Friday, April I1I, 11~75 THEM ICH [GAN DAILY Page: Five THE MICHIGAN DAILY Paae Five . , , . cinemct week Pick of the week: Singin' in the Rain Cinema U,'Aud. A Sun., 7, 9 The introduction of national network television in 1950 sent he motion picture industry scrambling to come up with1 omething to top the at-home convenience of its new visuall ompetitor. Paramount cleaned off the aboratory shelves and came p with VistaVision. Twentieth Century - Fox brought in ster- eophonic magnetic sound. But at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, man- agement elected to. invest mil- lions in what had always been the studio's most successful product - the cinema musical. Singin' in the Rain represents the most cohesive effort, from this era of the last gasp for the dancing spectacular. Stan- ley Donen's direction and Gene; Kelly's choreography blend magnificently into a fast-paced piece of entertainment that fea-. turns a quick wit and a nasty two-step. Kelly,,.Donald O'Connor, and Debbie Reynolds star as a trio of actors and technicians caught in the 1929-1930 Hollywood changeover from silents to talk- ies. The touchy situations and problems they encounter were quite real in 1929, perhaps ex- plaining the surprisingly down- to-earth atmosphere - a com- rodity only rarely found in movie musicals. Nine lighting and -laboratory work back up a good dones troupe and surprisingly funny script. In many ways, in fact, Singin' in the Rain may just rep- resent the best of the Holly- wood studio period. -David Blomquist * * * I E I I . { I E I What's playing this Cinema Weekend Light entertainment dominates the scene at the fliclis around town this weekend, as four musicals and two comedies roll at local theaters. Opening at the Fifth Forum today is The Four Musket- eers, Richard Lester's sequel to last year's tongue-in-cheek comedy starring the same dynamic foursome. Showboat, the classic Jerome Kern musical, puts in an appearance. Friday at Cinema Guild. Here's this Cinema Weekend in detail: Friday-All the King's Men, 100 Hutchins Hall, 7, 9; Showboat, Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05; Day for Night, Aud. A, 7, 9:15; The Harrad Experiment, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30, 9:30; It Happened One Night, Couzens Cafeteria, 8, 10. Saturday - Dames, Arch. Aud., 7; The Gay Divorcee, Arch. Aud., 9:05; Day for .Night, Aud. A, 7, 9:15; The Har- rad Experiment, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30, 9:30; It Happened One Night, Couzens Cafeteria, 8, 10. Sunday - Singin' in the Rain, Aud. A, 7, 9; Native Land, Let There be Light, Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05. All weekend -- The Great Waldo Pepper, Michigan (665- 6290); Young Frankenstein, State (662-6264); Savages, Cam- pus (668-6416); The Four Musketeers, Fifth Forum (761- 9700); Murder on the Orient Express, The Stepford Wives, Hearts and Minds, Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, The Movies, l$riarwood (769-8780). Lenny Fifth Forum hero, Lenny Bruce, has cur- iE ~The Ia t e s t prevailn cul rently risen to the ultimate1 status of chic. Anyone previous- Miss Naivete tiptoes into the aesharing any relation with the exeien ih iiit ,n late comic, however slight. has feelings of inadequacy, djmade it well known, while it breezes out with a great deal of eems a intellectual-pus to have tenderness for her partner and sharebarucesn liberaif rankn love for her fellow classmates. conservatism a Of course, this is all non- Thus, the Lenny Bruce phe- sense, but the directors hoped nomenon has snowballed, and {it seems) to have won our has of late erupted into some-. sympathy by focusing on thewhat of a cultural expion. development of this singuiariy The Lenny Bruce "mystic" isl All-American female. currently presented with text-. But their feeble attempts do book clarity with the United not work, and the viewer must Artist production of "a Bobs depart not knowing whether to Fosse film" entitled, simpi and back. y personally, Lenny. The movie has been handled. -Sarah Polarek as one of those rare cinematic * * * events, a la Last Tango in It Happened One Night Paris. Employing the Michaelj Todd theory of limited access, Couzens Film Co-op Couzens Cafeteria Fri., Sat., 8, 10 At the beginning of the 47,,h AnnualAcademy Awards pres-s s entation last Tuesday, a year- by-year review named the past 46 films voted the best picturer2 of the year., Among them is it , TODAY AT 7 & 9 P.M. Happened One Night, which SAT.