Friday, March 28, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Friday, March 2, 1975 THE MICIGA AL oFv CinemG Pick of the week: Seduction of Mimi What's playing t Campus Three new commercia Since very few Italian films directors lead the pack at Over make it to American light entertainment departs theaters, Francis Ford Cop- The Great Waldo Pepper, pola's Godfather series provided Bogdanovich tackles a Col most of us with an introduction BodnvctakeaCo to the strange web ofrSicilian dancing would-be spectacu mores. Nevertheless, Italian di- for more serious viewing, rectors have been exploring and tion of Mimi finally opens making fun of their brethern to At press time, here's w the south for years. this weekend: Lina Wertmuller produced Friday-Bananas, Aud. The Seduction of Mimi i 1971, Swope, Aud. 4, MLB, 7:15 just before beginning her ex- ination, Arch. Aud., 7, 8:45 quisite effort Love and Anarchy.1 7, 9 Virdiana, Aud. A,: Seduction is a light piece of satire that perhaps once and for Hutchins Hall, 7, 9. all breaks down the Sicilian Saturday-Four surreal moral myth. ence on Surrealism, Aud. A The film revolves around a 7, 9; .Children of Paradise, leftist quarry worker, called Sunday-Dreams That M9 Mimi for short, who must leave Port of Shadows, Arch. Au Sicily when his friendly neigh- 9:05. borhood Mafia chief becomes All weekend-The Grea disgusted with his radic l poll- 6290); Young Frankenstein, tical views. Unon settling in. ofMi, Campus (668-641 Turin, Mimi meets and falls in love with a beautiful woman- 9700); Murder on the Orien and from there the fun begins. At Long Last Love, and Al Seduction lacks some of the The Movies, Briarwood (7 depth and timirg of Love and Anarchy, but it's still a funny and quite illuminating film. In have down-to-earth voices, u fact. Seduction is a most re- like the formal ones heardi mrarkable piece of truly Italian many musicals, and Lerner an cinema. Loewe's songs come at appr -David Blomquist priate times so they don't inte * * * rupt the drama. Truly, then Young Frankenstein is a sense of magic in Camelo -Joan Ruhela State - . * Weekend ,his Cinema Weekend al entries from three excellent the flicks this weeknd. In the ment, there's George Roy Hill's starring Robert Redford. Peter e Porter score in a singing and ular, At Long Last Love. And Lena Wertmuller's The Seduc- up in town tonight. hat was scheduled at the movies . 3, MLB, 7, 8:30, 10; Putney , 8:45, 10:15; International Ani- 10:30; Camelot, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7, 9; My Little Chickadee, 100 distic films, part of the Confer- A, 7, 9; Camelot, Nat. Sci. Aud., Arch. Aud., 8. Money Can Buy, Aud. A, 7, 9; d., 7; Easy Living, Arch. Aud., at Waldo Pepper, Michigan (665- , State (662-6264); The Seduction 16); Lenny, Fifth Forum (761- nt Express, The Stepford Wives, ice Doesn't Live Here An ,re dency to include a scene merely for the shock value. -Melissa Harris Lenny Michigan Daily I COLLOQUIUM "LATIN AMERICANS IN STRUGGLE" SUNI PAZ in concert "The Music of Latin America" SUN., MARCH 30 AT 8:00 P.M. MLB AUD. 3-$2.00 sponsored by the Group on Latin American Issues - - ---------: The hero, rently status Fifth Forum # I a t e s t prevailing cult Lenny Bruce, has cur- risen to the ultimate of chic. Anyone previous-10 ly sharing any relation with the late comic, however slight, has made it well known, while it seems a intellectual-plus to have shared Bruce's liberal ideolo- gies back in an era of ranking conservatism. Thus, the Lenny Bruce phe- nomenon has snowballed, and has of late erupted into some- what of a cultural explosion. The Lenny Bruce "mystic" is currently presented with text- book clarity with the United Artist production of "a Bob Posse film" entitled, simpiy and personally, Lenny. The movie has been handled as one of those rare cinematic L ___ s AI*'11 IL. i_ e e ts ? ...La T ._.ango in =,N Young Frarlrenstein is Mel Brooks' best film to date. He has calmed down considerably since his previous successes, The Producers and Blazing, Saddles. No longer does he ex- hibit the frenzied, almost mania- cal lust for laughter, the "do- anything-for-a-ioke" humor that characterized his earlier films. Brooks frequently displays flashes of genius in Franken- stein, parody of horror movies that is brilliant in places, great in others, and uniformly good throughout, with only a few lanses into his former style. The cast is sensational, with the possible exception of Teri Garr, in the thankless role of the doctor's assistant. Once: again, Gene Wilder (who co-I authored the script with Brooks) acts up a storm as Franken- stein. Marty Feldman, a new- comer to Brooks' stable of per- formers,.almost steals the show as Igor, the