VHE MiCHIGAN DAILY Page Three rHE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three C O Q jo NOW THERE ARE Pick of the week: Deep Throat Bullard Action Now Group Nat. Sci. Aud. Fri., Sat., 6:45, 8:30, 10:15 How Percy Bullard and com- pany only managed to find a black - and - white print of this porno classic which made mil- lions solely on the fact that it was in color I'll never know, but, anyway, this first of the low- budget, multi-million-dollar box office flesh films arrives in town this weekend to provide a finan- cial boost for Bullard's reelec- tion campaign. The star is, of course, the in- imitable Linda Lovelace. There is a thin plot to give some kind of redeeming social value to the picture, but for the most part Deep Throat is nothing but good, honest, down-to-business sex. Well, if nothinj else, Bullard gets a few points for originality. After all, even the Committee for the Reelection of the Presi- dent never thought of using por- no flicks for political purposes. -David Blomquist The Grand Bouffie Fifth Forum Director Marco Ferreri has as- sembled a highly unique and per- verse account of four men who eat themselves to death and im- mortality in a film that won the Critics' Prize at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival. Grande Boufe emay sickenhor enlighten, depending on what shape your stomach is in. The scenes border on the outrageous (exploding toilets), but most of it is good, clean fun. Most film buffs will quickly recognize the crucial moments as directorial tributes (Fellini, Bunuel, and Bergman are featured in partic- ular) rather than exercises in bad taste. -Michael Wilson Between Time and Timbucktoo. New World Films, Nat. Sel. Aud. Sun., 9 Between Time and Timbucktu is a typical Vonnegut creation, with lots of science-fiction fan- tasy, some blunt satire, and a finely tuned vision of the mad- ness of the current American scene. The script borrows heavily from Vonnegut's written works, and this does make it difficult to comprehend if you're not fami- liar with them. But the basic. plot line is easy enough to fol- low. Stony Stephenson, winner of a breakfast food jingle contest, is selected as an astronaut, and subsequently shot through the chronosynclastic infidibulum, a time warp for you and I. There he meets specters from his past, and has a number of improbable experiences. -Stephen Selbst Hunger . Cinema II, Aud. A Sun., 7, 9 Hunger is an interesting film with only two characters from S w e d i s h filmmaker Hen- ning Carlsen. It's basically the story of a poor, impoverished writer (a Daily staffer?) who meets a kind, sweet woman who falls for him. Well, if you like Swedish films, go, but be forewarned: Bergman this film is not. It has its mo- ments (lead Per Oscarsson won a best acting award at the Can- nes Film Festival), but also drags out at times. -David Blomquist Dr. Strangelove Friends of Newsreel, MLB This 1964 Stanley Kubrick mas- terpiece has a special beauty in this day and age, what with Viet- nam in the past and Henry Kis- singer on the horizon. Peter Sellers is here at his best, playing not only the title role but two other parts. George C. Scott is especially deluxe as Gen. Buck Turgidson (be careful -Scott may convince you that the Commies are about to drain off your precious bodily fluids.) The story is basically a take- off on Failsafe, the Henry Fonda nuclear panic movie. Here, how- ever, everyone turns out to be a bumbler - except the bomber who pilot got the wrong mes- sage and can't be stopped. -Louis Meldman Sugarland Express Michigan Steven Speilberg is a new fact among American directors, fresh from television and a stint at film school. He stinks. Sugar- land Express is a testimonial to his claustrophobic talent, a senti- mental piece of prison break-out fripe starring that lovely and talented Goldie Hawn in her con- tinuing role as Goldie Hawn, girl wonder. Here, Hawn springs her hus- band from the clinker and the ensuing chase scene takes up (would you believe?) the entire movie. Why the hell this gar- bage was released to theatres in- stead of television is beyond me, except that maybe TV was too good for it. Based loosely on a true story, Sugarland Express will probab- ly make a fortune when it is righteously sold to television. In the meantime I suggest everyone hold their breath waiting. -Michael Wilson Happy Birthday, Wanda June New World Films, Nat. Sci. Aud. Sun., 7 Happy Birthday, Wanda June is a filmed play, and as such it suffers from that. Unfortunately, it looks like a filmed play, and after seeing the success of the American Film Theater in con- verting plays to movies, this ef- fort fails by comparison. The basic story remains funny, however, blessed as it is with Vonnegut's bizarre vision and some