"Soturday, October 12, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five 'THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT' "s tu: y J;. y4 'R ' Fti:... .. . Fun, frolic from the old By DAVID BLOMQUIST Yet That's Entertainment is badly cramped by the audience sound-on-film in the late '20s winning Broadway Melody of In 1929, a fledgling five-year- really more than just another conventions and technical re- had forced Hollywood to turn 1929 - were hardly technical old studio rather pompously nostalgia film. In a sense, it is strictions that plagued D. W. to Broadway for performers who masterpieces Most of the pho- known as Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer a beautiful cinematic tribute Griffith. could talk as well as act. In tography tended to be rather produced the first all-singing, to a real Hollywood legend. To be sure, the Metro musi- the process, studios acquired theatrical and "stagey," just all-dancing musical film. Holly- The Metro musicals cannot be cals at times represented the literally hundreds of tap dancers like the first silent pictures had wood Revue only featured a considered "great" films, at worst and most garish extremes and high-vibrato tenors. The been. small team of chorus girls and least in the sense that modern of the '30s and '40s Hollywood. musical film emerged as a cel- But as soon as sound editing a forgettable crooner nicknamed: critics use the term. They were In retrospect, it almost seems luloid vaudeville show-only on was introduced in the early '30s, "Ukalale like," but still, for .'-...............,.\ s:si~~isanaiimssssia~i~ssa h msca a ofan unig "Ukalale likey" but.. . . . . . . . . . . ............................_.................:..............................................."..........._... . .............. th..sialwa.ffan.rnnn some reason, caught on with in truly high style. From that' American movie audiences. It Th1n tr m w a.rrl.s gwI3>1.gth na idna..nA r Ihl"bme ritlvrwo* ~hit-nl th i-br q ip--' was the beginning of the most successful empire in the history of the motion picture. For the next thirty years, the best performing talent in the world passed through MGM's iron gates on Washington Ave- nue in Los Angeles to becomej part of a truly grand celluloidI legacy-a legacy that eventually ; included some of the most bril- liant and imaginative footageI in all cinema. Put simply, That's Entertain- ment is a 2/2 houracollection of sequences from that magnifi- cent MGM library, laid end to end with some (thankfully) brief commentary by a few of' the old Metro stars. 1 rte tiVAU)vI LI Iut U cF .UtctP(nn cvt turer eU gre imsf U'/i5I, ft tetlAs in the sense that modern critics use the term . .. But if there had been no musicals at MGM, the top directors of modern serious cin- ema might still be working in a medium cramped by the restrictions that plagued D.W. Griffith. ."'. ::: .:..:.. ..... . ........ ".... , .. -.. ......,..:."5 . . ...:i " :".:"::: 1....1%.... .....:: r....::"::::. point onthe uner was es tined to be-thanks to its extrav- agant production design and ' equally extravagant budgets-' the technical innovation point of the industry, as well as the showplace of Hollywood's best performing talent. A sequence like the tom-tomI dance from Rosalie, for ex- ample, is dazzTing today on two levels. First, naturally, there is the classic Eleanor Powell tap dancing her way down a series of platforms and eventually through a row of cellophane flowers. not movies with a pointedly dramatic or striking social mes- sage, such as we have come to expect the cream of contem- porary filmmakers to produce. But if there had been no "tuners" at MGM, Altman, Bergman, Fellini, Truffaut, and all of the other top directors of modern serious cinema might still be working in a medium impossible that studio execu- tives actually ordered big name actors like Clark Gable and Jimmy Stewart to suffer through protracted singing appearances. Yet this was the essence of the star system-and the mu- sical was the perfect medium for that strange system to flour- ish in. The sudden introduction of a far bigger and far grander scale than any stage producer could ever envision. (In fact, it really should be no surprise that the first major motion picture to be released with at least a partial sound- track, Warner Bros. The Jazz Singer, was a musical film.) Of course, the first film mu- sicals - like Metro's Oscar- times in film history-utilized the unique qualities of different lens lengths to create special effects. In one short clip, Van Walt brilliantly illustrates the creative use of cinematic depth of field to emphasize Miss Powell's flamboyant style. Similarly, Busby Berkeley ex- ploited technical aspects of film to establish his reputation as probably the most imaginative of the early musical film di- rectors. In a seies of Judy Gar- land-Mickey Rooney "B" musi- cals (spotlighted at some length in That's Entertainment), Ber- kelcy shows how to use camera angles to best take advantage of those infamous casts of thou- sands. Somehow, Berkeley could almost make a falling curtain speak as it waved about over the heads of a dancing chorus line. Berkeley presided over some of the best of Metro's black-and- white musicals. But when the time came to produce the first color "tuner," the job went to a more recognized dramatic director. In 1938, Victor Flem- ing, .Judy Garland, Bert Lahr, Frank Bolger, and several hun- dred little munchkins turned out MGM's most ambitious musical to that time-The Wizard of Oz. Wizard of Oz was a giant cel- luloid gamble on many fronts that somewhat unexpectedly paid off. MGM had serious doubts about the performing abilities of Garland, and would have preferred to see Shirley Temple play the little lost girl from Kansas. (Fortunately for us, Temple was firmly under contract to Twentieth Century- Fox.) (Continued on Page 8) Hamming it up in 'On The Town' Frank