Friday, November 8, 1974 ^+ j (fry i \ T. 1 MICHIGAN DAILY Pogo FiVP7 Friday, November 8, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five crnemci weeed THIS WEEK ONLY!! Fickof the week The Abdication The Movies, Briarwood The last time we saw Liv Ullman speaking English was in the midst of a cinematic musical debacle called Lost Horizon. Thankfully, she has finally hit upon a more worth- while vehicle for her consider- able talents in Anthony Har- vey's The Abdication. eased on Ruth Wolff's play, Abdication is loosely drawn from the life of Queen Christina of Sweden, a'powerful 17th cen- turv Protestant monarch who renounced her throne to convert to Catholicism. Wolff's story (and screenplay) follows the travels of Christina to Rome and the Vatican, where .instead of the expected royal welcome, she receives a tem- pered greeting and notice that she will first have to pass examination by a committee of cardinals before being admitted to see the Pope. It is her relationship with the chief examiner, one Cardinal A.alino (portrayed by Peter Finch), that forms the core of the film. AzzalinQ tries to draw ont the inner Christina in an effort to probe her motives for converting. He succeeds, but finds more than he bargained for in the process. Harvey's highly original di- rection takes full use of the celluloid medium-indeed, Ab- dication can hardly be describ- ed as just another filmization of a successful stage play. Har- vey uses high angle shots, shadows, low key lighting, mon- tage and almost every other trick in the filmmaker's book to carefully evoke an atmo- sphere of touching pathos. Ullman and Finch. are simply brilliant in roles that virtually dominate the entire picture. Nino Rota's music, performed by the Royal Philharmonic Or- chestra, adds a deft expressive touch to the film. In fact, the weakest link in the whole film is Wolff's screen- play. Filled with cliches and terrible. dialogue anachronismS (e.g. "freak"), it might other- wise be considered a strike against the picture. Bt the combined efforts of Ullman, Finch and Harvey are just too overpowering to allow anything to weaken the message of Ab- dication. -David Blomquist * . * Walking Tal Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud. Fri., Sat., 7:30, 9:30 Walking Tall is proof that a film does not have to have a large budget to be "successful" -just a lot of sex and violence. The film concerns a sheriff (Joe Don Baker) whose idea of justice is "if it looks bad, bust its bead," which he prtceeds 'to do with a huge wooden club he carries. Violence follows vio- lence and in the closing scene, citizens are self-righteously en- gaged in lawless reprisals. There is nothing wrong with low budget films, but being allowed to see the sound boom swing past is more than un- professional. Likewise, Joe Don Baker has very little acting ability beyond his talent for smashing skulls. This type of film glorifies violent self-righteous lawless- ness and appears to exist only for that violence. Don't patron- ize such films. -David Crumm * * * Harold and Maude- New World, MLB Sat., 7, 8:45, 10:30 Hal Ashby's Harold and Maude is a love story about a 20-year- old boy and a 79-year-old wom- an. Even though the action and characters are not really scru- tinized, it is an exceptionally funny, warm and inspiring film. Harold, played by Bud Cort, is obsessed with suicide. He simulates hanging, hara-kiri and shooting himself-to 'name a few-in an attempt togaet a rise from his overbearing yet unemotional mother. Maude, four times his age, has the vitality and love of life Harold lacks. She teaches him how to live and love, hoping that he will continue after she takesher life on her eightieth birthday. This film presents life and death in a uniquely warm and humorous manner and should definitely be seen. Unless its messages are intellectualizedor weakened by a sentiment of action implausibility, Harold and Maude is an inspiration and: a joy. Linda Fidel Day of the Jackal Bursley Hall Enterprises Bursley West Cafeteria Sat., 9 Ever since MGM cancelled Fred Zinnemann's epic Man's. Fate, the respectable director has been in a suspended state of limbo. In what appeared to be a search for work, Zinne- mann took up the task of di- recting Frederick Forsyth's The Day of the Jackal. Univer- sal, apparently hoping for a collaboration of distinguished director and reputable novel, has missed the boat. From the looks of the film, it seems that Zinnemann still has his mind elsewhere. The film, which deals with the at- tempted assassination of Charles DeGaulle, moves along at a clumsy pace. The events are strung out as to fill a pre- designed frame of time which! the film must encompass. Al- though interesting and extreme- ly clever at times, The Day of the Jackal never completely in- volves the audience in its pur-! pose, dwelling on what appears to be an acutely objective van-! tage of the entire scheme. Edward Fox turns in a cred- ible performance as the zestful assassin, but the film as a whole never really meshes. When one examines the pre- cision to which this film was constructed, the