Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 6, 1970 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 6, 1970 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S. A. Bldg., before 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- tion notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6' Day Calendar Physics Seminar: I. Kimel, "S-Wave Non-leptonic Decays," P&A Colloquium Rm., 4:15 p.m. Ann Arbor Film Cooperative: Mickey One, Aud. A, Angell Hall, 7 and 9:30 p.m. i ORGANIZATION NOTICES Gay Liberation Front, New Members meeting, 117 N. Thayer No. 4, 8 p.m., Wed., Oct. 7. Central Student Judiciary Hearing. Thursday, Oct. 8, 7:30 p.m. Engineering Placement Advisory Committee, et. al., v. Students for a Democratic Society, et. al. Baratin Coffee Hour. every Thursday. Next time, Oct. 8, 3-5 p.m., Frieze Bldg. Room 3050. Open invitation to all peo- pie interested in French language and culture. Program Information 662-6264 Watch the landlord get his. ~ Godard's 'Wing from the East' Rafelson's 'Five Easy Pieces' Cinema Chabrol's 'The Butcher' * New By BRUCE MOCKING Last of two parts Bruce Mocking attended the New York Film Festival this past September. The first part of the article, published Sun- day, included a review of Truf- faut's "The Wild Child". Re- views of three other movies fol- low. While Truffaut's film impres- ses me greatly, Goddard's Wind from the East, shown on the following night, had exactly the opposite effect, It's Godard's most boring, hard-to-follow, and amateurish film, and that's say- 'ing something. As many as forty people walked out during the showing; and the only reason I stayed was the mercifully numbing quality of having had very little sleep the n I g h t before. But seeing this, painful as the experience was, inspired me to a whole new theory about God- ard's recent films. Let's face it, Marxist-Leninist,ideology is bor- ing; how many people do you know have read all of D a s Kapitol? And Revolutionaries, despite all the romanticism that surrounds them, are boring, too. Now obviously Godard, as a serious revolutionary filmmak- er, cannot help but made a bor- ing film. Neat, eh? But there's more. Now who goes to see these films - mostly boring Marxist- Lenihist revolutionaries, people with inhumanly long attention spans. Those few misguided, non-revolutionary souls w h o come to see Godard's films end up either walking out or falling asleep or falling into a kind of stupor in which the film bor- ingly progresses leaving them e Joplin found dead in LA (Continued from Page 1) I on stage and fake it. I've got to let. loose with what's inside." Born in Port Arthur, Tex., in 1943, Janis Japlin was a rebel at an early age. She left home at 17, drifted across the country, taking odd jobs and occasional college courses. She came to admire beat- niks because they "believe things aren't going to get better and say the hell with it, stay stoned and have a good time." Fame overtook her at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival. She had been singing in small clubs in San Francisco and Los Angeles, de- veloping a mournful blues style that harked back to her early idols, Huddie "Leadbelly" Ledbet- ter and Bessie Smith. Although she seemed totally ful- filled as an' artist before the audi- ence, she admitted that the rest of her life was wanting. "The worst thing is the lone- liness," she told an interviewer last year. "Somehow you lost all the old friends. The travel circum- stances pull them away. "It's hard to make new ones. When we're not on stage, we re- hearse, lay around in bed, check in and out of motels, watch tele- vision. It really is lonely. I live for that one hour on stage. It's full of feeling. It's more exciting than you'd expect in a lifetime. It's a rush, honey." Wave to ponder Truffaut sitting in that box with Catherine De- neuve. This power of boredom is ob- viously very useful to Godard since it gives him total free- dom. He could be plotting in de- tail the overthrow of Pompi- dou, but what French film cen- sor has the staying power to observe it. Even if one is a Godard ad- mirer and rejects this theory, there are still several faults to be found with Wind from the East. First of all, Godard ar- ranged to have the film distri- buted by New Line Cinema, the most greedy, bourgeois distri- butor in the business. Certainly, there are a number of radical media groups he could have turned to; I don't think they would have turned down the distribution of a Godard film. But even if these groups were not up to the task, there are a hell of a lot of distributors less bourgeois than New Line. And there is a further prob- lem, (I don't know if this is directly the fault of Godard or New Line, but Godard certain- ly had final responsibility), namely, that the many long, speeches in the film are simply dubbed in over the French, with the dubbing lagging anywhere from ten seconds to a minute behind the original French. God- ard speaks much in the film of wedding sound to image as the goal of the revolutionary filmmaker. I can't imagine any- thing more counter-productive to this goal than this stupid dubbing system. Fortunately. that Friday was salvaged by, a new film by the young director Bob Rafelson, Five Easy Pieces. He is not very well known - his only other film, Head, starring the Mon- kees, was a total disaster - but Five Easy Pieces shows that he has really learned his stuff. The film is another in the series of road pictures and alien- ated-young-American pictures that have glutted the market in the past few years, but it is head and shoulders above most of the genre. Easy Rider, despite all its good qualities (one of which - Jack Nicholson - ap- pears here) sought manipulat- ed, undeserved, responses by playing up to audience identifi- cation. Midnight Cowboy, too, National General Theatres edicits despite its fine acting, stooped to a lot of cheap emotional tricks. Five