Fridoy Octobor 11, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rm e Five Fri~0y, Octoler 11, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY r~e Five Pick of the week: Dr. Strangelove Ann Arbor Film Co-op Aud. 3, MLB Fri., 7, 8:45, 10:30 It is probably fair to say that the black humor genre of mo- tion pictures began with this strange 1964 film from Stanley Kubrick. At once terribly funny and h o r r i b l y chilling, Dr. Strangelove is easily the best; advertisement for detente and! disarmament ever assembled on celluloid. Peter Sellers plays a totally undynamic American president beset with a rather grave prob- lem: a Strategic Air Command general, gone beserk while va- hemently contemplating anti- Communism a n d fluoridated water, has sent his atom-bomb filled B.52s off to destroy the Soviet Union. Now, according to Army Chief of Staff Buck Turgidson (played by a pre-Patton George C. Scott), that wouldn't really be such a bad idea (what's a few million people, right?)-except for the fact that the Russians; cinemQ wee kend England where the last surviv- ing member takes all. With a variety of wild twists the plot becomes unbelievably contorted ending in a chase of horse- drawn funeral wagons. Forbes piles so many Vic- torian cliches on us, including old-style title cards with "The Girl He Worships from Afar," along with an unceasing string of gags that one laughs con- tinuously. Some of the gags are stretch- ed too far though (notably the final chase), and the last 40 minutes move a little slow. But we are so busy laughingly en- gaged in homicide, sex, greed and body snatching that we hardly notice. --David Crumm Sw * # * Duddy Kravitz State grosses. It hasn't been the hit now it has become the definitive ed revenge by Marie for sexual that French Connection was, but hard-nosed cop story. abuse incurred by respectable one must consider the repedtion This was the film that br ught , citizens of the town. By using factor involved with all spin- director William Friedkin h i s' a tape recorder and by charging offs. pre-Exorcist notoriety, and lit- for her "services," Marie de- It is just amazing, though, erally made Gene Hackman,' velops a foolproof case. Those that 20th Century-Fox has rill- who has since become one of whom she confronts change ed the Seven Ups on the same America's most sought-after little; however, for Marie, it isI double feature with its forerun- performers. representative of her liberation. ner. With only perhaps a ten The laurels won by the film; All in all, the fine acting minute intermission between I (a slew of Oscars including Best coupled with the music of, shows, the poor folks in the aud- Picture and Best Director) are , Georges Moustaki make this ience may think they are just not undeserved in the light of film enjoyable. seeing French Connection over, the film's wake. Almost over- -Cinthia Fox this time with the reels in dif- night, the modern police drama ferent order. became a new movie and TV !Wuthering Heights -Jim Valk genre. Hackmanplays a detective on Cinem Sat., 7, 9 . ud. the trail of a narcotics ring -at. 7 . thetrilofa arotcsrig Wuthering Heights is a movie Cocoanuts a hackneyed story by now, but ,l Lke t novel by Emil Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud. just a couple of years ago, iconte on which it is based Sat., 7:30, 10:30 it was timely. The suspense s this 1939 film version is the Groucho Marx and assorted jell handled especially in re ultimate in Gothic romance. kin cavort this weekend in one gard to the soundtrack, and But the movie cannot be dis- of their lesser known flicks Co- there is just enough violence to missed as melodramatic clap-; coanuts. While lacking the truly keep us tingling but certainly I trap-William Wyler has tight-' maniacal ambience of other not enough to be wasteful, use- ened up the storyline and height- Marx Brothers enterprises, this less, or gross. ened the drama with a sure and' film does have its own unique And of course, there are the discriminating directorial hand.! by now famous sequences of Plavedouainst the back- drop of the desolate moor, thef drama concerns the ill-fated; love