Fri4ay, November 16, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 16, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Le Souffle Au Coeur Cinema II, Aud. A Sun., 7 & 9 Well, who ever thought incest could be funny? French director Louis Malle's Le Souffle Au Co- eur is actually a comedy based on that verboten subject - a comedy which sets out- to prove that yes, Virginia, sex with your mother can indeed be fun. Lea Massari portrays a bored upper-middle-class wife sick of her humdrum lifestyle - some- thing that seems a little puzzling, considering the household con- tains two thieves and an art forg- er. Nevertheless, she decides to pep up her life and that of her 15- year-old son by personally intro- ducing him to the fine points of lovemaking. Strange bedfellows, to be sure. But if you can sit through this weird plot and one of those run- of-the-mill weak endings, you'll see why Murmur received con- siderable praise at the Cannes Film Festival a couple of years back. You may also consider yourself a nominee for the Gross Film Lover of the Year Award. -DAVID BLOMQUIST A King in New York rind Portnoy's Complaint Friends of Newsreel, MLB, Aud. 3, 4 Fri., Sat., 7:15, 9:30 The brilliant master of cinema, Charles Chaplin, brings us a masterpiece made during his self - exile from the U. S. - A King in New York (1957). Written, scored, directed by, and starring Chaplin himself, King has unfortunately been an impossible film to obtain; it has never had a formal release in this country. Billed as "a satiric spoof of an American gone crazy," this pic- ture made in Great Britain is not to be missed. The lesser half of the double- feature is that triumph in bad taste, Portnoy's Complaint, star- ring Richard Benjamin and the shrieking Karen Black. With the exception of a hilarious perform- ance by Lee Grant as Mrs. Port- noy, this film should be shown only in men's restrooms where it belongs. It has taken a perfectly mar- velo'is book and destroyed it quite efficiently. -MICHAEL WILSON Frenzy UAC Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud. Fri., Sat., 7, 9:30 A necktie murderer stalks Lon- don in Hitchcock's most recent emerges on the screen as first- rate entertainment, with Laur- ence Olivier as Heathcliff and David Niven, Geraldine Fitzger- ald and Merele Oberon in lesser but convincing roles. Although the original story is a bit cut up and the whole thing was shot in America, Wyler's masterpiece is still a refreshing pause from the banal offerings coming out of Hollywood today. -MICHAEL WILSON Arsenic and Old Lace Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Fri., 7, 9:05 About the only thing this akawa is their captor, a man who is respectful of the British colo- nel's energy and determination and, at the same time, mystified by that same colonel's apparent eagerness to help the Japanese w:ir effort. Bridge Over the River Kwai is a gre-t film and exciting enter- tainment, powerfully acted by Guiness, Haiy-kawa, and Holden and masterfully directed by Da- vid Lean (Lawrence of Arabia, Dr. Zhivago). -JAMES HYNES Jeremy Michigan If you've ever been in love, if if you have to read it, the movie will seem choppy and preten- tious because of what it omits. Director Joseph Strick's liter- ary bent might be familiar to those who saw his castrated ver- sion of Tropic of Cancer earlier this semester. One wonders what drives him to try to turn the ac- knowledged great literature of the 20th century into pale sha- dows of their former selves on the screen. -PHILIP MIROWSKI Walking Tall State Theatre Hailed as this year's Billy UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Residential College ART FACULTY SHOW at the UNION GALLERY OPENING RECEPTION TUES.., NOV. 13 8-10 P.M. MUSIC by R.C. music ensembles cinemo weekend ABRAM KROL-BARBARA BRODSKY SUSAN CROWELL-EDWINA DROBNY 6RITA MESSENGER-DIBERT :: :::. flick, F r e n z y. No attractive young woman is safe while the psychopathic