-SUN. AT brought well deserved praise to 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. the film has opened at "selected theatres" across the country at showcase prices.. With all the hype surrounding the film, it becomes requiredl viewing for all who claim in- terest in contemporary cinema. And to their dismay, it proves a dramatic disappointment. The film, in its stricv cly ie- mnat ic context, is extraordinary, particularly considering itis only Fosse's t hird film. But when one 'examines the direc- tor's characters thro'ugh the black and white cinemaiagraphy of Bruce' Surtees, we find only shallowness; not only :n Hoff-1 man's interpretation of Lenny, but in the entire present-1ast technique that Fosse rliies so heavily on. Julian B e r r y ' s screenplay strives desperately to become an active support that makes Fosse's film more than merely a pretentious tribute. -Jim Valk U presents Reefer Madness. AND Cocaine Comed (Mysteries of the Leaping Fish) TONIGHT, Fri., April 11 MLB:4 7:001 8:45, & 10:30 $1.25 - JOIN THE DAILY STAFF The Great Waldo Pepper Michigan The Great Waldo Pepper is good solid Saturday afternoon entertainment (or better yet,, Wednesday afternoon, w h e n aduls are admitted for one thin buclk), but definitely not the stuff of which dreams are made. In short, the aerial scenes are of . "edge of the seat" va- riety; however, the intrusive ground sequences never get off the ground. Robert Redford, in impressive matinee idol fashion, plays the same starry-eyed romantic hero ever in search of lost and/or never gained glory that we've all come to know and love through, w a t c hi n g "Action Movie" every Saturday after- noon. Redford's ideals never waver as he scratches a meager exis- tence from dangerous stunt fly- ing, all the while, dreaming of the glory of World War I's flying aces and the chance to battle Ernst Kessler, the great- est of them all, for the distinc- ion of the world's greatest yer. The entire film builds up (rather slowly at times) to their Itimate, inevitable showdown-- which occurs, incidentally, at the expense of the motion pic- ture crew that's filming the story of Kessler's flying career with he and Waldo Pepper (Red- ford) employed to perform the aerial stunts. In the course of this rather episodic film, Pepper witnesses several dramatic deaths of friends that result from his per- sistence in practicing his dying act. But in one highly melodra-. matic dialogue with the now bit- ter Kessler---a scene that un- comfortably summarizes Pep- per's theme-the "great" Waldo. Pepper recognizes the heroism I ' C; , t i i ; , .t t ' S 7 2 t t r s c v ,e f of flying and the moral neces- unknowns, with the exception of director Frank Capra in 1934. sity of his pursuing it. Susie Blakely, is pretty good. The fast-moving comedy, stars George Roy Hill (responsible Individual opinions about Sav- Claudette Colbert as Ellie An- for story and direction) makes ages are sure to be extremely drews, a stubborn heiress who this a more personal film -han. varied, so see it for yourself. tries every possible means to his preivous efforts (Butch (as-: -Joe McMullen spite her well-known father. She sidy, The Sting), as all the big- * * * escapes her father's dominion, shot Crits have poin ted out. -D y for Night and during her flight she en- Yet, Hill remains an eter- Cinema I, Aud. A counters the outspoken news- tainment" director and falters Fi.emat ,I7An:d. A paper reporter Peter Warne, badly when he tackles heavier Fri., Sat., 7, 9:15 pae yCakGbe tdym eks I think it would be difficult played by Clark Gable. themes. for anyone not to like a Fran- Romance develops baween Thusly, Pepper proves an ex- cois Truffaut film. His elegant this unlikely pair as they dis- citing two-fifty's worth when good nature has an infectious cover a life of hitchhiking and the camera takes to the sky but quality hard for any moviegoer tourist camps. falls flat. on Robert Redford 's pretty face wn grounded.' to resist. It Happened One Night en- -Chriy face when grounded. But is it really possible to do dures as a classic of the cinena -Chris Kochmanski more t h a n like Truffaut? 