Friday, February 16, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three r Friday, February 16, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY As ThiS KOrK $2.00 b50 FRI.-SAT.-SUN. ELEKTRA Record's Paul Siebel L'Atalante Cinema Guild Fri. In L'Atalante, director Jean Vigo deals with dramatic fic- tion as if it were documentary, projecting an ironic and detached attitude in the calm and reflec- tive style of the French essay. L'Atalante is the name of a barge on which a newly married couple spend their honeymoon. Vigo's sympathetic and highly sensitive understanding of the romantic mentality ,are at 'work here in his portrayal of the couple's problems, all against the background of a beautiful mesh- ing of symbols., Although complex, L'Atalante never becomes abstract. In his book on Vigo, reviewer John Smith insists that "the cinema has nothing to offer that is super- ior in feeling to L'Atalante." -STAFF Loves of a Blonde Cinema Guild Sat. & Sun. Loves of a Blonde is one of. thoserare films that is both small and relaltively unambi- tious, yet complex, warm, hu- man and very funny. Milos For- man's Czech movie is very much a situation comedy, revolving around two simple predicaments. We are first treated to a dance arranged so that, some small town female factory workers will have a chance to meet some men (and therefore, hopefully, reach a higher output - in more ways than one). The blonde of the title falls for a musician, and, mistaking his romantic pat- ter for sincere emotion, follows him to his home in a larger city, thereby creating the second hu- singer-songwriter IyZ! Hill STREET 76F1951 " morous situation of the film. Mi- los Forman seems to excell at a minor, ironic, delicate sort of comedy, of which this film is a fine example. -STAFF Morocco Cinema II Fri Morocco (1930) was directed by Josef Von Sternberg and is the vehicle he used to introduce Mar- lene Dietrich to American audi- ences. Unfortunately, he seems to have relied more on Dietrich's beauty than on her acting abili- ties, as she is required to do little more than gaze intently in- to Gary Cooper's eyes, smile, and/or look exotic. Still, who could resist those beguiling charms-in this movie neither Cooper nor Adolphe Menjou, evi- dently. Dietrich portrays Amy Jolly, a high-priced apple vendor (?) at the local bistro. Menjou is in love with her and offers all sorts of diamonds and emeralds as inducements to marry him, but she will have none of it, for she; you see, loves a Pvt. Tom Brown of the French Foreign Legion (Cooper). In order to arouse his interest, she offers to sell him one of her apples at 20 francs each. He gives her the money, and she gives him the apple and her room key saying, "Here's your change." (No wonder the franc was devalued.) At any rate, Cooper succombs quickly and tells her that he'll desert the Foreign Legion if she'll follow him to Europe. She agrees, but then he changes his mind, leaving her to forget her infatua- tion by promising to marry Men- jou. Apparently that prospect pales, however, and she decides it would be better to follow her true love wherever he may go- in this case that involves crossing the burning desert in her bare feet. And so, manless and shoe- less, but with hope in her heart and apples in her basket, she plods off into the Saharan sun- set. -WILLIAM MITCHELL A Day at the Races Cinema II Sat. & Sun. For those few who seriously attempt to distinguish between one Marx Brothers movie and another, A Day at the Races is the one about horse doctor Hugo Hackenbush (Groucho) and his bumbling attempts to come to the rescue of Maureen O'Sul- livan and save her sanitarium. While whether you have or haven't seen a Marx Brothers film ordinarily has little to dd with whether you should go to see one, the issue might grow in cinema w n wa~saiMeeken. Subscribe to The Daily I' I importance this weekend as fren- zied masses will have to decide whether to spend their dollars on this or Bananas, or, if one is feeling tremendously anti-mate- rialistic, whether to blow it all on a big weekend double bill. -STAFF Bananas Modern Language Bldg. Fri., Sat. The plot of Bananas, just like A Day at the Races, is irrele- vant. It is just a conventional