affair of the restless young! Cathy (Merle Oberon) and the brooding, enigmatic Heathcliff1 (Laurence Olivier). A typical! Bronte heroine, Cathy is tornj between her passion for Heath- cliff and her appreciation of the more refined Edgar (here,; played by David Niven, a more compelling character than in the: novel). . Oberon and Olivier turn in matchless performances, and the suspense is sustain e d throughoutsthis powerful and passionate drama. -Judy Lopatin Television Nostalgia Radical Lawyers Trueblood Aud. Ed Sullivan to Elvis is as-c sembled for a trip back to thef golden days of yesteryear, total- ing a package guaranteed toe put Kojack, Kodiak and Kolchaki politely to shame. The mere thought of all these! gems together under one roof1 is really too good to pass up. What civil-minded citizen could: possibly pass up the comedic1 genius of the ex-President in, perhaps his greatest perform- ance of his political career? The 1 now famous Checkers speech is ; so juicy and, delivered with such superb timing that it rivalsa anything Mel Brooks could con-! ceive. And Groucho Marx's now classic You Bet Your Life seg- ment, complete with George "Lipton Tea" Fennamen and that asinine duck, is worth the price of admission alone. Chinatown The Movies, Briarwood There's something hopelessly beautiful about Roman Polan- ski's new film, Chinatown. Per- haps his memory of Sharon Tate is fading: the streaks of violence that have so much characterized his more recent films have disappeared. Jack Nicholson plays Jake, an ex-Los Angeles Chinatown cop in the '30s who is in the small- time and somewhat sordid rac- ket of spying for suspicious hus- bands and wives on their mates. Evelyn Mulrae (Faye Duna- way) comes to Jake with such a problem, and . Jake suddenly finds himself involved in a bi- zarre scandal in the Los An- geles Water Department - a scandal that becomes for us the incarnation of all the sec- rets and corruptions within this society. Chinatown is about this so- ciety - its aching need for jus- tice and love and the incredi- ble tides that crash you back to where you've begun - back to Chinatown, back to the filth, back to the absurd horrors of the street. It's Nicholson's most in-depth role to date, and Dun- away is, from every stand- point, stunning. S i 4C have instalued a dctoomsday The theme of Ted Kotcheff's machine." This happy litcla de- The Apprenticeship of uddy vice promises to destroy theKthe ialmstiesonougy entire world if so much as one Kravitz is almost reason enough inchof ussan oilgoe unin to see the film. Kravitz is te inch of Russian soil ges up istory of an overly ambitious a nuclear mushroom. Jewish boy determined to suc- Character actor Slim Pickens ceed. In his endeavor, Duddy is magnificent as the Texas B- becomes so coarse, crass, and SZ pilot determined to blow up greedy that no amount of those "Rooskies"-oops, I mean money can compensate for his Slim Pickens is terrifying. . character degeneration. That's the problem with Dr. There are, however, many Strauglelove: between laughs, things that detract from the 46n't forget to shed a few tears. impact of this message. The The "doomsday machine" may film fails to scorn Duddy's really exist just around the: metamorphosis, allowing him to corner, be sympathetically reimbursed -David Blomquist the huge sum of money he loses on a fixed roulette wheel. Jules tin( Jim As Duddy, Richard Dreyfuss Jules ad V~faithfully fails to show depth or New World, MLB sensitivity, even when he loses A forerunner in the use of the his girfriend. This can be per- A foerunerm th us oftheceived as a credit to his por- hand-held camera tecnhique 3nd tra ac edtohiver a prime example of the natural- tray of an obsessed acieer istie acting inherent to French or as oroftf the implausibil- filmmaking of the '60s, Francois whtyof hpisd, chrce n h Truffaut's Jules and Jim is a wholeepisode.