40 years since it was released. * Critics rage away pro and con Multiple viewings of this movie over the latest Fellini or Ku- cannot lessen its comely ;m- Savages brick, while there on the fence pact. Campus sits Truffaut, cloistered in leis --Joe McMu'lea S a v a g e s is simultaneously amorphous cotton candy films, * * * funny, seriously symbolic, off- whimsical and safe. . , beat, brilliant, and weird. It Day For Night is Truffaut's All the Irn s Aen makes its Midwest premier in paean to movie-making itself. It Law School Films Ann Arbor after playing in New is a fictionalized documentary 100 Hutchins Hall York and on the West Coast. of the trials and tribulations of Fri., 7, 9 In a forest, seen in black- putting together a motion vic- Robert Penn Warren's prize- and-white, are a clan of sav- ture-a sort of film within a winning novel, All the King's ages attired in their ritualistic film. Men, based on the rise and fall clay masks and feathers, ad The people involved portrav of Huey Long, was turned into smeared with mud. They are essentially themselves, although a film by Robert Rossen in preparing to make a human using fictitious names. Truffaut 1949. sacrifice when a croquette ball himself plays the director; pe- Men tells acomplicated ,tory falls from the sky into their rennial alter-ego Jean-Pierre of a self-made, righteous, coun- midst. Leaud is one of his stars, with try lawyer (Broderick Craw- Fascinated by the ball's per- Jacqueline Bisset and Jean ford), who cheats his way to po- fect, divine shape, they venture Pierre Aumont also figuring litical kingdom in a southern out of the forest to an abandoned nrominently. Naturally, Day For state. The film gets bogged Victorian mansion. The savages Nieht is impeccably made and down by incredible melodrama, discover a world of jewels, mu- verv enjoyable. .But that's all. and only occasionally offers sic, and clothes. Truffaut long ago abandrned psychological insight. The fM1 m jumps abruptly meaningful cinema: his films Consistency of dramatic struc- ahead to a croquette game on radiate all the charm in the ture-or of character revelation the lawn of the mansion. The world, but the master no longer -is nowhere to be found in the time is not definitely given, but takes risks, no longer reaches film. Crawford concentrates tre- several hints indicate roughly out. Rather. Truffaut seems con- mendous energy into his role, the 1920s. tent with his niche as a kind of but Rossen's screenplay (his Now seen in color are a group: will-o'-the-wisp, bewitching the own) fails to transfer from Mr. of elite society: the hostess, an mind and senses-but never the Warren's book any depth of un- English lord and lady, a capital- heart. derstanding of the characters. ist, a debutante, an eligible -Kim Potter A ost - Watergate audience young man, several young men *A * * m pig t We rgdthi ln- and ome, alesbananda Imight well find this film in- and women, a lesbian, and a The Harrad teresting. Ugly illustrations of transvestite. back-room spittoon politics and The mysterious croquette ball Exnerirnent ilid illuminations of howling interupts their dinner party and Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud. nolitical mobs abound. Hard- somehow affects them all ment- Fri., Sat., 7:30, 9:30 hoiled henchmen. and corrupt ally. Their irrepressible sexual A small Eastern college be- oliticos are a-dime-a-dozen. So desires and involvement with, comes the site for an unconven- that's where Bernstein and witchcraft cause them to re-' tional exercise in academia by Woodward got that title . . . gress, and by the end of the a dignified but "with-it" sociol- -Nathalie M. Walker film, they are all savages. ogy professor. In The Harrad , * * GENE WILDER " TERI GARR i a t k i f }j3 )j E 1 s i 7 k( C ii , > Somehow remaining a 1 o o f from the madness through most of the film is Julian, the song-. writer. He sits alone in the