Friday, April 20, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Friday, April 20, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three $hI 00K '2." 8:30 MARSHALL DODGE downeast humor Belle de four Cinema Guild Fri. More Bunuelian comic perver- sion and surrealism, served up tn high Baroque style. Tooth- some Severine Serizy (Cather- ine Deneuve) finds the sexual 6:00 2 4 7 News of her modern married liif e 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father omewha lacking n d ies to '50 Fiints tonessoehtlcigadeieso 560peration Second Chance look elsewhere for her jollies. 6:30 2 CBS News She becomes a prostitute during 4 NBC News the day and encounters as my- SeaN of Jeannie riad a group of lovers, as she 50 Gilligan's Island " could ever wish for. Finally she 56 Bridge with Jean Cox becomes overly involved w i t h 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences one customer - a raunchy gang- 4 News ster (Pierre Clementi)' - and 7 To Tellvhe Truth her two happily divided life styles 50 I Love Lucy begin to merge. Or do they? The 56 To Be Announced film never positively assures us See LISTINGS, Page 9 just what is real and what is BEER VAULT First and oldest in U.S. Drive in for beverages for parties, picnics, or home. KEG BEER. IDrive Thru 9:00 A.M.,-MIDNIGHT-MON.-SAT. NOON-MIDNIGHT-SUN. 303 N. Fifth 668-8200 .. .. . . . . ..: =V .%r " t % . v-: , . . .. . -Y% $ % S imagined by the chara all lush enough viewin Bunuel's first color f it makes precious litt sense. T e SienE Cinema Guild Sat. & Sun., if memory serves nr icters. It's her son, who watches the pro- g (this is ceedings and is left as a last film), but soilrce of positive commumca- le human tion. Like most Bergman films The Silence is extremely intensrt. -STAFF Unlike most Btrgman films bus. like Cries and Whispers, it offers fairly limited characterizations. re It is, of course, worth seeing, even if you hadn't planed on cele- brating the end of classes with ne, this is depression. Rancho Noto Cinema II Sat. A 1952 Fritz Lang about an outlaw hideo Texas. Marlene Dietr Altar Keane, the mistr sanctuary for despen Dietrich sings one s shows her legs, but second place tosthe ele rected fistfights and Look for George Supern es in a bit role. Destry Rides Cinema IIj rious Western ;out in old (shades of Stanley Kubrick ). (Not reviewed at press time, of course). Jeremiah Johnson Fox Village the tenth Ingmar Bergman film to play in this town during the past school year. Thankfully, it will be the last. Not that Berg- man is a bad filmmaker (he is a great one) nor that he does not' deserve to be shown. It is simply that the emotional and mental strain of living through his sev- -DAVID GRUBER rich plays Cuban 'Film l 'ess f this UGLI Multipurp ate men. Fri. ong and New World Film Co she takes stinting an evening egantly d:- Films to Ann Arbor.' shoot-outs. include the highly accl man Reev mories. of Underdev Why Moncada?, Brigad --STAFF ceremos, and 79' Sprin rare opportunity to see Again tive cinema of thisi nation. (Not reviewed time.) The Thin Man Cinema II Fri. The Thin Man is a fine exam- ple of the marvelously diverting entertainment packages Ameri- -STAFT Robert Redford is Jerimiah Johnson, the adventuresome pio- Night neer, the self-imposed societal s outcast who, as a young man, dose seeks the awesome beauty and austere survival - oriented -life -op is pre- of the Rocky mountains. We foi- of Cuban low his life for a number of The films years, witnessing encounters aimed Me- with fellow mountaineers, hostile velopment, and friendly Indians, and set- da de Ven- tlers. Unlike the majorityrof ngtimes. A cowboy and Indians genre films, e the crea- this is a relatively chauvaniirn- interesting free documentary on mountain at press life in the last century. The wild- erness scenery, filmed in na- tional forests and state parks in Utah and Colorado, is breath- taking, the sets . painstakingly realistic, the acting convincing biographi- and the action well-paced and not o complex overly blood-stained. One could "Bert & I and Bob White. COUNTRY MUSIC "A fullness and sensitivity equal to anyone performing today."