Page Two THE MICHIGAN ]DAILY Wednesday, October 13, 1971 Page Two THE MICHIGAN OAILY Wednesday1 October 1 3, 1971 James Earl Jones recalls 'U' :-I -Daily-Gary Villani A ienation in the By BRUCE SHLAIN Enter Hector Bloom. A jock, and a good one. An All-Ameri- can basketball player at a big college. Now he 'is about to graduate, sign a juicy profes- sional contract, and spend a few years tossing in hook shots on courts around the country be- fore settling down to reap the sweet benefits of his heroism. Yet in Drive, He Said, direc- tor and screenplay-collaborator Jack Nicholson does not give Hector any wide yellow brick road to follow from the campus to the outside world. Indeed, as Nicholson would have us believe, there is no road in sight. Perhaps drawing from the core of his own portrayal in Five Easy Pieces, Nicholson uses the college campus to commun- icate, in a series of ferocious, choppy images, a sense of utter alienation' a nd homelessness amid the chaos of a university. Throughout the movie we are subjected to Nicholson's styl- ized, exaggerated portrait of the University as a dense, ster- ile jungle, clouded with rhe- toric and ritualistic inanity. Al- though shot exclusively on a college campus. I cannot re- call seeing one book in the en- tire movie. Surely the most, glaring mis- conceptions ,are p r o v i d e d through the dialogue of the campus representatives of the revolutionary' left. Their con- versation seems so stilted and tired that an almost incoherent lunacy is suggested. This lost sanity is made graphically ap- parent at the local induction center, where several long- haired students are attempting to beat the, draft by ;proving their mental instability.r I The wild rantings and ravings of one of the boys. Gabriel (who happens to be Hector's room- mate), show him as beginning' to confuse his insane play-act- ing with reality His humorless, bitter confrontations with the Army personnel (consisting of punching as well as shouting characteristics that would justi- fy his rejection of the violence- oriented military values. The intense Gabriel, like all of the other staunch critics of the .deathi culture in this movie, fit into an unhappy post-Arlo- Guthrie category. According to Nicholson, it is obviously no longer fashionable to amble about, speak in a drawl, and grin while plucking a guitar. Admission to the counter-culture is only pro- cured through a freaky version of "keeping up with Joneses": the less you put up with, the more you are unhappy with, the better person you are. In one of his magnificent tirades, Ga- briel reaches a pinnacle of sorts, showing his utter con- tempt for capitalist civilima- tion by ripping his toilet from the bathroom floor and throw- ing it out the window. The political disappointment on campus today, however, is not being channeled into a sui- cidal, morose, recklessness, as Nicholson would have us believe. It is more a case of introspec- tive apathy that results in an adoption of the philosophy of Richard Brautigan, who ob- served a hitchhiker sitting down in a park, taking six apple turn- overs out of his backpack, and eating them in the sunshine. Brautigan remarked that his act was probably a more valid protest than picketing a missile base. Young America has not yet .rejected happiness as a non- relevant value. So on the level of a documentary on the cur- rent mood of the American uni- versity, Drive, He -Said fails miserably because of its sheer inaccuracy. But there is more to this mo- vie, which is basically the sad saga of Hector Bloom, basket- ball player. Contrasting with the unreal scenes of the counter- The ALLEY This FRI.-SAT.-SUN. ALBERT KING 2 Shows Fri.-Sat. 7:30-10:00 SShow Sun.--8:30 $2.50 ALL SHOWS Adv. Tic.-SALVATION RECORDS Coming Oct. 22, 23, 24 JIMMY REED By GAYLE POLLARD and LYNN WEINER 1953. Eddie Fisher, Jimmy Stewart, Marilyn Monroe, Ko- rea. Crew cuts and saddle shoes. The diag on a fall day. James Earl Jones, star of "The Great White Hope," jolts back in time to his college years, He returned to Ann Arbor last week to receive an honorary doctorate during the opening of the Power Center for the Per- forming Arts, but he also re- turned to reminisce. The soft-spoken actor intro- duces himself as Jimmy, and walks slowly across the diag and down State St. as he reflects. "I was the first one in the history of my family to ever go to college, and it was a time when you had to pick one of the big three: law, medicine, or en- gineering." He picked medicine, he says, but soon found he had no affin- niversity culture at work and play are the superably filmed basketball action scenes, and all the pom- poms, Pepsi, band music, and unbridled crowd spirit that ac- company them. And, wading nonchalantly through all of the adulation and excitement is none other than the disheveled, droopy-eyed, anti-hero, Hector Bloom, played by William Tep- per. His predicament is that of be- ing hopelessly caught in the middle of a mad swirl of mani- acal extremism. On one side, of course, is the carefree life of the average jock, complete with giggling cheerleaders and the ever-present father figure, his basketball coach. But on the other side is the vociferous Gabrie, who engi- neers a guerrilla demonstra- tion over the PA during one of the games. One can begin to ap- preciate Hector's awkward po- sition as he stands listlessly on the court, waits for the police to drag off his struggling, kicking, screaming friend, and then continues playing. In this conflict of Hector's, the unsure footing characteristic of com- ing age in America today is more closely captured. What, then, is Hector left with? The most evocative image we get is of Hector standing atop a ledge -with a basketball in his hand,. with Karen Black standing 50 or so feet below him as he tries unsuccessfully to convince her that he is capable of loving her. There is no place to go from the ledge, no way to assert