Friday, March 2, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page 'Three Friday, March 2, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three David Copperfield Cinema II Fri. "I have in my heart of hearts,' said Dickens, 'a favor- ite child and his name is David Copperfield.' The classic story of David's triumphs and sor- rows and the amazing people who were his friends and ene- mies, has been made into, a * gorgeous photoplay which en- compasses the rich and kindly humanity of the original so bril- liantly that it becomes a screen masterpiece in its own right. The immortal people of David Copperfield, of whom G.K. Ches- terton has said they are more actual than the man who made them, troop across the . . . screen like animated duplicates of- the famous Pliz drawings on an irresistable and enourmously heartwarming procession. It is my belief that this cinema edi- tion of David Copperfield is the m o s t profoundly s a t i s f y- ing screen manipulation of a novel that the camera has ever given us." - Andre Sennwald, N. Y. Times, 1935. Who knows, it may still be. The film stars W: C. Fields as "the magnificent Micawber, the indigent aristocrat, the tool of circumstance," Lional Barry- more as Dan Peggoty, Maureen O'Sullivan as Dora, Basil Rath- bone as Mr. Murdstone, and Freddie Bartholomew as the kid. Not seen by presstime. Things to Come Sat. Cinema II Things To Come is the vision of eminent science - fiction author, and fortune teller, H. G. Wells, in 1936. It is the frighteningly, pessismistic tale of a turbulent century. However, more import- ant than the factual accuracy of the 100 years, is the prophesy of man's human condition in the fu- ture. This is 1973, and for obvious reasons we can smirk smug- gishly, confident in the knowl- edge that the worldwide holo- caust Wells' predicted for the past three decades never mater- ialized H o w e v e r,Things To Come correctly portrays the world as an arena for man's non-stop conflicts. R a y m o n d Massey's pur- poseful and quiet portrayal of John Cabals, a scientist, philoso- pher, and humanitarian who leads the world back to civiliz- ation - underground cities, ar- tificial sunlight, muzak, etc.- strongly hints of being a por- trait of Wells. Cabals, better than anyone in the film, knows that the need for confrontation in men will never subside. He chooses to conquer science and space rather than other civiliz- ations. Yet the insecurity of civi- lizations because of warfare, both past and future, leaves the audi- ence intrigued, much the same as the conclusion of another science-fiction classic A Canticle for Leibowitz. Things To Come is engrossing and provocative, and if half way accurate, then we are in for an interesting century. -JEFF EPSTEIN Belle of the Nineties Cinema II Sunday When Belle of the Nineties was first released in 1934 it was titled It Ain't No Sin and was considered so lewd as to be un- fit for general audience consump- tion by all the censoring boards, including the state of New York, which refused even to license it. So some of the more objection- able material was removed and the film was reissued. Gone are scenes like the one in which Mae, slasped in the arms of an over zealous lover, murmurs se- ductively: "Take it easy, honey. You'll last longer." But by and large, Belle of the Nineties bris- tles with all the sexual double- entendres for which Mae West is famous.. Mae plays Ruby Carter, a slinky cabaret singer in a swank New Orleans gambling estab- lishment called "S e n s a t i o n House." There she plays queen bee to a swarm of admirers, but her real love is a boxer named Tiger Kid (Roger Pryor). Some- how she and the slugger have a falling out due to an unfortunate misunderstanding p u r p o s e- Hour of the Fu Part 1 New World Fil UGLI Fri. This is the first hour of a long, long, long,t ary history of Argent with radical polemics plistic thinking. Stanli nann cited this as the of 1971. Jean-Pierre "Jean-Luc Godard and' his romantic French ac it a "Sheetty movie.". complimentary. The Kingo Marvin Gard Fifth.,Forum The cinematic them as a game" is surel most originanl of con The King of Marvin Ga rarity, in that it stan crnaces love you for what you are, but that don't last long.") However, this can only be part of the Im cause. In Stockton, any success is a minor one, and if it comes and a half at all it does so with some de- andoauhalf- gree of failure. There is noth- Jevoluti nl ing worth attaching oneself to, a, filed and no one has enough strength and sim- to do so anyway. What there is best film instead is a shared sense of Gorin (of frustration, a feeling that the fame) n only thing people have in com- ent called mon is the grit of the town. Admission Behind Fat City one can feel the sureness of Huston's direc- -STAFF tion. (except for one moment at the end when he decides to use a bit of obvious trickery). He knows his settings and charac- lens ters thoroughly, and he