F=riday, April 1$, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page rive Friday, April 18, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five cinema Pick of the week : Shampoo What's playing thi The Movies, Briarwood A feast of new commerc It's .a shame that Hal Ashby weekend, with the Movies at B never seems to get solidly writ- selection of motion picture pr ten material to direct from. In classic, 2001, returns for an Shampoo, Ashby's cinematic viewing. All together, a good' technique is again revolutionary The much awaited Robe and impeccable. But although laboration Shampoo arrives Robert Towne and Warren Beat- Arborites the chance to decide ty's screenplay tries awfully fate of this Hal Ashby film. hard, the only impression it The entire weekend schedu leaves behind is a perplexed Friday-Shadows of OurI "So what?" 7, 9, An American in Paris, Beatty portrays a top Bever- ly Hills hairdresser trying to Space Odyssey, Nat. Sci. Aud. keep up simultaneous affairs Saturday-Pride and Pr with first two and then three of Taming of the Shrew, Aud. A, his customers (Julie Christies, W. Cafeteria, 9, 2001: A Spa Goldie Hawn, and Lee Grant). 7, 10. Inevitably, of course, the wom- Sunday-Take Me Out t en meet up with each other, the Charulata, Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05 facade of alibis crumbles, and All weekend-The GreatN Beatty's sex life falls apart. 6290), Janis, State (662-6264), And that's the problem with (668-6416), Lenny, FifthF this film: it's perfectly predict- Hearts and Minds, Murdero able right from frame one. Pop- Doesn't Live Here Anymore, ular fiction for years has brought us the sad tales of la- 8780). dies and gentlemen trying to burn the candle at both endsw.l the and getting scorched. Shampoo who tries to crawl ito the neither poses nor answers the grave with her dead child, the question any differently. anguished father who has lost Beatty, Hawn, Christie, and his family and his home to the Grant go through the perform- bomb, and the young wife who ance motions quite adequately. has only a photo and casket by And, naturally, Ashby's catchy which to remember her hus- style - including the interest- band. But the war wasn't that sim- ing use of a strobe light to em- ple, and Davies breeds from phasize a kietic sequence - the source of contempt, inter- keens the picture watchable. utngfootage of widows and Yet when the final fadeout cutting expressing their per- rolls around, all the hard work orphansepress intervpew- still seems quite in vain. Un- wsna gny withian ierew fortunately, there's no sulbstance with Gen. William Westmnore- 's a sdsta land explaining that the Vet- to Shamoo - it's all su namese don't value life as do with no soap. Westerners weekend 'Yeoman' falls short with s Cinema Weekend cial films arrive this cinema Briarwood offering an excellent roduct. And Stanley Kubrick's other well deserved round of weekend for a movie. rt Towne-Warren Beatty col- at Briarwood, affording Ann e for themselves the aesthetic ule looks like this: Forgotten Ancestors, Aud. A, Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05, 2001: A , 7, 10. ejudice, Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05, 7, 9:15, Serpico, Bursley Hall ace Odyssey, Nat. Sci. Aud., o the Ball Game, Aud. A, 7, 9, 5. Waldo Pepper, Michigan (665- Last Days of Man on Earth Forum (761-9700, Shampoo, on the Orient Express, Alice The Movies, Briarwood (769- of the universe. Stanley Kubrick produced 2001 in 1968 in collaboration withI author Arthur C. Clarke. Since? that time, "Also Sprach Zara- thustra" and "The Blue Danube Waltz" have become virtually completely associated with the film by the public. 2001 offers the ultimate jour- ney through time and space, the intellect, and its evolution. -Joe McMullen * * * Taming of the Shrew Cinema II, Aud. A Sat., 7, 9:15 Franco Zeffirelli's Taming of the Shrew has little to do with Shakespeare and lots to do with slapstick. The film is a totally wild abstraction of the play, with the famous Burtons turned loose on each other. Spurred on by Zeffirelli's di-, rection, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton race madlyI through the film, inflicting phy- sical violence upon each other at every opportunity. Shake- speare's text gives way to shrieking and sweating. All of the performers ham it up, and it is in their extravagant over- acting that the sheer theatrical gusto of the film resides. But