Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, December 3, 1971 BIG DOUBLE FEATURE! i 1 _.__._ . _ _ _ ._ _ _ II I dM .o J By BRUCE SHLAIN In the previews for Kotch that appeared on television, di- rector Jack Lemmon sits com- fortably in his cloth-back di- rectorial chair and proceeds to inform us smugly that this mo- vie was one that "had to be nyde." It is by no, means a bad> film, and, judged in the genre, of sentimental soft-comedy, does not fare badly. But Kotch "had" to be made about as urgently as the Hope-Crosby road pictures. The only objective that the film sets for itself is to portray an old man, played by, Walter Matthau, as a real- live person, thereby escaping the stereotype of these "for- gotten people" as mere fumb-. ling vegetables. It does this, and does it well. But that in itself cannot squeeze tears or cheers out of anyone with homework to do over Thanks- giving vacation. the Matthau's portrayal o year-old is quite good plete with an assortm well - practiced maneu hunched back, - wobbly twisted mouth, and dra speech. Mr. Kotcher th acter is in a world of h operating at his own pac while ;everyone else runs frantically, without time precise, historical disser which he delivers wheth one is listening or not. I most people have hadt comfortable experience lently smiling . andz while some Methuselah lative lectures on why we install sprinkler systems natronal forests to preve: For once we see such sit from the perspective of man, who feels a need t his presence felt. forgo (ten f a 70- Unlike Ruth Gordon's whim- , com- sical portrayal of the disturbed cent of oldster in Where's . Poppa, vers - Kotch's situation is grounded in y gait, reality.'The movie is at its best awn-out when it focuses on the home- e char- lessness of the aged, as Kotch zis own, is finally turned out of his son's eAeven plush suburban home. No long- around er can his daughter-in-law tol- for his crate Kotch's tendency to leave 'tations, the toilet seat up, a rattier du- er any- bious reason for expulsion. At 'm sure any rate, an especially good the un- scene ensues when Kotch's own of si- flesh and blood take him.to the nodding Sunnydale retirement h o m e of ar ("for the sunset years") just to a re- "look around." Kotch, with should most of his mental faculties still in our intact, cannot relate to 80-year- nt fires' olds who .only want to play uations games and be children again. tFor Kotch is not ready to return the old to any womb-like security; his o make realization of impending death is too vivid, and keeps him from succumbing to anything. Once, looking at a grouping of :stones outside his window, he imagines them as his, gravemarkers at a rainy funeral. Some of the film's more po- etic effects are achieved through the periodic use of flashbacks. as certain things instantaneous- ly touch off Kotch's recollections of married life, the birth of his first child, and decorating the Christmas tree for his family. ts, I sat But Kotch does not allow such reminiscent moments to con- ,ffort to trol him in the least. Determin- Fury is ed to make himself useful, he elusion" rents a cabin in which he hous- 'ocalists es a 17-year-old unwed mother. he plot Erica, played by Deborah Win- oh dra- ters. In a rather stilted finish oncilia- which unitesold and new, decay e living, and regeneration, death and Oriental birth, etc., Kotch winds up de- beyond livering her baby in a filling not so station lavatory. The major sing or preoccupation of the past few Eereare months done with, Kotch does ed) but not relax, refusing an oppor- ~d)but tunity to move back into his oeons son's home. Instead he goes S soutto raise hell with a Spanish ut is-r friend of his, defiantly leaving ae bsiar the toilet seat raised as. he tl ais, storms out of the house. I U pn aiIg Calendar I e Friday, December 3 Film- Fifth Forum "Stranger" 7 and 11 p.m.