Friday, December 1, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Fr11 1 iay, Deeme 1 97 HEMCHGA AIYPaeThe Tokyo Story Cinema Guild Fri. Tokyo Story is perhaps the best of Ozu's family-office pictures. Several critics have put it on their lists of top ten favorites of all times. An elderly couple go to Tokyo with their married daugh- ter to visit inlaws and married children. After returning home, the old woman is taken ill and dies, leaving the old man alone. The film is deceptively simple. Ozu's forte, however, is not cinematic flamboyance but his ability to develop relationships between people and communicate them to the audience. As Stanley Kauffmann writes, Tokyo Story is a film that encompasses so much of the viewers life, that you are convinced you have been in the presence of some one who knew you very well . That seems to me to be one excellent definition of superior art and it applies to Ozu. As for his societal remoteness, the most obvious and the fundamentally truest point about Ozu is that being the 'most Japanese,' he has been univer- sal." -CHRISTOPHER PHILLIPS Tales of Manhattan Cinema Guild Sat. & Sun. In 1942, this was a "bold and amazing new picture" that rep- resented a breakthrough in movie style. Ten writers worked on the screenplay, including Ben Hecht, the co-author of Front Page. Featured stars included Rita Hayworth, Edward G. Robinson, a callow Henry Fonda paired with a young Ginger Rogers, and Charles Laughton. The revolutionary thing about Tales is its episodic structure, a rare departure from the al- most standardized Hollywood plot of that time. Four little fables, plus an epilogue, center around the activities of a gentleman's full-dress suit in New York. Charles Boyer gets shot in it, Edward G. Robinson retrieves it from a second-hand store and C 0 QQ QMd wears it to a college re-u etc. Eventually, the suit p D. B. Cooper and drops fr plane with pockets full of m This type of plot framewor been done, since in, among places, The Yellow Rolls Ro The overall film is a weak, since all the storiesd really add up to any c theme, though sporadic att are made to point out th significance of material trap and of man himself. Eachc pieces is intriguing in itself ever, and fairly well match mood. The big dispute Tales is supposed to be: Charles Laughton the only thing about it or did he ove his role as a rising young pi See it and find out. -TERRY MA The Thirty-Nine S Cinema II Fri. "I am out to give the1 good, healthy, mental shak Civilization has become screening and sheltering thl cannot experience suf thrills first hand. Therefo prevent our becoming slu and jellified, we have to e ence them artificially." S in 1935, this is as close to a view and statement of purp Alfred Hitchcock has evert Since that time much has done to make reality more ing than his movies. But it his credit that, until only re his flims do exactly what aim to do. Even his older are no less upsetting now they were when originallyi The Thirty-Nine Steps (19 an early use of Hitchcock's man theme. Richard H (Robert Donat) finds a w stabbed to death in his fla union, ulls a rom a ioney. k has other oyce. trifle do not entral empts he in- ppings of the , how- hed in about Was great erplay anist? RTIN is accused of the crime. As police chase him, he chases the spy ring responsible for this mur- der. At one juncture he must spend a night in a hotel hand- cuffed to a woman he loathes. (Madelaine Carroll) and who is not overwhelmed with him, either. The best feature of the film as Hitchcock has pointed out, is that its scenes are forever chang- ing. Hanney speeds from escape to escape all across England and Scotland. Which makes for a nice travelogue as well as good Hitch- cockian suspense. -DAVID GRUBER Psycho Cinema II Sat. & Sun. teps If satisfaction can be defined as total absorption in a growing mood of terror, Psycho is one of Hitchcock's most satisfying films. public A secretary who finally' decides e-ups. to take the money and run; a e so nervous young man who operates at we a seedy motel and who cares for ficient his elderly mother in an errie re, to house on the hill. The plot evolves uggish slowly, the mood darkens grad- xperi- ually-until Hitchcock decides to poken attack. world Psycho is unflawed by the blat- ose as ant manipulation of the audience come. Hitchcock has displayed in such been films as Strangers on a Train. thrill- In that and in other films, he t is to goes out of his way, almost de- cently, spite the plot, to construct and they prolong artificial suspense situa- films tions. than In Psycho, however, both in made. his camera work and in the un- 935) is folding of events, Hitchcock is wrong very careful about the informa- [anney tion he chooses to reveal, and the oman way he chooses to reveal it. This at _ and selectivity, together with close --- attention to details of pacing and internal plot consistency, so total- ly involve the viewers that, we marvel at Hitchcock for his sub- tlety instead of resenting him for his manipulation. LARRY LEMPERT tov. t night 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones 56 Bridge with Jean Cox 6:30 2 4 7 News 9 Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 56 Book Beat 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I Love Lucy 56 World Press 7:30 2 What's My Line? The Hellstrom Chronicle Modern Language Bldg. Fri. & Sat. If, every time Russia sneaks missiles to Cuba or Nixon invades Cambodia you get a queezy feel- ing in your stomach and sense the death of Man is imminent, sit back, take a deep breath, and