Friday, Oct6,er 19, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Friday, Oct~h~r 19, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Le Joti Mai Cinema II, Aud. A Sun., 7, 9 Chris Marker's 1966 Le Joli Mai, although a little disorganiz- ed and somewhat long, is a splen- did example of French cinema- verite. Le Joli Mai is billed as a docu- mentary about Paris and its peo- ple in spring." But it is more than that - it is not just an- other travel film about Paris, stuffed to overflowing with shots of the Eiffel Tower. Instead, it is a fascinating study of the daily lives of Parisians from all walks of life. Simone Signoret and Yves Montand narrate the picture. Music is by Michel Legrand. -DAVID BLOOMQUIST Across the Pacif ic Cinema II, Aud. A Sat., 7, 9 A thriller spy movie from John Huston, master of the twisting plot. Humphrey Bogart as soldier Leland is kicked out of the Ar- my for theft, but that's really only a ruse to allow him td work undetected as an Army intelli- gence agent. Sydney Greenstreet seems to be an urbane, dignified college professor, but is really a spy for the Japanese in the last few days before Pearl Harbor. -WILLIAM MITCHELL . An Autumn Afternoon Cinema II, Aud. A Fri., 7, 9 One of Jspan's finest and most sensitive directors, Yasujiro Ozu emerged as a critically - acclaim- ed talent with his immortal Tok- yo Story in 1953. Since his death in 1963 many of Ozu's films have been repeatedly shown and ap- plauded for their lyrical beauty and precise reality. An Autumn Afternoon is not to be missed; it is a fl Awlesssly ar- ticulated work of art. --MICHAEL WILSON Kid Galahad and Angels with Dirty Faces UAC-Medihtrics, Nit. Sci. Aud. Sat., 7, 9:30 Kid Galahad (1937) is by far one of the best boxing dramas ever made, starring the immor- tal Edward G. Robinson and Bette Davis. Angels With Dirty Faces, also by Hollywood director Michael Curtiz, is an unprecedented tale of fear in New York with the Dead End Kids and James Cag- ney matching' wits against Fath- er Pat O'Brien. The final scene in which Cagney breaks down . . . . . . . . . . cin'ema eeken~d before going to the electric chair is unbelievable. -MICHAEL WILSON Yellow Submarine UAC-Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud. Fri., 7, 9:30 There is no animation around to compare with the technical vir- tuosity achieved in Yellow Sub- marine. Although the film is a few years old and the Beatles have since broken up it seems nothing can break the spell Sub- marine casts over its audience. The songs are of course jewels and the story is very, very amus- ing, Listen for Love Story author Erich Segal's crisp dialogue in the middle of all the cartoon fun and you will realize he does have talent. -MICHAEL WILSON illicit Interlude Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Fri., 7, 9 Ingmnr Bergman is known pri- marily for the deep and dark soul - searching of his meta- physical dramas, but he also can be light and lyrical as in Illicit Interlude, set against the natur- al beauty of the Swedish country- side. It concerns a ballerina who discovers the diary of a former lover tragically }killed during the s'imnmer of their romance. By re- living a boat cruise they took to- gether, she is able to make sense of her present love life. -MICHAEL WILSON The Spider Stratagem Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sat., Sun., 7, 9 Made for Italian television be- fore The Conformist and Last Tango in Paris, The Spider Stra- tagem is probably Bernardo Ber- tolucci' s simplest and most acces- sible film. In it, a young man returns to the town where his father, a local hero, was murdered by Fascists during the war, only to discover that his father was responsible for planning his own killing. This movie is not your conven- tional who-dun-it, but the untang- ling of the intricate web of events and reasons makes it quite interesting. -MICHAEL WILSON Black Film Festival Friends of Newsreel, MLB, Aud. 3, 4 Fri., 7:15, 