Pc a Sax THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 8, 1970 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 8, 1970 Just another, (Continued from Page 2) chilling and deadening climax. With the hard hat offensive fresh in our minds, there is no question that when Joe busts into the commune and gets a few hippies between his sights, it is relevant. But is this any more than faddism? Is it a film that says something about our times as well as a film t h at happens to be of our times? The answer depends on how you ap- proach Joe, and the movie al- lows for two very different ap- proaches. On the one side are the critics who see Joe as straight tragi-cornedy, a mod- ern-day Marty. This is what I call inductive drama; it s e e s society through effects on in- dividuals. J o e is just another average Joe infused -with the dementia of his part of Ameri- ca.' If Joe aspires to this kind of personal drama it is less than successful. For drama it is too often contrived and too often lacks credibility. It is also guil-' ty of the grossest stereotyping: the worker who reads the Daily News, goes bowling, has a Southern wife named Mary Lou, drives an old Chevy, wears a corduroy coat, has a flag in his rec room and an 'Honor Ameri- ca' sticker on the wall over his gun rack, and who trusts the President ("If you can't buy a used car from him, who can you buy one frorn?"). Joe is all that! Worst of all from the stand- point of inductive drama is the fact that I, for one, was very conscious this is a film, not a slice of life in human terms. My reactions to Joe to I d me that he wasn't real, because if he were real I'd have felt the same gnawing anger that I felt last May watching the con- struction workers beat up the peace marchers. So, surprising- ly enough, Joe isn't an angry film. Most of the time I found Joe laughable, and at, times I even found him likable, which is more than I can say for the movie's "kids." Now there may be some moderate liberals out there who.are going to tell me that if I ever met a hard hat alone, face to face, I'd probably like him too. It's an academic question since if I ever do meet average a hard hat alone, face to face, I'll probably never live to tell about it. (Fortunately, there aren't too many hard hats knocking around.) Anyway, there is a second ap- proach, and this is the view I hold. Joe is hyperbolic parody and allegory. Its characters aren't supposed to be real; it isn't a slice of life. In the de- decutive drama Joe Curran, Bill Compton and the anony- mous pot-heads are symbols, and the film itself stereotypes and objectifies to reveal some- thing about the stereotyping and objectification that act- ually does go on in our society. It's like the little boy in the grammar school play who pro- claims, "I am a tree," and then sets his leg-roots and spreads his arm-branches. Joe all but shouts, "I am THE hard hat." In this context the fatal flaws of personal drama can become assets, and as allegorical par- ody Joe is both thoughtful and powerful. In objectifying it s characters and in parodying the right-winger, pot-smoker and suburbanite, it sets up its ter- rifying conclusion and tells us just how dangerous muddled generalities can be. Our imper- sonal society lends itself all too well to broad categorizations of its people. We feel we know the driver of a car with an Amer- ican flag decal proudly pasted on the window. And in the ur- ban enclaves of the blue collar- ites, long hair has all kinds of insidious connotations. What's more, with atomiza- tion all around us there seems to be a psychic security in be- longing to a bigger group, even if its members are united by nothing more than superficial symbols like flag decals and long hair. Where personal, pri- mary relationships were once an identification with or rejection of people themselves, today our relationships are marked by an identification with or rejection of various symbols that h a v e come to replace people. We stand in our relation to our society like bizarre caricatures. 'Joe'? Beyond a reaction to atomiza- tion there is probably a certain amount of intellectual laziness involved. After all, the media age has taught us to think .in simple images. And the upshot of all this is that people are be- coming less human in their fel- low beings' eyes; lives are be- coming cheaper. Those crazies who said four, dead at Kent wasn't enough, were really say- ing that Kids as an entity, ie. long hair, rock music, pot, bell- bottoms, free love, got what It deserved. The radicals who scorn the Pigs'are also objectify- ing. They're not talking about flesh and blood at all. Of course, symbols don't get killed. People do. That seems to be Joe's mes- sage. On a symbolic level, Joe is everything students expect a fascist bigot to be. The doped- up, dopey figures that pass for kids are everything middle America ascribes to young peo- ple. And Bill Compton is in the middle, a typical member of the chic upper middle class with one foot in the camp of Joe's Right and the other foot planted in the camp of his daughter's Con- sciousness III. Compton is the America both sides are trying to win, the America both sides must win. Without him, Joe is just another ignorant loud- mouth. Without him, his daugh- ter is just another misunder- stood hippie. Compton's dilemma is .Amer- ica's dilemma. He is inundated from all sides by the symbols. Even he himself is a symbol. So he stands in the commune holding one of Joe's rifles and listening to the hippies' pleas and to Joe's encouragement. "Pull the trigger, Compton. You'll be doing a service." He stands there torn between the symbols and the reality he sus- pects is hiding beneath the sur- face. He stands there confront- ed by long hairs, but something inside tells him these are people, too. He stands there confused, and he pulls the trigger. A commercial center from the ancient past The palace of Qasr al-Hayr, c.728 (Continued from Page 2) "one of the last flourishes of the late classical antique style." In nine hundred, A.D., as a layer of fallen columns revealed to the researchers, an earth- quake occurred which suddenly destroyed Qasr al Hayr's former character. "In the twelfth century," stated Grabar, "people came to live inside the enclosure, and built mud brick walls of homes over the original stone g r i d . Qasr al Hayr became a medieval walled city with an internal wat- er system. The inhabitants re- paired the walls to serve for de-, fense until they abandoned the city in the fourteenth century." "Why excavate?" asked Gra- bar, whose life in a remote part of the Middle East prompted him to question the purpose of digging up the remains of this "fragment of human energy" - its ceramic sequence; its stucco decoration, even its nails "More than a search f o r knowledge," asserted Grabar, "excavation has a curiously enriching effect: it shows t h e vanity of all things human and how art is used as a substitute for reality. Beyond this, e a c h fragment can be seen as the em- bodiment of a unique human experience as well as a clue; each makes us uncertain of whether we are unique or re- placeable." Expect The Unexpected in The Village Voice Every isste of The Voice uncovers what's new and controversial. The Voice is the weekly newspaper dedicated to free opinion on just about everything: from the international scene to local politics; from enter- tainmnent and the arts to nuclear physics. It is news and reviews of politics, books, theatres, movies., music, and art. 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SIX For the student body: FLARES by Levi Farah Wright Outstanding recordings of the great classical works performed by world- renowned orchestras. Wide selection. A. Chopin played by Wilhelm Kempff. B. Brahms, Variations on a Theme of Haydn, The Vienna Philharmonic. C. Strauss waltzes-The Vienna Philharmonic D. Rachmaninov-The London Symphony E. Von Karajan conducts Vienna Philharmonic, including music from "2001". F. Great Moments 'From Italian Opera. G. The London Symphony Orchestra performs "A Midsummer Night's. Dream." H. The music of Berlioz performed by The Paris Consevatoire Orchestra. 1. L'orchestra de Ia Suisse Romande performs Beethoven's "Eroica" J. Tchaikovsky's "The Nutcracker Suite" and others. Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. w E t 1L -w ..z. ii11,, I I