-Mich. Daily l11 Hill STREEt 161*115I cinema weekend gat. By all accounts, Destry Rides Again is a thoroughly enjpyable' film. Jimmy Stewart plays a~ young man who comes to Bottle- neck to be a sheriff's, deputy. Ile refuses, however, to carry a gun. This being unethical and Patton UAC/Mediatri Fri., Sat. Patton is a straight cal look at a man to THE FRIENDS OF NEWSREEL present Ton~igh erity for too long a time, re- gardless of what truths about life his films may reveal, is taxing, and ultimately tiring. The Silence is actually one of Bergman's lesser efforts, but an important one since it is the pre- cursor of Cries and Whispers which recently freaked out great numbers of Ann Arbor movie- goers. It concerns two sisters, one of them highly sensual, the, other love-starved but having a loathing for sex. They goad each other and torment each other though they talk very little. Ac- companying the sensual ° iszer is can studio directors turned out almost effortlessly regularly dur- ing the '30's. Taken 'from the Dashiell Hammitt novel, this is the film that spawned the most consistently excellent movie ser- ies Hollywood ever produced and was the basis for the '50's TV series. Myrna Loy and William Powell, as the husband and wife sleuthing team Nora and Nick Charles, are a wonderfully so- phisticated, funny couple. Com- edy, romance, suspense, and a wire-haired terrier named Asta. -STAFF 0 World Premiere Engpgement i i The Best of the 2nd Annual YErotic Fl Festival complete 90-minute program 7:00-8:00-9:00-10:00' p.m. Modern Languages Auditoriums Aud. 3-7:00-9:00; Aud. 4-8:00-10:00 $1.50 contribution come early and avoid inconvenience; sell-out shows are anticipated from 8:00 p.m. on... and coming this WEDNESDAY April 25 the incredible VAMPIRE LOVERS an erotic nightmare starring Peter Cushing; Ingrid Pitt, Dawn Addams 7:00-8:40-10:20 p.m. $1.25 cont. BASS LESSONS STEVE CHALL, currently working with OKRA, will be taking appointings for private instruction. Call- Ann Arbor Music Mart 9:30-9:00 MON.-SAT. 769-4980 336 S. STATE ST. THE U. M: PLAYERS GUILD Presents JOHN GUARE'S The House of Blue Leaves APRIL 19,20,21-8:00 p.m. ARENA THEATRE-Frieze Building ALL TICKETS $1.00 tickets on sale, days of performance, at the. door 5:00-8:00 p.m. highly impractical in West, he is labelled a he triumphs none the becomes the film's hi Marlene Dietrich give: rabbit's foot. Ooolala. by press time. Second New Erotic Film Fr Friends of News MLB Fri., Sat. A new collection o erotica. Highlights of1 festival were a film d woman masturbating- ions sports equipmen that soccer ball!) and up sexual encounter to the William Tell Brando in 'Tango' The film hardly needs any more hype, but we thought we'd share with you anyway. Detroit premiere Wednesday. the O'd to handle in any other fashion. softy. But The film follows this giant per- less and sonality of General George S. ero. How? Patton through those moments s him -her he enjoys most, the gore! and Not seen glory of war. George C. Scott won the Oscar -STAFF not only for his portrayal of blood 'n guts, but for being just George York C. Scott. The actor is perfectly suited for the role, and Scott's estival approach to Hollywood is very creel reminiscent of Patton's view of Washington's politicians.v U n- fortunately, not all the f i I m ' s f assorted characters effect the same pow- last years erful reactions. Karl Malden, as epicting a Omar Bradley, the underst~ad- with var- ing G.I.'s general, comes off as t (oooh! the 'Father Knows Best" of WW a speeded II performed Patton's appeal can be likene.! Overtur to the popularity of T.V.'s All- -- in the Family. Half the audience this fine still from 'Last Tango' argue that Robert Redford's character was a touch over-god- ly, but this is of minor import. Go see it. -MARTY MARMOR The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie Campus It might well have been