9:30 The Landlord is an hilarous farce about a wealthy white boy, trying to make it in Pearl Bai- ley's neighborhood. Beau Brid- ges co-stars with Bailey in this film which hits home, exposing hypocrisy. The much - applauded, seldom- seen documentary Malcolm X, narrated by actor James Earl Jones, shares the bill with Land- lord in what promises to be a dynamite double-feature. Sat., 7:15, 9:30 Superfly is the story of one man trying to make it out of the dope- pushing world with his wallet and spirit intact. It is an original, en- tertaining film with musical high- lights by Curtis Mayfield. Across 110th Street is far more realistic, however, in its por- trayal of some of New York's Harlem inhabitants and their sur- vival-of-the-fittest code. Anthony Quinn plays a detec- tive on the trail of Tony Franci- osa, a sadistic Italian gangster. The picture works remarkably well as a vehicle for Quinn's multi-talented, washed-up police- man-the best role he has had in years. Sun., 7:15, 9:30 Book of Numbers, directed by Raymond St. Jaques, is the story of two hustlers organizing a num- bers game in the ghetto of a small southern city. It is well-conceived and acted, though the film seems to drag somewhat' toward the end. Herbert Biberman's classic Salt of the Earth is shown concurrent- ly with Numbers. -MICHAEL WILSON Endless Summer and Visions of Eight Fifth Forum Double Feature Endless Summer, one of the few financially successful docu- PROBLEM PREGNANCY COUNSELING PREGNANCY TESTING no charge SUMMIT MEDICAL CENTER 1-272-8450h approved by National Organization for Women mentaries, is by no means a technically great hour and a half of film-yet it is still a fascinat- ing and totally relaxing motion picture. The story is simple: we travel along with two surfers making a round - the - world search for a "perfect" wave. Endless Sum- mer is, in fact, really at its best when the camera turns toward the ocean and the attempts of the surfboard aficionados to master waves from California to South Afric a. -DAVID BLOMQUIST Visions of Eight, which Time called "Cheap-shots of Eight," presents the Munich Olympics as viewed by eight famous directors. For those of you who are im- pressed by that sort of thing, the directors are Foreman, Ichika- wa, Lelouch, Ozerov, Penn, Pfleghar, Schlesinger, and Zetter- ling. There are no new points-of- viewer insights, only the same slow-motion and trick editing that you can catch each week on the N.F.L. films. Hardly worth pay- ing for, don't you think? -ROBERT BIANCO The Outfit Michigan After a long, hard climb up the movie success ladder that cul- minated in his portrayal of the family lawyer in The Godfather, Robert Duvall now has his pick of scripts, co-stars and direc- tors. Why on earth hesconsentedto do this violent mess about Ma- fia money we'll never know. Kar- en Black tries to co-star but does little more than cry a lot. -MICHAEL WILSON Also ... I Could Never Have Sex With Any Man Who Has So Little Re- gard For My Husband at the Campus. Screenplay by Dan Greenburg. Jesus Christ Superstar at the State. Join The Daily CIRCU LATION DEPT. ®.... . Come in Gnv afternoon 420 Maynard I ; i , ' , .. Y 4 "A HILARIOUS MOVIE proving that sex is tunnier than anything else"--Smith, Cosmopol- tan Coen 6:45 Shows at 7 & 9 p.m- RATED R Sat. & Sun. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. the mOvie: at BRIARWOOP Adjacent to J.C. Penney " 769-8780 f 1-94 & S. State, Ann Arbor Daily Early Bird Matinees (Except Sunday & Holidpys) the movies 1 4:05, 6:05 8:05, 10:10 the movies 2 Jackal 5 & 9:30 Pete 7:40 the movies 3 at 11:30, 2:20, 5:10 & 8 the movies 4 Moon 6:30 & 10:10 Tiger 8:25 A TOUCH OF GLASS "DAY OF THE JACKAL" PLUS GEORGE SEGAL GLENDA JACKSON "PETE N' TILLIE" Starring Walter Mathau, Carol Burnett PG WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS CAMELOT Starring Richard Harris, Vanessa Redgrav Technicolor Panavision G HILLEL WEEKEND at CAMP TAMARACK FRIDAY, OCT. 26-SUNDAY, OCT. 