NU I ri t r-A I;- ri 1 3^ R 07 = Page Five F'age ~1ve N icholson s American By BRUCE SHLAIN Like John Cassavetes' Hus- bands, Hal Ashby's The Last De- tail concentrates on an insulated, all-male group of three. The basic idea is the same, and works well again: by expos- ing the way that sailors think and act away from their home base, a lot can be said about the military, just as Cassavetes made what I think was a power- ful statement about marriage by showing what suburban men are like away from their wives.' In both films there is hardly a shred of plot. Husbands main- tained interest and established a humorous continuity with its parodic cinema - verite tech- niques. Ashby has no distinctive visual flair, but Detail is a Jack Nicholson film, and as Badass Buddusky he is not merely re- quired to play his role but to in- tegrate all of the film's themes in his performance. In some of his other films a similar task fell on Nicholson, but the role was usually not meaty, enough to explain or fill out the inscrutability of the film. For instance, in Five Easy Pieces, there is really no way that he can convey the charac- ter's reasons for his lack of mo- tivation - it is simply a "given" that he throws away the piano for the construction job. But in The Last. Detail Nichol- son is playing a man who is not cursed with the acute awareness that entraps Bobby Dupea in Pieces or the younger brother in The King of Marvin Gardens. Buddusky is, quite simply, a beer-drinking lifer in the Navy with a rather vulgar sense of humor and an occasional need to let out his frustrations in a good brawl. The sharp - tongued sar- casm has become a Nicholson trademark, and we like Buddus- ky for his ability to talk back to waiters and bartenders; a sympathy slowly Develops in us for an otherwise d spicable char- acter, this being the genius of Nicholson's performance, in drawing us close to the type of man it would be easy to detest. Buddusky, along with Muihall (Otis Young), has been ordered to transfer a weak-willed klepto- maniac (played by Randy Quaid, who along with Nicholson is nom- inated for an Academy Award) from the bus to the train, we see ripping off anything he can get his hands on, indicative of how senseless his eight-year impris- onment will be towards curing him of his stealing. Buddusky and "Mule" begin to pity Meadows, who breaks down crying on the train, and, since they have five days to de- liver the prisoner, Buddusky as- serts himself, prolonging the trip so that he can treat the boy to a good time. He is then, do- ing his job while pretending not to do it, to be both Head Honcho and Mr. Nice Guy, to be, in his own words, "the Badass." The journey then proceeds through some fine comic scenes of gar- gantuan beer-consumption, a visit to a house where they smoke grass and Mule gets hassled about Nixon while Buddusky makes an ass of himself in try- ing to seduce a young college girl, and a pathetic and touch- ing night at a whorehouse where Meadows loses his virginity. ' Slowly the, relationship be- tween the three begins to change, and we see that much of Bud- dusky's apparent kindness is really only a device to avoid recognizing that he is going to be the one that locks Meadows up. He wants Meadows to let off steam, to belt him one. lie sees through Meadows' weakness but fails to see his own self-de- structive behavior and isolation from the variety of alternatives outside the military life. The leeway they have been given in delivering the prisoner begins to haunt Mule and Bud- dusky, who cannot avoid the re- ality that seeps in through the roof of the mind. When they first got on the train Mule settled down in his seat, looked out the window, and smiled like a con- tented cat. "I love trains," he said. He and Buddusky were to- tally ignoring Meadows, Even when Meadows broke down sob- bing, Mule just says, "Man, he's crazy." Paradoxically enough, it is Buddusky who experiences the final psychological vertigo, as he sadistically loses his head and psychotically beats Meadows senseless after a lame attempt at escape. Mule had told the Nicholson character earlier that there was no middle ground, that they either had to let Meadows go or finish their