lovable retainer with the movable hump. -Melissa HarrisE * * * Camelot Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud. Fri., Sat., 7, 9:30 Camelot suffers from some of the flaws common to many musicals. Its protagonists, Lan-' celot and Guenevere, seem to roles each of them plays, and' love one another simply for the the imprecise democratic ideals of the kingdom may remind you of impractical high school his- tory textbooks. The film is entertaining, none- theless. Richard Harris portrays King Arthur as a very person- able anti-hero and has some very funny lines. Vanessa Red-! grave is a very attractive Guen- evere but always seems to be' play-acting. Also, Harris and Redgrave. Bananas Ann Arbor Film Co-op MLB, Aud. 3 Fri., 7, 8:30, 10:00 Woody Allen's Bananas is crazy mixture of satire, parod gags and flights of lunatic fa tasy about a nasty New Yor products-tester (Allen) wP somehow becomes the preside of a Latin American banan iiu Lmbr tiav nre nyur, events, a la Last Tango in 69-8780). Paris. Employing the Michael Todd theory of limited access, the film has opened at "selected n- advances, after which he hangs theatres" across the country at in himself. showcase prices. nd Inheriting half his estate, Viri- With all the hype surrounding o- diana strives to adhere to her;the r- moral principles by turning it viewig fort becomes rquired re into a home for vagrant beg- vterestin contemporary cinema t. gars of the area And to their dismay, it pro'ves Their rancid and brutal re-ar sponse forms the crux of this a dramatic disappointment. withering film, and their "Beg- The film, n its strorlycrne- gar's Banquet" scene remains' matic context, is extra rdinarv one of the most remarkable particularly considering it is sequences Bunuel ever filmed. only Fosse's t hird film. But when one examines the direc- a of nis one of the best tor's characters through the y, of Bunuel's really downbeat black and white cinematography n- films. Reflecting his view of of Bruce Surtees, we find only rk Franco Spain, it voices little shallowness; not only :n Hoff- bo or no faith in the possibility of man's interpretation of Lenny, nt positive action for social change. but in the entire prescnt-past -Kim Potter technique that Fosse r lis so ) I republic. The film opens with Howard Cosell and the staff of ABC's Wide World of Sports enthusias- tically covering the Assasvina- tion of the Week, that of the President of the South Ameri- can republic of San Marcos, whose expiration, one cue, high- lights a week of festivities. Allen's view of the world is fraught with everything except pathos, and I find it highly amusing. The film is a bizarre amalgamation of love, Cuban revolution, the C.I.A., Jewish mothers and J. Edgar Hoover. The few unfunny spots in the movie are simply not that im- portant; most people have come to accept this rhythm as an ineluctable part of Allen's comic genius. In Sleeper, Allen sus- tains greater continuity, but Bananas is funnier. -Nathalie Walker Viridiana Cinema II, Aud. A Fri., 7, 9 Viridiana is Luis Bunuel's most cynical and probably his best film. Idealism versus real- ity is the theme here, and Bunuel leaves no doubt as to the inevitable, savage victor. A beautiful, chaste young nun (Virdiana) takes temporary leave of her convent when in- vited by her rich uncle to his estate. She resists his amorous I 3 V I 1 f f 4 l F j j i Putney Swope Ann Arbor Film Co-op MLB, Aud. 4 Fri., 7:15, 8:45, 10 15 At a board meeting of an all- white advertising agency, the chairman drops dead of a heart attack. The remaining board members immediately vote for3 his successor. None of the men can vote for himself, so each one secretly votes for the token black-Putney Swope. From this potentially stimu-' lating premise the film prompt- ly dies. When it was first re- leased in 1969, Putney Swope was hailed as refreshing be- cause it questioned the public's values and broke all the old: Hollywood taboos. In 1975, how- ever, the characters are stereo-' typed and the jokes are stale. Much of the film is crude,E vulgar and monotonous. Direc- tor Robert Downey has many1 faults-among them. the in- heavily on. Julian B e r r y' s screenplay strives desperately to become an active support that rakes Fosse's film more than ineely a pretentious tribute. Unfortunately, the handsome craftsmanship of the film and Valerie Perrine's superb per- formance become secondvv to the structural faults of 'Fosre's a p p r o a c h. Ultimately, in its frantic attempt to be taken ser- iously, the f i 1 m squanders where it matters most. -Jim .alk .r If you are interest- ed in re v ie win g poetry, and music or writing feature stories about the drama, dance, film arts: Cnntact Arts Editor, c/oaThe