Friday, October 20, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT WEDNESDAY-SATURDAY AIRBORN 9:30-2:00 S Od44eq 208 W. Huron LUNCHES DAILY 00 QQ Q d A AIJRAa hetre BO~X ff ice, Y VEST. OCKTi THEATRE 14832 ( .n4 a etMh. f37-49'15 Intimate Lighting Cinema Guild Fri. The pleasures and the entice- ments of provincial family life are explored in this 1965 Czech film. A big-city musician re- visits an old music conservatory friend, now music director of the local school. The sharply differ- ent life situations and styles of the two men-one married, with children, the other frolicking with a mistress who has ac- companied him - are contrast- ed. Young director Ivan Passer, with subtly understated tech- nique and acting, captures the interplay of the various char- acters - and the intimations of the deeper feelings beneath the surface. -MATTHEW GERSON ONLY Les lonnes Fernmes Cinema Guild Saturday, Sunday Born of the French 'New Wave' ,and directed by Claude Chabrol, Les Bonnes Femmes depicts the crude, deforming re- alities of the lives of four shop girls who spend their days be- hind the counter and their nights on the prowl seeking those baser pleasures of human existence. While all the girls share the same purpose in life,heach is uniquely individualin character. Chabrol examines them as if they were insects - coldly, impersonally, and objectively; but with a feel- ing of intensely personal concern. The futility of any of the girls ever achieving happiness drives them to increasingly degrading means of entertaining them- selves. Their story becomes a tragedy. The shopagirlsrand the men they meet are products of Cha- brol's unique sensibility for hu- mor, irony, emptiness, and fu- tility. With the camerawork of Thi NPKBCD one of the best of the 'New Wave' cinematographers, Henri Decae, he captures the dreary cheapness of the Parisian land- scape. Les Bonnes Femmes is not a film that entertains and delights audiences. But nevertheless, it is an exemplary 'New Wave' film and a step in the develop- ment of a highly respected French director. -CAROLE TOWNE Black Orpheus Cinema II Fri. Updating an older dramatic work to utilize a contemporary setting and translating ancient Greek myth in terms of modern life are two entirely different propositions. This is the reason why, to the casual reader, James Joyce's Ulysses bears little re- semblance to its mythic source, and is also the reason why Mar- cel Camus' Black Orpheus is no West Side Story. The super- natural quality of myth and the mundanity of everyday life can be reconciled only on the level of a symbolic and spiritual unity of the works. In the film, Orpheus, a music- ian, falls in lovetwith Eurydice, loses her to Death, in the form of a man in a skeleton costume, and journeys to hell via a voodo medium to regain her. Other than this, the myth remains a spector in the background of this story of life among the poor blacks of Rio de Janeiro during Mardi Gras. The dramatic de- fects which result from the use of actual natives rather than professional actors are more than offset by the way in which the director has used his setting to capture the quality of life in Rio, and the exciting, almost mystical air of the Carnival. -SHELDON LEEMON A Day at the Races Cinema II Sat/Sun What happens when you take the world's funniest human be- ings and place them in the mid- dle of a fourth - rate musical comedy? You get a second-rate musical comedy. That's about the best that can be said for A Day at the Races. The form of successful Marx Brothers' movies is present in Races but the substance is missing. It's filled with gags that almost succeed and situations that aren't quite funny. Even the genius of the Marx Brothers couldn't salvage this one. Grouche used to admit that when all else failed to he al- ways get a laugh by rolling his eyes and flashing his eyebrows. Races doesn't have too much else to recommend it. Filmed to cash-in ($) on the prior success of Night at the Op- era, Day at the Races unfortu- nately quels. went the way o ERIC Thell Them W Boy Is Her Bursley Hall Sat. Abraham Polonsky wz balled from Hollywood McCarthy's reign of t cause of his Leftist pal naturally when he ret f i l m d o m with Wi critics tried to make up years by praising thefi skies. None of which cha fact that Willie Boy is tious, often laughable b ford is OK, but Kather Indian Maiden has to b be believed. f all se- Where the two films part com- pany, however, is in the all-im- LIPSON portant matter of tone. Director John Schlesinger took Cowboy Tillie and buffed it up to a nice, shiny, glamorous sort of raunchiness, e and wrung out of it all the pathos and pseudo-tragedy he