Friday, January 26, 1973 THE'MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Friday, January 26, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Cinema Guild Fri. When horror films and moral allegories converge, a deft touch is a necessity. A fully de- veloped screen adaptation of the Stevenson tale Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is yet to be done, but Vic- tor Fleming's version, with Spen- cer Tracy drinking the spiritual Harvey Wallbangers, is not bad. Unlike the "pure" interpreta- tion by Barrymore (in which no make-up was used), Tracy is pro- vided with an entirely new face, with bushy eyebrows and a dark and gloomy complexion behind which evil is supposedly lurking. Tracy does exaggerate the role, turning it into a grotesque split between the meek and mild-man- nered Dr. Jekyll and the man- nerless Mr. Hyde, who thinks of little else but Ingrid Bergman, portraying a demure barmaid. It is truly frightening in spots, and Hyde gets off some interest- ing religious comments, some of which are laughable, but it is Tracy who controls the laughter. -BRUCE SHLAIN * *M * Lenny Bruce at Basin St. West Cinema Guild Sat. It is difficult to say anything about Lenny Bruce without deify- ing him, without eulogizing about the "real" definition of a martyr, etc. The reason this is so diffi- cult is because his comedy was not simply an appendage of his Global Books SPECIALIZING-MARXISM- LENINISM-LABOR AND AFRO-AMERCA HiSTORY BOOKS FROM U.S.S.R. & CHINA 4415 SECOND AVE. DETROIT-832-0740 THURS./FRI. DR. JEKYLL_ & MR. HYDE Dir. Victor Fleming, 1942. Robert Louis Stevenson's frightening tale of the good and evil in one man, 1 in an extraordinarily pol- ished, Hollywood produc- tion. Mixed with a bit of Freud and "a lot of hor- ror a la Grand Guignol. With Spencer Tracy, In-. grid Bergman, Ian Hunt- er, Lana Turner. SAT. LENNY BRUCE AT BASIN ST. WEST ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM I ~ 9:05 $1 mind, not just a nightclub hob- by - his comedy and personal charaoter are almost indistin- guishable. Despite his genius, because of the nature of his material he was largely hidden from t h e American people, labelled as "sick" by the very sicknesses he strove to eliminate. A f e w cherished artifacts of his per- forming remain, one of the few being Lenny Bruce at Basin St. West. An extra added incentive at this showing is the unveiling of five Betty Boop cartoons, which are unrivalled in the realm of imaginative surreal animation. Nothing in these Max Fleischer cartoons ever stands still - clocks, statutes, flowers, and other heretofore inanimate ob- jects get up, walk, and talk, all bouncing to the beat of that sen- sual, curly-topped torch singer, Betty herself. -B. SHLAIN * * * Blood of the Condor Cinema Guild Sun. Blood of the Condor (1965-Bo- livia) attempts to combine a re- volutionary message with poetic cinema. On the one hand, the movie tells how a Bolivian branch of the Peace Corps, in all its well-meaning stupidity, inten- tionally sterilizes the women of a certain village - all of which is supposedly based on a t r u e incident. By the way, Condor it- self is reputedly partly respon- sible for the expulsion of t h e Peace Corps from Bolivia. On the other hand, this bizar- re plot is offset by the movie's depiction of the almost superna- tural Andes landscape, the fas- cinating daily routine of the vil- lagers, their lives, and their my- tLb-ogv and religion. If the mes- sage is a bit hackneyed a n d heavy-handed, the insight into cinema weekend Bolivian culture and tl of the Andes should worthwhile. Not Re' Press Time. * * * The Good, The B The Ugly & A I of Dollar Cinema II These two films ma first and last entries mous "Dollar" trilogy Spanish - made Weste Eastwood plays TheI No Name, a cool, deta ern gunslinger who see more to James Bon Gary Cooper or John' Both movies are ra lar. The plots and die very lightweight stuff. revolve around the p of portraying good old blood and guts viol camera dwells on sma details. The films ar with a heavy-handed1 yet some of the scene cinating just for the love of gore and acti one susceptable to the murder, bloodlust an are great fun, can ind selves to the utmost.' tor, Sergio Leone, has screen and soundtrack bark of guns, the whi hose shots lets and the morbid bodies of be quite victims. He builds up a mood of viewed at dread and danger that erupts in cascades of violence. -STAFF The Good, the Bad and the Ugly seems to be the weaker of ad, the two films because Leone and doesn't dwell so much on the ac- Fistful tual scene of violence as on the small, morbid touches that S he delights in. Myriads of char- acters all seem to be missing ke up the either a