Wednesday, February 7, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednesday, February 7, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PaeThe tonigIht 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones 56 Maggie and the Beautiful Machine 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7 ABC News 9 I Dream of Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I Love Lucy 56 Zoom 7:30 What's My Line? 4 Festival of Family Classics 7 Wild Kingdom 9 Irish Rovers. 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Consumer Game 8:00 2 Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour 4 Adam-12 7 Paul Lynde 9 News 50 Dragnet 56 America '73 8:30 4 Banacek 7 Movie "Divorce His/Divorce Hers" Part 2 9 Wonder of it All 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 2 Medical Center 56 Eye to EyeJ 9:30 56 Ask the Lawyer 10:00 2 Cannon 4 Search 7 Owen Marshall 9 This is Noel Coward 50 Perry Mason 56 Soul! 11:00 2 4 7News 9. CBC News 50 One StepsBeyond 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "The Desperados" (69) 4 Jo hnny Carson 7 Jack Paar Tonite 50 Movie "The Telegraph Trail" (1933) 12:00 9 Movie "Rage" (1966) 12:30 50 Movie "Man from Monterey" (33) 1:00 4 7 News 1:20 2 Movie "Big House, U.S.A." (55) 2:50 2 News wcbn By BRUCE SHLAIN Two suburban Southerners are being forced to sodomy at gun- point along a river bank by two vicious hillbillies. One of the vic- times has already been violated. Now the hillbillies turn towards the other man, Ed (Jon Voight), who is helplessly tied to a tree. There is a close-up of Ed, he is wide-eyed and panting, t h e sweat is rolling freely down the sides of his face. Now a close-up of the attacker-to-be, of his scraggly beard and horrific, toothless smile. The camera drops to his belt, he begins to undo his trousers, and then the camera suddenly zooms in be- hind him to Lewis (Burt Rey- nolds), who stands poised with bow and arrow. The singing thwock! of the arrow is heard, one of the hillbillies has been hit in the back and the other runs off. All of this in approximately three seconds. And then the pace is slowed, the camera lingers on the dying man staggering about with an ar- row clean through him, the sound 'Deliverance': P urely visceral experience of fear 9:00 12:00 4:00 7:10 8:00 11:00 3:00 The Morning After Show Progressive Rock Folk., Buckminster Fuller Rythmn and Blues Progressive Rock Signoff "DEAL IN UNNATURAL SHADES FROM THE PSYCHE... A GOTHIC MYSTERY." -Time Magazine Color by DeLuxe i -ALSO- The stars of "Goodbye Columbus" the comedy "MADE FOR EACH OTHER" * THURSDAY * Max von Sydow Liv Ullman THE EMIGRANTS CULT.URE CALEJHWA CAPRA FESTIVAL-Cinema Guild presents Capra's Mr. Deeds Goes to Town at 7, 9:05 in Arch. Aud. FILMS-Psych 171 Film Series shows Terry's Comings and Goings and Bullins' A Son, Come Home in the Frieze Are- na at 4; AA Film Co-op plays Adige's Mad Dogs and En- glishmen at 7, 9 in Aud. A, Angell. MUSIC -The Music School presents Theo Alcantara con- ducting the U Philharmonica and Thomas Hilbish, con- ducting the U Chamber Choir in Hill at 8. UPCOMING DRAMA TIP-UAC Michemers present Woody Allen's play Play it Again, Sam Thurs. at 8 at Mendels- sohn Theatre. DRAMA-Honey plays at 8 at the Vest Pocket Theatre. ART-An exhibition of works by 30 university art faculty members is on display in the museum of art. WCBN-Our campus FM station broadcasts the first of its tapes of the Future Worlds lecture series at 7:10. The first part of Buckminster Fuller's talk can be heard to- night; the second half will be broadcast tomorrow at 7:10. - - - - - - - - - - of crickets is heard, and then he collapses, blood obscenely pour- ing from his open mouth, again in close-up. This murderously-paced action sequence signals the real be- ginning of Deliverance, although it occurs some forty minutes in- to the film. It is the point where the innocent-seeming journey of four men on a weekend canoe trip explodes into The Ordeal. The dead hillbilly lies grotes- quely among the city folk, and they are noticeably terrified by the body's presence, a reminder of what they have just been through. Only Lewis, the n o s t athletic and courageous of the four, dares approach the body. The rest, Drew, Ed, and Bobby, cower in the background as if they were the confounded apes in 2001 and the dead body was the 'secretive and all-powerful mono- lith. Seeing as it is customary cine- matic