Michigan Daily. ability to sense when a joke stops being funny, and the ten- Records in revieew T HE TALE OF THE STONE FLOWER was Prokofieff's last ballet (1948-50), and to some modern ears it can sound miles from that composer's earlier, more acerbic and experimental pieces. This disparity was intentional, the piece having been written as a musical atonement to Soviet authorities, who had been harrassing Prokofieff since 1934 about his "anti-democratic tendencies", that is, his originality. It is a mistake, however, to assume that, because this music sounds "bland" in comparison with Prokofieff's other pieces, it should therefore be despised as the sort of State- authorized "non-composed" music it was supposed to have been. III , ""'S ' _ -i BRIDGE: Failure to take available precautions means defeated contract b EDITOR'S NOTE: Frank Bell's column on bridge ap- pears on Friday this week only. It will return to its regular Saturday morning space next week. Playing in a local swiss team1 of fours, my partner picked up: the South hand and opened one spade. I raised to two spades,j and my partner bid three clubs, ostensibly a game try, but in this case a slam try. I raised to four clubs, showing my king of clubs, and my partner bid the good slam. NVul. 71 FRANK BELL -- " Unon ruffing the first trick, What in fact emerges from this piece is the picture of a declarernlayed the ace of =man who has decided for reasons of his own to work under sndes and a shade to dummy's stringent artificial restrictions, but who was nevertheless deter- queen sbth ppnnsfol- lowed. He now led a diamond to mined to turn out a decent piece of music. his ace and tried to cash the Prokofieff took advantage of the well-known fact that censors king of diamonds, but the rozf are notoriously superficial in their censorship. With "unneces- caved in when East ruffed and sary" dissonances gone and lots of "pretty" melodies, as re- returned the queen of clubs, quested, the piece received official approval - however, it can Winning dummy's club king, be argued that neither dissonance nor absence of "melody" was South hopefully ruffed another ever a significant feature of Prokofieff's music. heart, but when the ace did not I, for one, find most fascinating other things in Prokofieff's fall, he cashed the diamond style, especially certain rhythmic features and the frequent and dummy. Crossing to his hand curious characteristic of being not quite tonal at the same time with the club ace, South ran his as being trivally tonal. But these are points which are per- good tricks and conceded a club haps too subtle to expect any censor to recognize. at the end to go down a trick. The first complete recording of the Stone Flower is by Gen- Declarer correctly foresaw the nady Rozhdestvensky and the Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra (Co- nossible snags to his contract, lumbia M3 33215, a 3-record set). Their performance is spirited but did not take adequate steps and accurate, at least in the sense that most of the notes are to protect himself. Upon ruffin.g .- U_ L,,AA there.,However, they play this piece as if it were nothing more 4* 4 North QQJ3 K J 52 9982 6K43 I F a the tfrst trick he shouldash;.._-.- West East the ace of spades, the ace of than that bland ballet it was supposed to have been-witness A 0 6 A 8 S 2 diamonds and then continue with the fact that whenever the music aspires to subtleties, the per- V 10 9 8 6 V A Q 7 4 3 a snade to dummy's queen. formance doesn't. * J 5 4 3 10 When both opponents follow to It is a pleasure to have a complete recording of this little- South the second round of spades, it known work, but I can imagine better cases for it that might A A K 10 7 4 will take snecifically a 4-1 dia- be made. A Void mond break with East holding -Charles Smith 4 A K Q 7 6 the four diamonds and only two,* *! * 4. A K8Q7 6 ' spades to set the contract. 4 A 8 7For when declarer leads the JOHN McLAUGHLIN'S unique style of electro-jazz lost much The bidding: second round of diamonds off of its intensity when the Mahavishnu Orchestra regrouped. South West North East of dummy, East will find him- But with improved individual efforts, especially by electric vio- 14 Pass 2A Pass self in a dilemma. If he ruffs linist Jean-Luc Ponty, the new Orchestra has regained the Mc- 34 Pass 44 Pass declarer will play small and Laughlin energy on Visions of the Emerald Beyond (Columbia 64 Pass Pass Pass later be able to sluff one of PC33411). Opening lead: ten of hearts. dummy's clubs on the long dia- McLaughlin remains one of the top contemporary guitarists, West led the ten of hearts, monds and ruff a club with but his style hasn't changed since the old group's first album,