could find. John Huston, on the other as black- hand, directs Fat City in a man- d during ner much more appropriate to error be- his subject. Assisted by a fine litics. So screenplay (courtesy Leonard urned to Gardner, author of the novel by Ilie Boy, the same name), Huston has fa- p for lost shioned a small, uneventful film Im to the about small, uneventful lives. anges the City is properly drab, faded, a preten- yet continuously interesting. ore. Red- One fault: Stacy Keach is mis- ine Ross' cast as a fifth rate boxer. But e seen to Jeff Bridges, as a very ordi- nary small-time pugilist, is fine, and Susan Tyrrell's barfly, look- in like d Bnpr ~in pt And Now for Something Conpletely Different Fifth Forum If you had hundred monkeys typing at a hundred typewriters for a hundred years, you prob- ably would not be able to ar- rive at a final shooting script for And Now for Something Com- pletely Different. With a typic- al British sense of economy when it comes to such resources as monkeys and typewriters, Five British Loonies, however, were able to accomplish the task in considerably less time. While not Completely Different, this movie is a novel and amusing ex- position of the British sense of humor, somewhat in the vein of the earlier works of Richard Lester, and Peter Cook and Dud- ley Moore's Bedazzled. The main body of the film con- sists of a series of bizarre sketches mixed with parodies of documentary films and T.V. Merely describing sketches about an accountant who wants to be a lion - tamer, or about the Hell's Grannies, a savage group of little old ladies, or about a man who buys a dead parrot, cannot convey the tone of this some- times dry, sometimes silly com- edy. It is well-paced, with in- teresting transitions between the bits, and it is this quality, as much as the stand-up comedy, that keeps the film interesting even when the humor is the type that merely evokes chuckles rather than drawing howls of laughter. -SHELDON LEEMON Fat City Wayside Fat City and Midnight Cowboy have a lot in common. Thematic- ally, that is. Both films are about empty, lonely lives. Both films tell the stories of unimportant people and their gritty, thankless existences. Both films attempt to examine the grubby underside of life that we middleclass mov- iegoers rarely see. ing ne a sousea young te Davis, is fascinating and funny, if not the utmost in movie rea- lism. -RICHARD GLATZER The New Centurions Fox Village The New Centurions begins as a feature length Adam-12, with a few nifty chase scenes to its credit. But director Richard Fleischer and scenarist Sterling Silliphant fail to give the movie the depth necessary to really ex- amine its subject: cop as an in- dividual against society. As the plot develops, two patrolmen - Andy (George C. Scott), a pa- trolman due to retire in one year, and Roy (Stacy Keach), his youthful partner - are plagued with a variety of plausible mis- fortunes. All of which soon be- come unconvincingly complicat- ed, however. Roy undergoes a metamor- phosis that Kafka would admire. And Andy, after retiring from the police force, decides to take a powder and commit suicide. One wonders just what George C. Scott was doing in this medio- cre film in the first place. -RAYMOND WILLEY Fiddler on the Roof State Balancing your life between the pull of tradition and the call of progress is a little like play- ing a fiddle on a steep roof. Harmony is precariously main- tained, subject to fits of disson- ance, and liable to terminate at any moment. Only some tor- turous bending enables the play- er to stay in tune at all, and the established score is largely scrapped in favor of playing it by ear. For the Russian peasant, Tevye, whose life has always been laid out according to the tenets of his Jewish faith and the demands of the community good, change is easy to equate with chaos. The marriages of his daughters, each succeeding one more unconventional than the last, forces him to bend his traditional values into somewhat more modern patterns. The les- sons in compromise (which do not extend to taking a Gentile son-in-law) assume greater im- portance when the villagers are forced to scatter into lives of their own at the end of the mo- vie. Minus the age-old support of the community, those who have learned some flexibility will stand the best chance of survival. You can see the film and fig- ure out the philosophy, or you can see the film and enjoy its songs and Technicolor and the should - have - been Award- winning acting of Topol as Tev- ye. Either way, Fiddler on the Roof is one of those increasingly rare cinematic events that should not be missed. -TERRY MARTIN Getting Straight Campus