part in Fronm Here to, Eternity when his career was on the skids. But this is no documentary; it is more a, film about men of power. The pivotal man of power is, of course, the godfather, Vito Corleone, played by M a r 1on Brando. With grey-streaked hair, puffed-out jowls and a mess of dark, shadowy wrinkles under the eyes, the face seems to have survived some arduous survival test. And then, out of the twisted mouth, comes The Voice, a sur- prisingly quiet, slow rasp, an unforgettable voice which is at once sinister and yet almost ten- der. That voice establishes, in the first scenes, the basic ten- sions of the movie, representa- tive of the cold Jekyll and Hyde division that the family mem- bers can make between their personal lives and their "busi- ness lives." For in that first meeting of the proud, tuxedoed Don at his daughter's wedding, he agrees to do some "business" for an old acquaintance by "tak- ing care of" some young toughs who beat up the man's daughter. And then the Don, without sec- ond thoughts, walks out of his study to "enjoy my daughter's wedding," the way any business- man would leave behind his' into a powerful Mafioso type is startling, and exeremely crucial to the development of the film's most ambitious conclusions. Throughout the movie people are murdered while those who calmly order the deed look at procedure as "nothing personal." But even if the mobsters' casual attitude becomes the norm, one's acceptance of their attitudes is an acceptance within the realm of underworld morality, at least until Michael asserts himself. For the change in Michael and his acceptance of depersonal- ized, casual m u r d e r strongly unites the "straight world" to the goings-on in the Corleone family, and winds up saying a lot about the corporate nature of America. -Bruce Shlain * * * Hospital Fox Village Whatever may happen to you on the streets of our cities in these troubled times, there is. always the chance that you'll 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 describes the mur- ders of five medical personnel and their solution by the medi- cal director of the hospital (George C. Scott), alternating between black comedy and good potboiler. 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 de- spairingly so - life may be a shilsandwich, but if you keep on chewing you'll eventually fin- ish. At least you won't starve. -Peter Munsing * * * State The Hot Rock The big heist genre is over- worked. William Golden (Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid) must have realized this when he started work on The Hot Rock, so rather than stake all his chips on one big theft, he sprinkled his tale with several. John Dortmunder (Robert Redford) has just finished serv- ing a four-year stretch ip pris- on when his bumbling brother- in-law, Andrew Kelp (George Segal) plots a new robbery - this time a diamond' in the Brooklyn Museum. But no soon- er do the boys and their two partners manage, in their own klutzy manner, to get the gem out of its case than they lose it. is no Woody Allen and even Al- len would, seem dull under the imprecise ' directora hand 'of Peter Yates (Bullitt, John and Mary). -Richard Glatzer * *' * The Ten Commandments Fifth Forum Moses brought the word of God to the Hebrews. Cecil B. DeMille brought the word of God to the Americans. "There is no place for the usual fiction in a picture that deals with the interpretations and circumstanc- es from which not one - but three! - of the world's great religions have spriung," Mr. De- Mille told his quartet of screen- writers upon first starting work on The Ten Commandments, "So let it be written gentlemen! So let it be done!" The completed film, though, bears a greater resemblance to Maciste in the Vale of Woe than it does to the Old Testament. Priests naturally weren't too pleased when they first saw the film in 1956. One said the film was more sensual, than Baby Doll, another that the Com- mandments are carved by, "a sort of spiritual acetylene torch." Yet it is just this element of spectacle, this total lack of subtlety that makes The Ten Commandments as entertaining as it is. True, DeMille sticks to the basic outline of the hook of Exodus. The director himself walks out from behind a cur- tain at the beginning of the film and tells us that the Bible is the story of the birth of free- dom under God's law (the Clockwork Orange of 1956). But when it- comes to filling in the first thirty years of Moses' life, thirty years the Bible doesn't discuss, DeMille lets loose an entire stock of standard spec- tacle dilemmas. Moses rivals his "brother" Rameses for the Film Critics? The Daily would like to hear from people interested in film criticism. A p p li c a n t s should have: I. a basic knowledge of film (from Ingmar Bergman to Al- bert Zugsmith) 2. taste (better masscult than midcult) 3. writing ability, Please send samples of work to The Daily c/o The Arts Editor. the characters all speak in silly metaphors ("I am poured out like water"). All of which makes The Ten Commandments perversely en- joyable in the very best spectacle tradition. And after all, who goes to the movies for religion anyway? -Richard Glatzer Room Service Cinema Guild Saturday and Sunday What can you say about a Marx Brothers movie? That it has the Marx Brothers. That it involves a theatre troup that has to find a backer for "Hail and Farewell," a potential 1938 Jesus Christ Superstar. That they can't meet a backer unless they remain in the hotel, but they can't remain in the hotel until they find a backer for their production. Eventually with the aid of a spineless hotel manager, an irate hotel auditor, two tem- porary suicides, a case of the measles, much brouhaha, hurley burley, loveable zaniness, and laughs galore they slip into the At State and Liberty THE SUNDANCE EXPRESS IS HERE! ROBERT REDFORD GEORGE SEGAL DIAL 662-6264 and ZERO MOSTEL in DIAL 662-6264~u e M w s JOHN COHEN and the PUTNAM STRING COUNTY BAND 9 P.M~u:r 20th CENTURY-FOX Presents -- IIE"A MASTERPIECEI --PAUL D. ZIMMERMAN. Newsweek C COMING -SHOW SOON! *.. -" COLUMBIA PICTURES Presenfl ABS PROOUCTION s w at rw w s w r w .w ws uar mw 1421 Hill STREET 7IMS1 _m r w w IIIE BL ID PI A WINE, CHEESE, BLUES CAFE and Other Things NOW OPEN-7:30 A.M.-2:00 A.M. 208 SOUTH FIRST ma i I U DeLong's Pit Barbecue FEATURES THESE DINNERS: -TOMORROW- 7:00 & 9:30 Anne of the Thousand Days "epic battle of sexes. -N.Y. Times "An instant classic. It has a hammerlock on history, performance, and rooting interest.." -N.Y. Post $1. cont.--free cider, coffee conspiracy 330 Maynard Bar-B-Q Ribs Bar-B-Q Chicken Bar-B-Q Beef Bar-B-Q Pork Shrimp Scallops Fried Chicken Fried Fish Fried Oysters All Dinners Include Fries, Slaw, and Bread GENEVIEVE BUJOLD RICHARD BURTON I i _ _ . CARRY OUT FREE DELIVERY OPEN: Mon., Wed., Thurs., Sun.-l 1 a.m. to 2 a.m. Fri., Sat.-1 1 a.m. to 3 a.m. 314 Detroit St. 665-2266 Is __ o", THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GILBERT AND SULLIVAN SOCIETY Presents PATIENCE APRIL 5-8 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre ADVANCED TICKET SALES 5-7 p.m. TODAY in BURSLEY LOBBY. t:: ..........' ..- .w