Friday, March 30, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Friday, March 30, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three The African Queen Cinema Guild African Queen is John Hus- ton's classic story of the orner- iest loner (Humphrey Bogart), the purest Missionaries' daughter (Katherine Hepburn), and their impossible downriver journey to blow up a German ship. More centrally, it is a wonderfully naive presentation of the battle between the sexes. The action is improbable but exciting. The characterizations are stereotypic yet touching. Bogart and Hep- burn are a magnificent couple. -MARTY MARMOR Before the Revolution Cinema Guild Sat. & Sun. The commotion over Last Tango in Paris is probably'some- thing director Bernardo Berto- lucci takes in stride, since he has been exposed to the likes of it before. His films have always generated excitement (though not such great controversy), and they have always been acknow- ledged as the works of a fine, exuberant creative mind. Indeed, Bertolucci began his career with a sensation. Before the Revolution, his second film, made when he was 22, was the triumph of the 1964 New York Film Festival. It aroused a number of great expectations among critics, and these expec- tations have been met. Now, af- ter The Spider's Strategem, The Conformist, and Last Tango, it is recognized as a work that has its flaws, but is still far above what a person might ex- pect from a beginner. Before the Revolution concerns an adolescent's efforts to find an outlet for his youthful ideal- ism. He delves into everything- art, politics, romance - with a rebellious spirit, but inevitably learns that reality is relatively unchangeable. It is said to be beautifully photographed a n d surprisingly well acted by its cast of non-professional perform- ers. Film not seen by press time. -DAVID GRUBER Key Largo Cinema II Friday Into the still, hot, stick air of an isolated- stretch of Florida beach comes Humphrey Bogart,, an ex-army major here to visit the father and wife of his best buddy, who's been killed in the war. He is hard-bitten, war- weary, disillusioned. But his buddy is dead and somehow he feels the need to pay his re- spects to the family. as director John Huston express- ed to one reviewer, this was not his primary concern in making the film. Above all, he said, he wanted to stress the necessity of remaining vigilant against any form of corruption that tries to slip back into a position of pow- er. Such sentiments seem en- tirely understandable in Cold War America, and they really do not detract much from the overall fine acting and tense ac- tion presented in Key Largo. -WILLIAM MITCHELL cinema weekend The Hustler Cinema II Sun. 'That game with the 15 num- bered balls is the D e v i l' s tool . . ."-Prof. Harold Hill. The Hustler cracks and rum- bles with every movement of the very colorful characters, or the rolling of the ivory balls on the slate slabs of the pools tables. The story is a "fastest gun in the West" saga transferred to the smoky pool rooms, with a classic confrontation between Fast Eddie Felson (Paul New- mal) and Minnesota Fats (Jac- kie Gleason). Gambler Bert Bordon (George C.. Scott) con- trols the action from the side- lines, judging what he refers to as "character." Director Robert Rossen has penned an extremely creditable script, capturing the odor and irony of the situation. Fats can beat Eddie, and Eddie can over- come Bert, but Bert controls Fats, so who's the winner? As an added technical note, Willie Mosconi, Minnesota Fats' num- ber one enemy, assisted Jackie Gleason, as Fats, in the filming of The Hustler. -JEFF EPSTEIN Mary Queen of Scots* Friends of Newsreel MLB Fri., Sat. Charles Jarrott's version of the 16th Century Battle of the Queens, with Vanessa Redgrave in the title role and Glenda Jack- son as her rival, Queen Eliza- beth. Vincent Canby of the New York Times described the film as, "an exceptionally loveless, passionless costume drama . . . all it's really doing is touching bases, like a dull dutiful stu- dent . . . The feebleness of the exchanges is almost enough to induce a kind of nutty compas- sion." The movie does have two excellent actresses, as its leads, though; perhaps it is worth see- ing for their performances. (Not reviewed at press time). long-fingernailed devil atop her. Or is it more than a dream? Until the very end, Polanski carefully splits the evidence for and against