him- self; he can only dribble his basketball. It is quite an ac- complishment to portray an All- American athlete as a wayward orphan of the storm without seeming crassly overemotional, but Nicholson has made it fair- ly easy to swallow. For the student body: FLARES by SLevi # Farah SWright SLee Male CHECKMATEj State Street at Liberty ity for chemistry or physics. And he then followed in the footsteps of his father and chose to major in drama. He lived in West Quad, then, and characterizates Michigan students of the 50's. "We were the squares-the silent generation, you know, the guyswho were to go off to Ko- rea and shut up about it, and we did." Although Jones did not go to Korea, he was a soldier. When asked if he would serve if draft- ed now, he said, "I used to be silly and answer I'd go if you'd let me bring a woman in with me, and all that, but that might get possible, so I'd better change tune. No I wouldn't go. If I had a life to give, I'd give it like the guys did at Attica." While in school, he belonged to the reserves. "I was in ROTC, very heavy in ROTC, I made a good soldier, another part of the insanity." He often returns to this con- cerof'insanity, focusing on America's orientation towards ''success" and "Struggle." 'I used to think that it was the American way and all, that you had to hussle, and 6eing black of course, that's brought home doublefold, you've got to strug- gle extra hard." The massive yet gentle actor talks about his involvement with primal therapy, and childhood. "There is no revolution pos- sible if it doesn't start from the cradle. The child has to overthrow the crap from the be- ginning. "The reason this place is here is because between childhood and now there's a lot done to help us forget what we knew as children - just very simple -Saturday Night An erotic mystery, a phantasmagorical film by Nagisa Oshima, "Japan's esthetically and political- ly most radical film maker." Diary of a Shinjuku Burglar in the JAPAN festival ARM/Michigan Film Society at Natural Science Aud. 7:30 & 9:15 facts about life - that life is creative, that life has no strug- gle in it. You shouldn't have to struggle for any of it," the dra- matist said. Most people believe that the life of someone in the theatre is a struggle. According to Jones, "WhiteHope," was the so called big break, but it was ;the result of a hardworking career. Now when asked where he lives, he holds out paint-stained fingernails from "just painting my swimming pool" and laughs. "I live in Hollywood," he says. "Now I'm a star." "That's the treat carrot that's stuck out for everybody, that you too can make it. But no- body's going to make it." Presently he has no definite plans. However the one thing he would really like to do dramat-, ically, is the role of Malcolm X. "Actors like to do the figures that affect the times we live in. I think Malcolm is the most meaningful. I think his life was most particularly painful, pain- ful like all black people go through. It's easy to understand, a black man's life through Mal- colm's," he explains. Sign-u for interviews Mon.-Thurs. 4-5:30 p.m. Room 3M, Michigan Union 4 k!, i ,, I MEN The Actors Guild presents 4,- w -- - MM DIAL 5-6290 Today at 1-3-5-7-9 name OUIS poison 4CA I~imRS.FILLER PANAViSION TECHNICOLOR ' From Warner Bros. A Kinney Services Company LSA Student Government EXECUTIVE COUNCIL hmas a' vacancy We Rent to 21 ear-Olds and Up STARTING AT $5.00 PER DAY & 5c PER MILE i~ i WEDNESDAY NIGHT THE WHITE HELL OF PITZ PALY DIR. G. W. PABST, 1929 One of the Little Known Genre of German Moun- tain Films. -A Visually Stunning Tole of Men V e r s us Mountains of Ice. With Filmmaker Leni - Riefen- stahl. ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7:00 and 9:05 75c i 0 I The Killing of Sister George the story of three consenting adults in the privacy of their own home PERFORMANCE DATES FRIDAY, OCT. 15-7 and 10 P.M. SATURDAY, OCT. 16-7 and 10 P.M. SUNDAY, OCT. 17-Matinee 2 P.M. Evening 7:30 P.M. Residential College Auditorium TICKETS $1.25 available only at the door AN EVENING DEVOTED TO { F LMFEEFILMS AND DISCUSSION PRESENTED BY THE ann arbor film COOp WEDNESDAY 7-9 ALICE'S RESTAURANT Alice Lloyd Hall r S .r x.r "". :i?:2 . pp:: n5Sn:is:: . y-; 4 Read and Use Daily Classifieds SMARCH TO CITY HALL To register to vote against the war Moratorium Day Wed., Oct. 13 ,1 I March leaves Diag at 12:75 matches) reveal none of the i Professional Hair Stylists and Barbers OUR REPUTATION IS ON THE LINE Michigan Uanio Barbers I TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi f _ 0? i1 'Ii /4,yg,0 ,;fl#94jiiy l0 r GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wed., Oct. 13 CIDER and DOUGH NUTS 4-6 p.m. RACKHAM 4th Floor Schedule for October Wednesday, Oct. 13 Thursday, Oct. 21 Tuesday, Oct. 26 CLIP AND SAVE BE THERE! Transcendental meditation is a natural spontaneous tech- j nique which allows each individual to expand his mind and improve his life. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 13-8 P.M. UGLI-Multipurpose Room for further info. call 761-8255 I 4. _, _.___ .. ___._._.._ _..._... ._ ._ .. _... , ' _.... ,_.._._.._.__.. === No" ANTI-NIXON Republican Congressman DONALD REIGLE talks on the failure of Nixon's Viet- nnm Pnlirv_ Preventinn ANixnn's RP- _ "The Devils" is an imaginative, visual, 64brutal assault on the senses! 4;7 r Aturbulent movie onslaught!" z..} Y-Cue Magazine x's- 4 "Some of you are going to hate this picture, some will love it, most of you are going to hate it and love it at the same time, as I did, but not one of you will be bored for an instant." Gannett News Syndicate "Ken Russell must be credited with a very dra- + matic chapter in film-making. Reed and Redgrave '4 7 and Russell make a splendid combination in an p 4, . ' explosive film which can't be sold short on the absolutely brilliant way in which it was made!" -ABC-TV r t r r r r r I ___ JM_1_r- I m ii11iF A.]