Sinatra (left) and Gene Kelly doffed white berets and Navy blues in MGM's postwar 'On The Town,' featured in 'That's Entertainment.' The film was one of the first musi- cals to be produced on location. But second, and more portantly, director W. S. Walt here-for one of the im- Van first lt~ I , BRIDGE: One in the hand is not always as good as two in the bush MOVIES on1 T ELE VISION_ by MLICH1AEL WILSON _ I[ by FRANK BELL -" * one coupon per pizza I MR. PIZZA 5Coff any Medium or SLarger Pizza Offer Good I I Saturday, Oct. 12 769-8030 FREE DELIVERY It was the end of an all night; bridge game when a weary South picked up today's hand, sat up, and wondered why, for once, God had decided to favor: him over his opponents. NS VUL. EW NV. NORTH} r! Q 5 V 4 *AK76532 4J73 WEST EASTt 4 K J 1098632 4 7 1153 V762 if + 84 * Q J 9 48 4KQ10642 SOUTHl 4 A 4 VAKQJ1098 f 10f 4A95 The bidding:3 South West North East 1 24 44 3 Pass 1 6 r Pass Pass Pass t Opening lead: eight of clubs.- As it was worth a forcing bid,1 South opened with a strong 24 t bid; West, with favorable vul-I nerability, long spades, and noi defense, jacked the action up to1 44; South's partner bid 5*;t East passed; and South bid at direct 6r, which was passedt out. His left hand opponent shot t You're pretty darn good at your job. But today, we all have to consider how we can do our work a little better. That's how each of us.can help keep our jobs here in America. For now and for the future. Amerika. It only works as well as we do. e/ T A"' irf 4t the eight of clubs on to the table. Declarer realized that what has been given must usually be earned, so he sat back to con- sider the hand. He did not like what he saw. Counting 11 tricks in the form of one spade, seven hearts, two diamonds, and one club, he realized that he was one trick short of the 12 needed to fulfill his contract. West had led with such ala- crity that declarer was certain the club eight was a singleton, so there was little hope for an extra club trick and none in spades, which left only l dia- mnonds. South saw that if they broke three - two, then he could set them up with o-1e ruff. But, how would he gat back to dummy to enjoy them? Acting on the premise that West, who was marked with at least seven spades to the king, had led a stiff club, and that diamonds were breaking th ee - two, he devised a fool proof line of play to land his con- tract. Playing a small club from dummy, the won East's 10 with his ace, and pulled trump in three rounds, encouraged to see that West followed to two rounds before sluffing a spade. Now, crossing to dummy with the diamond king, he ca~h-.d the ace of diamonds and stuffed his ace of spades! When West followed, he ruffed a diamond and led his remaining spade. West, who had nothing but spad- es left, won his king and ha I to return a spade to dummy's queen, while declarer stuffed his remaining clubs on the queen of spades and the good liamonds. Thus, by throwing away n sure trick, declarer received two in return. A clear case of when two in the bush are worth me-e than one in the hand. A psychotic doctor brought back from the dead has to feed on human blood to survive in Channel 50's noontime thriller The Return of Dr. X (1939), starring Wayne Morris, Rose- mary Lane and a very annoyed Humphrey Bogart as the zom- bie medic with a makeup prob- lem and nobody to talk to. Later today on the same chan- nel at 4 p.m. Carrol O'Connor stars in a shortened-for-TV mo- vie about Martians and homi- cide on the weekly Outer Limits series, now unfortunately in re- runs. Barry Morse is also fea- tured in this bizarre tale, which was filmed long before O'ConnorI made it big in All in the Family. The next good movie hits the airwaves Sunday at 1 when Montgomery Clift stars as Freud (1962). on Bob Hynes Showtime Theatre. Susannah York has a big role in this in- teresting picture depicting the early years of Freud's life, and her co-stars include David Mc- Callum (who has a thing for mannequins), Larry Parks, Eric Portman and Slim Pickens. Lat- er Sunday night at 11:45 on 7 Frank Sinatra yuks it up with' Sammy Davis, Joey Bishop, Dean Martin and Peter Lawford in Ocean's 11 (1960), an excel- lent gambling heist yarn that operates with class. Monday's only offering is the musical remake of the John Garfield classic Four Daugh- ters (1938) entitled Young at I Heart (1955), starring Frank Sinatra and Doris Day with Gig Young, Ethel Barrymore and Dorthy Malone in support- ing rolls. The original ending has Garfield killing himself, but the studios wouldn't let Doris Day get involved with cinematic suicide so they tack- ed on a soapy ending for this version. The best thing about Tues- day's Cat Ballou (1965), on Showtime Channel 9 at 1 p.m. is Lee Marvin in his Oscar-win- ning portrayal of two men on opposite sides of the law in this Western farce which also stars Jane Fonda, Dwayne "Dobie Gillis" Hickman and the late, great Nat King Cole. Later that same day on Chan-' nel 9 at 9 p.m. Liz Taylor and Dick Burton share the credits for Boom! (1968), a box-office disaster that also stars Noel Coward. Tennessee Williams' story about a vulgar and dying millionairess who befriends a mystery man known only as the "Angel of Death" on a Medi- terranean island makes for good TV excitements and is well worth watching. James Cagney gives a bril- liane performance in Each Dawn I Die (1939), aired this Wednesday on Channel 50 at 1 p.m. Although the story is ba- sic prison melodrama about a framed reporter and the friends he makes in the slammer, Cag- ney and co-star George Raft act out the highlights with all the energy of a speeding loco- motive. At midnight Wednesday on 9 Rock Hudson and Doris Day gas (continued on Page 8) LIBERTY AT DIVISION , VIA p #"A _. I MOVING SALE 20% OFF ALL MERCHANDISE &ipdeP4 &Se£7hkp 316 SO. STATE STREET 9 am.9 o.m. Mon.-Sat.; 11 a.m.-6 p m. 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