Easy Pieces manages to avoid this about 90 per cent of the time, and actually says something genuine about t h e alienated youth of today. If anything, it consciously avoids throwing out any symbols that might yield an easy emotional response. The protagonist, Jack Nich- olson, isn't a student, isn't a hippie, isn't even an ACLU law- yer. When the film opens, he is working as a hard hat, setting up oil wells. His girlfriend, Kar- en Black, isn't anyone from Women's Lib; she's just a plain, gum-chewing waitress. Of course his family is upper-middle class, but they clash with, him not be- cause of politics but simply be- cause the family has a musical tradition that he refuses to fol- low. The title refers then to five easy pieces for piano - Cho- pin etudes (though double-en- tendre does figure in). When he plays one of these etudes at the insistence of his brother's fiancee and she comments on how moved she is, he blows up, "I faked a little Chopin, you faked a big response." He is un- able to summon the inner feel- ing necessary to any really good musician; he knows this, and it's the reason he is in con- flict with his family. The power of the film lies in the fact that we perceive this lack of inner feeling, this in- ability to really appreciate any- thing. But Rafelson and Nich- olson never allow us to become contemptuous, never allow the film to become corny. Even though Jack's alienation is so deep, so far beyond our own, and so personal rather than societal, ' we come to feel for him. We are compassionate even when we see him driven to des- perate acts. In short, the film reaches us on a level beyond cheap catharsis. Jack Nicholson gives an even DIAL 8-6416 ENDING WEDNESDAY TONIGHT AT 7 and 9 "A Sincere Film Ob- viously Made by Someone Who Wants to Undpr- stand What's Happening in Our Colleges." -Hollywood Citizen News )motion better performance here than in Easy Rider, if that's possi- ble. He may indeed be, as Rex Reed suggested, well one his way' to becoming America's finest actor. And Rafelson puts Nich- olson's talent to good use, pro- viding a pleasing slickness and outrageous humor that com- pliment the powerful acting; he produces a film that is not on- ly good but whose commercial success seems assured, and un- less I miss my guess Five Easy Pieces should be the Midnight Cowboy of 1970. i Saturday night brought an- other film from a member of the New Wave-Claud Chabrol's The Butcher. Like Truffaut, Chabrol appeared on stage, looking for all the world like a French version of Woody Allen. He related an anecdote of how he brought his two children to see the last day of on-location shooting. The youngsters were so taken with the village that the Chabrol's stayed two extra days. When they finally left, they stopped at the first cafe in the next village only to find the entire production crew to- tally soused. (The French do haves an odd sense of humor, n'est-ce pas.) n The Butcher is another Cha- brol film starring the director's wife, Stephane Audran. When someone asked him at his The Michigan Daily, edited and man- ager: by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer-i sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. s of Thursday afternoon pre ference why he always s' wife Chabrol replied," that and the tion. she is a very good charming." And th slightest bit of ex Audran is the headmis the elementary school in French village. Jean plays a butcher, newly r to the village after fiftee in the Army. They esta relationship that range the charming (he barge her class to present her leg of lamb) ultimately, tragic. Chabrol carefully: isters comedy and susp this awkward relationsh latter increasing as it m a final frightening and confrontation. especially where this s is concerned, Chabrol himself a masterful d and, if I may say so, th is every bit as good as. t of vintage Hitchcock. M lament - and this is n brol's fault, quite the o - is no American dist has picked it up. For son son that I have never be to understand, Chabrol least known for the New ecstasy ss con- directors, though just about tars his everyone who has seen his films "I find agrees that he ranks among the actress very best of them. I only hope is isn't that, as with Five Easy Pieces, aggera- this beautiful combination of slick commercialism with artist- tress of ic merit will give Chabrol the a small widespread distribution he de- Yanne serves. eturned Which leads to still another n years problem. The New York Film blish a Festival is the finest gathering s from anywhere of new films at one s in on time in one place; it is the oasis with a in the film desert. I only wish to the such deserving films would get admin- better distribution, instead of ense to the pieces of crap with which lip, the we are inundated every week. oves to To send the Festival on tour, moving even in abbreviated form, would require a lot of money. But not uspense that much - not a hundredth proves the cost of a bomb like Cleo- irector, patra. I know this won't hap- his film pen. It is a tragedy, really, be- he best cause a festival like this is ly only something not to be missed by ot Ch- any real film fan, yet it will be Opposite missed by just about every film tributor lover outside of NeW' York. Phil me rea- Ochs once refered to Elvis Pres- en able ley as "total ecstasy," That's is the really what the festival is. Total w Wave ecstasy for $7 a night. """ --- DIAL 5-6290 Ending Thursday "Top-notch war adventure ! -Judith Crist New York Magazine in Metrocolor GP CRC Michael Caine Cliff Robertson From the man who brought you "THE DIRTY DOZEN"' SHOWS AT 1 :00-3:30-6:00-8:30 * FRIDAY * LEE MARVIN IN "MONTE WALSH" I 4 , . M BEST**- STEAK HOUSE STEAK DINNERS NOW SERVING At Reasonable Prices FILET-1.59 SIRLOIN-1.53 Above Includes Baked Potato, Salad, and Texas Toast STEAKBURGER-.79 includes baked potato and Texas Toast 217 S. 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