strangler is on the loose. Hitchcock's black humor shines in this well-acted thriller, which promises a tight, enthralling plot. Watch.for Hitchcock's well- known secretive appearances, first in the crowd of horrified onlookers at the beginning of the filh, and then possibly as the killer's mother. -STAFF W tihering Heights Cinema II, Aud. A Fri., 7, 9:30 There are many reasons why this film is still so alive after all these years: one of them is Greg Tol-nd's beautiful photog- raphy and another is Ben Hecht's snappy script. Directed by William Wyler in 1939, Bronte's Wuthering fleights macabre comedy has to recom- mend it is Cary Grant. Arsenic (1944) is a tribute to his talents. Josephine Hull plays an old lady who poisons people, and good-natured Cary finds out. Raymond Massey, perhaps still remembered best from the old Dr. Kildare series, has a feature role as Grant's cohort. -MICHAEL WILSON Bridge Over the River Kwai Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sat., 7, 9 Bridge Over the River Kwai can be viewed as an adventure epic, as a prison camp drama, or, most importantly, as a bril- liant study in the conflict of priorities. Alec Guiness gives one of his best performances as the colo- nel of captured British soldiers in World War II Burma. He sees his duty as protecting the wel- fare and morale of his men. In order to do that, he builds a stra- tegically important bridge for the enemy. William Holden is diametri- cally opposed as an American prisoner who sees his duty as de- stroying the bridge. Sessue Hay- you are in love, or if you are planning to be in love in the near future, don't see Jeremy. This film made a smash hit when it opened in New York a few months back but the whole pack- age is pure alligator tears - how anyone could like this charmingly nauseous indictment of youthful romance is beyond me. Jeremy is a cello player and the girl of his dreams is a danc- er; together they fall in and out of love for the first time. Half- way through the picture you be- gin to wish they would conceive a suicide pact and end the whole business in a big splash of car- bon monoxide. -NICHAEL WILSON UJlysses Cinema II, Aud. A S't., 7, 9:30 Ulysses is a very self-conscious adaptation of James Joyce's seminal novel. More so than other movies, the experience of viewing it is inextricably tied to the experience of reading the book. If you haven't read Ulysses first, then the movie will en- courage you to do so, as long as the dry, static scenes don't turn you off. On the other hand, A bdelicate balance' marks string quartet Jack, Walking Tall is a film that doesn't leave you feeling any- thing but amazement that pic- tures like this are still being made. Maybe if Johnny Cash had played the female lead it would have worked, but it comes off as just another violent vehicle for super-fascist Joe Don Baker, who gets his thrills kicking peo- ple for a big salary and rates as this year's "hot" box - offict talent. --MICHAEL WILSON Also . . The Campus presents The New Land. Cinema Guild features Straub's Chronicle of Anna Magdelina Bach Sunday at 7 and 9 in Arch. Aid. New World Media presents Yo Soy Chicano and Requiem 29 free tonight in UGLI-M'iltipur- pse Room at 8. Both films con- cern La Raza, and speakers from United Farm Workers and Far- :ih Strike Committee will be pre- sent. All interested ISRAELI DANCERS, contact Sue Baker, 761-8931. Come to a MASS MEETING Tues. 27 Nov. H I LLEL, 1429 Hill St. i s "GOOD E-V-E-N-l-N-G" mediatrics presents ALFRED H ITCHCOCK'S FRENZY The latest, greatest, chillingest thriller by the Master of .jhe Macabre Fri. and Sat. v n17:0and 9:30Not. Si.Aud. Nov. 16 and 17 $100 By KEN FINK The Tel Aviv String Quartet presented a program Wednesday night in Rackham Aud. boasting a diverse musical content span- ning the Mozart Clarinet Quintet with Yona Ettlinger playing the clarinet to the Bartok String Quartet No. 3. The quartet played with a most striking