Poge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 15, 1971 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 1 5, 1971 Death ia EDITOR'S NOTE: Due to technical ; difficulties, the following review could not be published while Death in Venice was still playing and sub- sequently was not published at all. 7 The demand from several readers for an interpretive review of this film prompted us to publish it at this ' later date. By NEAL GABLER Like it or not (and I don't particularly), we're in t h e throes of galloping aestheticism, Venice: Too much aestheticism and pretty soon we'll have to confront the question, Can our art subsist on style alone? Al- ready, crotchety academics point accusing fingers at the light shows, whining guitars, Cat's Cradles and 2001's that many young aesthetes canonize as Art. These things may entertain or narcotize, say the defenders of culture, but they will never en- lighten. The kids, of course, clap their hands over their ears. They're" getting used to hear- ing this stuff, and they know , that their voice-weary critics will eventually find themselves playing Beatle records or mut- tering something about Weimar Germany. Academe offers no other options. But you really don't realize . images how tight the grip of aestheti- cism is even butside the coun- ter-culture until you see a film like Luchino Visconti's Death in Venice, based on the novella by Thomas Mann. Are you listen- ing, all you humanties' graduate students out there? Like other Visconti films (Rocco and his Brothers, The Stranger, The Damned), Venice has won its share of praise, including a spe- cial award at Cannes. And like other Visconti films it wins its kudos chiefly for style-style that practically oozes out of the sprocket-holes. There's the lan- guid, roaming camera that pries decadence off the walls. There's the luscious color that festoons everything. There's the opera master's magnificent orchestra- tion of bodies and objects. There's the uncanny attention to detail. There's even a powerful score supplied by Gustav Mah- ler's Third and Fifth Sym- phonies. And the net effect of all this dazzle is an almost hypnotic languor, which somehow seems perfectly appropriate consider- ing the theme of the Mann novella. For Mann an individual can pursue truth and wisdom through two routes - knowl- edge, or perception of, the beautiful. The first is a mental process and, given the expan- siveness of the mind, it is in- herently spiritual and disorder- ed. The second; being the province of the senses, combats disorder with formalism. After all, we can see beauty. The trou- ble is that a person's worship of form, unless tempered by intel- lect. may lead, in Mann's words. to "frightful emotional excesses which his own stern cult of the beautiful would be the first to condemn." This is precisely what happens in Mann's Death in Venice. world-famous novelist now in his declining years, escapes his native Munich for luxurious Venice. And no sooner does he arrive on the Lido than he sights Tadzio, a male nymphet who seems to be perfection it- self. After much internal wrang- ling, Aschenbach becomes so powerfully attracted to this slip of purity, that he is over- whelmed and ultimately defeat- ed by his own aestheticism .. . which is what happens, I guess, when a formalist finds the per- fect form. This is not, however, what happens in Visconti's filmati- cization, even if you are willing to accept the picture as some- thing more than Boys in the Band circa 1910. (It is called Death in Venice, isn't it?) In- stead of Mann's formalism and knowledge, Visconti drags out those old twins of freshmen aesthetics, the mind and the senses. Unfortunately, not only are the typologies different, but there is really no correlation be- tween the two. Mann's "formal- ism" is sensationalist but or- dered; his "knowledge" is spiri- tual but disordered. Visconti is more conventional. The "senses" are sensationalist and disorder- ed; the "mind" is spiritual and See VISCONTI, Page 10 workshop with K1L LEN on Songs of the Sea SAT., OCT. 16-2 p.m. The ARK sponsored by the Folklore Society THIS WEEKEND from England LOU KILLEN{ w/ concertino Ks FRI.-~ SA T.-SUN.-OCT. 15, 16, Albert King "MR. BLUES POWER" THE ALLEY 330 MAYNARD 17 "unusually subtle and sen- sitive . . . grand and vigor- ous . . . "-Rbt. Shelton, N.Y. Times $1.50 The Devils: Beyond superlatives HELD OVER Photo-Stanley Livingston Fri.-Sat.--2 shows: 7:30-10 Sun.