truly fine lines. Briefly, it concerns the saga of Harold Ryan, who returns after eight years in the South American jungle where he sought and eventually found "diamonds as big as cantaloupes." The whole thing is a little heavy handed, and neither of leads York or Steiger is espe- cially good. -Stephen Selbst The Misfits Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sat., 7, 9:05 Clark Gable and Marilyn Mon- roe both closed out their careers with this 1961 film that came in as the most expensive black-and- white film ever made. The picture had everything go- ing for it - Gable, Monroe, a screenplay by Arthur Miller, and direction by John Huston - but somehow this story of an odd bunch of scatterbrained loners in Nevada never manages to take shape. -David Blomquist Dr. Zhivago South Quad Films Dining Room 2, South Quad Fri., 8 This lengthy (three hours, 17 minutes) but engrossing saga of the Russian Revolution, told in terms of an intense love affair between a traditionalist doctor, Yuri Zhivago, and Lara, the es- tranged wife of a Communist revolutionary, hasits problems, but still ranks as one of the best films Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer ever produced. David Lean directed this epic with his customary wide scope, easily capturing the image of the era - yet somehow losing the spirit of Boris Pasternak's novel in the transfer to film. Leads Omar Sharif and Julie Christie are, however, for the most part quite watchable - a word that, in fact, aptly de- scribes the entire film. --David Blomquist Bringing Up Baby Cinema II, Aud. A Fri., 7, 9 In Howard Hawk's classic screwball comedy Bringing Up Baby (1938), Katherine Hepburn and Cary Grant do some of the funniest routines you'll ever see on film - they just don't make 'em like they used to anymore. Hepburn has never looked bet- ter in her role of a neglected and dissected high - society girl with a pet leopard; Grant plays an- about - to - be - married ar- chaeologist who meets up with her near the eve of his wedding. The result is a hilarious mess, a fine mixture of slapstick and sentimentality. Charlie Ruggles and May Rob- son also star, along with a cute dog and a missing dinosaur bone. If you've ever seen What's Up, Doc?, come back and see what the original looks like. Hawks himself once remarked he liked Bogdanovich's remake but that Baby really leaves room for little imitation. -Michael Wilson Straw Dogs Friends of Newsreel, MLB Straw Dogs is a story of how a mild-mannered mathematician (played by Dustin Hoffman) can defeat a half-dozen burly, crazed Irishmen in a fight for his house and wife. Well, who does Hoffman think he is - Errol Flynn? This was Sam Peckinpah's first attempt at a movie outside the "Western" genre, and obviously so. the movie is an utter bore. --Louis Meldman Papillon Campus Only a few directors have suc- cessfully been able to move from television to motion pictures. The TV director is almost univer- sally trained to think in terms of close, tight shots. Film, how- ever, requires - especially in wide-screen - an almost com- pletely opposite viewpoint, de- manding a broad, nearly pano- ramic approach. Director Franklin Schaffner started out cooped up in the confines ofhtelevision, but no viewer of his latest film, Pa- pillon, could accuse him of feel- ing cramped any longer. Indeed, in not only Papillon but his pre- vious films (including Patton and Nicholas and Alexandra), Schaffner appears to be develop- ing a mammoth epic style that rivals Cecil DeMille. Allied Artists spent $11 million to produce this present Schaffner extravaganza from Henri Cher- rier's story of life in a chillingly cruel French prison colony. (Star Steve McQueen alone reportedly received over $1 million for his efforts.) The film portrays what it's in- tended to, all right - 'man's in- humanity toward man' - but Schaffner far too often (like in Nicholas and Alexandra) gets hung up in his epic style and wastes reels of film just show- ing off his- big budget. McQueen and co-star Dustin Hoffman seem lost in the midst of it all. Nevertheless, the film defi- nitely has its fascinating high- lights. -David Blomquist The Great Gatsby Fox Village With all that advance publicity -the Gatsby "look", the Gats- by napkins, the Gatsby under- wear - what else could the film do but flop? Jack Clayton's long-awaited Great Gatsby is so rotten, so devoid of talent and imagination,' that it comes off looking like little more than some monumen- tal tribute to Vogue magazine. If only the acting and dialogue had sparkled and glittered like the photography and costumes, this could have been one hell of a picture. Robert Redford and Mia Far- row as Gatsby and Daisy are truly pathetic; the captivating Fitzgerald portrait of undying and unrequited