squirm before The Hestrom Chronicle. Nils Hellstrom, a pro- phetic biologist, firmly believes that humans had better worry about insects as well as each other, for these little terrors can be very, very mean when life is not kind to them. To back up this view producer David Wolper and his crew have ventured deep into forests, bee- hives, termite mounds, deserts, and backyards to capture - su- perbly - the activities of insects and their societies. Two things become evident from watching these insects. One is that they are highly efficient, the o t h e r is that they act instinctually, in- stantaneously, and without emo- tion. Amazing things are accomp- lished when they work together. Whatever the threat they pose to humans, they are certainly in- structive in communal living. The insects are grotesque, of course, but they are undeniably fascinating. The black w i d o w spider - great mother of the in- sect realm - takes a timid lev-- er, gives him his moment, then kills him. The queen termite pro- pagates almost non-stop day in and day out. Indeed, they are all there, friends and enemies from your last camping trip, 'all big- ger, more sinister, and much more interesting than ever be- fore. -DAVID GRUBER WR-Mysteries of the Organism Modern Language Bldg. Fri. & Sat. Dusan Makavejev's WR - My- steries of the Organism opened at the 1971 New York Film Fes- 8:30 4 Little People 9 Irish Rovers 50 Merv Griffin 56 Off the Record 9:00 2 Movie "The Chairman" (1969) 4 Ghost Story 7 Room 222 9 News 56 Realities 9:30 7 Odd Couple 9 Woods and Wheels 10:00 4 Banyon 7 Love, American style 9 Tommy Hunter 50 Perry Mason 56 International Chess Tournament 11:002 4 7 9News 50 Rollin' 11:20 9 Nightbeat 11:30 2 Movie "The Lelicate Delinquent." (1957) 4 Johnny Carson 50 Movie sWelcome Home, Johnny Bristol" (1972) 1:00 9 Movie "Black Torment." (English 1964) 1:30 4 News 7 Movie "The Wages of Fear." (French; (French; 1953) 1:30 2 Movie "Dr.:Mabuse vs. Scotland Yard." (West German; 1964) 3:00 2 7 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 tival a little over a year ago to a fairly luke-warm critical re ception, and it has its Ann Arbor premiere this weekend. T n e film is a movie collage, devoted primarily to three psycho-sexual- politically oriented pursuits: 1) a documentary concerning in- famously bizarre Austrian-born psychiatrist Wilhelm Reich's in- stitute in Maine, 2) cinema ver- ite interviews with many Groov- ie people (Tuli Kupferberg of the Fugs( a New York transvestite, a female erotic artist, a plaster- caster, etc.), 3) a narrative con- cerning a Reichian beautician who attempts to sexually liber- ate a Russian only to have her head lopped off with an ice skate. Maravejev is probably trying to be outrageous, but it all sounds like the momentarily very in and hip thing solipsists will watch twenty years from now in order to laugh at another era. Those were the 70's . . . (Not reviewed at Press Time). -STAFF Lady Sings the Blues State The first reaction most people have to Lady Sings the Blues is "Diana Ross????" Of course, the first reaction most people had to Funny Girl was "Barbara Streisand???" It just goes to show you that you never can tell. Regardless of the quality of the movie itself, Ross is definitely worth the price of admission. For those of this generation who have never head the famed voice of Billie Holiday, on whose tragic story the film is loosely based, the songs sound as if they had been written to be sung by Ross. She is indeed, . Billie Holiday, partly because most people who see the movie have no other im- age associated with that name, and partly because she throws herself into the part with great conviction and a total effort that almost raises the film into great- ness. Almost, but not quite. ; have two basic objections to Lady. One, it is disconnected, in the way that all musicals are dis- connected: people do things so that songs can be sung while they are doing them. Second, the plot line is falsified for dra- matic purposes. Billie Holidays life has been slightly re-organiz- ed, and I suppose that's ok ex- cept a lot of viewers will see it as Bible truth. I wish Holly- wood wouldn't do things like tha . Anyhow, concentrate on Ross and you won't be disappointe . -TERRY MARTIN Play It as It Lays Fifth Forum Play It As It Lays plays like an American primer on Ingmar Bergman. Though it is supposedly an adaptation of a Joan Didion novel - co-scripted by Ms. Did- ion herself - it has somehow pinched nearly every one of Bergman's favorite themes. And it gives them back to us jumbled up, immensely lacking in mva- tion and conviction, and some- times word for word and shot for shot as they were in Bergman's works. This film knows no lim- its; it tackles everything at once: the silence of God, the meaning- lessness of life, the question o to live or not to live, the bord- ers between sanity and insanity, film reality and actual reality and more. Tuesday Weld, with a single facial expression throughout, plays Maria Wyeth, the ex-wife of an insensitive, terribly avant- garde filmmaker. Maria may or may not be insane. Her husband definitely is a bastard. T h e y and their movie-making friends (one of whom is Anthony Perk- ins, who definitely is in despair) live in borded luxury on the beaches of California. Maria gets pregnant by another man and is traumatized, the quick f 1 a s - backs tell us, by the ensuing abortion. She becomes despond- ent. Swirling freeways are h e r symbol for purposelessness, rat- tle snakes her symbol for t h e horror of reality (something