hursday, iNovemDer L, '~ IL iriL Ml(,.h~iSN VAILY 1'age Three Thursday, November Z, 197Z THE Page Three The Residential College Players presents: The House of Bernarda Alba by: FREDRICO GARCIA LORCA 8:00 P.m. EAST QUAD AUDITORIUM November 2,3,4, 1972 341 S. Main-769-5960 TONIGHT: GOLDEN OLDIES DANCING: 8 P.M. to 2 A.M. DRAFT BEER and PIZZA -NOTICE TO ALL DISPLAY ADVERTISERS Due to space limitations, advertising clos - ing may occur prior to regularly announced deadlines. In all cases, advertising will be accepted on a "first come-first serve" basis. -The Daily Business Staff Duke Ellington A "legend in his own time," Duke Ellington will be presented, with his renowned group of musicians, by the University Musical Society as a special Benefit Concert Nov. 11 at 8:30 in Hill Aud. Tickets available in Burton Tower Box Office. ARTS By BRUCE SHLAIN To attempt the filming of A Separate Peace is, unavoidably, to be forced to make a great film, or at least to try. There is no room for creating a modest little film out of the John Knowles novel. The same stig- matic pressure will befall those who try to make movies out of The Catcher in the Rye or any "modern classic." So, then, immediately I was pleased as well as distressed to learn that they had made a film version of A Separate Peace. For as much as I was anxious to re- experience the fond and sad images of Gene and Finny im- mortalized in celluloid, I was also wary of the possible ugly bowdlerization of great litera- ture into romantic fish food for the piranhas of Middle America. After all, is this not a time of nostalgia (a time to look back even to those spare days during the second world war, because everybody then had a purpose or thought they had one)? And is there not a market for "com- ing of age" movies a la Summer of '42 - lazy exhortations made erroneously in the name of Sen- sitivity (not to be confused with Sensuousness, another style in vogue someplace). Magnify my fears by at least ten upon hearing that Larry Peerce, whose last effort was Goodbye Columbus, would be the director. Upon seeing the film, however, I was somewhat relieved. My greatest fears had been unfound- ed, for the film was undoubtedly made with an amorphous grasp of the beauty in the novel, for it is all there: the quiet campus at Devon, the war on the edge of everyone's thoughts, and the two boys - intelligent, studious Gene and the phenomenal, ath- letic Finny. There are also the classmates -the immaculate and aggressive Brinker and the quiet, childish nature of Lepellier ("Leper"), played superbly by Peter Brush. And there are the scenes of Gene and Finny at the dean's tea, at the beach, in the gymnasium, and, of course, in the tree, where the action footage of Finny's fall is handled with enough ambig- uity to puzzle the viewer as much as Gene; the actualization of Gene's blind impulse of ha- tred was filmed in confusion, just as Gene's thoughts surround- ing the impulse itself were con- fused. The novel was short; conse- quently there was no big prob- lem in editing to find the really representative sequences. No, the whole treatment would be one of attitude, of mood. Unfortunately, t h r u g h a slight but persistent heavy-hand- edness, the film obstructs the grand and lofty images of the hazy fight between good and evil, primarily through Peerce's insistence on capturing all the "perfect moments" and indeli- bly etching them into our memo- ries. Part of the film's heavy-hand- ed flavor consists in the all-too- frequent interludes of tinkling, melancholy piano, but basically it is the tendency to hold the camera too long on most shots, as if there are simply vast mountains of significance to be gleaned by gawking at the same pose. This ultra-slow trigger on the camera is given free rein on the close-ups of all the boys, es- pecially Gene. Peerce seems to be trying to make up for the lack of turmoil that Parker Steven- son, playing Gene, is able to emote. Gene must be, of course, the focal point of the film-for it is he who discovers the twilight zone of love and hate within him- self which actually dooms peo- ple with the simple vitality of Finny. In the novel, Gene won- ders if Finny was, indeed, doom- ed. It is this inner turbulence in Gene that renders the war ef- fort vague and enigmatic, for the battle against evil inside Gene strangely parallels the bat- tle against evil that the students want to enlist into: nothing is black and white anymore. Such subtleties are simply ab- sent from the film, primarily be- cause of the same blue-eyed va- pidity with which Gene's face again and again responds to life's mysteries. The trouble is that there is a naivete behind his expression which would tend to make one believe all things are a mystery to him. The flimsiness of Gene's char- acter is in no way a result of any intended shift in emphasis from the original work. The beginning and