the rollicking pace be- comes tedious. Those antici- pated speeches of Shakesperean clarity and eloquence never come. The movie refuses to settle down to good, Shakesper- can comedy. The lush Renais- sance decor and elaborate cos- tumes hardly compensate for this real lack of substance. Yet, however distant from the original play, the first half of the movie provides much fun which even the most pained scholar should be able to ap- preciate. -N ithalie M. Walker * * * 4, ,4mr Noan inPalris Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Fri., 7, 9:05 Gene Kelly pretty well sums 1n) the content of An American in Paris when he sings, "I got rhvthm, I got music, I got my girl." Kelly, as an American World War IT veteran trying to be an artist in Paris. lives with a pre- beatnik jar' ninnist and courts Sa French girl (Leslie Caron, in her first screen annearance) wtho returns his affection btt his commitments elsewhere. The film's musical renditions were innovative in their d a v and still have quite a bit of aneal. "Who could ask for a-rvthinP more?" If you like musicals at all, ou should find A American in Paris enter- ta inin g. i overly stage By ANDREW ZERMAN two - dimensional characters sation, musically, comically or ; ens "gaily tripping and lightly Everything about the Gilbert whose personalities can't be de- dramatically. skipping" around the stage, the andvSullivan Society's new pro- veloped in the songs because However, there wouldn't be quality of the cast, the direction duction of Yeoman of the Guard they all sound the same. If the Gilbert and Sullivan societies and the orchestra was apparent. is graceful, lilting, well-perform- satire were more stinging, if all over the world if people Relentless British decorum ed and so perfectly neat and the wit were sharper, if the didn't find the operettas peren- may inhibit excitement but proper as to be more than a singers didn't always seem to nially fresh and appealing. Yeoman demands it and this little bit sterile and sometimes be singing about nothing, plot These devotees, who are a dedi- company provides it. The cast cloyingly precious. It is all so and characterization wouldn't cated bunch, must not be both- has no seriously weak link and carefully stylized and directed. a couple of very strong ones. Every chorus member knows............................... William Kinnucan does justice exactly where to go on stage to...... to the show's best role, Jack look puzzled or delighted or Point, with his ingratiating per- frightened each time Mr. Gilbert If the satire were more stinging, if the wit sonality and fine voice. Julia and Mr. Sullivan bring them out . . Broxholm doesn't let the senti- for no reason at all. The show tcere sharper, if the singers didn't always see, to mentality of her part prevent progresses like clockwork or a her from giviing a credible per- department store window: me- e singing about nothing, plot an caracter- formance and her luscious voice chanically. ization wouldn't matter so much. But in Yeo- is the show's treasure. Gilbert and Sullivan's operet- In the hokey role of Wilfred, tas have lasted one hundred then', the humor is predictable and the satire H. Don Cameron is the strongest years primarily because of their usually tame. We're left with a harmless oper- actor. His numbers with Phoebe lyrics, but trained opera voices and Jack Point are as enter- do not constitute the best me- etta, guaranteed to never reach across the or- taining as anything in the show. diurn through which to transmit chestra pit and create a sensation musically, Credit for all that neatness, intricate rhymes. Professional which, in fairness, I should companies performing G & S Corn ically Or (dramatically. call polish and professionalism, can probably overcome this goes to directors Clark Suttle challenge, but i this production...............................................:Ei. and Susan Morris. The beauti- it was not. Many lyrics, espe- ful costumes and attractive cially in ensemble numbers, lighting brought an appropriate were lost, even in the second matter so much. But in Yeoman, ered by two and a half hours fairy tale atmosphere to the row. the humor is predictable and the of patter songs and they should show. Unfortunately, the same Those complicated lyrics, con- satire usually tame. We're left find this Yeomen delightful. can't be said about the set taining endless rhymes on with a harmless operetta, guar- Even to a sourpuss like myself, which, for some reason, looked "ivity" and such sounds, are anteed to never reach across the who quickly got tired of all the two-dimensional even though it heaped on an absurd plot and orchestra pit and create a sen- pointed pinkies and fair maid-! wasn't. -- - - -- ----- SPLUSRATED4s t3()SCHP N DALE-A. 3020 Woshtenow °.reP.)6-41 Dial 434-1782 TECHN COLOR Friday at 7 & 9 p.m. Friday-Sat.