Friday, January 18, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Friday, January 18, 1974THE MICHIGAN DAILY By MICHAEL WILSON The Getaway Friends of Newsreel, MLB, Aud. 3 & 4, Fri., Sat., 7:15, 9:30 If you want a good laugh, go see Ali McGraw try and act in Sam Peckinpah's The Getaway (1972). Starring Steve McQueen, Getaway is about a convict re- leased from a Texas prison by the syndicate to pull off a dar- ing bank job. The double-crosses and chase scenes. that ensue leave you yawning, but Mc- Graw's always on hand for com- ic relief.( She fell in love with her co-star on the set of the pic- ture, and subsequently divorced Robert Evans, Paramount studio head, for the more brazen, mas- culine McQueen.) If you like slow-motion violence, and it's obvious director Peckinpah loves it, then Getaway if your kind of picture. It's not mine. . the first full-length 'video-taped films to be released by Holly- wood for theatres instead of tele- vision; it is short on plot but long on bizarre special effects that will leave you glassy-eyed. Directed by the self-proclaimed genius Frank Zapra, Motels fea- tures Ringo Starr, Theodore Bi- kel, Howard Kaylan and Keith Moon in a phantasmagorical story of love, hate and rebirth on the planet earth. The music is sensational - Zappa enlisted a full orchestra to act out his wild- est musical fantasies - but don't expect much else. Witness for the Prosecution Cinema II, Aud. A Fri., 7, 9 A year before he made the classic Seven Year Itch, Holly- .; ' f:4aa w.t.M_.1 M?9 iSs{ 5'"- S o {.:i::a.i: - ":r.:::.}>;t:.' " :i::" ::+";y The(;ood, the Bad, and the Ugly Cinema II, Aud. A Sat., 7, 9:45 Sergio Leone is an Italian-born director that turns out spaghetti westerns faster than film critics can throw them up. He was the creator of A Fistful of Dollars, A Few Dollars More, and count- less numbers of other 'formula' Clint Eastwood films that make millions at the box office, and a few million more when they're sold to television. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966) is no exception. It stars the stone-faced Eastwood in a bloody tale of stolen money, double - crossing partners and incredible cowboys who take baths with their gun belts on. Eli Wallach and Lee Van Cleef spill some blood of their own as the co-stars, but keep your eye on Eastwood. It is primarily his bone structure and the sound- track that keep the picture mov- ing. Singin' in the Rain Cinema II, Aud. A Sun., 7, 9 Singin' in the Rain (1952) might just be the best musical ever made. Gene Kelley, whose smile and tan shoes are forever etched in screen history, gives a kinetic performance in this story of the transitonal period that occurred during the Holly- wood 20's from silent films to talkies - he also directed, along with Stanley Donen. Besides Kelley, there's Donald O'Connor as his dance partner, Debbie Reynolds, Jean Hagen and Millard Mitchell. Hagen is hi- larious as a silent film star with a speech impediment - there's plenty of good-natured satire go- ing on here that is truly funny. And it's quite rare nowadays to see a film that moves even half as fast. Cool Hand Luke Friends of Newsreel; MLB, Aud. 3 & 4, Fri., Sat., 7:15, 9:30 Cool Hand Luke (1967) was made in the days when Paul Newman was still acting beauti- fully and not just walking through his roles. Directed by Stuart Rosenberg, Luke is a ter- rific, gutsy-kind of picture, with a fantastic performance by Newman as the chain-gang pri- soner who just won't stay down. His numerous escapes and re- captures are exhilarating in their freshness and humour; t h e screenplay is filled with all kinds of little diversions that make you wish the film was an hour longer, if anything for just an- other fleeting glimpse at the Newman mystique. The Laughing Policeman Michigan Walter Mathau stars in this mystery-thriller about a killer who boards buses and then pro- ceeds to gun down all the pas- sengers. He passes for the pas- sive, never smiling detective beautifully, but The Laughing Policeman, directed by Stuart Rosenberg, has nothing to offer except its co-stars in the way of entertainment. As Mathau's partner, Bruce Dern gives a restrained, effective performance - he is well on his way now to becoming a major box - office attraction and de- serves it. For years Dern was playing creatures from outer space and two-headed men until he got his big break in King of Marvin Gardens with Jack Nich- olson. Now he's playing Tom Bu- chanan in the screen version of Great Gatsby, due out in spring- time, and offers first-rate talent and a fresh face to filmgoers in place of the raw violence-type characters that seem to perme- ate our films these days. Magnum Force State The sequel to Dirty Harry, Magnum Force stars again Clint Eastwood as the rough-tough de- tective who will rise to any task, even if it means piloting a 747, to capture some hijackers. Di- rected by Ted Post, Magnum Force is ballet of violence: more people get gunned down for no reason than in any other film to come out in the past year. Notice how Post will show you graphic blood and guts but almost no sexual activity - presumably Harry's gun means more dollars at the box office than his love- making - and note also that once again Eastwood g e t s through an entire picture without moving a facial muscle. The Way We Were Campus Theatre Along with The