closing scenes with the adult Gene (the body of the film is a flashback) place an obviously great burden on Gene's role. For the muted grey colors of ap- proaching winter in these scenes, the man forlornly craning his head into the wind to stare at the very tree he shook his best friend out of - this is a pic- ture of a man whose emotional life has been a draining, tor- mented one. At the picture's close, the man says he did not cry when they were lowering Finny into the ground because "one doesn't cry at one's own funeral." But the rest of the film did not strike me as sufficiently traumatic to merit such thoughts: the film's slow-aced smoothness belies the silent suffering that its charac- ters endure. This is not to say that A Senerate Peace should resemble the subconscious psy- chological volleyball of such jarring films as Hour of the Wolf, but neither should it flow as serenely as Summer of '42, which it does. This serenity, this recurring dissolve of green, leafy trees rustling in the wind to a shot of Gene wilking - it pervades the entire movie. The boys in the film, although at prep school, come into almost no contact with any authority whatsoever. It is almost as if they are ludi- crous Charles Schultz charac- ters in Peanuts, uttering their simple profindities in a world void of authority. For instance, Finnv to Gene as they lie side by side at the seashore: "In this teenage period in your life, the best person to go to the beach with is yor best pal. And that's what you are." The depiction of Finny, Gene, Leper, and the rest as boys who are alone in some secluded vacuum would not be an utter prostitution of Knowles' ideas. But it does not work here be- cause the acting is simply not strong enough to evoke the trans- cendant aura of mythicality that must surround a character like Finny, and which actor John Heyl cannot convey while simply swimming or excitedly running A Separate Peace: Flawed adaptation CULTUR CALE ARik about in his jockey shorts. Perhaps the moving literary images of the characters, Finny in particular, would come alive if transmitted through compari- son with the stuffiness of De- von. But there is no dynamism, political or otherwise, lent to the "School vs. Finny" opposition; little is made of his obsession for breaking rules. The rebellious twist of A Sgpa- rate Peace has, no doubt, been downplayed to allow the melan- cholia to blossom. One has only to think of Lindsay Anderson's If ... and Malcolm MacDowell's characterization of the free spirit virtually fighting for his life in FILM-The Film Co-op is Aud. A at 7 and 9:30. about the film: presenting Fellini's Satyricon in Daily reviewer Rich Glatzer says .A _ _ - _. ..... _ . _.. a morass of authoritarian dead weight to see how wishy-washy is the cinematic Finny. It is a bit surprising to find a film so utterly apolitical, espe- cially one that deals with the war. One'recruiting officer, speaking to a group of enthusias- tic students at Devon, starts off by saying he wants to make things "perfectly clear." The ob- vious reference to Nixonian log- istics, which the young men will- ingly absorb, has the effect of negating any awareness one may have sensed in the students. The only residue of feeling that the film evokes is that of with- drawl, of Leper, AWOL from the Army, melodramatically curling up into a womb-like pose as he lies in the snow in his Army coat, silhouetted against the stark white, while Gene looks on helplessly and Charles Fox's poor imitation of a Michel Le- grand score oozes in from the horizon. U ntverstity MNT 4 A NATURAL A exciting.' By DONALD SOSIN University Symphony Orchestra, Theo Alcantara, conductor; Hill Auditor- O ium, Tues, Oct. 31, 8 p.m. x Stravinsky - Monumentum pro Ge- - suado;Haydn - Symphony No. 45 in Fsaarsminor; Strauss-Also Sprah Zarathustra, The USO 's concert Tuesday night may have not been the most technically perfect example { - , of its playing I've heard, but the R group generated more excite- ment than I think I've ever x heard them produce. Part of this was due to the exquisite close of the Haydn ;E*{ . I { 4symphony. The nickname "Fare- The Queen's Favorite SY{ . . t i.. / :ie / - . 