ugly job as quickly as possible. Buddusky agreed at the time, but after a cathartic fight in a lavatory with some Army men, they continue to entertain Meadows until by the film's end he has learned enough from the two to do the one thing he never would have been capable of before-attempt to escape. The moments preceding the beating are probably the film's best. The three are out in the cold barbecuing hot dogs, al- though they have no buns. It is cold, and Buddusky sits among the snow-covered benches drink- ing beer and shivering. He muses about how "it takes a sa- distic kind of guy to be a ma- rine" and how Meadows will never make it through Ports- mouth with "those goddamn grunts kickin' the shit out of him for eight years." As he-sits there his eyes seem to well up with tears, or is it the cold? At any rate, Nicholson is never more brilliant than when confronting the impotence of his position, and we feel the rage burning in him, because in loser viewing the film -we ourselves forget that they are going to lock Meadows up, and when two hours have passed and the chore seems imminent, we get as fidgety as the characters. When Meadows trots off in his awkward, penguin - like gait, we know what is coming. Chasing him down into a ravine, Nichol- son beats the prisoner and then collapses, exhausted, yelling about having lost his shoe in the snow. All during the film there had been the assurance on Bud- dusky's part that in releasing his rage he was demonstrating a true mark of character, but in this pathetic scene it is obvious that he is not "the Badass," but simply a coward out of control. With a cigar, a short haircut, a cocky walk, and a few tattoos painted on his chest, Nicholson has revealed a range that few Americans actors can lay claim to. He makes real the entrapment of the modern American Loser, in of his different guises, as frus- trated artist in Five Easy Pieces and The King of Marvin Gar- dens, and now as the tough guy whose machismo is inextricable from the weakness that he hates in others, and which is really his own weakness. When the gates close on the blood-spattered Mea- dows, there is a shot down a flight of steps to where Buddus- kv and Mulhall stand strangely like orphans, and it is obvious that the gates hakre closed on them as well. The Last Detail depends too heavily on the fine dialogue writ- ten by Robert Towne for the screenplay, there being just so many ways to show three men talking, even though the back- ground keeps shifting. But the ensemble acting is excellent, right down to the last detail. Do Your Own Seder!! Did you ever think of doing your own seder instead of going to someone else's seder? PASSOVER Is APRIL 6 If you want to LEARN how to do PASSOVER and your own seder in your apartment or dorm, come to a PASSOVER SEDER WORKSHOP SUNDAY, March 24 1 p.m. at HILLEL, 1429 Hill St. Nicholson: "I am the Badass." University Baroque Trio performs esoteric fare gy TONY CECERE In a sparsely populated Rack- ham Auditorium appointed with students crocheting and reading, the University Baroque Trio per- formed music of Telemann, Bach and several more esoteric com- posers of the eighteenth century with perfunctory competence. Rosemary Russell was mezzo- soprano soloist along with Trio members Nelson Hauenstein, flute, Gustave Rosseels, violin, Charles Fisher, harpsichord, and Peter Spring on double bass in a concert that suffered from sameness and -musical overpre- dictability. The first half of the program consisted of three. trio sonatas: the first one was by Franz As- plmayr, an almost buried baro-; que composer with nothing sal- ient to be remembered for (least of all this composition). The next one came from the pen of Christoph Gluck, an ar- tist who is remembered more for his operas and larger orchestral works than for chamber music. In this Trio Sonata, Gluck patterned his melodic lines af- ter his operatic music, producing a composition whose pathos be- came awfully hard to absorb af- ter a short time. Hauenstein and Rosseels played intimately, in line with the requirements of the piece. The third trio sonata by Tomaso Albinoni moved along with more dance-like grace and life than its two predecessors. After