etiquette for the camera to politely leave a dead body af- ter the obligatory last gasp, this scene, with its morbid, unflinch- ing insistence upon accentuating the hillbilly's bloodied counten- ance, is part of director John Boorman's consistent emphasis on the physical aspects of death. At every opportunity, Boor- man concentrates on the situa- tions which call for repeated phy- sical contacts with the dead. The hillbilly killed by Lewis must be carried upstream and buried to avoid a trial; the other assail- ant is eventually slain by Ed, and he too must be laboriously dragged about tied up with rocks, and plunged into the river; and when it appears that Ed, Bobby, and Lewis are about to make it out of the river peacefully, they are startled by the sight of Drew's mangled body up against a rock, confirming his assumed death the previous day. The graphic and macabre gor- iness (some sequences could con- ceivably repulse Lt. Calley) ris- es above the level of the Porno- graphy of Blood, for the empha-, sis is at all times on the char- acters' reactions to it. To be sure, having the aud- ience recoil at something espec- ialy ghastly establishes a very special type of identification with the actor - he is then acting out our own sense of horror. This questionable but extreme- ly effective device was utilized in Catch 22 when Alan Arkin, as Yossarian, stripped the clothes from the wounded young Snow- den only to have his insides sud- denly pour out. Then there is a quick cut to the contorted face of Arkin, who is then given a great deal of leeway, for no aud- ience could recover quickly enough to say that Yossarian's frenzied, hand-biting response was overexaggerated, or melo- dramatic, or epileptic. I would suspect that, without the rush of intestines, the subsequent clos- er scrutiny of Arkin might cancel out the scene's effectiveness. This type of identification is especially crucial to Deliverance, because the movie simply does not make it on James Dickey's intellectlal level, nor did Boor- man tailor it to anything more than the purely visceral exper- iences of fear. Leaving the pro- f"ndities to smolder in the nov- el, he has concentrated on In- volvement, and with success. There is little else but the categorical assault of direct and immediate exuerience, which car- ries with it the bare, simplistic clout of naked tragedy. Totally absent is the cool, stylized, de- tachment that frequently makes foreign films seem so cultured next to their American counter- parts. Boorman's "vulgarized" approach is curiously apropos for his subject matter, since the ac- tion, occurring as it does in :he wilderness, is already stripped of its cultural context, and Boor- man takes the reduction one step further by stripping away m'ch of the artistic context as well. There is a severe paucity of contemplative moments - t h e primary thespian requirement in the film is to know how to pant and feign nervous exhaustion. Jon Voight does noticeably better than his three cohorts, but even Voight is at times so exaggerat- ed in his despair that one had to wonder, does the smell of death make him asthmatic, or is he really having a crisis? B u r t Reynolds also has a failing, namely his difficulty in convinc- ing himself he is not Marlon Brando - but his leg gets hurt before he ruins the film with the macho stance. Deliverance is, of course, not the first film to deal with the unleashing of hidden fears and powers in an alien and dangerous situation. Movies like Peckin- pah's Straw Dogs and Cluzot's Wages of Fear are of the same type. The films by Peckinpah and Cluzot, however, are films of linear motion, they move steadily towards .some impending catas- trophe or release, some epiphan- ous, all-encompassing climax, which will conceivably provide some answer to a pressing, dis- turbing question. Will Dustin Hoffman as the timid mathemati- cian in Straw Dogs stand up to the drunken village ruffians who are trying to break into his home? Will the truckdrivers in Wages of Fear stand up to the pressure of driving trucks load- ed with nitroglycerin? There is notequivalent question to ask in relation to Deliverance, and hence no answer. Every ten- tative or desperate act taken by the characters to extricate them- selves from their Ordeal proves ultimately fruitless, there is noth- ing realy tangible that they are fighting against. Even when Ed eliminates the second hillbilly (who was perch- ed on a cliff with his shotgun waiting for their chance to go by) with an arrow, his triumph is double-edged; for in the pro- cess he falls on one of his own arrows and wounds himself, so that he is left with the gnawing pain in his side. There is always another dan- gerous stretch of rapids around the bend, and even when they have left the water, there is still the suspicious probing of the po- lice to contend with. As Bobby remarks, "There's no end to it.". The "escape" must obviously come from within - from this comes the impact of Dickey's novel. The characters must some- how harness the energy released from the upheaval they have un- dergone. In the novel, Ed, the narrator, says that "the river and everything I remembered about it became a possession to me, a personal, private posses- sion as nothing else in my life ever had." The film does not deal w i t h escape routes. The only intima- tion of Ed's personal transend- ance of the Ordeal comes when he scales the cliff at night to ambush the hillbilly. Pleased and a bit surprised to have climbed up there, he stands tall and looks down at the river, which pulses through the gorge with a blue-orange iridescence. But Boorman does not dwell on the scene, nor does he milk its beautiful serenity by trying to make the events cohere neatly into Ed's personal salvation. The film's final image is that of Ed's nightmare, of a hand slowly emerging out of the water in that same, blue-iridescent atmosphere. The canoe trip is over, but something indefinable, amor- phous, and frightening looms in the background. Only the hand is shown, just a tip of the night- mare's iceberg. Boorman seems to be leaning heavily on the premise that a horifying concept is all the less horrifying once it is a concept, that to be left with nothing but a nervous inkling in the pit of the stomach is the most honest way to communicate such an ex- perience as the men endured in Deliverance. Indeed, he has re- jected any formula, any frame- work - it is not just another of those "cases" of nature's indif- ference or of the hidden prim- itivism in all men. If it sounds inane to applaud the intellect of a director for hav- ing the foresight to remove the intellect from his adaptation, then a I can manage to refrain from doing so. Boorman may in- deed be leaving most of the work, most of the perspective, to the viewer's personal discretion, but it does not strike me as a crime when the characters them- selves are glimpsed in that same uneasy purgatory in between the loss of previous values and' the grasping of new ones. This is, after all, the nightmare of De- liverance, to be suspended from the edge of climax, holding on with the fingertips and flailing the air with the feet. the air with the feet. Bertolucci talks' about Liast Tango' MICHIMERS present Woody Allen's play Play It Again, Sam 8 P.M.-THURS.-FRI.-SAT. FEB. 8-10 MENDELSSOHN THEATRE TICKETS $2 & $2.50 in the Fishbowl and at Mendelssohn Box Office I TONIGHT By United Press International Director Bernardo Bertolucci, eye of the storm of controversy over Last Tango in Paris, con- cedes that his new film'has "a certain fascination." His shocker, which stars Mar- lon Brando, caused Bertolucci to be tried-and acquitted-of ob- scenity in his native Italy. The film has been lambasted for male chauvinism by -women's lib in the United States and hailed' by critics on both sides of the Atlantic as a triumph of art over what used to be considered por- nography. Bertolucci can tango all the way to the bank. "When they show Tango at film festivals 20 years from now, the iudiences will think I made it for a nun's school, even, in Italy," predicted the compactly built, handsome director whose five previous films included sev- eral flops and The Conformist, which earned him international critical praise. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 MaynardaStreet, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Mirthful! Magical' Musical! WAL.T . .' DISNEY5 - t AI.L-CARTOON * FO rURE : Dailyot 1, 3, 5, 7, & 9 p.m. 231 south state Theatre Phone 642-6264 "There are two types of film," he said in an interview alternat- ing between English and Italian. "In one, reality is in front of the camera. In the other, the film speaks in metaphorical terms and the reality is in the camera. I used the camera in the latter way in Tango. Bertolucci considers 'inema the only real esperanto, closer to music than theater or narra- tive. Waxing poetic about the tool of his trade, he likened the camera to a womb-a simile that recalls the roundish, womb- like room in which Brando and his co-star, Maria Schneider, explore the outer limits of sex. Bertolucci said he was mes- merized the moment he took a movie camera in hand in his late teens. He knew immediately that films were his future-and his punishment. "When I am not making a film, I am miserable and when I finish one I always think it will be my last," he said. Bertolucci wrote Tango. for Jean - Louis Trintingnant a n d Dominque Sanda, co-stars of The Conformist but they were not available. He conceived the idea of changing the male lead from a Frenchman to an American "sort of 'An American in Paris' 20 years later" so that Brando could play it. "I didn't approach him be- cause of his success in The God- father because they were still editing it and even Marlon had no idea whether it would be a success," Bertolucci recalled. Once Brando signed for the role of Paul, an emotional bank- rupt who seeks salvation in bru- tal sex, the Betrolucci system went into action - long discus- sions with the actors to help them get inside their roles, then right into screening without the usual rehearsals. "I will film scenes many times to get what I want but I never rehearse," Betrolucci said almost vehemently. "I feel it's useless. It is more important what actors are in the actual moment of screening than what has been said or written before..- 'It is important for me to know what is happening in ac- tors. If Marlon came to the set with only a couple hours of sleep, I had to take advantage of his paller and sleepiness. I think this gives a certain fascina- tion to Tango." A sense of time and lighting also ari vital to the Betrolucci style. He believes every film has its own particular tide, not the same as a clock or a calendar, but the time of the emotions. H- describes the lighting of Tango as attaining a very refined at- mosphere not unlike that in paintings of the late Renais- sance. "But time dominates and it gives me vertigo," he added. "My next film will start in 1900 and move through the century, until now, until tomorrow, into the space age. But it will not be the surface of the moon. It will be the cornfields. "I will take the camera into the earth, as if I were filming an unknown planet of an un- known galaxy, with the feeling that some city people have when they first come to the country. I'm writing the script now but the land will oblige me to im- provise with its unforeseeable wind, change of light, with its silence so pregnant with vibra- tions. As for the charge that Tango is pornographic, Bertolucci has a succinct answer: "There is no such thing as pornography, only good films and bad films. These acts are so natural that to have omitted them would be more morbid because it would encour- age the audience's fantasizing." STUDENT DISCOUNT $1.00 OFF $5, 4, 3 weeknights-$6, 5, 4 weekends GROUP RATES AVAILABLE-CALL BOX OFFICE b Dennis Hopper's THE LAST MOVIE starring DENNIS HOPPER and PETER FONDA SYLVIA MILES JULIE ADAMS SAMUEL FULLER AND FEATURING KRIS KRISTOFFERSON "a frenzied, brilliant, love-hate attack on contemporary movies, including his own, and our assumptions about them." "BEST FILM"-Venice International Film Festival WANT A GOOD SUMMER JOB? . .. If your parent's income does not exceed $12,000. ... If you can show substantial Financial need through Financial Aid application. .--If you will be a full time student in the fall. Then apply for the Spring/Summer Work Study Program. Jobs are available in Ann Arbor, with the Detroit and New York Urban Corps, also in California, Ohio, Florida, Pennsyl- vania and elsewhere. APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 1 APPLICATIONS DUE MARCH 1 For applications and more information-Inquire at 2011 SAB 763-2151 liill I I "Charles Brinson as Joe Valachi is honest, affecting and strangely poignant." -Playboy TheValachiPapers INTERESTED IN STUDY/TRAVEL EUROPE 73 TONIGHT A Showing of the Film IMAGES AND AFTERWARD The Opportunity To Meet and Talk With- * 1973 Faculty Program Advisors " Students from Last Summer's Program STARTS THURSDAY Thursday is Bargain Day!-We will now have mati- nees every Thursday-All seats will be 75c before 6:00 p.m. PU w \u ".*X--T-V., I " Pt'arrnns Fvnp~ripnpi n ea ;, ii'dvandA Tr~nvol I a hrnnd1I