unity of interpretation, sounding as if all the members were of the same mind and dis- For review of the San Francis- co Mime Troupe, see Edit Page, opposite. playing a most delicate balance. The program begin with the dynamic Bartok Third, played with the conciseness that does true justice to Bartok's middle period. This is Bartok's shortest quartet, written in a continuous four movements that mainly con- sists of the development of a few motifs so that the actual form is closer to an ABAB design. It is this motific development that makes this a blatantly non- lyrical quartet. The quartet dis- plays much of Bartok's "flavor" in its ute of unusual tone colors and sonorities such as glissandi, pizzicati and sul ponticelli. The Bartok was followed by a magnificent performance of the Mozart Clarinet Quintet. This is one of the first major pieces in the clarinet renetoire and bares resemblance to Mozart's own clarinet concerto and oddly enough to a Beethoven clarinet- bassoon duo. Ettlinger and the quartet play- ed the quintet in a lyrical and strikingly romantic style. Ettlin- ger displayed a beautiful full- bodied sound that was blended with the quartet in a pleasing balance. The Schubert Quartet Op. 161 nrovided quite a contrast to the Bartok work in the same genre. Schubert does not concern him- self with short motific ideas but is a melodic genius in his em- ployment, of long spun-out lyrical phrases. The "tonal travelling" in the ouartet is done in a fascinating form "instant modulation" where Schubert, without going through a bridge section, immediately changes keys. The piece was played with a sensitive equili- brium both dynamically and in- terpretively. A THE BLACK WOMEN'S CAUCUS OF STOCKWELL HALL cordially invites everyone to GENESIS-The Opening and Dedication of the ROSA PARKS CULTURAL LOUNGE FROM "THE Dream, Came Struggle to Ronse Parks. Gwe'n Brooks. i* A NEW LAND... A NEW HOPE. y / EMIGRANTS" the Settlers' / Survive .. 'THE NEW LAND' IS WONDERFUL. DIRECTOR TROELL IS A FILM MATER.# -Pauline Kael, The NeN Yorker and the Trotter House Choir will be present. \J/ I * II STOCKWELL HALL'S MAIN LOUNGE SUNDAY, NOV. 18, 4:00 P.M. U- - Max von Sydow 0 Liv Ullmann "THE NEW LAND" w ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE-BEST FOREIGN FILM Etchings & Watercolors by NICOLE T. LEVIN Nov. 17th-Dec. 7th GALERIE JACQUES-2208 Packard America's funniest comedy team of the decade... Richie and Spiro... in. the absurd.last mving motion picture r -u,,ve dt me "A MAGNIFICENT ACHIEVEMENT THAT LEFT ME BREATHLESS WITH ADMIRATION AND AWE." -N.Y. Daily News "A Masterly exercise in film-making. A lovely and moving film. Uniform excellence."--N.Y. Times HurryFri., M . Tue. at 8pm. only Mlt End P S Sat. &~ Sun. at 1:30, 4:30, & 7:30 as M. TIAM 0-0 "JEREMY" HAS NOTHING GOING FOR IT EXCEPT THE PEOPLE WHO LOVE IT. BLACK ARTS and CULTURAL FESTIVAL RICH LITTLE.HERB VOLAND sBUCE KRAY . DIIAN WKLIAMS . STEWART RALEEY EA$TOMSMOTHERS NATHMA HAZE wow 808 , SEINSTEIN " 5r 808EMENEGGER EASTMAN COLOR " A F~fE iMS UMEW 0 now yoU can SEE anything you want M at .. ARLO GUTHRIE COLOR by DeLuxe United Artists Fl ! 9 0 I November 16-18 RI DAY ... a weekend o Opening Reception- 4-7:30 p.m. and dance by bi Black Art and Photograph Exhibit-4-7:30 p.m. performers. All events FREE Gospel Concert-8 p.m. featuring "THE TROTTER SINGERS" All events held i "ALTAR CHOIR OF SECOND BAPTIST" corner of East U Hill streets. SATURDAY * Black Art and Photography Exhibit-10 o.m.-8 p.m. * Black Craft Demonstrations-10 a.m.-7 p.m. * Poetry Reading-2-4 p.m. 0 Jazz Concert- 8 p.m. feoturing "WENDELL HARRISON AND TRIBES" "THE BLUE MIST" Df art, music, dram, rck artists and E. n East Quadrongle, niversity and "A stinging, zinging, swinging sockC-it-to them doooey. Will leove yeyl helpless with Iai4gter" -Westinghouse Radio xIv Special late show Fri. & Sot. 10:30 p.m. Sep. Adm. -IM It's about the- - f time I I I I rz _ :A I. . C l IL~nAY