Rosemary's insanity. But the sympathy of the audi- ence is with her all the way, es- pecially during her pregnancy, when she cuts her hair so she resembles Joan of Arc, grows pale, and loses a great deal of weight. While movies like Psycho de- rived their scary nature from the phenomenon of the diseased mind in a normal world, Polan- ski's Rosemary is the only sane woman left in a world of devilish insanity.' -B. SHLAIN Pistacce (Gabriella Tuna), his wife and faithful valet: Signora (in Italian) - "Eh, Pistacce! What do you think of the Viet Nam War?" Signor (in English) "Eh! Why not let Saigons be Saigons?" Concise, provocative, uproarious. One can go on and on describ- ing Bolu gems: the fabulous short episode in which Bolu sees a woman with three breasts - and does a double take! The single shot (daringly held for ten minutes) in which Bolu first sees a Tootsie Roll. Bolu's warm and poignant conversation with Gabriella Tuna when the couple discovers that their three year old son is a transvestite. The Life and Times The Maltese Falcon could also be the architect of a scene in of Judg e Roy Bean which Paul Newman gets drunk The Life and Times of Judge with a bear. Roy Bean is one of the most -B. SHLAIN curious - looking films John Hus- ton has ever made. Surely it is Steelyard Blues a surprise, coming as it does Fox Village after the superbly tight drama, Fat City, in which he blended Steelyard Blues is after your an acute, almost documentary student dollar. Donald Suther- naturalism with artfully con- land plays an ex-con demolition cocted character studies. .....derby freak; Jane Fonda, a pro- Bean, however, is wildly dis- stitute; (reminiscent of Klute); jointed, with characters flying and Peter "Joe" Boyle, an un- in and out of the action like employed madman circus per- mosquitoes. Mostly, it is a ser- former. They, and their entour- ies of comic vignettes involving age, are zany free-spirited indi- law and order in the West, with viduals who merely want to en- Paul Newman in the starring joy themselves without societal role as the judge. The movie interference. No such luck. begins with Bean robbed by a I think the film attempts to pack of whores and scoundrels offer a political statement con- -they tie a noose around his cerning the viability of anar- neck and let his horse drag him chism in a repressive society, or off to strangle him. But the perhaps an existential statement rope breaks, and Bean returns to concerning the necessary re- murder all of his dozen or so sponse of absurdism in the face attackers, proclaiming himself of alienation and meaningless- as the indomitable "law of the ness. Maybe both or neither. land." Either way this is not an even- Slowly but surely, amidst num- ing with John Paul Sarte or erous arbitrary hangings or- the Wobblies. The symbolism is dained solemnly, albeit drunken- gross, the dialogue unexception- ly, by Judge Bean, a town al, the plot line non-existent. builds up around him. The his- -MARTY MARMOR torical implications of the tale, once the town can no longer tol- And Yet Another erate hangings in broad daylight Week Of and denounces Bean, recalls the** effect of Arthur Penn's Little Cries and Whispers - Campus Big Man, in which an era is - Bergman's hotly controversial captured in the legendary exper- film about death, pain, and the iences of one man. Penn, how- interpersonal relationships among ever, had far better control over four women (one of whom is his treatment of history, maybe dying). because his characters were not The Heartbreak Kid - Michi- drunk most of the time. Still, gan - A vastly overrated disas- Huston's movement towards the ter. Elaine May's sloppily made, surreal is one of the most inter- thoroughly cynical variation on esting developments in his il- The Graduate, replete with a lustrious career - who would cast of totally despicable card- think that the man who made board characters. The father (Lionel Barry- more) and his daughter-in-law (Lauren Bacall) own a big non- descript hotel, but when Bogart arrives he finds they are unwill- ing guests in their own place; the property has been taken over by a gang of thugs head- ed by a slimy second-class mob- ster named Johnny Rocco (Ed- ward G. Robinson). Rocco, it seems, had been deported to Cuba years ago, but has decid- ed that the time is right to make a clandestine comeback, com- plete with all the cruelty and arrogance of old. The first shot of