Sting, Sidney Pollack's The Way We Were is a fine example of where Holly- wood's head is at in the stream- lined 70's; it features lush pho- tography, plush scenery and slush acting between the co- stars. In this case, Robert Redford and Barbara Streisand are the victims of our new movie men- opause - they try tovact like college students in love but come off looking like little more than box-office stars in makeup reading cue cards. I for one am sick and tired of seeing Red- ford's smile pass for profession- alism, and wish he would return to the fine acting he gave up in films like Downhill Racer. Also .. . The Paper Chase is still play- ing at Fifth Forum. BIG LIP RECORD SALE "SAVE NOW- .SAVE BIG" TODAY AT TTOLELETTTiST STATE STREET AT NORTH UNIVERSITY I cinema weekend 6 .typ , :+ '+v'L C'+'": :{+S ' ';r,'.i,} °: yY, i:E;:j},5:i;;titt{:;Y :4:4 yy ;bn..-.iti}:? ' '%' };i 7S4 ::{,}:i{:i t 'r7 6?5 , Oi'.h... :Q o. a. e "," t ' . ..a{.v::4: a,".4 ,v. {{s.:..: k 'S}s."}: G}: :: :+.'FuS 'iv...r:t.};'r,::>:-'";:;;}7::-?;?5:1:?;1 .................. n........... Quiet Mn Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Fri., 7, 9:05 If you can picture John Wayne in Ireland, of all places, then John Ford's Quiet Man (1952) shouldn't be too hard to take. Wayne somehow outshines an im- peccable cast (Maureen O'Hara, Victor McLaglen and Barry Fitzgerald) in this uninspiring story of an ex-boxer who returns to his native homeland and falls for a fast-talking little Irish witch. O'Hara has made better films -notably Lady Godiva - but Maureen O'Hara makes Quiet Men worthwhile. John Ford's films are always enjoyable, even when they're as bad as this one. The Seventh Seal Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sat., 7, 8:30, 10:15 The Swedish director Ingmar Bergman made a picture in 1957 called The Seventh Seal that has probably been seen by more peo- ple, more times, than any other foreign film. This time around, movie-goers have a chance to see a print in fine shape - the management promises no scratchy soundtracks or blurred faces because it's a brand new copy. I won't try and explain what Seal is about but don't let that stop you; there's a fine cast in- cluding Nils Poppe, Gunnar Bjornstrand, Max Von Sydow and Bengt Ekerot as Death, along with a thoroughly haunting soundtrack by Eric Nordren. If you've never seen in Ing- mar film, make it to this one. It's incredibly unique. J'ampyr Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sun., 7, 9:05 Carl Dreyer was a brilliant Da- nish director who died only a few years ago; his films are per- turbing, moving with a strange silent force. Vampyr (1932) was made one year after the Ameri- can version with Bela Lugosi had hit the screen, but it was sadly ignored for the latter's sensa- tionalistic, attention - grabbing properties. Finally Got the News New World Media International Film Series, East Quad Fri., 8 (Finally Got the News (1970) is a unique and forceful docu- mentary offering the workers' view of working conditions inside Detroit's auto factories. The film focuses on the activities of the League of Revolutionary Black Workers in their efforts to build an independent black labor or- ganization. 200 Motels UAC Mediatrics: Nat. Sci. Ad. Fri., Sat., 7, 9:30 200 Motels (1971) was one of $2.50 THIS WEEKEND FRI.-SAT.-SUN. Patrick Sky Songwriter-Humorist "Songs that made America famous" "the best social commentary of the ecade." -Billboard Record Review I .' somewhere there must be something of social value. Chnij.d he n , rvhome wood director Billy Wilder colla- borated with the spellbinding mystery writer Agatha Christie to film Witness for the Prosecu- tion (1957). Starring Tyrone Pow- er, Charles Laughton and Mar- lene Dietrich, Prosecution is a unique who-done-it set during a suspenseful London murder trial. Laughton manages to steal the picture as the sharp counsel for the defense, but it is the Wilder "touch" that makes the film so worthwhile. - TONIGHT Marionette Theatre of Peter Arnott Euripedes' CYCLOPS RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE AUDITORIUM--8 P.M.f O EAST QUAD $1.50 GENERAL ADMISSION Tickets available PTP Ticket Office 10 a.m.-1 p.m., 2 p.m.-5 p.m. and at door. Further information call 764-0450 }C_-'?4--G -(7 -YC)- O--,.O<>i ?-Lyo C-y:O o BIBLICAL BIOGRAPHY Studies in Ch-acter, Conscience, Crisis AT THE UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. HURON 9:30 A.M. Each week one of the following characters will be d'scussed: Joseph of Arimathea, the Syrophoenician woman, Anna, Ne- dab, Bezalel the son of Uri, Achan, Ananias and Sapphiro, Elymas, Eunice, Onesimas, Philemon, Timothy, Demas, Dio- trephes, the Dragon, Jepthah, Bildad, Manasseh son of Heze- j ! kiah, Mordecai, Joel. Focal Queftion for di-cucsion include: What nersonal, civic, and religious issues did they face? What character criis did these provoke? How do thewe parallel dilemmas of our own? Instructor: Kenneth L Pike WORSHIP SERVICE-10:30 A.M. Calvin Malefyt and Alan Rice, Ministers CA1mediatrics resents Frank Zappa's starring: FRANK ZAPPA and the MOTHERS OF INVENTION, RINGO STAR and THEODORE BICKEL FRIDAY and SATURDAY-J 'n. 18 cnd 19 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. NATURAL SCIENCE AUDITORIUM tickets. $1.00 SEVERYMONDAY NIGHT IS GUEST NIGHT! 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