leg, two legs, an arm or in the fa- an eye - all of which Leone ex- of Italian- ploits to the hilt. The action rns. Clint which does occur in the film's Man With much too lengthy 2 hours all ched West- revolves around a battle between ims to owe three men during the Civil War d than to as they fight over $200,000 and Wayne. finally face off in a three-way ther simi- shoot-out. alogue are .Fistful of Dollars seems to be The films a bit more on target than The ossibilities Good, the Bad and the Ugly pri- -fashioned marily because it involves scenes lence. The of faster - paced action, quick- ill, morbid er editing and more violence. It e dripping deals with a Mexican town and Machismo, two families, the Baxters and s are fas- the Rojos, who are locked in a air simple feud over who will control the on. Every- smuggling centers in the village. idea that Into this town rides the Man id killings With No Name who virtually de- ulge them- populates the village before he The direc- rides off into the sunset. filled the Nevertheless, both films event- k with the ually get to be a bit of a drag. ne of bul- Two hours of nothing but gore and guts with absolutely noth- ing else to hold it up just can- not make for a successful film, ~ -although anyone with a pen- chant for choice examples of violence and the morbid will cer- tainly enjoy a few minutes. -JEFF SORENSEN tford and McCabe and Mrs. Miller Modern Language Bldg. Fri., & Sat. McCabe and Mrs. Miller is one drawings of those unusually rich films that grows immeasurably from one viewing to the next. And, as of h-ing 8-9). my last viewing, I would rank it as the most important Ameri- ra, Josef can film of the last decade. Mc- Cabe's complexity is due some- what to director Robert Altman's Fri., Sat.) quite innovative attempt to in- Sat.) cov- vest a commercial narrative film t.) cover;with the sense of realism of cine- .ma verite. Things don't seem to FrI., Sat.) be enacted for the cimera' ; Bimbo's benefit; rather, we get not par- Rubaiyat, ticularly privileged, ofttimes r; Pretzel elliptical glimpses of the movie's zz combo, dialogue and action. Conversa- (Fri, St.,tions are occasionally muffled, Fri., Sat., naudible. One becomes ac- quainted with the film as with a person, noticing some things the first time around, other, less ob- 5 vious things the second and third. All of which would be a royal pain had Altman's notion of realism not extended beyond mere dialogue obfuscation. The film revolves around Punchy Mc- Cabe (Warren Beatty), his arriv- al, in 1900, in Presbyterian Church, Washington, (a muddy, paltry collection of shacks) and his role in building the village into a thriving community re- plete with shops, tavern, and whorehouse. And Altman, true to realistic form, presents us with a wilderness town that he and his technicians actually constructed in Canada and in- habited during the course of the shooting of the movie. Vilmos Zsigmond's exceptional color photography, dominated by drak grays, dark browns, and dark blues, conveys the wet, oppres- sive reality of a frontier village brilliantly. And yet Altman is striving for quite a bit more here than a simple gritty realism. In the tale of McCabe, his relationship with Mrs. Miller (Julie Christie), ma- dame of his whorehouse, and his venture into Capitalism (via the skin business), Altman does noth- ing less than chart the course of American history, from the days of the frontiersman to the growth of American capitalism to our present world of bureau- cracies and corporations. It all sounds awfully pretentious t h e way I've presented it, I know. And yet it all works beautifully, probably because while Altman is damned profound in an his- torical sense, he never loses sight of simple human realities, and never sacrifices his characters for more abstract aims. -RICHARD GLATZER * * * Iy Fair Lady Mediatrics Fri. & Sat. To be truthful, I haven't seen My Fair Lady since it first came out nine years ago, and I went then only because of Audrey Hepburn. In my youth I had melted before the many televis- ion reruns of Roman Holiday, Sa- brina Fair, and Breakfast at Tif- fany's (the last kiss in Tiffany's is a killer for a 14-year-old), like others had done when she first aneared in movies in the early '50s. At that time she was the darling of America, the innocent pixie with the high cheekbones and slender figure who so charm- ingly fell in love with Gregory Peck, Humphrey Bogart, George Peppard, etc., and who often doubled as a model for Vogue Magazine. It was rarely observed that the pixie could act. She seldom re- ceived a role that required much more than capturing the viewer's heart. But when she did, as in The Nun's Story, she played