entire exercise seems a waste of both time and talent. -Jim Valk * * t sleuth New World, MLB Sun., 7, 9 In Sleuth, a young working class man decides to get an elaborate revenge on an old aristocratic man. The old man, who likes to play games, has! played a "dirty trick" on the young man. Some of the parlor games the' two play are funny. The old man admires the young man's sportsmanship. But the char- acter of the games changes as we gradually learn that the two men have very different moti- vations. However you interpret the puzzling ending, you will probably agree the games have "gone too far." Michael Caine is fine as the bitter young man and Laurence Olivier is equally good as the old man. Get your popcorn before Sleuth starts because you won't want to leave once it has start- ed. -Joan Ruhela On the Waterfront Law School Films 100 Hutchins Hall Fri., 7, 9 With a cast of superb actors, director Elia Kazan has trans- formed Budd Shulberg's screen- play of On the Waterfront into one of cinema's most powerful dramas. This movie could very well be the finest film por- trayal of man's inhumanity to man ever made. mThe story revolves around the longshoremen of New York and how they are terrorized by their union leaders. Marlon Brando plays Terry Malloy, an ex-prize fighter, who! is used as an unwitting tool to set up his own brother to be killed by labor leader Johnny Friendly (Lee J. Cobb). Malloy is tortured by his con- science until finally, with the help of the "local pr.iest" (Karl Malden), and the guidance of a woman (Eva Marie Saint), he risks his life and testifies be-{ fore the commission investigat-I ing the docks, destroying the{ power of Johnny Friendly. Marlon Brando was never better than in this film, and' the other characters perform equally well to make this drama a taut, realistic portrayal of what life can sometimes unfor-' tunately be like. Rarely is a film made that is this good and succeeds where so many before it have failed. -Mark DeBofskyI * * * East of Eden Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sun., 7, 9 East of Eden comes to cam- pus this weekend amidst a whole raft of Steinbeck film adaptations. This is Elia Ka- zan's version of Steinbeck's classic novel and it follows only, The Grapes of Wrath as the best of the bunch. Kazan uses only about a quarter of the novel in translating this drama to the screen while still retaining the general flavor of the original masterpiece. The movie centers on the con- flict' between Adam Trask, a. farmer, and his son Cal. Otherj complications arise involving Aron, Cal's older brother and Cal's cheap, unfeeling mother. This film overcomes some troublesome obstacles in attain- ing respectability. James Dean, in one of his first major film roles as Cal, comes perilously close to being little more than a bland Brando imitation. Raymond Massey achieves a passable performance with theI help of some truly formidable forehead furrowing as the se- vere Adam Trask.j Infinitely more effective than the mediocre acting is Kazan's excellent use of scenery as it conveys the immensity of the California landscape. In total,! this picture succeeds on the strength of its superb sense of atmosphere overriding the less than adequate acting. -George Lobsenz{ * * * Of Mice and Men Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sat., 7, 9 Burgess Meredith is the small, cruel George and 'Lon Chaney is the huge rabbit-loving Lennie, in this 1939 adaptation of the Steinbeck novella. Of Mice and Men centers' around two drifters and com-E patriots who are searching hope-x lessly for a life and a farm where they can live off the; "fat o' the Ian'." Though George is the brains of the duad and Lennie the brawn, both seem to, need each other, if only to keep by the romantic fire of Parisian from being alone. playboy Melvyn Douglas. Their stopover and employ- It's really unnecessary to see ment at a work farm, and this film on the screen sinces it their relations with the sur- is a coming attraction in Avon rounding workers, become the Books' series of frame-by-frame focus of the story-line. Betty analyses of motion picture clas- Field plays the alluring Mae, sics (also in the series are The wife of the work foreman, whose Maltese Falcon, Psycho, Casa- soft, soft hair is so fascinating blanca, etc.). For a nostalgic1 to Lennie. evening of entertainment, how- The film, works largely be- ever, Ninotchka is the right film cause director Lewis Milestone to catch. chose not to tamper with the original script. It's the only adaptation ever made of the novella, but it's just as well: nothing else need have been done. -David Weinberg * * * --Chris Kochmanski * * * Rainparts of Clay Cinema II, Aud. A Sun., 7, 9 A beautiful 19-year-old girl and the inhabitants of a primi-, f Thieves Life IUs ! Cinema II, Aud. A Fri., Sat., 7, 9:15 r Most moviestare advertised by their stars.