knows their backgrounds. Stories and e of "life remembrances pop up in gener- y not the al conversation, deepening and cepts, but filling out the lives we are rdens is a watching. There are fine per- ds unpre- formances by Keach, Bridges, by Susan Tyrell as Oma, a mixed- s up, highly emotional woman who vacillates between fits of tears and a kind of masculine tough- ness, and by Nicholas Colasan- to, whose Ruben is the person- ification of a coach, short, paunchy, with a high hoarse voice, an unending line of pep talk, and a genuine concern for his boxers. In Huston's hands all these elements are blended to- gether in a rich and unassuming picture. -DAVID GRUBER cinema weekenc Sounder Michigan Although Sounder is a nicely photographed a n d pleasant enough film, it remains a mys- tery to me why there have been waves of acclaim for it. Part of the mystery probably lies in the very fact that a word like "plea- sant" can be ascribed to a film about black sharecropping in the Deep South. And during the De- pression, yet. Hats off, then, to white direc- tor Martin Ritt He seems to ha-e once an.d for all commer- cialized the Black Experience into a mixture of shimmering wheatfields and good hard work. To point out the commercialness of Sounder, however, need not entail a total condemnation. The subject matter is, for the most part, novel enough, and the act- ing powerful enough, to with- stand the almost "breezy" .ap- proach to the anguishes of pov- erty and racism. That is, after all, partly the point, to break through the stereo - typical veil, the social veil that hides the Southern Black, and move the personality to the forefront. Indeed, at times Cicely Tyson, as Rebecca, and Paul Winfield, as Nathan, move, nbowt with such an imnenetrable inner strength th-t their eco- nomic struggles seem a mere pittance. Winfield is often shot with the camera looking up at him, exag- gerating his physical stature as he tugs at his cap and glares for a moment at the horizon. Cicely . Tyson, meanwhile, is even more spiritually imposing than Win- field. Her thin, almost bony fig- ure is perfectly suited to Martin Ritt's idea of the combination earth - mother andsensual wo- man. The pose that. Ritt most often films of Rebecca is one in which she flares her nostrils and shows her teeth like a fine race- horse, supposedly in these mo- ments breathing in the Despair and turning it to Love. One can only look forward to seeing Ty- son with another director, even though she provides the' best dramatic moments in Sounder, as when she stares back momen- t'arily at the sheriff who denies her knowledge of her imprisoned husband's whereabouts. Yes, the Morgan family has its hardships. The film begins with a nice scene in which Na- than and his oldest son, David Lee (Kevin Hooks), run through a moonlit patch of woods in pur- suit of a raccoon. Sounder, their dog, gives exhausting chase, but, the raccoon gets away. Nathan takes it in stride, in the manner of a man accustomed to failure, but at the same time his sense of male pride is left totally in- tact. With his children going hun- gry, Nathan steals some meat ("I went where I had to go. My children was hungry."), and is promptly arrested for it. As he driven away in a pick-up truck, handcuffed, his faithful dog Sounder chases after him, and is shot at and wounded by a depu- ty. Bleeding, Sounder limps off into the woods. In the absence of Nathan, David Lee and Re- becca have to handle the share- cropping themselves, which they miraculously manage, although Ritt leaves it to the imagination as to how that was actually ac- complished. At this point in the narrative, David Lee becomes the import- ant character. Determined to find his father, he finds out, with the help of a white woman, where his father has been sent. He embarks, on foot, on a ri- diculously long journey, which proves fruitless - he does not find his father, but' he shows he can walk long distances. One of the things that gives this film its slow and comfortably melan- choly pace is the. emphasis on the distances between theMor- gans' farm and "civilization." For instance, when the three Morgan children deliver the laundry to the white woman, Ritt follows them on their jour- ney for almost five minutes, as they run, play, and tire them- selves out on the sun-scorched fields. But the visions of the black farming community as a spac- ious, free, and colorful garden of Eden are short-lived. The baseball game in which Nathan pitches his team to victory is followed by a delightfully care- free stroll with Rebecca and Ike (Taj Mahal) complimenting Nathan on his throwing arm and Ike picking on his guitar - but the walk ends with Nathan's ar- rest at his home. By making David an allegori- cal figure of the Black movement away from the farm, away from poverty and towards Justice and Equality, Sounder loses much of its impact. For the film works on the level of the ordinary and sometimes heroic "drudgery of survival," plain and simple. By trying to inject a detachment from the characters by allusions to their historical significance a la The Emigrants, the charact- ers, looked at as cogs in a larg- er framework, appear ludi- crous. They appear ludicrous because the characters of Rebecca and Nathan already exist outside of a historical framework by being so much "larger-than-life." It is something like trying to look at Rhett Butler and Scarlett ' Hara as symptomatic personali- ties of the dying Southern Iaris- tocracy. No way: it is the South that revolves around them! It is surprising that this dis- parity between theme and execu- tion would arise, especially with Lonnie Elder III (Ceremonies in Dark Old Men) adapting'the William* Armstrong novel. One suspects, however, that the whit- ish liberal "justification" of the Morgan's hardships might be traced, to Ritt. -BRUCE SHLAIN; And Yet Another Week Of.. The Emigrants--Campus--See this by all means. Deliverance -- Fox Village - From Germaine Greer to Cosmo to Deliverance and now to a poster wearing nothing but a shirt (but shot from behind). What next, Burt? ........... WABX Presents During their American Tour the BEE GEES IN CONCERT WITH 30 MEMBERS OF DETROIT SYMPHONY conducted by GLYNDWR W. HALE Special Guest Star from England JIMMY STEVENS * CONCERT LOCATION SWITCHED * From Cobo Arena to Masonic Auditorium All tickets purchased for Cobo Arena may be exchanged for comparably priced ticke.ts at Masonic Box Office thru March 10th. After March 10th only refunds will be given. still TUESDAY, March 20-8 p.m. Tiickets $5.50 $6.50 At Masonic Box Of., Grinnell's, Hudson's or by Mail Order to t Masonic Box Office, 500 Temple, Detroit. Send self-addressed stamped envelope with Certified Check or Money Order. A GOLDEN GOOSE PRODUCTION fully to keep them apart by the proprietor of "Sensation House", Mr. Ace Lamont - a type that causes the otherwise agreeable Ruby to remark: "His mother should have thrown him away and kept the stork." of course, Mae and her man are reunited, but not before a num- ber of double - crosses and plans of revenge have been woven in and out of the plot. Actually, the plot of Belle of the Nineties, as in most of her movies, merely serves as back- ground to Mae West, for she makes her personality the sharp focus of the picture, knowing better than most performers then or since how to use a ve- hicle to a lady's advantage. Incidentally, the band accom- panying Mae on her songs (in- cluding "St. Louis Blues") is none other than Duke Ellington. -WILLIAM MITCHELL tentiously as a tragic allegory for the failings of American capi- talism on the most personal of levels. Jacob Brackman's screenplay, directed by Bob Rafelson (Five Easy Pieces), involves the strain- ed reunion of two brothers, David (Jack Nicholson) and Jason (Bruce Dern). Nicholson is su- perb as David, who does a late- night radio show on which he slowly creates grotesque and an- guished tales based upon his own experiences. Although pessimis- tically reserved in the discon- solate existential manner, Nichol- son still manages to control the film, if only with his doubting, bitter squinting and asthmatic sniffing. Dern meanwhile, plays his over-genial, fast-talking brother, whose home is the Broadwalk, always ready with a business scheme, a hustle, always ignor- ing everything to concentrate on reaching the jackpot. Only as the film develops does it become ap- parent that Jason is basically a fraud, an "artist" really, whose every gesture is geared to main- tain the delicate illusion that he is flirting with a huge financial success. Jason knows that David does not believe in his manipulations, and asks him incredulously what it is that holds him back, so he can tell David "if it's real." Indeed, it is Jason who reck- lessly defines the film's reality, its game-like quality. He is taking David on a journey through a dream that he wants to share, a dream that enables him to avoid David's weary hopelessness. The touching embrace of the two brothers, occurring after one of their usual stalemates, demon-. strates how close they really are, separated only by the thinnest of veils, namely American mythol- ogy. -BRUCE SHLAIN Across 110th St. State A slick "formula" detective film set in Harlem, where tough- ness and nerve are ends in them- selves. Music by Bobby Womack in the Isaac Hayes style, and plenty of tense encounters with obscenities and radical epithets to underscore the filthiness of the city. Anthony Quinn as the aging detective. One of Dick Gregory's favorite movies of '72, although not of one of mine. The situation in our major cities is simply not all that bad. -SPIRO F. AGNEW to 0 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS "THE FBEST PICTURE ' BEST ACTRESS A T.