Tuesday, January 16, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three 7 Temperatures Rising Most of our patrons agree with 1'214 s. university Free Press critic Susan Stark who called HAROLD AND MAUDE the most easy-to-take comedy of CAM the year" and who picked it as ________________________one of the year's Theatre Phone 668-6416 10 best films. S "r They met at the funeral of a perfect stranger. Fromthen on, things got perfectly stranger and stranger. Paramount Pictures Presents HAROLD and MAUDE Color by Technicolor A Paramount Picture GP EXTRA- "THE DOVE" .n : A satire on ingmar Bergman. films By RICHARD GLATZER Sam Peckinpah's films have, over the past four years, alter- nated with scrupulous regularity between the violent and action- packed, yet serious and ambitious films upon which the director has partially gained his reputation (The Wild Bunch (1969, The Straw Dogs (1972)), and Peckin- pah's cinematic breathers-light, - pseudo-lyrical, superficially much prettier and more eager to please charm-films (The Ballad of Cable Hogue (1969) and Junior Bonner (1972)). The tougher films seem to me the much more exciting group; Peckinpah is an unde- niably talented action director who produces slight, dull, in- sincere trifles when he's out of his element. Yet even the direct- or's action films are tremendous- ly uneven. Pechinpaw is often all too eager to impose second-rate, inappropriate philosophpic mean- ings on those films, meanings that are occasionally so facile and offensive as to almost ne- gate the effects of his superior craftsmanship. By all rights-if the cycle were to continue-one would expect The Getaway, Peckinpah's latest film, to be another of his tough movies. And to a certain extent it is just that. The Getaway has quite a fair sized portion of that characteristic Peckinpah violent excitement that is the director at his best. Indeed, the film's plot line often seems to be little more than a string meant to tie to- gether various , action episodes. Doc McCoy (Steve McQueen) is granted parole after serving four years in prison so that he may engineer a bank heist for a crooked government offcial. Doc, Carol McCoy (Ali McGraw), and colleagues steal the $500,000. Doc and the Missus try to reach the Mexican border with their fortune intact, pursued by police and fellow crooks alike. Yet The Getaway differs mark- edly from Peckinpah's recent violent films, for the film is al- most completely in pretentions and seriousness. To be sure, many of the old Peckinpah pseudo- profound cliches sur- face occasionally. The movie's poor opening sequence features a montage comparison of Mc- Queen with animals caged and tamed by technology, thereby combining two favorite peckinpah themes, Man as advanced ani- mal and Man up against Technol- ogy. And in the pair of romances An unpretentious blood rn' guts movie the film produces-McQueen-Mc- -Graw and the often funny, oc- casionally inane pairing of Sally Struthers with fine film heavy Al Lettieri-Peckinpah's motion of women's attraction for the macho Man's Man is ever present. This sort of preten- tiousness makes up, however, a minor, undeveloped aspect of the film, not its major preoccupa- tions. Peckinpah seems to be pri- marily interested in making an uncomplicated, entertaining, ex- citing action film; his previous- ly overblown, inappropriate in- tellectual obsessions are here shrunk down to size and/or done away with entirely. So instead of Robert Ardrey and theories on human sexual be- havior, we get a tremendous con- cern with dramatic effect, a con- cern so overriding that plot and character logic are often thrown to the winds. For example: the McCoy's p 1 a n t diversionary bombs that are intended to ex- plode after they have robbed the bank. Why after, not during or before? Certainly not for any mundane reasons; more likely so that we can see Ali and Steve drive the getaway car through the explosions (and up along the porch of somebody's house). Why does McCoy order a salesman, at gunpoint, to wrap up a shot- gun he knows he will probably use within the next few mo- ments? Simple. Peckinpah mere- ly wants us to enjoy the sight of McQueen shooting the gun through all the wrapping. And once again, dramatic effect tri- umphs over storyline logic. Coincident with Peckinpah's de- sire to make an unpretentious blood and guts movie is a wish to pay homage to his filmic roots- the American action and sus- pense film. The director's dis- dain for plot sense is similar to Hawk's plot confusion in The Big Sleep. Several of the movie's best scenes-those set in a gar- bage truck, in a train station, in a run-down hotel, in particular- are conceived in very Hitch- cockian terms. Even Peckinpah's decision to do away with "pro- fundity" that does not grow or- ganically from the film's nar- rative harkens back to the gen- erally unpretentious Hollywood of