& Other movies are advertised by their special ef- fects. But Thieves Like Us is credited to Robert Altman who belongs to a new breed of di- rectors whose names dominate tthe marquee wherever their filmsare being shown. Keith Carradine plays Bowie, i convict who escapes prison with. two fellow inmates and plans to rob every bank in Mis- sissippi. While holed up in a gas station,vBowietmeets and falls in, love with Keechie (Shelley Duvall). Their love af- fair is the focus of the rest of the film. An interesting thing to note about this movie is that the soundtrack is composed almost entirely of '30s radio shows. Also pay close attention to the use of Coca Cola as a recurring metaphor throughout the film. While often compared to Bonnie. and Clyde, Thieves Like Us comes even closer to cap- turing the '30s on screen. -Mark DeBofsky 4 PERFORMANCES -POWER CENTER Ur Grapes of Wrath tive mountain village in Tunisia Ci' a G d A . Ad compose the cast of this fic-' C FrGi.,Arhtional - political documentary. Fri., 7, 9 Ramprts of Cla a direted Few films, particularly those ampartoCa y was oirec that come from this country, aFrench dueean-Louis Bung capture the feeling of an era as celli in 1971. well as The Grapes of Wrath. This short film (90 minutes) Indeed, by its dignity of theme has a rather limited plot and and excellence of treatment, is concerned primarily with. The Grapes of Wrath surely be- phoogrngdtheimarliths long onanylist of cinema mas- photographing the mieager lives longs on any in a village of rock salt hand- terworthe cutters. When the entrepreneur; Nunnally Johnson adapted the f t hentlventrepaes John Steinbeck classic and John of the iners the usually docile Fnrd dtiros s this el uent ac- , count of an "Oakie" family's journey from the barren Dust Bowl to California and of their subsequent disillusionment. Johnson and Ford have done what few have been able to accomplish. They have taken a literary classic and trans- formed it accurately while los- ing none of the flavor and mood of the original. This has been accomplished thanks to John Ford's superb direction, which through the use of camera angle, captures the feeling of desolation which Steinbeck so vividly described fn his novel. The cast, led by Henry Fonda, Jane Darwell and John Carra- dine are flawless in their roles, capturing the bitterness and tragedy of the characters. In short, The Grapes of Wrath is not konly one of the earliest exposes of social injustice, but also one of the most moving and beautiful films to come out of America at any time. -Michael Broidy * * * Ninotchka New World, Aud. A Sat., 7, 9:304 Just as Alfred Hitchcock is called the "Master of Suspense," so was Ernest Lubitsch con- sidered the "Master of Sophis- ticated Comedy" in his Holly- wood heyday. Ninotchka, with Greta Garbo in the title role, is his best remembered film and currently the subject of film cult revivals. Overlooking the outdated poli- tical preaching, Ninotchka pro- vides a lighthearted vehicle for Garbo to find, lose and regain the impossible love. This time the Swedish legend plays a cold Russian agent who is thawed natives stage a three-day sit- down strike. Soldiers are brought in to keep them there, and their pa- tient fast ultimately leads to the restoration of the former wages. But one of the miners, the young girl's lover, dies, and in grief she drowns herself in the desert. Ramparts of Clay examines the social changes which in- evitably take place in villages of newly-established nations. Subtitles are used for the sparse French dialogue, as Bertucelli offers us a nearly silentuand entirely somber view of another world. ' -Sarah Polarek Grand Hotel Cozens Film Co-op Co'zens Cafeteria Fri., Sat., 8, 10 Greta Garbo and John Barry- more head up -a fine cast in this 1932 Academy Award-win- ning film. Manslaughter, gam- bling, a shady business deal and, of course, several love affairs, are just some of the activities which permeate the lives of all those living in the Grand Hotel., Greta Garbo stars as an aloof dancer, Grusinskaya, who, as with all Garbo characters, warms up when she is with the man she loves. John Barry- more plays the Baron, a jewel thief, who sweeps Greta off her feet. Lionel Barrymore plays a suicidic bookkeeper who falls in love with Joan Crawford, the stenographer; Wallace Beery is the villain (hiss!) who murders the Baron and breaks Greta's heart. Director Edmund Goulding of- fers up a typical 30's adventure- and-romance film which is de- lightful because of his talented and exciting cast. --Sarah Polarek - P"4 _. _ ___ r Subscribe to The Michigan Daily SHOWTIMES MON.-THURS.: 7:00-9:00' FRI. & SAT.: 7:00-9:00-11:00 SUN.: 5:00-7:00-9:00 LAST 5 NIGHTS HELD OVER 2nd GREAT WEEK! 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And the lost 45 minutes of the film is unlike anything you hove ever seen. It will have you howling and cheering like no movie ever has. "THE LONGEST YARD" is a fierce, funny movie. For men, for women, for everyone. "RANKS WITH THE BEST. A GEM OF A PICTURE." -A. McLain Detroit News THIS IS THE ONE Tonight-Complete Show at 7:30 & 9. Open at 7:15 p.m. Complete Weekend Shows at 1:30-4:00- 6:30 and 9:00 p.m.-Open at 1:15 .m IM COUZEN'S FILM CO-OP. PRESENTS 'Y 2 "FAR-OUT" FILMS!! GRAI'WI HOTl 'I a a ...o, I I I®t r e (O AT T o .ax. .~ '4lN'~X.~.X.V.'\" .W.u -