intermission Rosemary Russell joined the trio in rendi- tions of two arias_ and a small cantata. Georg Philipp Tele- mann's aria "Tod und Moder dringt herein" from a church cantata came first, serving as a vehicle for Russell's totally un- affected, natural and pure voice. Then a J.S. Bach aria, "Baken- nen will ich seinen Namen" fol- lowed, with all members of the trio working to supportthe voice. The small cantata "Die Land- lust: Kleine Kantate von Wald und Au", a Telemann composi- tion on pastoral ideas, was far and- away the most interesting piece on the program. Here the different parts traded musical sentences, dynamic contrasts rose out of the mist while a poetic vocal line floated above it all. Essentially, Telemann put the cantata in a bottle, minia- turizing'Arias, Recitiatives and winding up with a finale evocative of shepherd's pipes and hunting calls. Again Russell sang splend- idly. To no one's surprise the eve- ning closed with yet another trio sonata. This one came from Carl Stamitz and thankfully proved itself a less sedate version of three movement (fast-slow-fast) form. Had the University Baroque Trio chosen a less deadly pro- gram they would htve played more out of inspiration than a sense of duty. The group played well, but this did nothing to re- ning: musical boredom arising pair the gross fault of the eve- from too much uninspiring, insip- id and esoteric baroque fare. Excepting the fine vocalising, it. was a somewhat somnabulent evening. CULTURE CALENDAR FILM-Cinema guild presents Dieterle's Hunchback of Notre Dame in Arch. Aud. at 7, 9:05; Ann Arbor Film Co-op features Penn's The Chase in Aud. A at 7, 9; Women's Studies Films shows The Blue Angel in Lee. Rm: 1 M.L.B. at 7:30; South Quad Films presents Kurbrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey in Dining Rm. 2 at 7:30 and 10; and New World Media International Films features So the People Show Know; Argentina: Alliance for Progress in the East Quad Aud. at 8. MUSIC SCHOOL-The Cambridge University Chamber Choir and the University Chamber Choir offer a free joint concert in Hill Aud. at 8 and the opera Eugene Onegin is being staged in the Mendelssohn Theatre at 8. BACH CLUB-Ressa Gringorten, clarinet; Brad Wong, clar- inet; Frank Nezwazky, piano; and Deborah Berman, piano perform Mendelssohn's Concert Piece No. 2 in d for two clarinets and piano; Ravel's Le Tombeau de Couperin for piano and four Hebrew songs for clarinet and piano in the East Quad Greene Lounge at 8. . POETRY-Burnette Meyer and Nicholas Piombiro read in the St. Mark's Church in the Bowery: 124 E. Quad at 8. CHARLES LAUGHTON as 13 THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME Quasimodo lives again in this moving adaptation of V i c tor Hugo's classic Romantic novel. Lcughton's performance c ha Il e n g e s Lon Chaney's great original. Maureen O'Hara plays Esmeralda and Basic Rathbone is the evil priest. Fri.: Qzu's FLOATING WEEDS ARCHITECTURE **Tonight at AUDITORIUM cinemag ud 7 and 9:05 A I BEST FOREIGN FILM ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE! OF ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS including BEST MOVIE SOUNDIER Heart-warming award winning film; starring Cicley Tyson "A Film of rare warmth and beauty." -ALSO- Atlantic Records Silver Anniversary Special A special film documentary showing musical highlights a n d insights into the workings of a record company. Courtesy of WCBN & Atlantic Records. NAT. SCI. AUD. 7:00 & 9:30 $1.00 TONIGHT-Live Broadcast of MOJO BOOGIE BAND and live interview direct from the PRIMO SHOWBAR BETWEEN SETS 8:30-Midnight on GENE'S BLUES WCBN-FM, 89.5 BURSLEY HALL ENTERPRISES PRESENT DIANA ROSS IN LADY SINGS THE BLUES SATURDAY, MARCH 23 adm. $1 new time: 8 P.M. Bursley W. Cafeteria College of Literature, Science, and the Arts RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE is pleased to present ...all it lakes is a litle Conflaence. (PG) "'THE ST NG" OPEN DAILY 1 P.M Shows at 1:30, 4:00, 6:30 & 9 P.M. 603 E. Liberty DIAL 665-6290 Open 12:45. Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, &9 P.M. 3 Academy Award Nominations incl. BEST ACTOR JACK NICHOLSON "THE LAST DETAIL" xt I 'nv43CflFa sl+i 7' i369si ,:,