Friday, November 17, 1972 THE MICHIGAN GAILY Page Three Friday, November 17, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WOW, ARE YOU LUCKY... You never got around to getting your seats for tonight's concert. But-believe it or not, there are still decent seats available. Union 11-4 p.m. and at the door Crisler Arena starting at 6:00 p.m. until they're gone. James Taylor shows at 8 p.m. C* cmart i cinema * Anna Christie Cinema Guild Fri. "Garbo talks!" was the way they advertised this film back in 1930, as Greta opened h e r mouth for the first time in mov- ing pictures to express the fol- lowing tender sentiment: "Gif me a viskey, ginger ale on the side -and don't be stingy, baby." Audiences that had waited breath- lessly to see if Garbo would fall flat on her face in the talkies sighed with relief. Despite a noticeable Swedish accent and an almost masculine delivery, the actress' speech complemented the carefully cultivated enigmatic personality already established in her numerous silent films. Anna Christie was directed by Clarence Brown, a favorite Gar- bo director, from the play by Eu- gene O'Neill. The plot concerns a woman with a scarlet past who is reunited with a father she has not seen in fifteen years and who believes her to be a model of purity. Eventually, the fiction falters; Anna attracts a man that her father feels is unworthy of his supposedly proper daughter. A tell-all scene ensues in which Anna lets loose a stream of in- vective and reveals the details of her florid past. According to Mordaunt Hall, the New York Times Critic at that time, t h i s scene is delivered in "a highly dramatic fashion." The supporting actors are cred- ible. Marie Dressler plays a dis- solute woman of indeterminate age with sympathy and an oc- casional comic touch, while George Marion re-enacts his stage role of Anna's father. Char- les Bickford, whom some may re- call as the aged patriarch on The Virginian TV series, is a ''powerful specimen of humanity" whose attentions to the formerly wayward Anna are resented by her father. -TERRY MARTIN Ninotchka Cinema Guild Sat. ' Early German cinema was chiefly preoccupied with news- reels, army propaganda films, and fictional films dealing with patriotism and the making of peace. In addition there were myriad sex comedies involving stale variations on relationships between army officers and young girls. One of the actors in these comedies was Ernst Lubitsch, a short man with a passion f o r long cigars, who had grown tired of playing minor stage roles. He GOT THE NOVEMBER-WHAT-TO-DO-ON- A-SUNDAY-NIGHT-BLUES? Why not come to the ARK COMMUNITY DISCUSSION E This week we'll be talking about "Law & Order & Free Conscience" If law and morality aren't the same thing in your mind, join us at. the Ark this SUNDAY around 8 p.m. Mother Courage: Rich, successful THE ARK FREE COFFEE AND POPCORN 1421 Hill DANCING 8 P.M.-2 A.M. EVERY NIGHT DRAFT BEER and PIZZA FROM 5:00 P.M. 341 South Main * Ann Arbor 769-5960 By TANIA EVANS The University Players produc- tion of B e r t o 1 t Brecht's Mother Courage which opened Wednesday night in the Power Center shouldn't be missed. Its acting is successful, its set is per- fect both"functionally and aesthe- tically, and the script itself is brilliant. There are problems with pacing, but these, I hope, will be corrected. Like most American directors of the play since it came to New York's leftist Theatre Union in 1935, Robert Porter emphasizes the work as entertainment and social commentary, ignoring, in- sofar as treatment, its dynamic function as dialectic. If Brecht were here, he would probably rant and rave. P o r t e r, however, explores many of the play's multitudinous possibilities and sets before us, if not all of the turkey, then a great deal of it. Under the musical direction of Stanley Hoffman, the orchestra, which sits on the stage in orien- tal fashion, and the actors-sing- ers excellently depict the dis- cordant Brechtian universe and the equally dissonant humanity that inhabits rather than lives in it. The music, much more than any other aspect of the produc- TOMORROW NIGHT! tion, explores the theatrical and didactic technique of derange- m e n t (Verfremdungseffekt) which Brecht employed to en- large audience consciousness. Brecht intentionally refused to create on stage a deterministic illusion that calls forth from the viewers momentary and safe emotional reactions. His ultimate purpose was to change the world, preferably to a classless, Marxist society. He would force the con- sideration of unrealized possibili- ties by displaying the tragedy, in Mother Courage, of a lack of awareness of the possible. Mother Courage is a "canti- niere" who sells a potpouri of wares from a dilapitated wagon, traveling with her three children along the battle lines of Europe's Thirty Years War. She is a contradictory being, capable of braving the hazards of