[ Friday, March 23, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three I / Friday, March 23, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAiLY film themes, and throwing an old, ins' who are tempted to let the Alice Adams Cinema Guild Friday In the title role of Alice Adams (1935), Katharine Hepburn plays a lovesick girl trying to attain an elevated social position in or- der to impress the handsome young man (Fred MacMurray) she met at a dance. Alternately ashamed of her family's meager existence and her own pretenses of gentility, Alice attempts to. keep him from meeting her fami- ly. However, she eventually, re- luctantly agrees to invite him to dinner, thus setting the stage for one of the most memorable scenes, in film history: Hattie Daniels as the slatternly hired maid, Malena-grumbling, chew- ing gum, and generally bringing the "all important moment" to a shambles. Based on a novel by Booth Tarkington and directed by George Stevens, Alice Adams won Hepburn her second Oscar nomination, and although rather trite by today's standards, the film was a great success, especi- ally because of the fine perform- ances of Hepburn, Daniels, and Fred Stone rlaying Alice's father. -WILLIAM MITCHELL Stage Door Cinema Guild Saturday Stage Door was originally a play written by Edna Ferber and George Kaufman intended as a biting satire on the foibles of Hollywood. RKO bought the screen rights and then drastic- ally changed the focus and char- acters, retaining only the title and skeletal framework, to make it a film about the evils of the Broadway stage. Kaufman is said to have remarked, "Why didn't they call it Screen Door?", but even he would probably have en- joyed it for the fine picture it is. Hepburn plays Terry Randall, a debutante and would-be actress who, despite money and position, lives in a theatrical rooming house ("for the atmosphere") with a group of other aspiring ac- tresses - all waiting for that big break. Ginger Rogers, Eve' Ar- den, Lucille Ball, and Ann Miller are among the other boarders nursing their disappointments, sharpening their claws, and vy- ing for the attentions of a promi- nent producer, Adolphe Menjou. -WILLIAM MITCHELL Little Women Cinema Guild Sunday .Little Women (1933) was Kath- arine Hepburn's fourth film and it is considered a film classic. Directed by George Cukor for Hitchcock's way of snoozing be- fore attempting such things as Vertigo, North by Northwest, and Psycho. -RICHARD GLATZER' Rebecca Cinema II Sat., Sun. Rebecca was Hitchcock's first American film (1940) and is still the only picture by the distin- guished Director to receive the cinema weekend suggsg.am as.......sas am me a mas .*.*..*.*......... RKO, it was superbly adapted and lavishly mounted from the Louisa May Alcott novel telling the graceful story of a family of four girls and their "Marmee" living in New England during and just after the Civil War. Miss Hepburn plays the eldest daugh- ter, Jo, with such conviction and force of characterization that one critic said she "goes darting through this picture without giv- ing one moment to think of her as other than Jo March". Suffice it to say, many people consider Little Women one of the high- lights of Miss Hepburn's career, including the judges at the 1934 Cannes Film Festival, who se- lected her as Best Actress for this portrayal. -WILLIAM MITCHELL To Catch a Thief Cinema II Fri. A light, very smooth Hitch- cock breather. Romance, com- edy, and just a touch of sus- pense as Cary Grant plays an ex-cat burglar, romancing Grace' Kelly on the Riviera, when he is accused of a recent string of robberies. It's all very elegant, very enjoyable, but undeniably "Picture of the Year" Oscar (al- though Alfred has no Oscars of his own; Rebecca's Oscar went to Producer David 0. Selznick). Yet, according to Hitchcock, the film "is not typically Hitchcock; it's a novelette, really, and the story is lacking in humor." Based on the slightly melodra- matic novel by Daphne du Maur- ier, the story concerns the sec- ond wife of a wealthy Cornish landowner (Lawrence Olivier), whose marriage is dominated by the invisible presence of his dead first wife, Rebecca. Joan Fon- taine is harassed by the spirit of the dead, and is unconsciously forced to emulate Rebecca's manner to please her hubby. Re- becca's presence is also felt in Hitchcock's constant use of slow tracking shots down the dark corridors and stairways of the palatial house. Hitchcock considered the story "old - fashioned." However, on orders from Selznick, the novel is faithfully reconstructed on screen. Selznick, having just fin- ished Gone With the Wind, felt readers of popular novels might feel cheated if the screenplays strayed too far from the original text. That theory doesn't make for surprising or exciting cine- ma, the trademark we've come to expect most often from Hitch- cock. -JEFF EPSTEIN Carnal Knowledge New Morning MLB Fri., Sat. Mike Nichols' clinical analysis