an obese, sweaty Robinson sitting in a tub of cold water, rubbery lips wrapped around a huge black cigar, epitomizes his vulgar character perfectly. He is a malevolent force that Bogart is too apathetic, too cautious to face up to at first, but as Rocco becomes more threatening and constricting, the ex-army major realizes just how dangerous such an element is to society, and finally becomes so outraged that he is, able to act upon the ideal- istic convictions he'd thought he'd lost. "Rediscovering courage", then, is one of the themes running through Key Largo (1948), but Picnic on the rass Cinema II Sat. New York Times film critic, Bosley Crowther, had these com- ments when Picnic On The Grass opened in the Big Apple in October of 1960. "Jean Re- noir is too old, too skillful and too sophisticated to be wasting his time on rather foolish, in- consequential traveling - sales- man type of jokes. "True M. Renoir has framed his picture, which he wrote, di- rected and produced, in beauti- ful outdoor settings that are so rich in color, so real in form and so redolent of the rustic that they suggest (as they were plainly meant to do) the open- air quality of paintings of the French Impressionist school. "But the style of presenta- tion of the story, which is fan- ciful and foolish in itself, is more on the order of some of the pho- tographs that modern advertis- ers use - you know, those things that show ladies in evening dresses pushing supermarket carts . . ." (Film not reviewed at press time.) -STAFF The delicate, balletic visual humor of Bolu in 'Squigi' .. _____ UAC-DAYSTAR Presents: tim buckley randy newman and -STAFF Rosemary's Baby UAC-Mediatrics Nat. Sci. Aud. Fri., Sat. Rosemary's Baby is Roman Polanski's rendering of the Ira Levin novel. Like most all of Polanski's work (Cul-de-Sac), Repulsion, etc.), the film con- centrates on lonely characters, this time one character, Rose- mary, in a macabre and alien world. The story is of a young couple (Mia Farrow and John Cassa- vetes) who buy an old house. Their neighbors, as it turns out, are involved in witchcraft, at least as a hobby. Rosemary is given a sedative in the form of some dessert from her neigh- bors, and then dreams of being raped on a table, with torches burning on the, walls and a scaly, t t t Squigi Nat. Res. And. Sun. Squigi (1972) is the third fea- ture film in fifteen years from the amazingly talented director- screenwriter - actor Bolu - the most popular celebrity in all Sardinia (actually worshipped in idol form in one small sea- side village), the mostrbeloved comedian in all Southern Eur- ope. yet a man literally unknown in the rest of the world. Bolu's comedy is primarily visual - a delicate, almost balletic, fragile form of humor that clearly has its origins in the silent film. Witness, for example, Squigi's classic scene in which we see a mouse about to run unknowing- ly into a mousetrap. Bolu's Sig- nor Pistacce (that brilliantly simple, arresting screen char- acterization) p i c k s up the mouse before it meets its doom and places it on the kitchen table - to save its life, we as- sume. But no, the devilish Pis- tacce, with that irrestible grin on his face, proceeds to smash the mouse with a three foot long rolling pin. Yet Bolu's humor is not en- tirely limited to the visual. His verbal witticisms are often de- ceptively simple, the terse final products of deep and profound thought processes. An example . is this devastating exchange Signor Pistacce has with Signora Yet the greatest pleasure is in simply viewing a work of this genius - and Squigi, like all Bolu films, is one of those movie masterworks that should be seen again and again and again. -RICHARD GLATZER Fellini Roma Fifth Forum Decadence has become the forte of Federico Fellini. He has given us plenty of it over the years and for the most part, he has made it "visually excit- ing, which is something of a paradox. In Roma we get some more. The film is a dazzling collage of scenes depicting life in Italy's greatest city. Fellini and his crew, take us through traffic jams, half-built subway tunnels, brothels (cheap ones and exclusive ones), ancient ruins, modern ruins. We see the people going through comical and somewhat grotesque daily experiences - some of the peo- ple are quite comical and gro- tesque themselves. And in one almost surreal episode, we are admitted to an ecclesiastical fa- shion show, which serves as a classic