war, while encouraging cow- ardice in her children. She gives a free glass of brandy to a tired soldier, yet refusesto bandage the wounded peasants with the linen shirts she can sell. Her creed has become one of capitu- lation. She is a trader, seeking the most for the lowest price un.. til she bargains away even the lives of her children. Irene Connors as Mother Cour- age is forceful and alive, dis- playing the full contradictions of her character, yet without quite realizing the role's possibili- ties. She mixes the styles of rea- lism and musical comedy, the re- sult of half-becoming the charac- ter and half-acting the role in the Brechtian sense of actor awareness. The Chaplain played by Ste- phen Wyman, who discards his robe for survival on the Catholic front, becomes an over-planned but very skillful and effective comic. Kattrin is the only real Brech- tian model. Abbe Hurwitz plays this ugly, mute daughter of Mother Courage.tThrough mental and physical gestures rather than personality projection she is poignant as victim and shocking- ly repellent as a misshapen crea- ture. Thoughthe audiencenneeds fuller preparation for her deci- sion not to capitulate, she is highly effective. The production as a whole is a rich one, but there is the major flaw of slow pacing through the first half. While viewing this play, we should be crying, laugh- ing and protesting all at once. Instead, we are led through soft- ened intellectual pastures. All the good acting in the world can- not overcome the effects of this sedentary pace. The fault lies with the direction and with Con- nors' excessive control over the production. The second half picks up considerably and it is unfor- tunate that those who left at in- termission did not remain to ap- preciate it. eventually began to direct his own comedies, giving them a sophistication, wit and c h a r m which, when more developed, be- came known as "the Lubitsch touch." He also acquired a repu- tation for his expertise handling of "superior women" that is, the best or most popular actresses of the day. By the end of the '20s, Lubitsc had gained prominence in Amer- ica. Hollywood, recognizing Ger- man film talents and wanting to close up a competitor, brough Lubitsch, along with E. A. Du- pont, F. W. Murnau, Conrad Viedt, Emil Jannings and others, to work in the big studios. Among all of these, Lubitsch was t h e shining star. Perhaps his best Hollywood film was Ninotchka (1939), a li g h t romantic satire with Greta Garbo, one of those superior women, and Melvyn Douglas. In this her first comedy, Garbo plays an ascetic Russian comrade sent to Paris in the springtime to help three bumbling but well-inten- tioned Russian emissaries with the sale of some court jewels. She is all for self-control, t h e Party, and the people until de- bonair capitalist Melvyn Doug- las steps into her life and re- fuses to leave. He shows her 7i good time, she falls in love with him, and the Paris springtime gradually enters her soul. But then she must return to her home- land. Does this stop the capital- ist? Only temporarily. Softly photographed, with deli- cate lights and shades and the famed Lubitsch touch, Ninotch- ka is a marvelous picture. Years after it was made, Garbo claim- ed that Lubitsch was the best director Hollywood ever gave her. -DAVID GRUBER La Dolce Vita Cinema II Fri., Sun. The Church has denounced it as immoral while the Left insists it is a powerful social document. It would appear that Fellini's La Dolce Vita deserves neither description. Concentrating on (more like ob- sessed with) the lunatic fringe of the hip world which frequents the Via Veneto in Rome, Fellini attempts to capture the flavor of the modern world by a simple cataloguing of sins. Fellini said he wanted to "put a thermomet- er to a sick world." But he seems to have shot the entire film in the fever zone. He tries to give the impression that he is being courageous in not diverting his camera from the decadence, when in actuality he is over- lingering at times and flirting with boredom. Still, many of the disturbing sequences are brilliantly conceiv- ed pastiches of the grotesque. One is able to become more or less involved in the performance of Marcello Mastroianna as the hero, a confused journalist. But the majesty of the film's lofty opening, of a helicopter trans- porting a statue of Christ away from Rome, is simply not sus- tained in the portraits of such tonight 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Edde'stFather 50 Flintstones 56 Bridge with Jean Cox 6:30 2 4 7News 9 Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 56 World Press 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I Love Lucy 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 Sanford and Son 7 Brady Bunch 9 Amazing World of Kreskin 56 Washington Week in Review 50 Dragnet 8:30 4 Hall of Fame 7 Partridge Family 9 Irish Rovers 50 Merv