Sunday, February 4, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Rage Three, ii. SPECIAL! HOT CHOCOLATE Everyone Welcome I LOTS OF PEOPLE GRAD COFFEE HOUR WEDNESDAY 810 p.m. West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM LOTS OF FOOD r -> FINAL APPEARANCE ' TONIGHT AT 9:00 BROOKLYN BLUES BUSTERS 1 BACK BY POPULAR REQUEST RADIO KING AND HIS COURT OF RHYTHM MON. TUES. WED. 217 S.ASH E 2PM. - 2A.M. Cap ro By RICHARD GLATZER Who is Frank Capra? Even people who've never heard the name have probably been influ- enced by him. The great Holly- wood film director almost put an end to the undershirt business when he allowed Clark Gable to go without in the Walls of Jerico scene in It Happened One Night. His Mr. Deeds Goes to Town put the words doodled and 'pix- ilated' into the dictionary. Clark Gable, Claudette Colbert, Jean Arthur, James Stewart and. Bar- bara Stanwyck all got big breaks in Capra films. And certain Cap- ra scenes and images - a young idealistic Senator (James Ste- wart) philibustering, Claudette Colbert teaching Gable how to hitchhike, Jean Arthur and Gary Cooper singing "Swanee River" on a park bench, a remote Him- alayan kingdom of peace a n d harmony called Shangri-la, even Hemo the Magnificent teaching kids science in the Bell Tele- phone Science Series -stick with people long after the last mem- ories of more esoteric, less in- volving films have been erased completely. And the appeal of a Capra movie only seems to grow with age. Cinema II recently showed It Happened One Night to two full houses - both of whom applauded the film solidly for several minutes. Capra is an American myth- maker whose success entertain- ing and moving an entire na- tion is unequalled in our film history. His observations of the U.S. of the '30's and '40's is often frank, almost hard-hitting. Yet Capra is primarily a comic genius who has always retained a certain innocence, a sincere faith in the possibilities of life and the power of the human spirit to overcome all obstacles. Some of his films are the most convincing and joyous affirma- tions of life I have ever ex- perienced. Capra's world view is perhaps never expressed as succinctly as, when Jean Arthur finds herself falling for one of Capra's naive, idealistic, almost silly heros, turns to a fellow cynic (I be- lieve it's Thomas Mitchell in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington) and drunkenly muses, "Maybe it's a curse to go through life all wised up." But I could ramble on { about Capra indefinitely. For anyone who's interested, Capra's auto- biography, The Name Above the Title, is filled with fascinating anecdotes, and Mr. Capra will be available for discussion at Cinema Guild following the 7:00 show on Feb. 11th, and the 9:00 show on the 12th. The Strong Man and The Negro Soldier MON., FEB. S Silent comedian Harry Lang- don shot to fame in several Cap- ra shorts and in The Strong Man (1926), Capra's first feature- length, "one man, one film". I haven't seen the movie, but two very distinguished critics - James Agee and Kevin Brownlow - recommend it quite highly. There is something of a run- ning controversy going among ilm reviewers as to whether Langdon's success is entirely a result of Capra's directorial gen- ius (Langdon's films on which Capra did not work are gene:- ally considered dismal failures) or whether Capra merely brough: out Langdon's fragile, unique tal- ent and displayed it properly, At any rate, one can seen in The Strong Man nascent themes of Capra's later work. Langdon plays Paul Bergot, a baby-faced Belgian soldier in World War I, who, for some perverse reason, has God on his side (and not too much else). Bergot gets captured by the enemy (in particular, one Zandow the Great). The armis- tice is signed, and the pair then go off to the U.S. enabling Ber- got to search for Mary Brown, an American girl who had writ- ten him faithfully during r h a war years. Bergot, of course, gets involved with several shady characters and strange dilem- mas before he finally finds Mary. (Donald Sosin will be accompany- ing the film on the piano). When Capra enlisted in the Army in 1942, the War Depart- ment put him to the best use they could - making moralo building movies. Capra's b e s t known World War II work is the Why We Fight series, but T h e Negro Soldier, made shortly af- ter this series, should be equal- ly interesting. Capra believes this to be the first legitimate at- tempt to document the black's role in American history. One must admire the courage of a man who would make a film of this sort while the Army was still segregated, but I wonder h o w liberal attitudes of the '40's will strike us today. By the way, Capra's role in making the film is quite ambigious. In his auto- biography, the director seems to see the movie as primarily his creation, though other sources give credit to Stuart Heisler as director and merely list Capra as production supervisor. Platinum Blonde TUES., FEB. 6 Platinum Blonde (1931), a pre- cursor of It Happened O n e Night, follows ace reporter Stew Smith (Robert Williams), his ro- mantic interest in heiress Anne Schuyler (Jean Harlow), and his relationship with colleague Gal- lagher (Lorretta Young). As m most of his comedies of the ear- ly thirties, Capra here shows a liking for slick urban folk; a liking that, after it It Happened One Night and Broadway B I 11 (1934) was to transform into a disenchantment with city cynics and a decided preference for naive country yokels. Mr. Deeds Goes to Town WED., FEB 7 In Mr. Deeds Goes to Town, Capra created his own genre. No longer were the city dwellers and their affectationsyw o r t h emulating; it is a very marked outsider, Longfellow Deeds (Gary Cooper) who sets a money-obses- sed metropolis straight with his common sense, non-materialis- tic values. Gary Cooper h a s never been more wining or more at ease. And Mr. Deeds gave a huge boost to the career of one of our finest comediennes, Jean Arthur. You Can't Take It With You THURS., FEB. 8 You Can't Take It with You tells of a wacky New York City family who merely sit at home, do exactly what they want to do, and constantly bring home addi- tions to their clan who are tired with the rat race out there. The Sycamores, though ostensibly New Yorkers, are again outsiders political comedy and a thorough- ly impasioned plea for liberty and justice. The movie's indict- ment of crooked national poli- tics had Washington in an up- roar when the film was first released - Joseph Kennedy, then U.S. Ambassador to Eng- land, even wrote to Harry Cohn (the film's producer) asking that the movie be pulled off the market. It wasn't. And when, in France, the Vichy government placed a ban on all English lang- uage films, theatres all across the country chose to show Mr. Smith the night before the ban went into effect. The film is a Mr. Deeds on a grander scale, filled with Cap- ra's patriotism and love of free- festival salute s comic ren us ing film about the possibility of American fascism: It Could Hap- pen Here. This is Capra's finest treatment of crowds - m o r e stunning than the crowd treat- ments in American Madness (1932) or Mr. Smith. The climac- tic rally, filmed in Wrigley Field, is turly overwhelming. The film suffers from a lack of a con- vincing ending (Capra realized this himself and filmed f i v e different, unsatisfying denoue- ments). Yet even while the last scene's logic fails, the mise-en- scene - atop a city office build- ing on a quiet, snowy Christmas Eve - is nevertheless quite ef- fective. Gary Cooper and Jean Arthur in Capra's "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town." "DEAL IN UNNATURAL SHADES FROM THE PSYCHE . . A GOTHIC MYSTERY." -Time Magazine as far as modern urban values are concerned, and, like Deeds, their non-materialistic, flamboy- antly individualistic outlook on life is seen in direct contrast with the more conventional suz- cess of robber baron Anthony P. Kirby (played brilliantly by Edward Arnold), who tries to buy the Sycamore's house to per- petrate some sleazy industrial scheme. The film, by the way, won Capra his third Best Direc- tor and second Best Picture Oscars. Mr. Smith Goes to Washington FRI., FEB. 9 Over the years, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939) gained a reputation as a classic American dom. Naive Jefferson S m i t h (James Stewart) stumbles into a Senate seat and goes to our Cap- itol only to have his ideals shat- tered by a head-on clash w i t h the corruption and graft that made Washington what it is to- day. Meet John Doe SAT., FEB. 10 To reveal the premise of Meet John Doe (1941) would be to spoil one of the cleverest open- ings of any Capra film. What Capra did here was to study the mass American movements of Huey Long and Father Coughlin, all the while keeping Hitler and Nazi Germany very much in the back of his mind, and to come up with a still timely and frighten- --ALSO- The stars of "Goodbye Columbus" the comedy "MADE FOR EACH OTHER" Next: "The Emigrants" O P 1973 SUMMER FLIGHTS 0 FULL DINNER WITH WINE " CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST 0 COMPLIMEN- the ann arbor film cooperative THIRD ANNUAL 8 mm FILM FESTIVAL CULTURE! CALEN DARk FILM-Cinema Guild presents Cry, Dr. Chicago, Cry at 7 and Dr. Chicago at 9, Sun., and begins Capra Festival with The Strong Man and The Negro Soldier, Mon. at 7 and 9:05 in Arch. Aud; Cinema II shows Claire's Knee Sun. at' 7 and 9 in Aud. A; The Ann Arbor Film Co-op brings the 8mm Film Festival winners Sun. at 8 in East Quad Aud. SCHOOL OF MUSIC-Deborah Hinderer plays oboe at S. M. Recital Hall 2:30 Sun.; John McCollum, tenor; Nancy Hodge; piano; and Robert Courte, viola, perform in Rackham Aud. 4:30 Sun. CONCERTS-U. of M. Folklore Society presents Sandy & Caroline Paton Sun. Feb. 4 at 9 in the Ark; Earl Robinson comes to the Ark Mon. night. It's a Wonderful Life SUN., FEB. 11 It's a Wonderful Life (1946) is Capra's favorite film, so it is quite fitting that he appear after the 7:00 show to discuss the film with the Cinema Guild aud- ience. This is Capra's most ser- ious and reflective film, a post- War recollection of an era and the study of a man's spoiled dreams and eventual dissillus- ionment. The movie is at times tremendously powerful, and James Stewart's performance (the actor's favorite of all his roles) includes some of the fin- est acting ever done in Holly- wood. The love scene with Ste- wart, Donna Reed, and a tele- phone, is absolutely classic. The Bitter Tea of General Yen and Lady For a Day MON., FEB. 12 Very atypical. This 1933 film is Capra's try at artiness. Me- gan Davis (Barbara Stanwyck) journeys to China to marry her missionary childhood sweetheart, Dr. Strike (Gavin Gordon) - that is until she meets the amor- al, sexy Chinese warlord, Gen- eral Yen (Nils Asther). Bitter Tea is sensual, erotic, lush, von Sternbergian. This is a rare print of the film that Columbia Pic- tures dug up for us out of their vaults. Capra is bringing us his own personal print of this 1933 film not ordinarily available for pub- lic viewing. This is the original Pocketful of Miracles, the story of an old poor apple-vendor who passes as an aristocrat. I have not seen the film, but it w a s very well received when Capra showed it at Yale and at Co- lumbia. Mr. Capra will discuss the movie after the double fea- ture. 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