love has been transformed on screen into some- thing out of True Confessions magazine. The two effective perform- ances are given by Bruce Dern as Tom Buchanan and Karen Black in the role of Myrtle Wil- son. The rest of the cast (Sam Waterson, Lois Chiles, etc.) are more laughable than passable. It's interesting that a lush-bud- get film like Gatsby can be so bad. It makes you wonder where all that money went. -Michael Wilson Blazing Saddles The Movies, Briarwood There hasn't been a good sa- tire on the Old West since Cat Ballou in 1965, but Mel Brooks has finally changed all that. His Blazing Saddles is perhaps the funniest movie to come out this year, besides being a genuinely dizzy piece of genre parody on every Bonanza-ridden cliche you can think of. Saddles is crazy from start to finish - don't miss it. Cleavon Little plays the new black sheriff of an old town about to be destroyed to make way for the new railroad; Gene Wilder is the has-been gunsling- er who drinks booze for break- fast and know's he still the fast- est shot alive. To reveal any- thing else would be shameful; half the fun of Saddles in the in- congruity, like having Count Ba- sie and company in full swing right out there in the middle of nowhere as Little rides by. Brooks himself plays two parts in the film, which also includes guest stars Harvey Korman, Slim Pickens and Madeline Kahn. The screenplay was done five separate ways by five different writers; Brooks then put it all together one night during Co- lumbo. Not since his fabulous Get Smart TV Show has the writer - actor - director suc- ceeded so well so fast. -Michael Wilson The Sting State No doubt about it: the team of Paul Newman, Robert Redford, and George Roy Hill simply can- not make a bad movie. If you liked Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, you'll squeal with delight at Sting. Sting is a story of a big con artist (Newman) who comes out of retirement to take on an ap- prentice (Redford) and make one final "big con" - one final "sting". The result is perfect. -Louis Meldman WITH ROOM FOR MUMMY! Great zip-together idea for backpackers who want light weight and warmth at a reasonable price. Insu- lated with a double layer of lofty DuPont Dacron' Fiberfill II; right and left models in regular and extra long styles; insulated Delrinl zipper with 2-way sliders; rip-stop nylon cover; warm and roomy oval foot pocket. -' Ask your nearby Stag Trail Haus TROIIHOUS dealer. p - - m- - - -- -- -- - m --- - - m -= * Send 25ยข for new Technical Report on trail I tents, backpacks and sleeping bags, or send11 $1.00 for backpacker poster plus Technical I Report.. To: Hirsch-Wee/White stag, Dept.CNP-2, 5203 S. E. Johnson Creek Blvd., 3 Portland, Oregon 97206.1 Name Address city state Zip college w-. s.. si --........-r.r...... e.----- GOOD LUCK EXAMS! ON. U-M STYLISTS at THE UNION Dave, Harold, Chet, and Jay Why is this girl Smiling? Last year at this time Joan wasn't smiling. She was flunking out of college *and didn't know where to turn. And the worst part was that v she realty wanted to earn a college degree and she knew that she was capable. Thomas More College gave Joan a Second Chance. We have a special summer program designed just for students like Joan ... underachieving students who have experienced serious academic difficulty or even failure. It's an intense program of study, test- ing, and counseling conducted by a specially-trained staff. And the goal of the program is the student's re- moval from probation or his or her readmission to college. Joan is a product of Operation Second Chance. She came through with fly- ing colors and will graduate on sched- ule. No wonder she's smiling. SECOND CHANCE JUNE 17 - JULY 26, 1974 BOB BROWN THOMAS MORE COLLEGE Box 85 - Fort Mitchell, Kentucky 41017 (in Metropolitan Cincinnati) or call: (606) 341-5800 - ext. 10 I U OPEN Regular Hours DURING EXAMS AND BREAK MICH IGAN UNION COFFEE HOUSE with Israeli Food-PITAH, FELAFEL, Etc. and Local Entertainment SATURDAY, April 20-9:30 p.m. at HILLEL-1429 Hill St. ADMISSION 75c PARK YOUR BICYCLE AT OUR Fr ENERGY-SAVING SHOPPING For your convenience there are sheltered bike stands S TUDENTS! WORRY*FREE SUMMER STORAGE For$495 WHY PA.CK TWICEn Textile experts advise: Never put winter garments away soiled. Always have them dry cleaned first. So why not do it the worry - free way - Greene's Way! Call NO 2-3231 for a Handy Hamper Storage Box. It holds about 30 gar- ments. We'll carefully clean the garments and store them in our air-conditioned vault until fall. The cost is only $4.95 plus regular cleaning charges. Includes free insurance to $250.00. NO PAYMENT UNTIL FALL. FOR CONVENIENT DRIVER SERVICE 662-3231I a I. For details, write:1 The program is adaptable to veterans. I I 0 0