Griffin 56 Off the Record 9:00 2 Movie John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara in "McLintock!" (1963) transparent personages as, for example, Anita Ekberg, whose strictly mammary presence, al- though satirically formidable, is tiring. -B. SHLAIN ** * (olddiggers of '35 Cinema II Sat., Sun. A herd of white pianos troops across the screen in a mammoth ballet followed by hundreds of dancin' feet, all perfectly har- monizing to "The Lullaby of Broadway" and your senses are agog. "Goodness," you think, "where did they ever find all those white pianos?!" But, Ah Ha!! it is only Busby Berkeley up to his old mirror tricks in another "Golddiggers" extrava- ganza - this time it's Golddig- gers of 1935. Berkeley takes the standard 30's musical plot of backstage in- trigue, shines it up a bit with his unique and fascinating cam- era work, and voila! you have escapism of the highest order. In this particular variation of the theme, a Mrs. Prentiss (rich and frustrated) is giving her an- nual charity show in a lavish summer resort hotel with the help of director Adolphe Menjou and his talented troupe of Broad- way hopefuls. Meanwhile, h e r daughter Ann (Gloria Stuart) falls in love with star crooner Dick Powell (who else?) and the two of them go around smiling a lot and singing love songs on cue. When you hear people talking about the good old days in Holly- wood, these are some of the days they are talking about, for al- though some of the rest of the world was suffering under Hitler and Mussolini, Americans were being dazzled by Busby Berke- ley's ability to multiply anything at will - maybe even better than Jesus ever dreamt of doing with five loaves of bread and two fish. -WILLIAM MITCHELL * * * Modern Languages Bldg. Sat. Medea, the daughter of the Sun and one time lover to Jason, leader of the Argonauts, has of- ten been treated as a tempest- uous woman, and her drama has been seen as a personal one. Maria Callas, a tempestuous wo- man in her own right, agreed to play the role only if the personal woman's drama was avoided. So director Pier Paolo Pasolini created a goddess who, displac- ed in Greek civilization and out 7 Room 222 9 News 56 Realties 9:30 7 Odd Couple 9 Woods and Wheels 10:00 4 Banyon 7 Love, American Style 9 Anne Murray 50 Perry Mason 56 To Be Announced 11:00 4 7 9 News 50 Rollin' 11:20 9 Nightbeat 11:30 2 News 4 Johnny Carson 7 Dick Cavett 50 To Be Announced 12:00 2 Move "Up the Down Staircase." (1967) 9 Movie "Psycho." (1960) 50 Movie "Man on a String" (1972) 1:00 4 News 7 Movie "Pickup on South Street." (1953) 2:00 2 Movie "Young and Willing." (1943) 3:00 7 News 3:30 2 News wcbn today fm 89.5 9:00 Morning After Show 12:00 Progressive Rock 4:00 Folk 7:00 Live Folk 7:30 The Drug Culture 8:00 Rhythm & Blues 11:00 Oldies Show (runs 'til 3) some scenes are too stagy, and the editing often calls attention to itself. Between the g o o d scenes, most notably the last in which Medea kills her children with a mixture of maternal com- passion and alover's revenge, the film is often boring. -DAVID GRUBER * * * The Girls Modern Language Bldg. Sat. Mai Zetterling, once an actress in I n g m a r Bergman's films, shares Bergman's views that men are responsible for much of what is wrong in the world. In her satiric film The Girls, she cre- ates a war between the sexes in which men are. put on the de- fensive. One woman (Harriet Andersson) takes her husband on a mattress to mattress romp of a bedding store, another wo- man (Bibi Andersson) strips be- fore her husband in a night club and throws her brassiere into his shocked face. At the end, the two sides confront each other at a dinner party, and the men are sent running. The film is helped a good deal by the acting of Bibi and Harriet Andersson and Gun- nel Lindblom,sthree incompar- able performers. -DAVID GRUBER Super Fly Fox Village On one level, enjoy Super Fly for the well-madehno-holds-bar- red action film that it is. It offers line after line of good, sharp cussing; ample sex, with a pleasantly erotic bubble-bath merger of suds, sighs and skin shot from all angles; an appro- priate quota of violence-and all of this moving at a nice, quick clip. On other levels, however, the cinm weeken d .Mmnsamatgsm1m~m~55m ms&2as#Esemag5 of touch with her mythic, pagan powers, alternates between love (for Jason) and subdued male- volence. It is a rage that re- gisters not in her face, but in her deeds. To capture the primiteveness of the period, despite the pervad- ing sense of order, Pasolini set his story in arid, dusty land, cut the film very roughly, and did include some choice bits of gore, most notably those parts of Me- dea's brother which are strewn about by the lady herself to ward off an enemy army. Me- dea is given her mythic stature through closeups of Callas' re- gal, bewitching face. These are the finest points of the film, ex- ploited only insofar as