attic playing the cello.; James Ivory has molded the screenplay by former National Lampoon editors George Trow1 and Michael O'Donoghue into a strange fable about civilization. The dialogue at times is a bit to quasi-symbolic, and many' incidents are left unexplained.' The acting, done by New York1 Experiment, James Whitmore, who is usually a very fine ac- tor, looks ridiculous in this wholly unprofessional and for- gettable film. The experiment concerns the mating of students enrolled in the program, with Whitmore en- couraging the couples to develop a sexually (and otherwise) sat- isfying relationship. B u t of course the scrupulous heroine, who is all sugar and spice, throws a wrench into his plans. Jazz style progresses, yet the old and new both shine $y SUSAN WELKER, and RUTH SLINGSBY Jazz started back at the turn of the century with the straight- forward tradition of Dixieland -the music that the Preserva- tion Hall Jazz Band had car- ried through the years. But From that classic tradition has evolved a more expansive, broader form of jazz - such as displayed by the University Jazz Band. And as the two groups performed here this week, it be- came increasingly clear that jazz, in whatever form, is pre- sented in a unique chronology. Preservation Hall started with 3 relaxed, easy come-on - the rinky tink sound of an old wood piano combined with the pulse Vf a drum and a low mellowing :rumpet. Enter right: a dixie- and clarinet crying for atten-J .-+- to . 'I n- hnnn effects added interest. Perform- walking down a street, half liv- ing excellence was shown ing in another world, they had through arpeggios, chromatic- more to say than most of us ism and bent notes. The drum- have thought of yet. And they mer successfully augmented said it. the solos. The clarinet display- The University Jazz Band, ed perfection on the high notes, conducted by Edward L. Smith, and the audience responded with had completed the spectrum well-deserved eruptions of ap- Monday night. The group show- plause. ed proficiency on multiple in- Nobody handed you a list of struments for a tight, polished The Gay Divorcee Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sat., 9:05 Fred Astaire a n d Ginger Rogers made their debut as a dancing and romancing team in 1933's Flying Down to Rio, but the following year's The Gay Divorcee marked their first ac- tual starring dual venture. Divorcee is typically predict- able: Astaire d a n c e s and charms his way into Rogers' heart, but she must first obtain a divorce from her rarely, if ever, present husband. The lovers are aided and abet- ted by Edward Everett Horton, Alice Brady, and Erik Rodin (who steals the show as the bumbling "correspondent") as they establish a model for sup- porting actors in all subsequent Astaire-Rogers vehicles. Seen as a whole, their films attain the classic stature cri- tics and cultists have afforded them over the years. But when! seen individually, the musicals of Astaire and Rogers are mere- ly entertaining and decidedly lightweight. Divorcee is no ex- ception.I YetMark Sandrich seems the ideal director for Fred Astaire, as his turns on the dance floor, with and without the equally nimble Ginger Rogers, remain as breathtaking as ever. "The Continental," for its words and music won the Best Song Oscar, and as a giant production num- ber is the film's high point- alone making Divorcee well worth seeing. -Chris Kochmanski songs - it wasn't needed. Ev- ery song sounded brand new,! yet recognizable and centuries old - like a handed down story which takes on new meanings, new interpretations, new ex-t pressions with each telling. Willie Humphrey sways his his and creates such sweet, soft sounds with his clarinet that one is astounded when he suddenly whins up and down the stick with the sneed of a. effect. They functioned at their best while playing hand, fast! tunes. "Spinning Wheel" was a great arrangement for the Jazz Band. The transitions were covered! well; the baritone sax was solid and one damn good tenor really succeeded with his licks. Capping off the evening was the Jimmy Wilkins Band, a professional group out of De- troit. Jimmv also commented .hmit :av. "We n 'Ond of rP.P-