Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 7, 1970 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 7, 1 97Qb cinema: Indian writer defends culture 'The Activist': A body without a head By NEAL GABLER The Activist is a hideous film suffering from many of the same afflictions as the move- ment it attempts to portray. It is dogmatic and cliche-riddled, insensitive, self-righteous, vis- ceral and humorless. (This last is , especially unfortunate con- sidering the vast, untapped comic potentialities here.) Not content with being politically. sophomoric it is also an aesthe- tic disaster choking on its rinky- tink Muzak with flutes and xylophones, its rock ballads with pithy poetry like "Flying is like dying," or "They say the world has grown so cold. It's from a war that's grown 'so old," and coated with a gloss that resem- bles nothing so much as Dow Finsterwald's Golf Tip Show that WBN ran back in Chicago to fill time between the end of the Cubs' game and the begin- ning of the hour. I'll admit to some confusion over the film's aims. There are some movies that are so godaw- ful you ask yourself, "Is this a comedy or is someone actually stupid enough to take this thing seriously?" In the same way The. Activist's characterization of the radical as dull, egotistical (his girlfriend gives him a hand-let- tered book of his own political pronouncements), r a c k e d by masculinity problems (he is constantly invoking his virility) could be either an intentional castigation of the radical psyche or, seen a bit more sympathe- tically, as indices of his solid, unshakeable heroism. I'm probably being overly generous in allowing even the possibility of intelligence. In all likelihood The Activist is just what it appears to be: a paean of praise to the collegiate guer- rilla. But its heroic type is no modern-day Marx; instead the activist (Michael Smith) is an old-fashinoned gunfighter gird- ing for battle. He smooths vaso- line on his face, winds tape around his arms, dons a helmet. Back at the apartment is the beautiful co-ed who urges him to settle down at Nanterre, "a real good poli sci school outside Paris," but who realizes that her man must do what he thinks is right. There are his cowering compatriots. "The N a t i o n a 1 Guard! That's another league." And there's the cynical, embit- tered poli sci prof, the voice of experience, who has been through it all and has retreated to his beach hideaway. The world is nearing the precipice, he says. Forget the causes, he says. Settle down with your girl, he says. There's an admission's officer at Michigan who owes him a favor, he says. But the activist grits his teeth and glowers. He ain't gonna chicken out. The image of radical as West- ern mythic hero says some ter- ribly revealing things about our radicals and the society they hope to redeem. We live in an existential age, an age in which people are defined not .by what they are deep down so much as by what they do. The Presi- dent underscores every warning with a scowl and furrowed brow, and every hopeful phrase with a grin and wagging V-signs. The hard hat demonstrates his pa- triotism by beating on peace marchers. The revolutionary ex- presses his fervor by rock-throw- ing and bomb-planting. But at the core of our society and at the core of many of its individ- uals, is a void. I hate to sound like Teddy Roosevelt, but where character once stood in simpler times, now the empty rhetoric and flailing fists of the Right, Left and Middle hold sway. Film is especially susceptible to our highly-charged romanti- cism of action not thought. It is existential almost by its very nature: twenty-four images a second bursting upon the brain. And a good deal of its current popularity among my peers comes, I think, from the fact that films (any film) can be emotive. More and more the insight and enrichment that are the traditional rewards of art are being relegated to "feeling." As someone recently told me, "Hell, I've stopped listening to movies. Now I just watch them." His attitude is perfectly un- derstandable. We hear so much nonsense these days that we close our ears almost by reflex when the verbiage starts spewing out of someone's mouth. Yet The Activist, The Strawberry State- ment, and most other youth movies try to circumvent the p r o b I e m by circumventing drama altogether and relying on image and identification. Sure, the activist is a creep who mumbles in monosyllables and simple sentences. Sure, he has psychological problems that the filmmakers mistake for some kind of courage. Sure, he's a cruel sonofabitch. BUT . . . when the cops start wading in swinging their truncheons and squirting their mace; when two know-nothings turn a water- hose on the