to create the director's desired . atmos- phere. They also though, tend to defeat themselves at times. Cal- las is a bit too .dispassionate, film adds new fuel to debates that have been burning for quite some time. If we want to dip into the realm of morality' coke-deal- ing, coke-snorting Priest, an anti- hero at best by most moral stand- ards, comes off as a hero of the highest order. Priest wants to make one last, million-dollar deal that will allow him to stop pushing for the rest of his life- he wants to be free. This is made clear by a number of melodra- matic, less-than-convincing ver- bal exchanges with his partner and with his women (and they are his women). Visually, meanwhile, the view- er is bombarded with that fine Continental, that lush pad, thoe sharp clothes-and on the scren, the vision impression is bound to dig deeper than the verbal. The Shaft-style rock music in the background presents the same paradox; you pick up the rhythms much more readily than yoiP ingest the moralizing lyrics. What we see and what we feel glamorize the dealing of cocaine far more than the plot condemns it. -LARRY LEMPERT Song of Norway Michigan The Michigan Theater's bring- ing Song of Norway here raises two questions: 1) Did the Way- side burn down? 2) Has every- one stopped making movies? Norway isn't exactly a breath of fresh air in this town's stifling- ly stagnant film situation. Worth- while films are sent out to the Wayside (usually the Disney centersofythe Midwest) for one week stays (witness Fat City), and garbage like Where Does It Hurt and this seem to be here forever. Not to mention the amazing number of return-run biggies. For those who are in- terested (and someone must be interested-why else would Ann Arbor theaters be getting such junk? Supply and Demand still holds today as ever), Norway, is several years old, stars Flo Hen- derson, and depicts the life of Edvard Grieg. By the way, the Fifth Forum should be exempted from any complaints: they've had s o m e worthwhile films, and should be getting more. -RICHARD GLATZER * * * Yet Another Week Of... Fiddler on the Roof - State - Tears and joy, songs and dances, sunrise and sunset. L'Chaim. Alice's Restaurant - Campus Arthur Penn's poignant depic- tion of several Americans search- ing for a sense of Community. Everything You've A w a y s Wanted to Know About Sex-But Were Afraid to Ask-Campus- Seven Woody Allen sex episodes, varying from the hilarious to the embarrassing. The Damned - Fifth Forum - Luchino Visconti shows us that all Nazis were just ordinary per- verts at heart. Yawn, The Garden of the Finzi Con- tinis-Fifth Forum - Bittersweet account of aristocratic" Italian Jewish family trying to cope with World War II and Aanti- Semitism. Not De Sica's best. MICHIGAN MEN'S G L911 CLUB in two JOINT CONCERTS with PURDUE VARSITY GLEE CLUB 7 and 9:30 Tickets at Hill Box Office or at the door C..ULT7URE CALEJWA CONCERT-UAC-Daystar presents James Taylor in concert at Crisler Arena tonight at 8. Tickets are still available, and will be sold lla.m.-4p.m. today in the Union Lobby, after which they will be available at the box office be- fore the concert. MUSIC-Ed Trickett and Guy Carawan are featured at the Ark, both tonight and tomorrow night. DANCE-International folk dance tonight at the Barbour Gym, 8-11 (teaching 8-9). SCHOOL OF MUSIC-Opera: Puccinni's Sister Angelica and Ibert's Angelique will be performed tonight at Lydia Mendelssohn, at 8. DRAMA-The U Players' production of Brecht's Mother Courage continues its run tonight at the Power Center, at 8. ART - The Lantern Gallery opens a one-man show of works by Otmar Alt, young German painter and printmaker, tonight. Reception from 7-9. WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-Bimbo's, Gaslighters (Fri., Sat., Sun.) cover; Del Rio, Armando's Jazz Group (Sun.) no cover; Rubaiyat, Iris Bell Adventure (Fri., Sat. Sun.) no cover; Pretzel Bell, RFD Boys (Fri., Sat.) cover; Blind Pig, Carey Bell (Fri., Sat.) cover, Classical music (Sun.) no cover; Golden Falcon, Wooden Glass (Fri., Sat.) cover; Mackinac Jack's, Ramblecrowe (Fri., Sat.) cover, Okra (Sun.) cover; Mr. Flood's Party, Terry Tate (Fri., Sat.) One Day Only-SATURDAY-Double Feature-SATURDAY-One Day Oonly cover; Odyssey, Mack Truck (Fri., Sat.) cover; the Hill, Cardboard, (Fri., Sat.) cover. Bimbo's on THE FILM SELECTED TO OPEN THE NEW YORK WOMEN'S FILM FESTIVAL the incredible Maria Callas as MEDEA directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini "Full of eccentric imagination and real passion . . . superb." -N.Y. Times >owsYMnY1 Fri. & Sat. Max U I M d h We Don't Have A Phony Atmosphere Some coffee houses put dinner mints by the cash register. They think that is atmosphere. Tough luck. We provide live music on weekends. Students display their artwork on our walls. Theater -groups work on our stage. Truck )OW h Sunday Open i 1 AAn; 7*tt..linm,'s