-] show: 10:00 Tickets All Shows: $2.50 COMING OCT. 22, 23, 24 JIMMY REED and the CHICAGO BLUES BAND Advance Tickets-Salvation Records 330 Maynard and 1 103 S. Univ. To The Daily: Ken Russell's The Devils is a film which brings to the screen an ultimate experience. To be- hold it is devastating to one's psyche. It's imagery is bril- liant, repulsive and degenerate; yet with all its sadism and tor- ture, what is seen is believable. It's distortion and horror are between the realities and fan- tasies of man. The time of The Devils is 1634, the era of Richelieu and rising Protestantism. The white fortressed city of Loudon is a jewel in the eyes of Cardinal Richelieu, who is busy building France into a nation while the king, Louis XIII, is busy playing Venus in baroque playlets. In Loudon is the magnificient Father Grandier (Oliver Reed), who as, a symbol is a sexually perverted Christ. He has power and lust; he impregnates wom- en without the slightest re- morse. He defends his city from the dispatched armies of Riche- lieu. He is a Machiavelian priest who is a hero to his people. Now enter The Devils-from the Church, from the State, from the inner self they possess the populace. Sister Jeanne (Va- nessa Redgrave) is the pur- veyor of perverted religious sex- ual frenzie. Sister Jeanne is in SATURDAY NIGHT An eroti.c mystery, a phantas- magorical film by Nagisa Os- himo, "Japan's esthetically and politically most radical film- maker." Diary of a Shin.uku Burglar in the JAPAN festival ARM/Michigan Film Society kit Natural Science Aud. 7:30 and 9:15 love with Grandier. Her fanta- sies have Grandier, the sexual Christ, come from his cross to love and molest her: But Father Grandier has fal- len in love with a plain pious woman and has renounced his debauched celibacy to marry. He discovers a new raison d'etre and reunites himself with God on new grounds. Sister Jeanne, her .fantasy lover abducted, stirs her order of nuns to psychotic possession with the devils of Grandier. Word spreads, and Louis XIII, who has placed his favor upon Loudon visits the city with amusement and plays a grande farce to prove the possession by devils a hoax. Bored, he moves on to shooting blackbirds (cer- tainly one of the cinema's classic lines will be Louis XIII saying "Bye, Bye blackbird," as he randomly shoots a flock of Huguenots dressed as crows for entertainment at a lawn party.) Maddened by the expose, the possessed nuns, professional witch hunters, sorcerers, al- chemists, pawns of Richelieu, jealous eunichoed churchmen, and a frenzied populace set out to crucify Grandier. Serious film go ers who mar- velled at Ken Russell's Women in Love and were disappointed with. The Music Lovers should not miss The Devils. The film has Russell's opulent cinema- tography, costumes and set: a barrage of gothic horror tactics, frenzied sexual orgies, and gra- phic scenes that are frankly re- pulsive. It also has a beauty: it also has a truth. The religions should not see it for they will be nauseated; the intelligent must see it for they will think. -Stephen Fisk, grad cJrnICIGA DIAL 5-6290 TODAY AT 1-3-5-7-9 Gustav von Aschenbach, a UAC-DAYSTAR HOMECOMING 1971 "Let's Work Together" Thursday, Oct. 28 PINK FLOYD GUARDIAN ANGEL $1.50-$2.50-$3.50 cINEMA D 1.Iy FRIDAY and SATURDAY a double feature at 7- The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939) Basil Rathbone's Sherlock Holmes at 9- OUNA DIN (1939) with Cary Grant, Sam Jaffe and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. 75c FOR BOTH FILMS AUD. A, ANGELL HALL next week: THE GRAPES OF WRATH Friday, Oct. 29 Parliament-Funkadelic BLACK ENSEMBLE ~1 -$2-$3 Saturday, Oct. 30 QUICKSILVER CATFISH $2-$3.50-$4-$4.50 4I purveyois of paradise HILL AUDITORIUM ALL SHOWS START 9 P.M. -TICKETS GO ON SALE MONDAY, OCT. 18- MICHIGAN UNION 10 A.M.-6 P.M. WARREN BEATTY -JULIE CHRISTIE in The Robert Altman-David Foster Production of "McCABE & MRS. MILLER" Also Starring RENE AUBERJONOIS - Screenplay by Robert Altman and Brian McKay. Produced by David Foster and Mitchell Brower - Based on the novel"McCabe" by Edmund Naughton- Directed by Robert Altman PANAVISIONĀ® TECHNICOLOR(' From Warner Bros. A Kinney Services Company 1 IAN The Actors Guilds regrets to announce The Killing of Sister George the controversial play that murdered censorship in England The Bereaved May View the Deceased on: 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 $1.25 available only at the door DIAL 8-6416 NOW SHOWING TONIGHT AT 7-9 P.M. Xtik;jj PaIMMIF Box Offices Open 6:30 Show Starts at 7:00 I. I, 0 i, solo Ā¢$ 08 ,, WILLOW 1483 6000 w Ad 1-4 EX~l6 ACKON OA . EAT F -. N o 0 r