called The' Dreams of the Bourgeoisie, for thin latest film of Luis Bunuel is made up of several strange, surrealistic scenes meant to sound the depths of its charac- ters. The charm of the charac- ters grows out of the fact that this sounding out does not phase them in the least. No matter what goes on around them or within them, they never regis- ter anything more than minor annoyance or irritation. Their darling smiles remain intact, their unconsciousness is never shaken. The Discreet Charm feels as though it was made by a man who is content with his long and See CINEMA, Page 9 NM *f mediatrics, Last Film for this year PATON 7 & 9:30 p.m. FRIDAY & SATURDAY NAT. SC1. AUD. ONLY 75c Tickets on sale at 6 p.m. * * NEW WORLD MEDIA -presents- the FI RST U.S. CUBAN FILM FESTIVAL -featu ring- MEMORIES OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT idirected by TdMAS ALEA A study of the difficulties a middle class intellectual has adjusting to the new revolu- tionary society. RECENTLY SEIZED AT THE 1972 CUBAN FILM FESTIVAL ATTEMPTED :BY AMERICAN DOCU- MENTARY FILMS. 1 Gold Prize 1971 Moscow Film Festivral. International Federation of Film Critics Award. WHY MONCADA? dir. Sergio Martinez-ALSO-BRIGADA DE VENCEREMOS (1970) "It was a fabulous time, one of those rare, magical The story of the Venceremos Brigade, young moments of history when'cynics are transformed Americans who went to Cuba in 1970 to help into romantics and romantics into fanatics, and harvest the 10 million ton zafra. everything seems possible. For the Cubans, and "Everywhere along the harbor, people stood for much of the on-loing world, Fidel Castro watching us come in. The Cubans were smiling, seemed a modern incarnation of the legendary waving and giving us the clenched-fist symbol of savior-hero, a bearded Parsifal who had brought revolutionary solidarity. We had arrived; revolu- miraculous deliverance to an ailing Cuba." tionary Cuba, a dream in progress in the western -Lee Lockwood hemisphere. We were ecstatic." -.'Glenda Cimino -AND- 79 SPRINGTIMES directed by Santiago Alvarez A documental poem of Ho Chi Minh on film. Ho Chi Minh was a man whose life spanned three revolu- tions, three continents, and three wars . (musical background) SPEAKER Music Sandra Levinson Poster & compliments dcoditor- Photo Display of Ceosita d Tech Hi-Fi * Venceromos Brigade sympathizes, and sees only a man symbolic of America- ag- gi'essiveness. The other hald em- pathizes, and receives vicarious pleasure in Patton's war. A s k Dick Nixon. -JEFF EPSTEIN C'11UUW'RI c EINDAR SOCK HOP-WCBN and UAC present Jimmy and the Jave- lins and Chastity and the Belts in their last campus ap- pearance tonight at 8:30, Union ballroom. MUSIC SCHOOL-Chamber music tonight at 8, SM Recital Hall; John Hall, tenor, tonight at 8, Cady Hall, Stearns Bldg. DANCE-Dance Dept. presents Grad Rag tonight and tomor- row night at 8, Barbour Gym. WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-Ark, Marshall Dodge. and Bob White (Fri., Sat.) admission; Rive Gauche, Lorre Weidlich and Dave Moultrup (Fri.) admission; Del Rio, Jazz (Sun., 5 pm.) no cover; Pretzel Bell, RFD Boys (Fri., Sat.) cover; Golden Falcon, Ars Nova (Fri., Sat.) cover; Rubaiyat, Iris Bell Adventure (Fri., Sat., Sun.) no cover; " Bimbo's, Gaslighters (Fri., Sat.) cover; Mr. Flood's Party, Brooklyn Bluesbusters (Fri., Sat.) cover; Bimbo's on the Hill, Cricket Smith (Fri., Sat.) cover; UNION GALLERY-Baroque Trio performs tonight at 7; Memorabilia of the Once Group: AA Avant Garde on dis- play tomorrow and Sunday; Allow 4-6 weeks for Delivery on display April 25; Art Trot (tour of local galleries) April 28, 29. UPCOMING DETROIT CONCERTS - Siegel-Schwall Blues Band, It's a Beautiful Day, April 21; Shawn Phillips, Sandy Denny, April 24; Steve Miller Band, April 20; John- ny Winter, Foghat, April 26; Merle Haggard, April 29; Faces, April 30; Slade, Peter Frampton, Strawbs, May 2; Pink Floyd, June 23; Led Zeppelin, July 12, 13. LAW SCHOOL FILM FRIDAY, APRIL 20 HUTCHIN HALL I II