Friday, December 7, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Notorious Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Fri., 7, 9 Alfred Hitchcock directed this intriguing espionage - thriller with Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman in 1946; it stands as one of the best Hitchcock pic- tures ever made. Cary must let Bergman pre- tend to fall in love with the evil Claude Rains and marry him be- cause the U. S. government says so - even though poor Grant is madly in love with the beauti- ful actress himself. You will marvel at the subtle direction and the heartbreaking relationships between the stars. Rains is unforgettable as the mother - dominated Nazi who finds out after it's too late that he is being duped by Bergman. Don't miss this film - there have been hundreds of imitations but Notorious is the real thing. -MICHAEL WILSON McCabe and Mrs. Miller Friends of Newsreel, MLB Fri., 7:15, 9:30 Robert Altman is probably the greatest working commercial feature director in America, a fact only dimly being realized as such films as MASH, Brewster McCloud and McCabe and Mrs. Miller are shown and re-shown on college campuses. These films age gracefully, and, most amazingly, Altman is not a one-theme director. He molds the most shop-worn gen- res of film fiction into forms that allow the audience to think for itself once again. McCabe is Altman's revisionist Western. There are the obliga- tory chase and shoot-out scenes, replete with saloons and whore- houses. But there are also capi- talists and entrepreneurs, ex- ploited Chinese, homilies on wo- men's rights, ambivalence, and the songs of Leonard Cohen. Best of all, unlike the Westerns of Sam Peckinpah, there is a sense of the frailty of all hu- man life. See it. -PHILIP MIROWSKI Monkey Business Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sat., Sun., 7, 9:05 One should never miss the chance to see the Marx Brothers on screen, larger than life and sans commercials. Monkey Business is one of the better Marx films, ranking just slightly behind Duck Soup and A Night at the Opera. The film (Paramount, 1931) casts the brothers as stowaways, and pro- vides them with more than am- ple material. Watch out for the customs scene and Harpo's solo a; a puppet. This movie, unfortunately, doesn't have Margaret Dumont, but it also doesn't have the hor- rible "young love" sideplot which hampered so many of their later movies. -ROBERT BIANCO Monsieur Verdoux Friends of Newsreel, MLB Sat., 7:15, 9730 Although not seen at press time, Monsieur Verdoux is ru- mored to be unadulterated, vin- dictive Charlie Chaplin in one of his finest moments as an aging, murderous Frenchman. Made in 1947, Verdoux, like many of the later Chaplin pic- tures, had difficult distribution proble~ms. Many felt the master was sacrificing comedy for phi- losophy in his later years and wouldn't give him a tumble. Friends of Newsreel should be comolimented for their policy of continuing to show later period Chaplin films in the face of pur- chasing problems. -MICHAEL WILSON The Fox Friends of Newsreel, MLB Sat., 7:15, 9:30 The Fox (1968) a screen adap- t.tion of the D. H. Lawrence no- vella, is the story of two intel- lectual young women who try to run a farm together until a fox gets into their chicken house and a man appears at their door. Sandy Dennis and Anne Hey- wood are the two women, and both give fine performances, as does Keir Dullea playing the young man. Special credit should also go to director Mark Rydell for cre- ating an evocative sense of mood, achieved mainly through beautifully photographed images, all held together by a spare, haunting theme played on solo flute. -WILLIAM MITCHELL Oscar Wilde Friends of Newsreel, MLB Fri., 7:15, 9:30 A courtroom drama about a sex scandal, Oscar Wilde may unfortunately force the viewer into a state of catatonic bore- dom. Robert Morley, playing the great author Wilde somehow holds the film together with a flawless performance, while Ralph Richardson enacts the role of prosecuting attorney. The film's faults lie in the hands of director Gregory Rat- lowe in Robert Altman's latest and greatest motion picture. Gould's performance will re- mind you of his funny roles be- fore he began making all those terrible flops which almost drained his talent. The Long Goodbye is a com- plicated mystery mix-up involv- ing the beautiful Nina Van Pal- landt (Clifford Irving's ex-) in a series of plot twists that remind one of Bogart's Big Sleep. It is no coincidence that both films share the same super-cool detec- tive and unexplained murders. Altman is trying to recapture the 1940's thriller genre here, and Cinema II schedule Not seen at press time Wild Strawberries (I n g m a r Bergman, 1958). Fri., 7 and 9 in And. A. The Kremlin Letter (John Hus- ton, 1969). Sat., same time and place. Madame Bovary (Rene Clair). Sun., subtitled. Also ..+. The Michigan Theater presents American Graffiti, a look at the rockin' boppin' early Sixties .% X, . . . . . Cinema weekeiid .. . ........................ .............................. . . ...................... off, whose eager hands seem to destroy every film they touch. He's the filmmaker who tried to shoot All About Eve in 1950 and won the hatred of star Bette Davis for the rest of his life. Wilde, shot in 1960, is a testi- monial to Ratoff's incompetence. -MICHAEL WILSON The Long Goodbye Fifth Forum Elliot Gould makes a well-de- served comeback as the popular private detective Phillip Mar- Arits fair to run Suanday So you won't be home from exams in time to do much Christ- mas shopping? Check out-the De- cember Art Fair this Sunday in the Michigan Union Ballroom for crafts from jewelry to leather- work. From 12 to 6 p.m. artists will display their work and will wel- come questions on their crafts. Prices are often negotiable, and haggling is an art form in itself, isn't it? The fair is sponsored by the University of Michigan Artists and Craftsmen Guild. he does a terrific job. Although Goodbye had prob- lems over the summer when it first opened in New York - Alt- man pulled it out of distribution to re-edit the entire picture- there seem to be no difficulties anymore. This is first-rate entertainment and one of the better films to come out this year. through the lives of four young men. The State features Fantasia, Walt Disney's masterpiece of an- imation set to classical music. The Campus shows Kubrick's Clockwork Orange. UAC-Mediatrics presents David 0. Selznick's Gone With .the Wind, Friday through Sunday at 7 p.m. in Nat. Sci. Aud. T E-IllORANGE BACKI A-Is Stanley Kubrick's Thur. & Fri. at a A& w from 1:30 LOE \ HELD OVER114 HITes n BECAUSEHT YOU WEEK! LOVE IT!**e Poh 661 Daily Photo by JOHN UPTON Jazz at Rackhamr Edward Louis Smith conducts the Jazz Band at Rackham Auditorium last night. Varying quali m U' Players~o' m8 By JIM KENTCH The world of Shakespeare's Cymbeline is one in which any- thing can happen and just about does. A decapitated corpse, ex- pulsion of political repressors, disguises, treachery and happy reunions all have their place in the play. The current University Players' production of Cymbeline at True- blood Theater is an incongruous as the play itself. The quality of all theatrical elements Wednes- day night varied greatly. Cymbeline is a romance, a category invented by academians who somehow couldn't see some Shakespearian plays as tragic or comic. Romance has elements of both traditional genres. All ends happily with the es- tranged lovers reunited and the Romans driven out of Britain. But along the way the queen kills herself, the prince is decapitat- ed, and things look very bleak in- deed when the heroine Imogen is thought dead. The costumes are impressive. Cymbeline appears every inch a king in his royal robes. Be- larius and his two companions live the pastoral life of ease in caveman regalia. But ;i e queen and her attendants look more like Oriental praying man- tises than anything else in their ridiculous hats and robes. The set reflects the fairy tale atmosphere and somewhat facil- itated the quick change of scen- es. Many exits are delayed and awkward. Difficulties in mov- ing the variouscprops detract- ed from the flow of the action. The music was trite - trum- pets announce the king's entrance - and without value. Some fine and not so fin3 act- ing was exhibited by the lead- ing actors. Marshall Levijohi as the treacherous seducer Iachimo and David Swan as the knavish prince Cloten dominated the stage. James Symmons was truly a noble savage. Evan Jeffries as king Cymbeline, though, w a s not as splendid as his costume-- he was a fine fuddy-duddy but not regally compelling. Richard Frank as Posthumous and Law- rence Harbison as Pisanio flatly recited their lines. In the demanding role of Irno- gen Judith Levitt did well as far as she went but lacked the versatility which the part re- quired. All the actors and actresses but Levijokitand Swan had pro- lems with the language. They treated it too piously to retain completely natural speeci. But Levijoki consummately lives his speech in Imogen's bedcliabe'r, and Swan doesn't let words get in his way as he stuabies to h:s death. The production's worst afflic- tion was the audience, wno laughed throughout the entire production. Cloten's very realis- tic and gruesome head being carried onstage and his headless body lying next to the sleeping Imogen were met with great mirth. Parts of this play are funny, but a decapitated b ) d y has never been slap;:ick. It is difficult to produce a Shakespearian play, but this production, although flawed and not completed smooth, must be praised for its ambition. FIFTH FORUM 210 S. FIFTH AVE. ANN ARBOR 761-9700 ELLIOTT KASTNER presents A ROBERT ALTMAN film ELLIOTT GOULD in "THE LONG GOODBYE" 2nd SMASH HIT WEEK! 231 S. STATE ! DIAL 662-6264 UA I" TA I$TUIUTIOU Co, Ki"wnDi".oot "DISNEY'S GREA T PIONEERING VENTURE IS THE SEASON'S HIT REVIVAL!" Newsweek "AN INCREDIBLY REVOLUTIONARY FILM... THE MIND CAN RUN RIOT!" The NYU Ticker "FAR AHEAD OF TS TIME...BEST AUDIO-VISUAL EXPERIENCE IN TOWN!" William Wolf, Cue "BEST FAMILY FILM!" Joseph Gelmis, Newsday "A TOTAL EXPERIENCE IN SIGHT, SOUND AND COLOR ... MAKE FANTASIA A MUST!" Bob Salmaggi, Group W Network _ _ .m.. _ - ______-._ __ _ x ' 5..,..'z..- ,. a 'n'8u d i PSGi United Artists SHOW TIMES "STARTS FRIDAY" 7:00 and 9:00 - A Ga~d-t LNDA BACK DOUBLEg FE ATUR E HELD OYER 2nd BIGiWEEK ONE OFS THE BEST"M PLUS '30'S MICKEY MOUSE CARTOON "KLONDIKE KID" Open daily 12:45-Shows at1,3,5,7, 9:05 ) E HELD OVER-3rd Hit Week