the '30's and '40's. And while Peckinpah is no Hitchcock or Walsh, he nevertheless does create some fine sequences, and he does keep things moving smoothly throughout the film's two-hour length. Not as successful is Peckin- pah's attempt to create an up- dated variation on the Bacall- Bogart chemistry in the teaming of Ali McGraw and Steve Mc- Queen. Try this dialogue on for size: McGraw: "I can screw every prison official in Texas if I have to." McQueen: "Texas is a big state." McGraw: "I can handle it." McQueen: "Yeh, I bet you can." Bogart and Bacall might have been able to pull this scene off (I kind of doubt it). But Mc- Queen and McGraw trading these quips are downright laugh- able. I thought I saw some genuineness in the physical part's of the pair's love scenes-still, I may have been influenced by the gossip columns. Otherwise, Mc- Queen is ok, but he's playing to a human vacuum. McGraw's Carol McCoy - Jenny Cavilleri gone ganster's moll-is really awful. Yet McQueen is beginning to look wrinkled and paunchy, while McGraw is as firm and fine as ever, so I guess her atrocious performance lends some sense of balance here. At any rate, Peck- inpah's try at whipping up a reincarnation of the classic duo is a predictably ludicrous one. Nevertheless, even at its most inept-and in the McQueen-Mc- Graw interplay it is very inept- Peckinpah's manner of showing respect for his cinema ancestry impresses me as being infinitely more fitting and likeable than the phony depth of The Straw Dogs. Just when I thought we were due for another Peckinpah heavy, the man comes up with an uncharacteristic combination of exciting action and a welcome lack of the director's brand of seriousness. tonight 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones 56 How Do Your Children Grow? 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7 ABC News 50 Gilligan's Island 56 Your Right To Say It 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth . 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I Love Lucy 56 French Chef 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 You Asked for It 7 Parent Game 9 Protectors 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Puppets and the Poet 8:00 2 Maude 4 Bighorn! to 0 7 Temperatures Rising 9 All Outdoors 50 Dragnet 8:30 2 Hawaii Five-O 7 Movie 9 Pig and Whistle Bill Moyers' Journal 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 4 Hernandez: Houston P.D. 9 News 56 Common Ground 9:30 2 Movie 9 Front Page Challenge 56 Black Journal 10:00 4 NBC Reports 7 Marcus Welby, M.D. 9 Tuesday Night 50 Perry Mason 56 Detroit Black Journal 10:30 564360 Degrees 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 One Step Beyond 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie 4 Johnny Carson 7 Movie-Thriller 50 Movie "Virginia City." (1940) 12:00 9 Movie "Breakout" (1957) 1:00 4 7 News 1:20 2 Movie "Charlie Chan at the Race Track" 1936 2:50 2 News Spector's timeless rock n' roll revived from Christmas past ..* . .*.*.*.*.*.mm mma so m Nominate your favorites . . . New Morning presents Agnes VordG's Le Bonheur IN COLOR "Varda's dissection is strikingly adult and unem- barrassed in its depiction of the variety of love with artistic and technical grace. A memorable view of the male and female-awash in familiar together- ness, sacred sex, and frank adultery." -NEW YORK TIMES "We have from France one of the most beautiful films that t. think you will ever see. It's called LE BONHEUR, which means 'happiness,' and it's Renoirish in full color with the tones of the im- pressionists." -JUDITH CRIST "A very unusual picture. Beautiful! A fine, con- sistent originality that merits attention from all H ELL, UPSIDE DOWN Pick the most memorable records of 1972. Send nomina- tions to the Arts Editor c/o The Michigan Daily, no later than Friday, January 19. Cast your vote now for the best: Album of the year................................ Rock album of the year ................... .......... Rock/folk-rock album of the year ..................... Orchestral rock album of the year ..................... Country/country-rock album of the year ............... R & B album of the year .. .......................... Debut album of the year............................ Single of the year .................................... W orst album of the year .............................. CULTURE AENA FILMS-Cinema guild is showing Mankiewicz' Cleopatra in Arch. Aud. at 6, 9:05 tonight. About this film Daily re- viewer Jeff Sorensen comments: Don't miss Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor and a cast of thousands in one of the monumental film lemons of all time. Cleopatra cost o cool $40 million to produce, the most expensive Hollywood movie ever made, and died commercially at the gate when it first came out. The film is pretty much of an artistic disaster as well as it plods along interminably for most of its three hours. Despite her $3 million plus paycheck, Elizabeth Taylor must be held accountable for a great deal of the failure. She attempts to play Cleopatra as a historically earlier version of Martha from Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, a suburban housewife, rather than the Cleopatra of legend. The Ann Arbor Film Coop presents Hamilton's From Russia With Love starring Sean Connery as James Bond in Aud. A. Angell Hall at 7, 9 tonight. MUSIC-Schubert's Die Winterreise: Ralph Herbert baritone; Paul Boylan, piano at Rackham Aud. tonight at 8. ART-An exhibition of "Post Conceptual Graphics" by Robert Senn Hauser is on display in the exhibition hall of the college of Architecture and Design. Lantern Gallery is showing "From N.Y. via A.A. With Love!" which focuses on works by several New York artists. By HERB BOWIE Now that the tree has been taken down, the new year has gotten its foot in the door and all those unwanted, unsightly gifts have been returned, what's the last thing you want to hear about? A Christmas album, perhaps? Ah, but this is no ordinary Christmas album! Sure, it's got "White Christmas," "Frosty the Snowman," "Winter Wonderland" - and all those other traditional Yuletide songs, but if you're ex- pecting the sort of syrupy music that annually drips from the speakers of department store P.A. systems and is secreted from easy listening stations to ooze its way over the airwaves into your radio, then you're sadly mistaken. This is a rock'n roll Christmas album! A rock'n roll Christmas album! Lest your mind, reeling from the thought of the unlikely com- bination of rock'n roll and Christ- mas music, seize upon the con- clusion that this is a tasteless, crass attempt to exploint the youth market, let me assure you that I do not use the phrase "rock'n roll" lightly. Phil Spec- tor's Christmas Album (Apple SW 3400) is not only good Christ- mas music, it's great rock'n roll. Although this record was orig- inally releasedtway back inr'63, and includes the efforts of Dar- lene Love, The Crystals, The Ronettes and Bob B. Soxx and the Blue Jeans, it appeals to much more than a sense of sock- hop camp (although it does that too, an asset not to be under- valued). Phil Spector, whodpro- duced all these artists-and ex- panded the job of producer 'till it dwarfed the role of the singers themselves-had the ability to transcend current pop trends to producetimeless rock'n roll.tHis sure feel for a throbbing teen- age heartbeat and, especially, his consummate musical genious insured that. This album is Spector at his peak. That pulsating wall of sound, the complex constructions of horns,strings,backup vocals, assorted percussion instruments -all an orchestra has to offer plus the traditional rock accom- paniment: it's all there. Each of these cuts is a compact rock symphony. Most of the songs are framed by clever little goodies such as the approaching footsteps and big wet smack preceding "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus" and the false ending of "Sleigh Bells" (followed by a key change, a restatement of the opening phrase, a horse neighing and the ringing of sleigh bells). Sandwiched in between is some of the most carefully orchestrated rock ever made. Instruments, it u re interest- e nreviewing poetry, and music, or rtng feature stories about the arts: Contact Art Editor, c/o The daa,adance, film. MihgnDaily. riffs and voices drift in and out continually, overlaying the basic rock'n roll that's at the core of each song. Although Spector is definitely the presiding genius of the album, some of the talent he assembled for the sessions deserves men- tion. Jack Nitzsche (who's since worked wth Neil Young and the Stones, among others) is credited as arranger, so it's safe to as- sume he made some large con- tributions to the album. Among the anonymous musicians heard, the drummer, the sax player and the pianist all get honorary men- tions. The drummer is just plain solid, lashing out at his drums in a precisely controlled fury that moves everything along nicely. The few sax breaks on the album are notable for their elegant yet energetic simplicity. The plane really only surfaces once on the albums, but that's at high point of the best cut, "Christmas (Baby Please Come Home), the only Spector-penned song present. As Spector delays the last line of the last verse, while Darlene Love and a back- up chorus alternately scream "Please!" with increasing fre- quency and fervor, the piano follows them up the scale, build- ing tension, until Darlene finally climaxes with "Baby please come home!" and, as the song slowly fades out, the piano just sort of soars on the heights it's attained. I know that Christmas is al- ready past, but it's not too late to go out and buy yourself a belated present. I guarantee you won't return it. movie-goers." one day only -NEW YORK POST January 17 Pete and Tillie: meager melodrama WEDNESDAY MODERN LANGUAGES AUDITORIUM $1.25 cont. 7:00-8:30-10:00 -Friends of Newsreel Who will survive-in one one of the greatest escapeW adventures ever! PANAMiSON'- COLOR BY OEMX' [PG By BRUCE SHLAIN Pete and Tillie has its roots set in melodrama, in the type that can never really escape the- rigors of its form to elevate it- self to even the most meager of artistic achievements. A skeletal outline of the story lays bare the Naked Truth about the film, which disguises itself for its first 80 minutes as a sensitive comedy, then slips into a phone booth to suddenly shrink into Soap Opera: two single people (Walter Matthau and Carol Bur- nett) meet at a party, have an affair, get married, have- a child, the child developes a malignancy, he dies, the marriage crumbles, the wife puts herself in a rest home, and at the end the mar- riage is patched up. I assume that I was supposed to leave the theater showering tears on my new scraf, but I suppose I will always resent the efforts of those who desire to warm the aesthetic cockles of my heart with a blowtorch. The way to a critic's heart is, alas, through his or her mind; I would guess that Pete and Tillie tried to make entry somewhere around the but- tocks. The worst aspect of the film is the plot, to which director Martin Ritt clings desperately, having no sense of technique to cover up the passage of cinematic time. His directorial repertoire consists of a long shot and a facial close- up, doing quite a bit towards making Carol Burnett look like she was still on television. There is nothing of import in Pete and Tillie that comes out of its cinematic production, out of the use of the camera itself. The film's best moments are the re- sult of the rapid-fire joking of Pete, which is obviously best suited for the stage. Most of his remarks do, however, have a refreshing touch of vulgarity about them, a crudeness which he does not hesitate to expose at the most awkward of moments. When propositioning Tillie before they are married, he does so by inviting her to his place "for a spot of heavy breathing." Ber- nard Shaw would not be jealous, I am sure, but the combination of such lines with Matthau's im- SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. Miss J leads deck-side promenades in an Italian platform sandal... headed for exotic ports of call in rich dark brown leather with triplex cross strap construction, platform sole and heel. 7-10 N, 5-10 M. $10. - A '4%4~J4OI ............ pishly ugly wise-old-hound-of-a- leathery-face is effectively amus- ing. And, for all - of those people who have waited out these long years during the war in Vietnam to see Carol Burnett take off her clothes (she does so in the dark), there is even a Bed .Scene. Once the awesome beauty of the deed is done, Pete interrupts the afterglow after about fifteen seconds to cut out for a salami sandwich, an example of the film's "realistic" touches. This occurs, of course, in the film's first half, where theoverall at- itude is one of "anything for-a lap gh." But, once the kid gets sick, the laughs are simply non-exis- tent. (His death, incidentally, occurs after he is on the screen about 20 minutes, which is none too soon, because the actor play ing little Charlie had one of those fake, high-pitched laughs that make a mockery of real chil- dren.) After the child's illness becomes a valid reality for both Pete and Tillie, their listlessness turns slowly to bitterness. In one scene Tillie walks into her backyard and screams convulsively at God and at the heavens in general, coming up with some surprisingly fine blasphemy. But one has to wonder if the Peter DeVries novella Witch's Milk, on which the movie is bes- ed, also fell prey to the Jekyll- and-Hyde conversion of the mor- bid turn of events and also lost its credibility, as the movie cer- tainly does. Mel Brooks made the same curious mistake in his film The Twelve Chairs, a fine comery until the very end, when sud- denly The Russian character played by Ron Moody began to fake an epileptic fit for money. It was not inserted as a sick joke, but rather to give the film some richer meaning beyond the laughter. Needless to say, it did not. The same error in Pete and Tillie is catastrophic, because the film depends on the transi- tion, but the different moods do not blend together; actually the diverse elements of comedy and tragedy, in this instance, stare at each other from across a void, and occasionally they make fun of each other. HAIRCUTS that don't look like HAIRCUTS Dascola Barbers 615 E. Liberty 611 E. University THURS. JANUARY 1S PRE-LAW STUDENTS Do you need titles for your law school application? THE LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT HAS SEV- ERAL IMPORTANT-SOUNDING POSITIONS OPEN. " LSA Student Judiciary (3 openings) a AA;i~rf veViePresident