it with depth and naturalness. Eliza Dolittle is quite similar to her romantic parts, though it is more animated and calls for a much greater change in character dur- ing the course of the film than those parts. For being so delight- ful in this role she lost the Os- car for Best Actress to M a r y Poppins. On the other hand, Rex Harrison won the Best Actor Award for a role that was to him old hat. His Professor Higgins is exactly what you expect f r o m having heard about it and seen it on Ed Sullivan. As far as the film itself is concerned, t h e songs are good, and Hepburn looks divine when she gets dress- ed up. -DAVID GRUBER * * * Deliverance Fox Village In his novel, James Dickey transmitted the Georgia wilder- ness so graphically that one al- most assumed the film Deliver- ance would make itself. Dickey, however, just as vividly portray- ed a mental landscape as wild as the Cahulawassee River; thought processes united with physical action to create a deep, h a r d- hitting suspense. Somehow, this punch in the gut eases into a slap in the face when Dickey and director John Boorman bring Deliverance to the screen - it is a slap that stings (and that ain't bad) but the feeling doesn't last nearly as long. Although the details are a little fuzzy, the storyline follows the novel faithfully. Four middle- aged Georgia businessmen tack- le the wilds, spurred on by the restless he-man of the group. The camera plunges into Cahula- wassee country, dipping us into the lush jungleworld that prom- ises deliverance from everyday life. The camera certainly captures the physical world. It maintains a high level of tension and ex- citement throughout the m a n y confrontations with danger, and it lingers on painful moments for as long a spell as any maso- chist could ask for. The film grips the viewer from beginning to end, moving onward as re- lentlessly as the river itself. Only by comparing it to the novel does the viewer realize what the film is missing - the mental landscape, the psychic terror that should grow w i t h each increasingly difficult step. Burt Reynolds can look as mas- culine and tough as you please, but his biceps don't reveal much. inner self. As Ed Gentry, Jon Voight must carry the burden of the action. The screenplay and direction, however, give him lit- tle opportunity to adequately con- vey Ed's elation, his fear or, most importantly, the extent to which he must squeeze out the will to survive. -LARRY LEMPERT * * * Travels With My Aunt Fifth Forum W h e n Maggie Smith first jounced onto the screen in George Cukor's Travels With My Aunt, I immediately realized she was supposed to be a young woman masquerading (presum- ably for some devious purpose) as an old one, and doing a pretty poor job of it. Surely no charac- ter would believe that that ridic- uously made up, freakish wo- man, doing a silly Auntie Mame- Isadora Duncan imitation, all in an outlandishly red wig, was a real old lady. Well, as the film progressed, I slowly came to realize that not only were the film's characters buying Mag- gie's bizarre impersonation,. but that - you guessed it - I was supposed to also. All of which might convey some sense of how desperately wrong this pseudo-witty, occa- sionally gray (that's as close as it gets to black) comedy is. And it's not entirely due to the grotesque miscasting of Maggie Smith in a role Cukor originally intended for Katherine Hepburn. Cukor's comic sense, his manner of directing actors, his camera placement and composition is all abominable. Cukor is obvious- ly trying to produce another of the light, sharp, sophisticated, and expensive comedies that made both his reputation and MGM's. And to be sure, this tale of larcenous, free-living Auntie Augusta (Maggie S.), h e r straight - laced nephew Henry (Alec McCowen - yes, Alec4 McCowen), and their interna- tional adventures and romances could - except for some really horrible scenes involving pot and an American teeny - bopper -be the work of a sixth rate studio director of the '30's. It's sad enough that a once okay film maker doesn't know when to give it all up, but it's sadder that he insists on dragging down with him two actors as talented as Maggie Smith and Alec Mc- Cowen. -RICHARD GLATZER Trouble Man State The most serious question rais- ed by Trouble Man, one of the latest black exploitation films, is simply why is this garbage shown in an Ann Arbor movie theater when there are a great many excellent first-run films that arrive here months late, if ever. Nothing in the film is pal- atable in the least. My urge to leave the theater and find some- thing better to do was nearly overwhelming throughout. Trou- ble Man just barely raises itself to the level