of American sexual mores is deft, perceptive, sensitive filmmaking. The sexual adventures of his two protagonists-beginning with college initiation (in which talk- ing with one's friends about screwing becomes more impor- tant than the act itself), terminat- ing in divorce and melancholy visits to call girls-always ring painfully true. And the Nichols trademark of impeccable en- semble acting is undeniably pre- sent: Jack Nicholson is as dy- namic as ever, Art Garfunkel is fine, Candice Bergen and Ann- Mvargaret turn in much better performances than they have any right to give.. A highly elliptic, strictly focused study of one of the most central concerns of modern American life. Altogether quite a fine film, if somewhat limited. -RICHARD GLATZER Zabriskie Point UAC-Mediatrics Nat. Sci. Aud. Fri., Sat. Revoluntionary dialectics care of Western Union, some good sex, acres of billboards, post-card pretty visuals, and a flashy finale, all courtesy of Michaelangelo An- tonioni. Zabriskie Point is as much fun as a movie can be when the director left his mind else- where. -RICHARD GLATZER Cries & Whispers Campus I didn't like it, but it was okay. I thought that it was just incredibly pretentious. Some people will question whether In- gmar Bergman can make a pre- tentious movie. They'll say that the reviewer's at fault. Not this time. Bergman can still direct people as well as anyone living. Liv Ullman, Ingrid Thulin, and Harriet Andersson give their ex- pected good performances, while newcomer Cari Sylwan is sur- prisingly self-assured as well. But beyond that, it's a symbol- ist's daydream gone haywire. White dresses on the red back- ground, and black on the white, etcetera and so on. It was just too much. All of this brings me to the red, red blood anq the self-mutilation scene. I'm sure you've heard about it already. I've been told that I can't possibly understand it, and the rest of the film, in fact, because I'm a man and this is a film about women. However, Bergman's a man too, and he wrote, directed and produced this film. Maybe that's why I think that it's so, so pretentious. The word fits. By the way, the movie has been distributed by Roger Corman. And you know what he does for a living. I bet that no one has ever accused him of being pre- tentious though. -BUBBLES LA ROUX , Vnltl Fox Village In Italy, when you wish to en- ter the room of another, you knock at the door exclaiming, "Permesso?". Now that you know why Billy Wilder's screen adaptation of Samuel Taylor's play is entitled Avanti you can put your inquisitiveness to rest and sit this one out. It's a loser from top to bottom, from the musak - ipfested jingle that ac- companies the opening credits to the very same jingle that accom- panies the closing credits. The plotline of this "comedy" is supposed to be the source of its humor. Is there humor in two people who travel to Italy to re- claim the bodies of their aged- swinger parents, killed in an au- tomobile accident? Are there laughs in denegrating the Italian lifestyle through chauvanistically ill-conceived American - imposed stereotypes? Would constant ref- erences to the fact that actress Juliet Mills is overweight send Jujyfruits up through your nose? Is Jack Lemmon's portrayal of a constipated business executive clever? The real humor in this mis- guided effort is in the uninten- tional, yet uncanny resemblance Juliet Mills. bears to Tricia Nixon and Jack Lemmon bears to an Eisenhower era Richard Nixon. If you pretend that Lemmon and Mills are actually Richard and Tricia starring in "First Family Dagoland Follies" everything seems to make more sense. -MARTY & SUSAN MARMOR Heat Fifth Forum "I'm trapped in a white ele- phant." And she is. Sylvia Miles is the latest addition to the War- hol - Morrisey crew, opposite the everpresent Joe Dallesandro, in their most recent attempt. She seems right at home. She should. She got all the good lines. Yes, that's right, there was a script. Morrisey takes the credit for it, but Sylvia makes it live. How about, "What do you mean what do I mean? I mean what I just said I mean." Pretty good, huh. Anyway, it's a story about an aging actress, an "old, minor al- most non-existant star" is how its put, and her lesbian-nympho- maniac daughter, and their friends, who are, as one of the film's straights describes them, "The way kids are today." Just for the benefit of the doubt, War- hol - Morrisey have tried to be clever, using many old, cliched 50 One Step Beyond 11:15 2 News 0 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 50 Gilligan's Island 9 I Dream of Jeannie 56 Bridge with Jean Cox 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell The Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 1 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 Tom Sawyer 4 Sanford and Son 7 Brady Bunch 9 Billy Graham Crusade 56Washington Week in Review 50 Dragnet 3:30 4 Little People 7 Partridge Family 50 Merv Griffin 56 Off the