-Linda Fidel i t 14 1 Sat., 5, 7:3U, 1U If That's Entertainment can Judging from the fall lineup; do it to movies, why not resur- on the tube, it may not be a rect the golden oldies of video- bad idea to see the originals: land for a few yucks? And that unwind again. But isn't this the is exactly what has been en- season of the new NBC? cnr c .2n - n massed here. Everything from -Jim Valk -David Weinberg leaureb . For one, it is a musi'al com- edy, complete with Irving Ber- lin score (which adds a littleE pizzaz to the already hectic fes- tivities) and some nifty com- bination chorus-dance scenes en- hanced by some imaginative camera work. In the midst of this mujical maelstrom, the Brothers wreak their customary havoc in a story set in the Florida land boom of the 1920's. Groucho reaches new highs, or lows, depanding on your viewpoint, in an absolutely' hysterical scene whe:e he croons a less than adoring iove- song to a huffy Margaret Du- mont. Strictly speaking, this is not one of the Marx Brothers best! movies. Still, it will certaiulyl provide you with more than thej requisite number of snickers, chuckles and belly-'augh:, -George Lobsenz ,i * * police experts dismanrliag a limousine, and of Backman chasing a subway train. -Bruce Weber The Big Sleep Law School Films 100 Hutchins Hall Fri., 7, 9 The Big Sleep is the famous Humphrey Bogart vehicle that screenplay collaborator William' Faulkner is said to have aban- doned in mid-script because he could not make head nor tails of the plot. Whatever the case, Big Sleeptj reunites the late Bogart with I his then-wife Lauren Bacall in a Philip Marlowe detective yarn so full of dramatic incidents and characterizations that its vital details of plot develonment esane most viewers entirely. To outline the plot in so short a snace is useless, but there's no onestioning the fault- I r Laycu VUL rascaiiaot Liic vati n- natural f4vorite aMong impres- sionable ollege students, but is f6t a favorite of mine. The film features international stars Jeanne Moreau and Oskar Werner as two members of an ever-rotating love triangle that leaves the male rivals, Jules And Jim, literally dazed untila the film's resolution. Eminent film critic Paune Xaci has wondered aloud why Truffaut would want to write a I book on Ifitchcock as he aid,i when "he (Truffaut) is by far the superior filmmaker." One look at film today, both artistic and commercial, bears out the opinion that Hitchcock! is by far the more influential director. Jules and Jim is pleas-1 ant enough, but disappointing1 and grossly overrated.a --Cris Kochmanski The Wrong Box I Cinema II, Aud. A Fri., 7, 9 : A tremendous lineup of Brit- ish performers are presented; in Bryan Forbes' The Wrong box, including Sir Ralph Rich- ardson, John Mills, Michael Caine, and Peter Sellers. ] Based on the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson, this tremend- ously funny black comedy concerns the fate of a tontine,; a sort of lottery in Victorian' * * * SevenUps{ The Movies, Briarwood Tinseltown Rule No. 1: "IfG it makes money, try it again." And thus hatches The Seven- Ups, another brawny, mean- man cop thriller that promises all the excitement of The French Connection. This time the names and faces have been juggled, but the flick has too much in common with its fore- runner to be deemed a mere coincidence. The producer of French Con- nection, Philip D'Antoni (who directs this time), evidently had so much fun watching that one being made he decided to do one himself. And instead of Gene Hackman, we get his old side- kick, Roy Scheider. The plot is slightly altered, this time revolving around a "dirty tricks" squad that han- dles all the messy jobs of the big city police force. But the purpose for the movie's very existence is the same. We are exposed to the seamy under- world, the brutal truth cf the law and order system, and, of course, another action-packed chase scene, which does admit- tedly have a cute ending. Not surprisingly, this tning has racked up some impressive Horse Feathers s Howard Hawks direction Mediatrics, Nat. 3ei. And. and crisp. s'irnrisinely frank Sat., 7:30, 10:33 dialogue by Faulkner and a The Marx Brothers made a tea'n of Hollywood writers. practice of taking ove- evry, Thoualh not as ambitious in large structure they could man- theme or as thouqhtfil as The age to gain entrance to: hotels Maltese Falcon. Bia Sleep ac- department stores, ocean