-C ICELY TYSON A_ MOVIE BEST ACTOR "I'd bet on 'Sounder' THE -PAUL W I N F I ELD to sweep this year's 'LE BEST Academy Awards. IB can't recall any film +~SCREEN PLAY I tonight 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 50 Fiintstones 56 Operation second Chance 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7 ABC News 9 I Dream of Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island , 56 Bridge with Jean Cox 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 World Press 50 I Love Lucy 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 Hollywood Squares 7 Wait Till Your Father Gets Home 9 Lassie 50 Hogan's Heroes 8:00 2 Mission: Impossible 4 Peter Pan 7 Brady Bunch 9 Woods and Wheels 56 Washington Week in Review 50 Dragnet 8:30 7 Partrdige Family 9 Pig and Whistle 50 Merv Griffin 56 Off the Record 9:00 2 Movie "The Magnificent Seven." (1960) 7 Room 222 9 News 56 San Francisco Mix 9:30 7 Odd Couple 9 sports Scene 56 The Symphony Sound 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 OnesStep Beyond 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "Moby Dick" (English 1956) 4 Johnny Carson 7 In Concert Special: The Guess Who, BAL King and Melanie 50 Movie "Edge of Darkness" (1943) 12:00 9 Movie "Blood of the Vampire" (English; 1958) 1:00 4 Midnight Special 7 Movie "Roger Touhy, Gangster" (1944) 1:30 2 Movie "Lady Possessed" (1952) 2:30 4 News 3:00 2 TV High School 7 News 3:30 2 It's Your Bet 4:00 2 News cable tv channel 3 that was so visually. moving." -Dave Sheehan, KNXT-TV CICELY TYSON & PAUL WINFIELD IN "SMNDER" A Robert B. Radnitz/Martin Mitt Film 4th H11 WEEK! SHOWS DAILY AT S1, 3, ,5, 7, 9 P.M r 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 Pixanne Today's Woman Something Else Strataihere Playhouse Local news and events Model Cities NCAA Sports Community Dialogue I Look what UAC-Daystar has' waiting for you. when you return from Spring Break: BETTE MI DLER THE DIVINE MISS m .......... ... ...---...-.. . - .~' *~r v ~ .,.,*: f.N . i :};i,.-i:: si:i: iii .. .:: "i - "::-:}:4;v iii N..::: :. f~., Fat City Fifth Forum Characters in John Huston movies are strongly influenced by their surroundings; they ob- tain their energy from them, they are built up, torn down or even driven mad from them. The spirit of their locale is often what determines their fate. This is certainly true of Fat City, one of Huston's finest films. The story takes place in Stockton, California, a town which is, in one word, cheap. It thrives on bars, urban renewal projects, and gymnasiums, and its inhabitants are kept afloat by alcohol, boxing and bowling. Billy Tully (Stacy Keach) is one of the town's many small time losers. Once a professional fighter, he is now a broken wan- derer of Stockton's streets. His excuse for his condition is that his wife walked out on him after he lost an important match ("There are some women who wcbn 89.5 fin P3 WCBN listings 9:00 Morning After Show 12:00 Progressive Rock 4:00 Folk 7:30 Rhythm and Blues 11:00 The Oldies Show W. C. Fields as Micawber and Freddie Bartholomew in the title role of 'David Copperfield,' showing here this weekend. From the author of 'Slaughterhouse Five' and 'Cat's Cradle' rultUR ALEN1DAR ART-The Ann Arbor Antique Fair & Sale will be held this week, in the Twining Aviation Building, Ann Arbor Mu- nicipal Airport, at 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Fri., Sat., and 11 a.m. -5 p.m. Sun.; Pyramid Gallery brings D. Rubello and paintings from his "Progressions Series" Sun. from 4-6;. Lantern Gallery opens collages by Ada Yunkers Fri. 7-9. CONCERTS-The Raven Gallery, Detroit presents Mill Creek Station Fri., Sat. at 9:30, 10:30, 12:00, and Sun., at 9:30 and 10:30; Winter Jazz '73 comes to Detroit's Ford Aud., Sun. at 8. THEATRE-Detroit's Vest Pocket Theatre presents Honey through March 11. UPCOMING CONCERT TIP-UAC-DAYSTAR brings Bette Middler Mar. 31 at 8 in Hill. Get tickets now. WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-Bimbo's has Gaslighters Fri., Sat. (cover) and Sun. (no cover); Blind Pig brings Gar- field Blues Band, Fri., Sat. (cover), and classical music. Sun.; Del Rio presents, Jazz on Sun. (no cover); Golden Falcon has Bossa Nova Fri., Sat. (no cover) ; Mackinac Jack's presents, Radio King and his Court of Rhythm Fri., Sat., Sun. (cover); Mr. Flood's Party brings Diesel Smoke and Dangerous Curves Fri., Sat., Sun. (cover) ; Odyssey offers Locomobile Fri., Sat. and Chip Stevens Sun., Mon. (cover); Pretzel Bell has RFD Boys Fri., Sat. (cover); Rubaiyat shows Iris Bell Adventure Fri., Sat., Sun. (no cover); Bimbo's on the Hill presents Gabriel Fri., Sat., Sun. (cover). LAW SCHOOL FILMS PRESENTS KURT VONNEGUT "some of the funniest, most sardonic lines to be heard at the moment on stage or screen enliven this macabre comedy." -WILLIAM WOLF, Cue Magazine. 'Happy Birthday, Wanda June' does revive the play with all of its varied delights. Once again, the pleasure of Vonnegut is yours." -JUDITH CRIST, New York Magazine JR's ?. J~$ . starring D A iCm.A plus CHAPTER NO. 5 entitled "THE DESTROYING RAY" of our continuing "FLASH4GOR DON" I