of the average crime - detective TV series. The film at present has an "R" rating, but, if some of the "right on" dialogue were trimmed by a few unmentionables, the film could find a comfortable slot in between, say Columbo and Man- nix. Ivan Dixon appears to be re- sponsible for directing this vomit and Robert Hooks is responsi- ble for playing the part of Mr. "T", the hero - private detec- tive of the movie. The film goes through the mo- tions of most of the cliches of the crime - detective film genre, with the only exception being that a black man is playing the part. T is hired to investigate some holdups of craps games and a trap is set whereby T is framed for a murder charge. Police Captain Joe Marx tries to nail T," but T is too clever, and Marx can't get any charges pinned on him. The plot con- tinues ad naseum thrqugh a ser- ies of murders and double-cross- es involving pathetic stock char- acters. Don't worry ,though, be- cause it all works out for the best in the end as T kills his Okotaganists in some nifty gun- play. Along the way there is a combination of almost unspeak- able dialogue, pathetic acting and thoughtless camera and edit- ing. The only action I suggest you take toward this film is to stay as far away as possible. -JEFF SORENSEN * * * And Yet Another Week Of... The Sorrow and the Pity - Campus - Informative, educa- tional, occasionally quite moving. A stunning World War II docu- mentar-y by Marcel Ophuls. The Poseidon Adventure - Michigan - Ernest Borgnine and a very fat Shelley Winters. Could you want any more? A R T S CULTURE CALENL CONCERTS-Folklore Society presents John Har Norman Blake in Power at 8. DRAMA-JLO presents Mousetrap at Mendelssohn ART-Kwan Lam Wong exhibits his architectural in Architecture & Design Lobby. DANCE-International Folk, in Barbour, 8-11 (teac MUSIC SCHOOL-University Symphony Orchest Blatt, conductor, in Hill at 8. WEEKEND BARS & MUSIC-Blind Pig, Okra (1 cover; Golden Falcon, Majo Boogie Band (Fri., er; Mackinac Jack's, Ramble Crow -(Fri., Sa Mr. Flood's Party, Brooklyn Blues Busters (1 cover; Odyssey, Store Front (Fri., Sat.) cover On The Hill, Cricket Smith (Fri., Sat.) cover; Iris Bell Adventure (Fri., Sat., Sun.) no cove Bell, FFD Boys (Fri., Sat.) cover; Del Rio, ja (Fri., Sat.) no cover; Ark, Steve Goodman ( Sun.) admission. t to, W The most remarkable 1 I have seen this year. -Arthur Schlesh Sat., Sun. and Wed. at .'*'' 1 P.M. and 7:10 P.M. Promptly toni ght 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones 56 Bridge with Jean Cox 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7 ABC News 9 I Dream of Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 56 Book Beat 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell The Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I Love Lucy 56 World Press 7:30.2 What's My Line? 4 Hollywood Squares 7 Wait Till Your Father Gets Home 9 Lassie 56 Wall Street Week 50 Hogan's Heroes 8:00 2 Mission: Impossible 4 Sanford and Son 7 The Brady Bunch 9 Woods and Wheels 56 Washington Week in Review 50 Dragnet 8:30 4 Little People 7 Partridge Family 9 Amazing World of Kreskin 50 Merv Griffin 56 Off the Record 9:00 2 Movie "Ten Little Indians" (English 1965) 4 Circle of Fear 7 Burt Bacharach Shanigri-la 56 Fine Art of Goofing Off 9:30 9 Sports Scene 0 56 Work Day Dream 10:00 4 Bobby Darin 7 Love, American Style 9 Tommy Hunter 50 Perry Mason 56 High School Basketball 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 One Step Beyond 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "Fate is the Hunter" (64) 4 Johnny Carson 7 Dick Cavett 50 Movie "Action in the North Atlantic (1943) 12:00 9 Movie "Corruption" English 1965 1:00 4 News 7 Movie "Outside the Wall" (1950) 1:30 2 Movie "Savage Drums" (1951) 3:00 2 7 News I inger Jr. Mon.-Tue.- Thur.-Fri. at 7:10 P.M. only 12 i 4 s. university CAMPUS 1;,l TAU EPSILON PHI Fraternity at 1412 Cambridge offers " Lifetime Friendships. "*An appealing living situation unlike a large dormitory or a confining apartment. " Social and Athletic activities. " Comparatively inexpensive room and board costs. Cinema 5 Presents The Sorrow and TherPipty Directed by Marcel Ophuls WHERE CAN YOU GET A it CUP OF COFFEE?* Dannon Yogurt for 30C? and a great breakfast of 2 eggs, toast, bacon, and coffee for only 65c? Nowhere but the HALFWAY INN! in East Quad on Church St. *bring your own mug-save the Earth CALL 761-3618 OR STOP BY FOR A RIDE ANYTIME HELL, UPSIDE DOWN Who will survive-in one of the greatest escape adventures ever! PANAVISION@ COLOR BY DELUXE® Soon: "SOUNDER" i, CINEMA II FRI., SAT. & SUN. CLINT EASTWOOD-DOUBLE FEATURE FISTFUL OF DOLLARS THE GOOD, BAD, AND THE UGLY Dr. Sergio Leone II II