28 TOPIC: THE NEW WAR IN ISRAEL AND AMERICAN JEWISH IDENTITY WHAT ARE OUR RESPONSIBILITIES AND PRIORITIES TOWARD ISRAEL? Let's get -away for a few days--release some frus- trations and tension--and put our heads together. RESOURCE PEOPLE: RABBI RICHARD LEVY, UCLA RABBI NORMAN FRIMER, BROOKLYN COLLEGE TO REGISTER CONTACT HILLEL, 1429 Hill St., 663-4129 by Oct. 24 Ryan & Tatum O'Neil in "PAPER MOON" PLUS-A "tSAVj1 E T HE T IGE R" The Movies at Briarwood will open at 10 A.M Adult Admission $1.00 'til 1:30 P.M. Mon. thru Sat. new morning media cooperative presents Weekend Festival of Recent Bla'ck Fil $2.00 &:63 EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY and WWWW Present Edgar SPECIAL GUEST: FOCUS Oct. 30-8:00 P.M. Bowen Ficidhouse $5 Advance $5.50 at the Door TICKETS ON SALE AT: Ann Arbor Music Mart J.L. Hudson's, Huckleberry Party StorejMcKenny Union THIS WEEKEND FRI.-SAT.-SUN. BOB GIBSON A MUST FOR ALL SERIOUS MOVIEGOERS. Donald J Mayerson, Cue Magazine AN INCREDIBLE FEAT. A HEROIC FILM. - Liz Smith, Cosmopo to- Prodiuced by' Stan Ma gu i E- t , ';candcer. David L. Wolper " Originai Music by Henry Mancini PLUS- ENULES"IRAVES FO THE "EO9LESS SUMMER" "CONTINUOUS EXCITEMENT "BRILLIANT... A PERFECT ...HYPNOTIC BEAUTY... MOVIE OUTOFSIGHT." BUOYANT FUN.' m1 -New Yorker -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times His name has been synonymous with the folk boom of the sixties, the Gate of Horn, Gibson Camp, etc. He's back and better than ever. 141 Hill TRETI SI ASA I . I TONI a NOW SHOWING! OPEN DAILY AT 12:45 SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. UAC-DAYSTAR Presents 2 HOMECOMING CONCERTS ... j Tbb: i.A this friddwy Oct. 19 hill aud. IGHT! MALCOLM X b. May 19, 1925-assassinated Feb. 21, 1965 -TONIGHT- M alcolm X "staggering adapatotio1of the autobiography." "bril- liantly constructed documentary . . . it stands as a vital record of a man of our time." "immensely powerful and admirably responsible . . . extra- ordinary footage captures the quality of Black Life in America." -and- The Landlord Beau Bridges, Lee Grant, Diana Sands, Pearl Bailey. An independently-minded rich white boy buys on inner-city tenement, with a mind to convert it into a "swinging" townhouse. His involvement with the ghetto residents of "his" builidng,-however, changes his mind. Like most films dealing with relations be- tween the races, it is a "sleeper," but Diana Sands and Pearl Bailey performances should "awaken" any audiences that see this film. -TOMORROW-Saturday, Oct.20 Superf ly a film you may think you've seen. "the one to see: an intelligent, perceptive, fast-paced movie. A solid script, solid acting, a musical score by Curtis May- field. It is a very important movie."-ABV-TV. "brilliant. It has a solid, tense plot, eye-catching settings, sex, whirlwind pacing."-Harper's-and -The New York Times: "A briliantly idiomatic film. Its gut pleasures are real and there are a lot of them; a very good movie." -and- Across 110th Street Instant recognition of its stunning "action-values" overlooked the exceptionally fine and sensitive B I a c k performances, particularly by men under pressure, interacting for their survival. Black boost the Syndicate's gross from its Harlem operations for a week, and the Italians respond with total war. -SUNDAY-Oct. 21 I show begins at 8 p.m. with RADIO KING and his COURT OF RHYTHM with The Soulful Soulmates $3 .50-4. 50-5.00-5.50 reserved seats '1 I "THE INCOMPARABLE KING OF THE BLUES" GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE Book of Numbers Two hustlers organize numbers game in the ghetto of a small Southern city in the 1930's. White cops are inclined to toler- ate the "nigger pool," but the Syndicate is not. Vital, ironic and violent performances in a film totally controlled by Blacks; directed by Raymond St. Jacques. ALL SHOWS 7:15 & 9:30 p m. $1.25 single admission; $2 double-feature; $4 for all five major films in the ® iu' MAMIIM air I I III