Getting Straight tries to be so groovy and hip you feel utter- ly nauseated at its end. Uptight school administrators in flair knits and sideburns try and re- late to stereotyped student re- a ARTS Easy Rider Campus When this film first came out I was in tenth grade and saw it four times, mainly because I had read they used real drugs, and I had never seen real drugs be- fore. Now that I'm older and wiser I can understand and ap- preciate Easy Rider for what it really is - a brilliantly con- ceived musical comedy. Dennis Hopper, who so obviously copies the late James Dean it is crimi- nal, made a fortune from direct- ing it and went on to make the disasterous The Last Movie in Peru - the greedy hippie also sued Fonda for a supposed quar- ter of a million in the process. All of which goes to show that if you want to be a real hippie and do real cocaine you've got to have money. I should mention that Jack Nickolson is the only person in the film who knew what he was doing, but they kill him off be- fore he even gets started. The tricky transition cuts galled ev- eryone at first, but now we know it was only due to Hopper's lazi- ness. If you haven't seen this garbage don't miss it. The soundtrack is dynamite, even though they did cut most of the songs in half. Gee, real joints. --PETE ROSS Butterflies Are Free Michigan Being the son of Green Acres star Eddie Albert probably brought Edward Albert a lot of -'I More, Pizza Days Left to add a little BLACK OLIVE to your life You say you've never tried BLACK OLIVES on pizza? Try it with ground beef or ham- it enhances the flavor of the meat. But there are ONLY 12 DAYS LEFT to try this scrumptious addition-so order it on your pizza today! CALL YOUR NEAREST LOCATION: E 169-5511 169-4555 1141 Broadway 2259 W. Liberty $2.0 MALVINA REYNOLDS Wrote "L i t t Ie Boxes "Who Have They Done1 The Rain," "Turn Around, etc., etc. "Along with Guthrie, Dyl and Seeger, Malvina Rey olds stands as one. of t 20th centurys major write of folk music. -S.F. Chronic MON. & TUES. DAV ID BROMBE RG 141 Rill STREE1 71+14s1e " .a..a s To an n- he erF cfe T bels in blue work shirts on a groovy campus with hip Elliot Gould. Pretty Candice Bergen is miscast as pretty Candice Ber- gen in college struggling to keep poor Elliot's head together be- cause everyone's getting laid and going through so many changes. Really, the movie is absolutely awful and don't you wish Ann Arbor was like that? I guess Hollywood didn't know that nobody's protesting any- more; students are too busy' cleaning up their faces and get- ting high on horse tranquilizers to participate. If you do go, don't follow your instincts and leave halfway through-Gould delivers a genuinely funny monologue on F. Scott Fitzgerald at the end that somehow -rises above the rest of this nonsense. -PETE ROSS S0V tonight 6:00 2 4 7 News, Weather, sports 9 Eddie's Father 50 Flint stones 56 Bridge with Jean Cox 6:30 2 4 7 News 9 Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 56 Book Beat 7:00 Truth or Consequences 4 News, Weather, Sports 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I 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 Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour 4 Lion at World's End 7 Brady Bunch 9 News 56 Washington Week in Review 50 Dragnet 62 Wrestling 8:30 7 Partridge Family 9 Political Talk 50 Merv Griffin 56 Off the Record thleatre End game: Dramatic success harassment and the lead role in the screen adaption of yet an other successful Broadway play. It's the tender, warm, and friendly story of a handsome blind boy trying to cope with an overprotective mother, Goldie Hawn, and the city of San Fran- cisco - all on one big stage. For .some reason, whenever Albert Jr. opens his mouth or walks across the room, he looks like a zombie, but don't let that get in your way; I for one saw the picture because of Goldie's body and the way she says, "Goodnight, Dick," but neither is in much evidence here. All is. forgiven in the Albert family, though, and I'm told Son of .Green Acres will be playing at a theater or drive-in near you soon. Times Square! Fresh Air! PETE ROSS 9:00 2 CBSsReports 4 How to Handle a Woman 7 Room 222 9 Tommy Hunter 56 Realities 9:30 7 Love, American style 10:00 2 Smithsonian Adventure 4 The American Experience 9 News, Weather, Sports 50 Perry Mason 56 High School Football 10:20 9 Nightbeat 10:30 7 Political Talk 11:00 2 4 7 News, Weather, Sports 9 Cheaters 50 Rollin' 11:30 2 Movie "The Nutty Professor" (1963) Jerry. Lewis. 4 Johnny Carson 7 Dick Cavett 9 Movie "Snake People" (1968) Voodoo dominated island inhabited by Zombies, snake cultists. 