expose on the state of the Catholic Church. All in all it's energetic and entertaining, though Fellini has said it be- fore. The Roman Empire is still falling. - DAVID GRUBER 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 1 Dream of Jeannie 50Gilligan's Island 56 Bridge with Jean Cox 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 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 Mission:Impossible 4 Sanford and Son 7 Brady Bunch 56 Washington Week in Review 50 Dragnet 8:30 4 Little People 7 Partridge Family 9 Woods and Wheels 50 Merv Griffin 56 Off the Record 56 World Press 9:00 2 Movie "Harlow." (1965) 4 Circle of Fear 7 Room 222 9 News 56 Turning Points 9:30 7 Odd Couple 9 sports Scene 56 Performance: Jazz 10:00 4 Bobby Darn 7 Love, American Style 9 Anne Murray 50 Perry Mason 56 Net Festival 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 One Step Beyond 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "Triangle" (1970) 4 Johnny Carson 7 In Concert 50Movie "All This, and Heaven Too," (1940) 12:00 9 Movie "King Kong vs. Godzilla." (Japanese 1962) 1:00 4 Midnight Special 7 Movie "Treasures of Kenya" (English 1968) 1:30 2 Movie "Witness to Murder" (1954) 9 Wrestling 2:30 4 News 3:00 2 TV High Schoou 7 News 3:30 2 News wcbn 89.5 fm 9 The Morning After 12 Progressive Rock 4 Folk 7, Live Folk 7:30 Talkback 8 Rhythm and Blues 11 The Oldies Show cable tv channel 3 3:30 Pixanne 4:00 Julia Meade 4:30 Something Else 5:00 Stratosphere Playhouse 5:30 Local News/Sports 6:00 The Right On-Model Cities 6:30 NCAA SuperSports 7:00 Community Dialogue 4 WED., APRIL 11-POWER CENTER' $3.00 admission Both Performing advance tickets now on sale Bth7: Pe9:o ing Michigan Union 11--5:30 at 7:00 & 9:30 concerts Mon.-Sat. 763-4553 by KEN RUSSELL director of "The Devils" featuring Glenda Jackson's Academy Award winning performance MIDNIGHT MOVIE Friday and Saturday Doors Open 11:45 PLUS CHAPTER 9 of "FLASH GORDON" Not Continuous with "Fellini's Roma" NEXT WEEKEND Fri., Sot. - April 6, 7 Lindsay \Anderson's "IF" and FLASH GOR DON No. 10 "A WILD, WILD, ALL STAR EPIC. NEWMAN BRILLIANT!" 231_ s_____s ___ -James Bacon, L.A. Herald-Examiner S TA TE I "AS ENTER' IN THE LIFE AND TIMES OF TAINING ASe BUTCH t NOW SHOWING CASSIDY'" ."SHOWS AT LARRY KRAMER and MARTIN ROSEN yeset ALAN BATES OLIVER REED GLENDA JACKSON JENNIE LINDEN ml, ELEANOR BRA] CUL'r7uRE .CALEINDAR' MUSIC-The School of Music presents Hugo Wolf Liedera- bend, a concert consisting of a choice selection of Wolf's 19th century songs, as performed by Elizabeth Mosher~ Rosemary Russell, John McCollum, Leslie Guinn, and Willis Patterson-all accompanied by Paul Boylan. To- night at 8 in the Rackham Auditorium. Also tonight, Henry Tysinger's organ doctoral, in Hill at 8. UPCOMING CONCERT TIP-Bette Midler-The Divine Miss M-performs tomorrow night at Hill at 8. Some ticketsf still available. DRAMA-The U Players' production of Arrabal's The Archi- tect and the Emperor of Assyria will be presented tonight at Frieze's Arena Theatre at 8. The Ann Arbor Civic Theatre's production of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie at Lydia Mendelssohn tonight at 8. And the Union Gallery presents Albee's The American Dream tonight at the gallery at 8. DANCE-An International Folk Dance, 8-11 at Barbour Gym (teaching 8-9). WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-The Ark, Aly Bain and the Boys of the Loch (Fri., Sat.) admission; Markley Hall, New Heavenly Blue and Mojo Boogie Band (Fri.) admis- sion; Bimbo's, The Gaslighters (Fri., Sat., Sun.) cover; Del Rio, Jazz (Sun.) no cover; Rubaiyat, Iris Bell Adven- ture (Fri., Sat., Sun.) cover; Pretzel Boys, RFD Boys (Fri., Sat.) cover; Blind Pig, Steve Nardella (Fri., Sat.) cover (Closed Sun.); Golden Falcon, Fifth Revelation (Fri., Sat.) cover; Mackinac Jack's, Circus (Fri., Sat.) cover, Bizzaro (Sun.) cover; Mr. Flood's Party, Cadillac Cowboys (Fri., Sat.) cover, Diesel Smoke and Dangerous Curves (Sun. 3 p.m.) cover; Bimbo's on the Hill, Longspur (Fri., Sat.) cover. FAj Med iatrics Rosemary's Baby Re-scheduled from April 6 & 7 I &1-71d -Judith Crist, New York Magazine SAT. & SUN. AT 7 & 9 P.M. ONLY JACQUELINE BISSET (Rose Bean) m-g AV,. %iARONER (Lily Langtry) Zr._s FAST! FRE bLVERY delicious PIZZA, SUBS & SANDWICHES! (9"12"14") (Roast Beef , Corned Beef & Ham) - ® - - m - m VALUABLE COUPON - M - M m -M JUMBO r ® fm ouon .: v, ; .: TAB HUNTER BRUNO (Thp Watch Spar) I