-Sun ~ ~ Sat -Sun. at 1-3-5-7-9 1-3-5-7-9--Open 12:45 4th HIT WEEK! THE FUTURE rxlw * .....is cancelled! WALT DISNEY MOLNAST DAYS OF PRODUCTIONS presents -N EARTH . t .Special Saturday Midnit Show! productiton f ., s .; l -David Blomqgist IHearts and Minds The Movies, Briarwood } With a sense of moral corn- mitment and striving decency, Peter Davies' Hearts and Minds stands as a cry of ontrapee against the indignation of the1 It is that prevailing mentality that still pollutes influential< ideologies today-merely afford- ing one the comfort of con- firming previously existing sus- picions. -Jim Valk t * * It i i I It I It ,t j l a i j a 1 t ,, i 1 l i l I J i U.S. involvement in Vietnam. 2001: A Space C Employing the documentary framework to the pinnacle, dys Davies goes beyond merely ex- Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud. posing the lunacy of the no-win Fri., Sat., 7, 10 s war-he rubs our noses in the In the year 2001, commercials corrupted mentality that de- spaceliners transport mystifiedt ceived the American people passengers from the earth tos from its very conception. the revolving space station, and The film is an American saga then on to the moon, wheret of lies and deceptions that start- scientists have established the I ed with Truman and continued I first self-supporting colony. I through with Nixon, exhibiting It is on the moon that ex- proof in the compact form of a nlorers discover evidence of lifex chronology of shame that stood in the universe alien to earth.L as standard policy through five Escavated in the crater Tychor administrations. is obelisk identical to the slab From the corridors of Wash- first encountered on earth byi ington to the villages of Saigon, man's anthropoid ancestors mil-v the film is a disgesting truth lions of years earlier.r that will reek in the hearts and To investigate the obehsk'st minds of those who witness it. meaning, two astronauts em- f The impact of the film is two- bark on a seven-month journeyt fold. The insane ideologies that to Juniter, the source of somec put us there still exist, from a sort of communications with thet ritualistic hero parade for a slab on the moon.C former prisoner of war who be- 20001: A Space Odyssey is thec lieved and still believes in the nltimate in s c i e n c e fiction American involvement to the ^inema. The future it portrays r hawkish nhilosophv of former is not remote at all, a mere 26s presidential consultant W a It years away. ,c Rostow, who was instrumental Though the space travel of I in holding the film from release the year is primitive next tod until just recently. "Star Trek." since warp drive, But the real crimes are has not yet been develoned, it against the people-the mother offers a trip into the infinity Serpico Bursley Hall Enterprises Bursley West Cafeteria Sat., 9 Sidney Lumet's Serpico is one of his most provocative movies. It is the story of the New York{ City detective, Frank Serpico, who in 1970 blew the whistle on graft and corruption within the New York Police Depart- ment, leading to the Knapp Commission hearings and the biggest shake-up in the depart- ment's history. Al Pacino (Serpico) performs superbly as a driven, Dostoyev- skian figure, rebelling against the sleaziness a n d laziness seening into American life. He adds depth to the portrait of the headed, sandaled cop who istens to Bach and takes ballet lessons. Actually, given the screen- play, Pacino's ability to present us with anything beyond the moral-do-gooder-stereotype, is quite remarkable. There simply is not much speculation any- where 'in the film about the motives that sustained Detec- tive Serpico, and made him re- fuse the bribes and corruptions to which his fellow officers suc- cumbed. Yet Pacino enables us, through his performance, to be outraged and to feel Serpico's outrage as well. | Only in retrospect does one realize how little analysis of situation and character the film contains. Actors who fault shal- low roles as their demise would do well to study Pacino's tri- umph