Record 9:00 4 Circle of Fear 7 Room 222 9 News 56 Turning Points 9:30 2 Movie "Take Her, She's Mine." (1963) 7 Odd Couple 9 Sports Scene 56 Performence: Jazz 10:00 4 Bobby Darin 7 Love. American Style 9 Tommy Hunter 50 Roberto Clemente 56 San Francisco Rock 11:00 4 7 News 9 CBC News film themes, and throwing an old, cliched (?) actress in the bar- gain, but it doesn't work. The photography is still like my home movies, and the, sound, well, I'm surprised I caught . as many lines as I did. Oh yeah, while I'm handing out the Oscars, Joe Dallesandro's acting has cleared up since Trash; so has his skin. Thank Sylvia for one last line though. Like she said, "This is Hollywood, baby." -BUBBLES LA ROUX The Train Robbers State John Wayne, our last cowboy, riding through the same movie forever. He's a perennial, good guy, a rough diamond, playing father figure to the rowdy young- ins' who are tempted to let the power of a gun lead them astray. The women know he is not as tough as his talk; they love him and often ask him to stay with them. But, alas, he is a drifter ("It's what I do best," he says in The Train Robbers) and he must push on, tall in the saddle, a bit world weary. The Train Robbers itself is a rather mundane western, . not quite having the humor and vi- tality of say El Dorado or Rio Bravo, though it tries for it. Yet at least it is not a pile of non- sense like True Grit. It's a fairly even job of filmmaking, centered around two groups of men, one good, one bad, who are both in. search of stolen gold. Enjoyment of it depends heavily on how See 'MORE', Page 10 11:30 4 Johnny Carson 7 Dick Cavett 50 Movie "Confessions of a Nazi Spy." (1939) 11:30 9 Curling Report 11:45 2 Movie "The Hoodlum Priest" (1961) 12:00 9 Movie "Island of Terror" (English 1966) 1:00 4 Midnight Special Tentatively scheduled per- formers: Grass Roots, Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show, folk rock artists Brewer and Ship- ley,and the O'Jays, a soul group. 7 Movie "Trapped in Tangiers" (1W41) 1:45 2 Movie "Bowery Blitzkrieg" (1941) 2:30 4 News 3:00 2 TV High School 7 News 3:30 2 News wmcbn 89.5 fm 9 The Morning After 12 Progressive Rock 4 Jazz 7 Live Folk 7:30 Talkback 8 Rhythm & Blues 11 Oldies Show cable tv channel 3 3:30 Pixanne 4:00 Julia Meade (consumer intetest) 4:30 Something Else 5:00 Stratosphere Playhouse 5:30 Local News/Town Crier 6:00 The Right On-Model Cities (Lt. Calvin Hicks of the AA Police Dept. Narcotics Squad and Charles D. Price of Model Cities) 6:30 NCAA Super Sports 7:00 Community Dialogue (Third Ward City Council Candidates) Cinema Guild honors Katherine Hepburn in a festival this weekend. "Raunchy humor! Hypnotically weird! A stunning tour de force for Sylvia Miles." -William Wolf, Cue Magazine CULT7URE CALEIN DAR;* DRAMA-Buchner's Leonce and Lena will be presented to- night by the German Department, RC Aud., 8 pm. And the Gilbert and Sullivan Small Company presents Gilbert and Broschmit's Haste to the Wedding at the Michigan Rm, at the League at 8. DANCE-International Folk Dance at Barbour Gym, 8-11. (teaching, 8-9). MUSIC-The Music School presents both a Duo Conoertante with Angel Reyes (violin) and Joseph Banowetz (piano), Rackham Aud., 8 and Bessie Hunter (soprano) in recital at SM Recital Hall at 8. WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-Rubaiyat, Iris Bell Adven- ture (Fri., Sat., Sun.), no cover; Pretzel Bell, RFD Boys (Fri., Sat.) cover; Del Rio Jazz (Sun.) no cover; Bimbo's, The Gaslighters (Fri., Sat., Sun.) cover; Blind Pig, Brooklyn Bluesbusters (Fri., Sat.) cover, Classical En- semble (Sun.) no cover; Golden Falcon, Fifth Revelation (Fri., Sat.) cover; Mackinac Jack's, Salmagundi (Fri., Sat., Sun.) cover; Mr. Flood's Party Terry Tate and the United Supply (Fri., Sat.) cover, Diesel Smoke and Dan- gerous Curves (Sun. 3 p.m.) cover; Bimbo's on the Hill, Apple Core (Fri., Sat.) cover; Ark, Leon Redbone (Fri., Sat.), admission. D t h s , r , URO ;E SUiVA UIiE I"HIT uEDN EtSRlmDRD RE SUhUIR IIUbESIN"HEIT" 1 lE E ILHRRORN MUM E uS EHE"B " 'Heat' is the most important f ilm to ever emerge from the Tropic Underground Movement, providing freshness and excitement. A simultaneously moving and hilarious film!" -Rex Reed, New York Daily News "THE MOST CONVINCING MOVIE ABOUT HOLLY- WOOD SINCE 'SUNSET BOULEVARD' Playboy "Warm and wonderful Warhol human beans ('smile')- living, laughing, loving, feuding, fighting, fussing, griping and groping .. . it was swell." -Vincent Canby, New York Times 2 Shows Daily-7:10 and 9:00 WANT TO. * Impress your friends? s Drink nickel cokes ? * Meet some new people ? r Learn something about advertising ? * And even get paid eventually? Cash in on this once in a lifetime offer Call Ray at 764-0560, or drop in at 420 Maynard UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN'S ARTS CHORALE PRESENTS A TURN THROUGH TIME FREE!r uri._, tL .l ..... . ... . 0 0 D Eh uSRDUO R 'iPTH PDPU 0 76-1-97001 I;,iaiak 1 IU kA