vehicle for unpredictable antics, caccio's bawdy tales to solini, by the way, ist ist, atheistic directorv ed us to such things as pel According to St. Teorema, and Medea. Catch-22 UAC Mediatri For those of you who read the book, Catch story of one man's a cope with a military that runs on its own usually in the form of visual or v e r b a 1 insanities. This isn't Woody Allen's funniest film, yet he is still the best comedian since the Marx Brothers. Woody is as funny looking a human being as any of the Marx trio. Resembling, somewhat, an. advertisement for starving Biafra with freckles, this self-acknowl- edged sex symbol is most amus- ing playing a total failure. Woody successfully revives the "neb- bish" who couldn't rob a candy store in Take the Money and Run. In Bananas he is a tester, (employed to test new products), who leaves for South America to lead a revolution. Many comedy bits in Bananas are reminiscent of the Marx Brothers, especially the court- room scene where Woody as law- yer cross-examines Woody the witness'. Also noteworthy is the screen debut of America's sport- casting superstar, Howard Co- sell. Allen has a field day with Howard, television, revolution and any institution of the '60s and '70s he considers material worthy of his insanity. -JEFF EPSTEIN Decameron Modern Language Building Fri. & Sat. What can you say about the first commercial film here to feature a man with an erec- tion? We don't know - primar- ily because no one on our staff has experienced Pier Paolo Pa- solini's attempt to translate Boc- logic, and then, whe lizes the futility of his escape from that m pleading insanity. But1 wanting to get out of is a perfectly sanec anyone who wants to; sane, and thereforec discharged. Yossarian lings through this mil rinth provide the pre which both the booka are based. Directed by Mike N starring Alan Arkina ian, Catch 22 (1970)i accurate translation of at least in spirit. The comes in trying to c many of the book's biz acters into a two hou the actors aren't giv time to flesh out their izations, so that at best formances come off a at worst as caricatu this leads to an overa situation in which a kn the book is almost e be able to understand ing what to whom. But for all this confu are a couple scenes wx to bring the whole ins tomy sharply back in In one, Yossarian is help his comrade, Sn -ing wounded at his s your leg still hurt?" inquiring, trying to t leg while the body ro ses, and dies; and fi lizing it's the body t tally wounded, not b to do a goddam thing a And then there is th image shot at long planes coming down a ering runway and lifti gently into the air. Up lessly. Like slow mot flies or moths dancin water. Green, death planes become airyi heavier than down. -WILLIAM M Innocent Bysta State The James Bond fi innovative in establish genre in adventure f at the same time, re genre obsolete. The Bo parody of the tongue-i proaches to murder an made the spy film that cannot be succe out making fun of itse Innocent Bystanders not a Bond movie, spy vs. spy cliches, down to the appeara leading man, StanleyE is a pockmarked, Wel Connery. film. Pa- This is not to say that the the Marx- makers of Bystanders did not who treat- break their backs looking for The Gos- new twists. Not only is Baker Matthew, mysteriously pitted against his own secret service outfit, but he -STAFF is supposedly impotent due to electrical torture. At least until Geraldine Chaplin comes along. -B. SHLAIN cs o have not Sounder 22 is the Michigan attempt to I think it only fair to warn r machine perverse potential audiences for Sounder that the title is also the name of the film's leading hound. This ** should provide a gut understand- ing, based upon past canine- genre cinema, of what you can expect to see. There are some differences, of course. Although Sounder is as wise and loyal as, say, Lassie, Rin Tin Tin or Old Yeller, he has had the gross mis- fortune of being born into mid- Depression racist Louisiana, ser- vant and companion to a strug- gling sharecropping Black family whose bearably hard times (as the movie opens) have suddenly become unbearable. What we assume has been sev- n he rea- everal days (weeks?) without efforts, to meat for