activist and his co- ed because these bumpkins are gung-ho for victory in Viet Nam, then the young audience identi- fies. Insight? Enrichment? The acts -- the cops' sneers a n d curses - tell us all we need to know. What we have in essence is a theater of life-you are the way you act. Camus considered the chief rule of dramatic acting that "everything be magnified and translated into the flesh," and that's a pretty good de- scription of what we've been seeing on the news for the last few years. But what happens to drama when reality is mag- nified and translated in this way? What happens when we lose the soul or character or whatever you want to call it that has always made reality real and drama dramatic? What happens is that we get idiotic films like The Activist that don't understand that copying reality just isn't good enough when the reality is so melodramatic. Herein lies the danger of making social films in America-1970. Medium Cool and The Activist can incorporate real events into their narratives, and the reality of life and the reality of the film ultimately, get blurred. (Persona is a com- ment on this very process.) But Wexler recognizes that the me- dium is indeed the message. so much so that most of us have p S lovers lane internalized the art of perform- ing and some of us have even substituted the performance for our lives. It's appropriate then that The Activist begins with the dis- claimer: there are no actors in this film. That can be taken either as fact or critical judg- ment. Michael Smith, in the most superficial performance I've ever seen, points up just how vacuous identification-via - image can be. Leslie Gilhoun, as the Vogue sorority girl who falls in with Smith's revolutionary cadre, is no great shakes as an actress but she is very pretty and she does do an excellent heart-pounding stint in bed; five positions in five aninutes is one hell of a way to earn a X- rating. Even then Smith, with his lumpy, freckled, pimply back, manages to prove that you can carry identification only so far. Who wants to see a beauti- ful girl making love to a dumb guy with a pimply back no less? Not that Smith can take any- where near all the credit for this catastrophe. Behind the camera tick obtuse little minds that concoct drek like, "It all boils down to two things: You've got a brain and a body. If you commit one and not the other you're a phony. That's what liberalism is all about." And that's what The Activist is all about too. It seems to reflect the growing doubt that the body might not have a head after all. By CHRIS PARKS "The government must be forced to recognize the sover- eignty of American Indians," said Vine Deloria, Sioux Indian and author of "Custer Died for Your Sins." Deloria spoke Sun- day before a quiet c r o w d of about 100 people at Canterbury House. The event, part of a cam- paign to publicize his latest b o o k on Indian affairs, "We Talk, You Listen," was co-spon- sored by the Centicore Book- store and the American Indians Unlimited. Deloria said he believed the origins of m a n y of America's problems were written into the Constitution. While it contin- ually stresses protection of in- dividual rights, he s a i d, the Constitution ignores the rights of groups and cultures. These rights, according to Deloria, include a group's right to its own community, 1 a n d base, religion, resource develop- ment and cultural development. Recognition of a broader inter- pretation of the Constitution to include the protection of the rights of cultures and groups, he said, is the major goal of growing cadres of young Indian lawyers. Deloria added he is not es- pecially interested in stories of oppression and hard times in the past -, his new book con- centrates on the oppression he says his people are suffering now. Deloria cited several inci- dents of alleged police brutal- ity which occurred in connec- tion with recent controversies over fishing rights on the West Coast as examples of this cur- rent oppression. Calling for an alliance among revolutionary groups to fight government oppression, Deloria added, however, that any such alliance would have to be tem- porary because of the widely divergent goals and interests of the different groups. He said he would settle for nothing less than the total re- turn of the N o r t h American continent to the Indian peoples. "America doesn't belong to the blacks or chicanos a n y more than it does to the whites," De- loria said. To achieve this goal, Deloria said, it will be necessary to "make the system devour itself." He said he is working towards this aim by searching through official documents and records to find deeds and agreements with Indians which have been violated. In one instance, Deloria