* "Joe Hill" 9 p.m.* Michigan Theater "Play Misty for Me" 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m.* State Theater "Soul to Soul" 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m.* Campus Theater "The Touch" 7 and 9 p.m. ARM, Nat. Sci. Auditorium "Vladimir and Rosa" 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.* Cinema Guild, Architecture Auditorium "Ministry of Fear" 7 and 9 p.m.* Cinema II, Angell Hall, Auditorium A "The End of the Road" 7 and 9 p.m.* Other Events: Rive Gauche, 1024 Hill Ukranian nights 8 p.m. Power Center, University Players "Anthony and Cleopatra" 8 p.m.* *denotes events for which admission is charged POTS & PRINTS--STUDIO SALE Sat. 12-8 p.m. Dec. 4 Sun. 10-6 p.m. Dec. 5 1314 Marlborough (off Packard, past Stadium) 471-2455 RITA DIBERT MESSENGER GEORGETTE ZIRBES STULL I I 'I 4 ' Joe Hill, the movie: "A BEAUTIFUL WORK, PART HISTORY, PART SOCIOLOGY AND IN LARGEST PART, A FILM BALLAD ABOUT A FOLK HERO! DIRECTOR BO WIDERBERG HAS TAKEN A PART OF HISTORY AND GIVEN IT THE GLOW OF LEGEND!" -Judith Crist.New York Magazine "O WIDERBERG'S 'JOE HILL' IS SPLENDID BEYOND REALITY!" --Pau! D. Zimmerman, Newsweek Joe mill, the man: Joe Hill was a banjo-playing drifter who became an organ- izer of the radical "Wobblies' in 1915, he was indicted for murder and executed. Many felt he was framed. It has fallen to Bo Widerberg, director of "Elvira Madigan, to tell this uniquely American story. In "Joe Hill' he chooses not to concentrate on the political being or musician but concentrates on Joe Hill the MAN. records- Creating your own instrumentalsystei i ® i "gR"wvAkwVi $1.50 U. UTAH PHILLIPS THE GOLDEN VOICE OF THE GREAT SOUTHWEST Paramount Pictures Presents A Sagittarius Production A BO WIDERBERG FILM who wrote songs and was shot. THOMMY BERGGREN andbyAWIDERBERG Ttesong sung by JOAN BAEZ in Color A Paramount Picture PLUS-2ND HIT ,,, PAUL N EWMAN in 'COOL HAND LUKE' STOCKWELL HALL By DON SOSIN Although I had heard of Har- -,ry Partch, _Ihad never heard any of, his music until I re- ceived the new Columbia re- cording of his gigantic Delusion of the Fury (M2-30576). I was immediately enthralled. Partch is a 70-year old Californian who has, since the 1930's, created his own distinct type of music, a rare achievement in a culture where composers are desperate- "'.ly trying, to sound different. Partch's success rests on the fabulous instruments that he has built and used. Their names are exotic - chromnelodeon, blue rainbow, zymoxyl, cloud-cham- b Mer bowls, to mention a few- and their sounds are incredibly beautiful. The listener becomes acquainted with them through a bonus record included in the package on which Partch de- scribes each of them in turn and performers provide musical illustratians. Partch's earliest instruments were adaptations of already ex-' isting ones. He elongated the neck of the viola and changed its tuning; he added stops to an old reed organ and re-tuned the whole thing. Later his imagi- nation broadened and he crea- ted new sounds by cutting up S 'bell jars and hanging them from 'abeamn or collecting bamboo tubes from all over the Far East and arranging them in a tuned pattern. These new instruments 'were created out of his need to break free from the tonal sys- tem. He invented a 434tone scale, and his own method of notation. All this is fine, but does the music itself match the ingenuity of the sounds? Very definitely. With the help of his instruments he has written beautifully expressive pieces, over a score of them, and from the examples on the introduc- tory record, they' seem to be h o n e s t musical statements, evoking pictures of cross-coun- try trains, and timeless mys- tical knowledge. After absorbing all these new sounds, and look- ngat the color pictures of the stunning instruments while they s IT WITH x YOUYOU CAN'TTAKE NOW SHOWING DIAL 434-1782 ON WASHTENAW AVE. 11/2 MILES EAST Oi ARBORLAND-U.S. 23 TODAY OPEN 6:45 Shows at 7 & 9 P.M. Sat.