the children has taken achine by its toll. The father, Paul Winfield, the atmy is driven to theft. The family gets army its protein dinner and Winfield desire, so gets a year in the work farm. get out is With Winfield temporarily out of cannot be the picture, all pretenses of this i's stumb- being something other than a itary laby- 1970's conception of a Black- mise upon Walt Disney-boy-dog adventure and movie flick are forever laid to rest. The boy of the boy-dog duo ichols and is Robert Hooks, a promising as Yossar- young actor cast in the role of is a fairly a down-home Tommy Rettig. He the novel, appears in every scene. The difficulty mother is Cicely Tyson, ten times ram too as beautiful and talented as June arre char- Lockhart. ur film - Every so often, for no apparent en enough reason, Taj Mahal . (who re- character- ceives credit for the soundtrack), t their per- walks onto the screen and de- s cameos, livers a zesty tune; a mesage for res. Sadly, one of the principals; or in one all chaotic case a clever one-liner, which owledge of simultaneously provides excel- ssential to lent comic relief and the high who is do- point of the movie. He has no business being in sion, there the movie and seems to let us hich seem know that his role represents a ane dicho- director's concession by sneak- to focus. ing on and off the screen. This trying to shallow reality is also evidenced owden, ly- in the accent of the school teach- ide. "Does er Hooks and Sounder happen he keeps upon in their adventures. Some- reat the one forgot to tell her that the ts, convul- action is Post-Reconstruction nally, rea- Deep South. She sounds as if hat's mor- she were giving directions to the being able Brooklyn Botannical Gardens. bout it-... This is not to dismiss Sounder e beautiful entirely. It does have its moments range of and its message. Louisiana gives heat-wav- a nice account of itself on the ng ever so big screen (similar to The Reiv- p so effort- ers in texture) and the guitar and ion butter- banjo picking is bouncy. Most im- ng on still portantly however, the simplistic h - shitting nature of the plot renders the insects no film a wonderfully palatable ve- hicle for offering children an ITCHELL understanding of Southern rela- tionships and culture devoid of anders textbook type. It is not a dis- paraging remark to say that this lms, while is an excellent film for children. ling a new It is. ilms, have Consequently, if you feel that ndered the your child's memorization of the ondish self- South's leading exports is beside n-cheek ap- the point, you may discover that d sex have Sounder' contains the point. If something you aren't a child or you don't ssful with- have any, better to pocket your if. admissions' money and skim the , although T.V. Guide for Lassie reruns. smacks of -MARTY MARMOR Reed reads Standing before a group of avid listeners in the UGLI Multipurpose room yesterday afternoon, J. D. Reed reads his poetry. Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM The Emigrants Campus The Emigrants lacks charac- ter complexity as well as any semblance of dramatic climax. But, despite how far removed we. might be from the disorienting, brutal, and yet exhilarating ex- perience of emigration, the rich detail of this film photographed and directed by Jan Troell is so emotionally evocative that it moves one to trace his family tree back out of the United States. The film is Swedish, but curiously enough, it seems to speak more directly to Ameri- cans than to Europeans; perhaps Americans feel the modern im- possibility of the "pioneer ex- perience" more intensely. The aforementioned "lack" of character complexity is more than made up for by the per- formances of Liv Ullman and Max Von Sydow, as Kristina and Karl-Oscar. The two of them play the Swedish farming couple who live a monotonous existence on a remote a farm-land that has as many rocks as blades of grass. From the beginning, Troell makes us aware of the all-per- vasive, near - maddening soli- tude of the close-to-the soil life, where only the sounds of labor punctuate the stillness. The burnt-out crops, a flash fire that destroys their barn, the endless proliferation of chil- drens' mouths to feed - the