said, such action led to a court suit over the legal ownership of the city of El Paso, Texas. Deloria said he believes a great deal of land in Michigan may still legal- ly belong to Indians and the matter is going to be researched in the near future. Deloria totally discounted the possibility of any kind of inte- gration or assimilation into white America as a solution to the Indians' problem, saying "You can't tranfer anything from one culture to aother out- side of trading goods." RADICAL FILM SERIES Presents A FREE NIGHT AT THE MOVIES OUR GANG, LAUREL & HARDY KEYSTONE COPS Canterbury House-Tonight 330 Maynard 7-9-1 1 P.M. . ".." . .. an editorial Overdose: A toast to life? Janis Joplin, the big little girl belting out the blues is dead, She was twenty-seven. Police who went to her Holly- wood hotel room, after a friend found her body, say that there were fresh needle marks on her arms. Whether or not Janis died of an overdose, and it seems high- ly probable that she did, is secondary to the fact that we have lost yet another musician who gave us all a good deal of pleasure and that it is the third time it has happened in a single month. Allan Wilson of Canned Heat, Jimi Hendrix and now Janis. It would be easy to start to propagandise around these peo- Sle's deaths, but it is now un- ziecessary to push out the same old line about drugs killing. Those who wish to have heard the message are alive, those wishing to ignore it are dying or dead. Janis wanted to call her first album Dope, Sex and Cheap Thrills, but the record company wouldn't let her. It's ironic. Catapulted to fame after the Monterey Festival in 1967 along with Hendrix, Janis was respon- sible for some of -the farthest out blues to come from a white female singer. Last night I listened to Cheap Thrills again. I also listened to Future Blues and the Monterey album. Only a month ago all of these people would have lived. It tends to bum you out a bit. -Jonathan Miller Daily Official Bulletin WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7 Day Calendart Botany Seminar: Dr. Thomas, Stan- ford University, "A Re-examination of Thysanocarpus (Cruciferae)," Botanical Gardens, 10 a.m. Botany Seminar: Dr. Thomas, Stan- ford University, "The Population Prob- lem", Nat. Sci. Aud., 4 p.m. Physics Seminar: G. Brownell, M.I.T.. "Nuclear Physics in Medicine," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 p.m. Statistics Seminar: Prof. J. Lingoes, "Clustering Formulation Evaluated I Probabilistically," 4205 Angell Hall, 4 p.m. Kelsey Museum & American Institute of Archaeology Lecture: Dr. H. Loten, U. of Pa., "Maya Temple Architecture at Tikal, Guatemala", Aud. B, Angell# Hall, 4:10 p.m. Computer Lecture: Prof. Carnahan, "The Fortran IV Programming L a n g- uage - III", Nat. Set. Aud., 7:30 - 9:30. University Players: "The Caucasian Chalk Circle," Trueblood Theatre, 8 p.M. General Notices Representatives from Law School of Cornell University will be here Oct. 13 to talk to students interested in study of law. Please make appointments at preprofessional1desk in Jr.-Sr. Coun- seling Office, 1223 Angell Hall. FOREIGN VISITORS Following person can be reached thru Foreign Visitor Div., Rmns. 22-24, Mi. Union (764-2148): Dr. S. B. Bharadwaj, Admin. Staff College of India, Oct. 7-9. LP RECORDS, PRE-RECORDED TAPES, AUDIO EQUIPMENT, ACCESSORIES, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS >", and SET YOUR OWN PROFIT PICTURE " MEET and BEAT ALL COMPETITION IF THIS IS YOUR BAG, CONTACT: MGtoDISTRIBUTORS, INC. A SU BSI DIARY O F SAM GOO DY, IN C. . MR. AQUILINA * Phone (212) 786-3337 OR USE THIS COUPON: MR. AQUILINA, c/o SMG DISTRIBUTORS, Inc. 46-35 54th Road, Maspeth, N.Y. 11378. Please send THE HAPPENING to: NameCollege"' Address >} City StateZIP .- -'.. .. ,. :".... . i«. . " .4::%% %4::: ::::5::::::::::...~~s::~~~i::i A~l LC I DIAL 5-6290 Ending Thursday "Top-notch war adventure ! -Judith Crist New York Magazine Tbts 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" 1i M2 4 -Daily-Thomas R. Copi the __ 40 Il+1 --*-,. 0a "&I f all lorZei" _. -r Adam & Eve couldn't have expressed love and to- getherness better than our classic "Loveshirts"' do.... Gals & guys can wear it anywhere be- cause the loveshirt is 4 ~. casual, it's message is beautiful... and obvious. Buy oneasa gift - even better by the pair., Crew neck, rib cuff and bot- tom, set in sleeves. All cot- ton, fleeced inside for extra warmth. State size S/M/L/XL. $6 EACH$'17PAIR pIus $1.00 p. thdlg. OHO ASSOCIATES CORP. P.O. Box 1116 Wayne, N. J. 07470 l EASD SWANK INC.- Sole Distributor * I Daily Ciassifieds Get Results NEW SEASON-OPENS TONIGHT the place to meet interesting people ... BACH CLUB l _ ibertolt brecht THF CAUCASIAN I I