&Sun.at 1, 3, 5, 7 &9 P.M. FAYE DUNAWAY and STACY KEACH in a Frank Perry Film are played, as he suggest down to Delusion. His most ambitious e date, Delusion of theF "a ritual of dream and de for mimes, dancers, v and instrumentalists. Tr is based on a Japanese N ma, and involves the recc tion of the dead with the The music reflects the C background, but goes far that, and comes out much Oriental - sound African - sounding (the African themes also use as a synthesi's, a unique The use of the chromel adds a Western flavor, b torted. The kitharas evok sounds with.a more tong Rhythmic section, nate with strummed grotnds (reminiscent of Cowell'sdBanshees) an voices slide up and do'w the harmonic canons (s instruments played lik guitars). The work as a whole' ply very fresh, full of su and hangs together we spite the fact that one hi a vague idea what is place visually. The performers, an un ensemble under the d of Danlee Mitchell, seem in command of their twen instruments, and I wou misc. that the quality playing is very high. I gineering is superb; the effects are fantastic. V the only complaint I with the liner notes byI Paul, who is apparently seduce the youth mark moth-eaten phrases lik your own thing" "far-ou "the times they are a- ing." Listening to Delusion Fury is a rare and be experience, and one that not be missed. 9 p.m. TONIGHT Admission 75c 1411 Rill STREET t'.i5 'I B ___ PIPTH POF'LJI P1PTH *VSNU W ATLIU6"Y" DOWNTOWN ANN AR5Oq "STRANGER"-7 & 11 "JOE HILL"-9 P.M. EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY PRESENTS CANNED HEAT sunday, december 5 8:30 p.m. pease auditorium, EMU tickets $2.50 on sale at mckenny union a student activities board production back- Henry ad the vn with tringed e steel is sim- irprises, ell, de-' as only taking nnamed irection 2to be nty-five ld sur- of the he en- stereo irtually have is Eugene out to et with ke "do it" and chang- of the eautiful should --MO E f EfI I I E i THE NEW YORK TOURING COMPANY Presenting Its Interpretation of JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTA Saturday, December 11 CO-SPONSORED BY Hill Auditorium-8:30 P.M. ENACT AND THE ANN ARBOR JAYCEES TICKET SALE BEGINS 10:00 A.M. MONDAY DECEMBER 6 AT HILL AUDITORIUM BOX OFFICE I DIAL 5-6290 "One of the most excit- ing films you'll see this year." -Det. News CINT L S "5' I r r FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 7 and 9 THE EN.D OF THE ROAD I American Revolutionary Media presents Jean-Luc Godard and the Youth Culture -TON IGH T- GVladimir and Rosa ... & Abbie & Jerry "flashes of the Marx Brothers and Bertold Brecht. . . on the whole, the best recent Godard I've seen."-Kauffman, NEW REPUBLIC "the Chicago Trial -parody is bitter, but the playing is exuberant and ener- getic, as childlike as the (pre-Moo) fantasies."-N.Y. TIMES also: Haight six-minute 1968 Newsreel documentary-and- Godard in America 40-rminute documentary of Godard's 1970 campus tour. Berkeley confrontation was historic. 7:30 & 9:30 Natural Science Aud. $1.25cont. I l I tPLAY STY FOR ME TODAY AT 1-3-5-7-9 (1969) I SCREEN ADAPTATION OF JOHN BARTH'S 1958 NOVEL OF LIFE IN ACADEMIA NOW ! d&Ml DIAL 8-64 16 L "Ingmar Bergman's 'The Touch' is the best film about love he has ever made." -Penelope Gilliatt, The New Yorker e "' ' Elliott Gould A Bergm n's The Touch" ColorR directed by ARAM AVAKIAN with Stacy Keach, Harris Yulin, Dorothy Tristan and James Earl Jones. Roger Greenspun of the N.Y. Times calls it, "a fairly close, sometimes clumsy adaptation." 75c Auditorium A, Angell Hall AMERICAtoAFRICA I Oakland Congress Concert-lecture Series Presents: THE ROCK OPERA 'SUPERSf-TAR' SATURDAY 4 -Dec. 1971-8:00 p.m. O.U. Sports & Recreation Bldg. AM I ; ; .. "RO