ex- treme vulnerability of these pea- sants is excruciating. As an es- cape, Karl - Oscar and Kristina pack up their brood and head for America, banding together with an eccentric group of religious zealots. The turbulent and claustro- phobic boat ride, with its hordes of lice and walls that run with slime, are somehow' survived by the emigrants. Almost like chil- dren, they dream of America as an Eden, magnificent and mys- terious. Disembarking at the port of New York, they are confronted by the masses of sullen, squat- ting blacks, ragged and in chains. The disillusionment of the emigrants is compounded by their inability to communicate. But eventually Karl - Oscar finds his lush farmland. Carving his claim onto a tree, he is a soli- tary and insignificant figure, content in a silent and immense paradise.. -B. SHLAIN And Yet Another ; Week Of.. Deliverance-Fox Village-Are they kidding? Best Picture? It's okay adventure, but nothing more. The Valachi Papers-Fifth For- um-Illustrated History. Eh. 603' lbery PLEASE Theatre Phone 66S.6290 NOTE! SNEAK PREVIEW TONIGHT at 9 o'clock OUR REGULAR SHOW "SOUNDER" WILL BE SHOWN AT 7 O'CLOCK AND AFTER THE PREVIEW. THE PREVIEW IS A COMEDY to, 0 SIGN UP NOW Study guitar with JUAN SERRANO one of the world's finest flamenco guitarists. Now teaching at MONDAY-SATURDAY 9:30-9:00 336 SOUTH STATE 769-4980 MIDNIGHT SHOW - FRIDAY and SATURDAY .Aadnitz /MATTEL Productions Reses "SOUNDER" A Robert B. Radnitz/Martin Ritt Film PANAVISION®COLOR BY OE LUXE ® with CICELY TYSON right on nce of the Baker, who sh, pseudo- I I 'r' ... I t {: ARTS Poets- The Michigan Daily Arts Page is now accepting poetry for publication. submit work to Arts Editor c/o The Daily. i k. }, f f * WABX Presents ; I f THE- f f f I' BEE f f f i 'GEES f f WITH 30 MEMBERS OF | DETROIT SYMPHONY ; f Conducted byf * GLYNDWR W. HALE ' * Special Guest Star i From England f iI * JIMMY STEVENS TUES., MARCH 20; i f SC EINA C UL tURiE. ALA MUSIC-Aspects of Electronic Sound, 8 p.m. at Hill, presented by the Music School. String Department Studeit Recital, SM Recital Hall, 8. DRAMA-The U Players present their production of Rabe's The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel at Trueblood at 8. The South Quad Players present The Apple Tree at S.Q. Dining Room 4 at 7:30 and 10:00. DANCE-An International Folk Dance tonight at the Barbour Gym, 8-11. (Teaching 8-9). WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-Ark, Paul Siebel (Fri., Sat., Sun.) admission; Blind Pig, Brooklyn Bluesbusters (Fri., Sat.) cover, String Trio (Sun.) no cover; Del Rio, Jazz (Sun.) no cover; Golden Falcon, Fifth Revelation (Fri., Sat.) cover; Mackinac Jack's, Lightin' (Fri., Sat., Sun.) cover; Mr. Flood's Party, Garfield Blues Band (Fri., Sat.) cover, Diesel Smoke and Dangerous Curves (Sun. at 3 p.m.) cover; Bimbo's on the Hill, Full Force (Fri., Sat.) cover; Odyssey, Stone Front (Fri., Sat.) cover, Okra, (Sun.) cover. O NOW PRESENTS (1 "VTIrUmkrfC -EED _AAADrLI jla ' tonight 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones 56 Operation second Chance 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7 ABC News 9 I Dream of Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 56Bridge with Jean Cox 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 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 Jacques Cousteau 9 Woods and Wheels 56 Washington Week in Review 50 Dragnet 8:30 4 Little People 9 Pig and Whistle 50 Merv Griffin 56 Off the Record 9:00.2 Movie "Alexander the Great" (56) 4 Circle of Fear 7 Room 222 9 News 56 San Francisco Mix 9:30 7 Odd Couple 9 Sports Scene 56 Walter Kerr on Theatre 10:00 4 Bobby Darin 7 Love, American Style 9 Tommy Hunter 50 Perry Mason 56 High School Basketball 11:00 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 One Step Beyond 11:15 2 News 11:20 9 News 11:30 4 Johnny Carson 7 In Concert 50 Movie "Twelve O'Clock High" (49) 11:45 2 Movie 12:00 9 Movie 1:00 4 Midnight Special 7 Movie "Shadow of Evil" (French, 1964) 1:45 2 Movie "Mambo" (Italian, 1954) 2:30 4 News 3:00 7 News 3:15 2 It's Your Bet 3:45 2 News plus: Chapter 3 of our continuing "FLASH GORDON" PIER PAOLO PASOLINI'S film of GIOVANNI BOCCACCIO'S ___ .nu ..r ter, _