in this less-than-perfect part. -Nathalie M. Walker I I J (4 t E { { i t t 1 -Joan Ruhela Duck'soup Couzens Film Co-op Purple Room, Couzens Sat., 8, 10 Hopefully all the film groups on campus will quit showing Marx Brothers films at such r e g u l a r intervals so that "Cinema Weekend" reviewers will not have to cover them over and over again. What can one say about Duck Soun, perhaps the best but still typical Marx Brothers film, that is witty, concise, and hasn't al- ready been said in this column in so short a space? To recap the storyline would be nonsense since Duck Soup's plot is . . . just that: nonsense. A more open - minded critic might find political symbolism and irony amidst the manic go- ings on, but I doubt whether that was Groucho's, Chico's, Harpo's or director Leo Mc- Carey's intention all the same. PROFESSOR CONDUCTS STUDY: 'Exorcist': A By JIM VALK tion its merits, as studio execu- Few films in motion picture tives will stoop to virtually any history have stirred so much low in order to boost box-office contraversity as William Fried- grosses. In an attempt to sepa- kin's adaptation of William rate fact from fiction surround- Peter Blatty's The Excorist. ing The Exorcist, Professor Released December 26, 1973, it Frank Beaver of the University took only a matter of weeks be- of Michigan Speech department fore the entire country was ex- organized a survey team last posed to this cinematic and so- year to collect reactions on the cial phenomenon. Wide spread film. reports of faintings, vomitings Equipped with a detailed and other physical and emotion- questionnaire, the team hiked al reactions to the film were to Briarwood when the film! quickly publicized by the mass opened there last winter and be- media, making "exorcism" a' household word. gan to assemble mass samp- But as with any slick Holly- lings of data from some 350 wood production, one must cau- persons who had viewed the, 1u rightf film. Although the actual number of persons to leave the theatre before the conclusion proved to be highly exaggerated - on- ly 26 during 10 showings, the number of persons who experi- enced some degree of shock or I fear while viewing the film was! significant .Of those who filled | out the questionnaire, 31.8 per cent fell into this category, with most recalling the graphic scenes near the end of the film as the chief cause of tension. I From the eeneral comments, the study points out that "those t who were shocked by the gra- phic material in The Exorcist accented the events on the screen as real or potentially real." Some admitted to "be- I lieving every second of it." Re- occuring adjectives that de- scribed the audio - visual effects of the film included "nausent-I ing," "gory," "unnerving," and "unfamiliar." Of those who claimed to ex-: nerience no fear or shock during the film (68.2 per cent), the prevailing exnlanation was fa- miliarity with the material. Many had read the book or had been informed as to the content of the film. The other common resoronseE by those claiming no fear was "T could not really nictlre it as a real-life situation." Many cit- ed the elaborate make-un as stretching the film beyond the , realm of believability, claim- ' 1 folly have been incredibly tortuous." But Friedkin's use of an all-out visual freak show for cheap screams, he claimed, "it saved the film from being an unbear- able experience." Two months later, Beaver dis- tributed a follow-up question- naire in his film courses and to several adult groups. Over half ofhthose whoreturned the form had avoided the film,I many because of reports on content or production quality. Only 21 of the several hundred respondents had stayed away because of fear or religious be- liefs. One 21-year-old woman stated that she had read the book but thovnght that the film would be very unpleasant. "A book can be put down and picked up again, but a movie is too encom- passing." she said. "People don't like to be sub- ie'ted to a film experience where thev are at the mercv of the director," Beaver explain- ed. "You can put a book down, but you can't put a film down." "As a case study in fear and manic," the survey concludes, "The Exorcist was more fad than fright." What Frank Beav- er's study confirms is the no- tion that perhaps lingered in the hck of all our minds: that the film was an overpublicized event that exploited a vast mi- nority of adverse reactions to the film. Tv, theend rulthe uventivre an- m. a