50 Movie "Mister Buddwing" (1966) Am- nesiac wanders New York to find out who he .is. 1:00 4 News 7 Movie "Man on a Tightrope" (1953) Circus troupe tries to flee Communist occupied Czecho- slovakia. 1:30 2 Movie "The Curse of Dracula" (1958) Vampire kills man and as- sumes his identity. 3:00 2 7 News 911-5555 3148 Packerd 161-1111 1821 E. Ann By GLORTA JANE SMITH Arts Editor Watch for next month's ITEM OF THE MONTH 0 V on the othe screen An evening with the Univer- sity Player's Showcase produc- tion of Samuel Beckett's End- game has led me to believe that local student theatre is perhaps finally taking a turn towards truly challenging and innovative dranma. Endgame is basically a cere- bral play-not merely entertain- ing but thought-provoking. Its success on the Players' stage lies mostly in good direction by Donald Boros which allows us to experience-more than simply witness-the utter human agony of existence. Well-executed comic relief matched by fine acting make this production a deeply meaningful and quasi-enjoyable experience. The play centers around di- alogue between two men-one who cannot sit and the other who cannot stand. Blind Hamm, the dominant of the two, is portrayed by Warren Hansen as overpoweringly nar- cissistic and authoritarian, con- tinually demanding actions of Clov. With a brutally scarred face and dressed in a patchwork robe of crimson and fur, he is perversely regal. The subservient Clov is por- trayed by Steven Chapman as one flippantly indifferent to all about him. Responding to Hamm's commands, he drags his stiff leg about stage fetching alarm clocks, gaffs and other itinerary, perching himself up- on a ladder to view the vast nothingness outside, etc. . . . Entering into the action are Hamm's legless parents who emerge from ashcans to add a bit of tragic humor and needed comic relief to the play. Nagg (played by Michael Roth) and Nell (played by Vicki Ver- geldt) dredge out our pity as they vehemently shiver in the cold, reminisce the past, and complain about their cans' sand which is in need of being changed. And yet we must sim- ultaniously laugh . . . at Neel's whistful sigh "Yesterday . ."; at Nagg's tale about a tailor; at the couple's futile attempts - to reach from their cans to kiss each other. In the shadows of Beckett's other works, Endgame speaks not only of trapped humanity, but of two men who must wait. Things are "taking their course," gradually degenerating with the loss of bicycles and sugarplums and Hamm's painkiller. And out- side the window, we are con- tinually reminded, exists a vast nothingness. Tension mounts in the play as we await some outburst, some rebellion by Clov against his conditions. He is held slave to Hamm by forces other than physical-trapped by a man who is both unable to see and to walk. We also await some saving grace-some magical eradicator of the conditions suffered by all. Gradually Clov's controlled ac- ceptance diminishes and he be- comes enraged-or at least as enraged as a Cloy is capable of becoming. "You drive me mad, I'm mad!" he tells Hamm. Intrinsic to Beckett's success as a playwright is his poetic use of language. As earlier in the play when Clov says "I'll leave you . . . What is there to keep me here?"-Hamm replies "The dialogue." The cast works well under Boros' direction,kdoing justice to Beckett's choice of language and talent as a playwright. Roth and Vergeldt, both freshmen, do a superb iob in their difficult roles of old-age. Cllapman's por- traval of nonchalance and con- trnlled aneer is equally fine. Perhaps the only acting flaws, thongh minor, come from Han- sen. Thronghot the play he sus- tni-s good gestures and sound effects (the whistling of the wind, an o^"gional falsetto): but there CULI.TURE .CAL EINWAR DRAMA-Samuel Beckett's Endgame continues at the Frieze Building's Arena Theater. UPCOMING THEATER TIP-The tony Award-winning mys- tery Sleuth will launch PTP's touring series here. The play will be performed four times-Saturday and Sun- day at 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. Tickets available at the Men- delssohn box office. MUSIC-Malvina Reynolds performs tonight at the Ark; The Rockets and Bad Luck and Trouble at the People's Ballroom tonight from 8-12; And live entertainment to- night at Rive Gauche. DANCING-International folk dance tonight in Barbour Gym 8-11 (teaching 8-9). WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-Bimbo's, Gaslighters (Fri., We Don't 'Just Publish a Newspaper " We meet new people " We laugh a lot " We find consolation " We play football " We make money (moybe) * We solve problems " We debate vital issues a ®1 SWe drink 5c Cokes - I ..---.-.W--..--.....-... --.- G -N.G . v .----.- I (i 1