4" { y + S Honored to have as its patron, Her Majesty, the Queen Mother Elizabeth, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra of London pays its third visit to Ann Arbor under the direc- tion of its Conductor for Life,' Rudolf Kempe. On the program is Samuel Barber's Second Essay for Orchestra, Op. 17; the Violin Concerto in D minor by Sibelius, featuring the young Japanese violinist, Teiko Mahashi; and Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 6 in B minor, the "Pathetique." Performance in Hill Auditorium, Saturday evening, November 4, at 8:30. Tickets from $3.50 to $8.50. CJI AT TCTr A T C1 trirTL7Tv well" comes from Haydn's none- too-subtle hint to Prince Ester- hazy that his musicians needed a vacation; the last section of the symphony has the parts drop out one by one, leaving only two violins at the end. The lights in the auditorium were dimmed to candle level, and after the final portion be- gan, grew progressively dimmer, while the musicians left in small groups. At the close, Al- cantara was left conducting the two violinists, and at the last note,, the lights were extinguish- ed. The effect was extremely beautiful, and the simplicity of the idea was matched by the ele- gance of the tranquil music. In this moment I forgave the horns their early sputterings (although there were, to be honest, some clear, precise, spots) and the ragged entrances of the violins in the first movement. There was some raggedness in the Strauss, too, mostly in the waltzlike section in the sec- ond half, but my overall im- pression was one of great ten- sion and excitement. I had never had the opportunity to hear Zarathustra in a live per- formance, and cliched or not, the opening measures were awesome merely because of the fullness of the sound, under- lined with the rumblings of the organ that just can't be dupli- cated on records. Fellini's Satyricon is a film everyone should see. It is a visual delight filled with bizarre characters and fantastic landscapes. There are monsters and gods and witches and mortals - all of them gathered together in Fellini's imagination and made to populate a decay- ing Roman Empire. It is all rather surreal and dream- like, just barely in touch with reality- yet just enough that we recognize it. Fellini himself calls it "a science ,fiction film projected into the past." Cinema Guild is showing program eight of the American Underground Retrospective in Arch. Aud. at 7 and 9:05. The Library Film Series presents Lover's Quar- rel with the World, with commentary by Carlton F. Wells, from 3:30 to 5:30 in the UGLI Multi-purpose room. MUSIC-The University Philharmonic, with Josef Blatt con- ducting, gives a concert at Hill at 8. DRAMA-The RC Players perform Lorca's The House of Ber- narda Alba at 8 in the RC Aud. Mozart's Bastien and Bastienne and Grass' Max, performed by the Student Lab Theatre, can be seen at 4:10 at the Frieze Arena. ART-Ann Arbor Women Painters present their 21st annual exhibition in Rackham Gallery; Union Gallery open to- day from noon until 5; exhibition of works by George Bayliss in the Exhibition Hall of the College of Arch. & Design; University Museum of Art features etchings from the 16th century to the present. * * * Information concerning happenings to be Included In Culture Calendar should be sent to the Arts Editor c/o The Daily. te0 0 a paid political advertisement tonight 6:00 2 4 7 News, Weather, Sports 9 Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones 56 Sewing Skills 6:30 2 4 7 News 9 Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 56 Secretarial Techniques 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News, Weather, Sports 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I Love Lucy 56 Dateline America 7:30 2 What's My Line 4 Circus! 7 Half the George Kirby Comedy Hour 9 David Frost Revue 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Behind the Lines 8:00 2 The Waltons 4 Flip Wilson 7 Mod Squad 9 Garner Ted Armstrong Special 50 Dragnet 56 Advocates 8:30 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 2 Movie "The Dirty Dozen," (1967) 4 Ironside 7 Jigsaw 9 News 56 International Performance 9:30 9 Word of Power 10:00 4 Dean Martin 7 Owen Marshall 9 Telescope 50 Perry Mason 10:30 9 Countrytime 56 Masterpiece Theatre 11:00 2 4 7 9 News, weather, Sports 50 Golddiggers 11:20 9 Nightbeat 11:30 2 Movie "Caper of the Golden Bulls." (1967) 4 Johnny Carson 7 Dick Cavett 50 Movie "The Liquidator" (1966) 12:00 9 Movie "Shenandoah." (1965) James Stewart. 1:00 4 7 News 1:30 2 Movie "Sangaree." (1953) 3:00 2 News wcbntoday fm 89.5 9:00 Morning After Show 12:00 Progressive rock 4:00 Folk 7:30 This week in sports 8:00 Rhythm & Blues 11:00 Progressive Rock (runs until 3) Cv7u JrHOPR-YTh21A 2175 SASH Bi2PA- 2AM Patrick J. Conlin- Washtenaw County's youngest judge- received more votes than any other candidate in the August primary for the Circuit Court. Here are some of the reasons why. Voters know Conlin represents youth arnd experience, and that he believes in: 0 0 0 0 0 0 accountability " public access to all records reform of the bail bond system administrative reorganization of the Circuit Court integrity of judicial office expansion of the Public Defender's Office support of county Alcohol Safety Action Program fair and firm handling of every court case 5th Dimension Paul Williams NOV. 18, 8:00 P.M. BOWEN FIELD HOUSE EASTERN MICHIGAN U. TICKETS: Reserved Seats- $3.50 $4.50 $5.50 TICKET OUTLETS: M~cKennv. Unin Voters know Pat Conlin's background. 1 ;,C-4. i -- - . -,r I - 1, 0- -4- i ! i . lifteme resident of Wasntenaw County