line's tually dwarfs Hston's film in race tracks, and ope. a houses. It susense and excitement. Count comes as no surprise tat ttt it among the best of both Hawks should overturn aiorher f our and Bogart. favorite institutions, the college -Chris Kochmanski 4 4 * campus, which is exactly what they do in Horse Feathers. , 4 Prv CurioUs Girt This is an early an, and there are musical numbers in it which Cinema IL And. A aren't so hot. 7ep:o is in it Sun., 7, 9 too, and he's not really so hot. The gist of A Very Curious But the Marx Brothers are the Girl is best summarized by Pab- Marx Brothers, and what el3e is lo Picasso, who calls the film there to say? It's a funny movie. "insolence raised to the status The best moments are the of art" and said that it has "the stock laugh-getters: Groucho jsme atmosphere as in the best insulting stuffed shirts, Chico films of Luis Bunuel." Nelly tickling the ivories (and our Kaplan has definitely succeeded ribs) and Harpo grinning his he n her first featueatirical head off. There is one priceless .sene comedy. involving a password. (Pssst, This French film (English it's "swordfish".) subtitles) has a captivating ar- I . t 4 i f 4 A f E } 1 -Bruce Weberr French Connection The Movies, Briarwood The French Connection h a s been such an accessible film that I can't imagine anyone who hasn't seen it yet, but if you a haven't you might as well. By ray of characters. Among them are Georges Geret, a peeping- ton postman; Jacques Marn, one of Marie's most helpless clients; and Claire Maurier, a Lesbian farmer. Last, but not least, the beautiful Bernadette Lafont portrays the intelligent Marie. The plot reveals the calculat- nighti'lfe By ICON LANGDON BLIND PIG 208 S. FIrst This weekend it's "Babyboy" Warren and his Chicago Blues' Band. The show begins at 9:30 Friday and Saturday night. $1 cover charge. * * 4 some of her recordings. Roma Baran plays the guitar and cello. Admission is $2.50, but you needn't spend a penny once in- side: there is free coffee and popcorn. Show starts at 9:00. * *O* MR. FLOOD'S PARTY GOLDEN FALCON 120 W. Liberty 314 S. Fourth Ave. Appearing Friday and Sat- Appearing Friday and Sat- urday night is a professional urday night is "Mixed Bag," a blue grass group not often seen local,- all black, five-man jazz in Ann Arbor, "Merrimac group with flute, offering a va- County." Admission is $1. Mu- riety of progressive, creative, sic begins at 9:30. and "funky" modern jazz. ** Show begins at 10:00. $1.50 cov- HURON HOTEL AND tr. LOUNGE * * * 124 Pearl SUDS FACTORY Ypsilanti N. Murou at Lowell Long established professional Ypsilanti jazz saxophonist Flip Jackson Performing through Sunday and his quartet will be blow. is the "contemporary" rock ing out "sassy and mellow" group "Astigafa," a group of lo- contemporary jazz through cal guys who feature popular | Saturday night, starting at 9:30. top 40 music, but exhibit a par- There is no cover charge. ticular affection for old Beach * * * Boys' Ltunes. Admission is $1; THE PRETZEL BELL "The goriest and the sexiest 'Frankenstein' ever filmed." E -Kevin Sanders, ABC-TV "A perverse y fascinating In e" 9 9-Paul D. Zimmerman, origin m v Newsweek "The most outrageously gruesome p ever." -Bruce Williamson, Playboy i show begins at 9:30. * * * CHANCES ARE 516 E. Liberty Entertainment will be pro- vided Friday, Saturday, and Sunday night by "The Shakers," a top, rock group from Ohio. Show begins at 9:30; admission1 is $1.50. * * * TIE SCENE William at Main This wekend, again, it's "Kramer's Kreamers," kick- "nr ,t hogvv isms ~from 9:00 120 E. Liberty The locally popular blue grass "RFD Boys" can be seen every Thursday through S a t u r d a y night at the P-Bell. Show be- gins Thursday at 9:30; 10:00 on Friday and Saturday. Cover charge is $1. on Thursday, $1.50 on the weekends. * * * MARKLEY Saturday night only, "Black Connection" performs at Mark- ley Cabaret, a dance being put on by the Markley Minority ifndy Warbols frankcnsici 'n A Film by PAUL MORRISSEY A ....,AnWWT ODA-, 1C6 n_ ARCA RA vI gIrTION " *A RRYANSTON P IrTII5ES RLE' ASE 'u vatr'n wgttvv sv urrvnw n t4uvs s ,, 11J DCi..VtVI##V V H # # e..t.ev '