like Bergman's spider god.) All this results in the fact that director Frank Perry has lost control of his penchant for madness (David and Lisa, Diary of a Mad House- wife). He is now dealing with people and emotions far beyond his grasp. -DAVID GRUBER Fantasia Michigan One of Walt Disney's avowed purposes in producing Fantasia (1940) was to bring "culture" to all Americans via the medium he understood better than m o s t everyone else - the animated cartoon. What started out as a Mickey Mouse short based on the music to "The Sorcerer's Ap- prentice" grew into a full-length feature with music by eight dif- ferent classical composers trans. lated into animated form. T h e cultural aspects are enhanced by having Leopold Stokowski and the Philadelphia Philharmoni, play the soundtrack and by hav- ing famed musicologist D e e m s Taylor intervene periodically to explain this "revolutionary new concept in total experience of sound and image". And that's putting it mildly, for despite this exciting innova- tion to realize visually an a- stracttformlikevmusic, W a 1 t Disney also deviates more than ever from his usually saccharine wholesomeness to portray t h e demonic side of Nature too. Ah yes . . . the old struggle between Good and Evil. Good, of course, wins out in the end (after all, it's 1940 and there's a war on in Europe between the good buys and the bad guys), but not be fore Disney builds the profane images up to the final satanic outburst of "Night on Ba 1 d Mountain" By all rights the film should have ended here, but no . . .Schu- bert's "Ave Maria" is tacked on to counteract the malevolence of "Bald Mountain" and thus bring the film to a "good" end- ing! Yuck and besides, it's anti- climactic. Still, for all it's cultural pre- tentions and pious sentimentality, Fantasia is definitely a unique experience - there are dancing mushrooms, pirouetting ostrich- es and hippopotami, a totally freaked out version of Bach s "Tocatta and Fugue in D Minor", and of course, Mickey Mouse and his band of berserk brooms - and this is one time you will not want to close your eyes w h i e listening to the music. -WILLIAM MITCHELL Super Fly Fox Village On one level, enjoy Super Fly for the well-made, no-holds- barred action film that it is. On other levels, however, the film adds new fuel to debates that have been burning for quite some time. If we want to dip into the realm of morality, for instance: c o k e- dealing, c o k e- snorting Priest, who should be portrayed as an anti-hero at best by most moral standards, 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 melodramatic, less-than-con- vincing verbal exchanges with his partner and with his women (and they are his women). Visually, meanwhile, the viewer is bombarded with that fine Con- tinental, that lush apartment, those sharp clothes-and on the screen, the visual impression is invariably more striking than the verbal. The Curtis Mayfield score in the background presents the same paradox; we pick up the rhythms much more readily than we ingest the moralizing lyrics. What we see and feel glamorizes the dealing of cocaine far more than the plot condemns it. Super Fly should also be view- ed as part of a recent film phe- nomenon, the sudden rash of films created by and for blacks. Priest is an incredible mixture of qualities: intelligent, sexist, militant, very cool, racist, tough, spiteful of efforts to help the black community at large. This raises a question that only black Americans can answer-is this the role model that they want to see portrayed on the screen? -LARRY LEMPERT The Virgin and the Gypsy Campus This has got to be the most rational film interpretation of D. H. Lawrence we are ever likely to get. Based very faithfully on one of his later novellas, the plot concerns the restless fanta- sies of a calmly-bred rector's daughter about an insolent gypsy she meets by chance one day. A fash flood is the instrument of fate that enables the gypsy to make the title eventually only half-true. Christopher Miles directs this film intelligently, interspersing the encounters of the principals with sharp vignettes of life at the vicarage. There are strange people at the vicarage: the rec- tor, rendered impotent years be- fore when his wife eloped with a younger man; an old-maid aunt who eats a single potato at each meal; and a tyrannical grand- mother who is constantly remind- ing the virgin and her sister about the bad blood they in- herited from their mother. Joanna Shimkus is a Madonna- faced, slightly kooky virgin; Franco Nero glowers handsomely as the gypsy. Sometimes the sym- bolism gets heavy-handed (es- pecially that flash flood at the end) but compared to the over- heated fantasy that Ken Russell concocted out of Women in Love, this D. H. Lawrence is as cool as a cucumber and twice as classy. -TERRY MARTIN Elvira Madigan Campus Visually, this is probably, as Newsweek says, one of the most beautiful movies ever made. The delicate, impressionistic land- scapes, shifting gradually from the warm lushness of summer into the misty chill of autumn, echo and intensify the stages of a doomed love affair between a Swedish cavalry officer and an 18-year-old girl. The two prin- cipals - (Thommy Berggren and Pia Degermark) do not detract from the film's beauty either. So overwhelming are all these visual effects that you tend to forget the basic thinness of the underlying story. It is, after all, a lovely little pipe dream, be- cause all we know, don't we, that things like pimples and obesity and crudity and filth exist, even if movies like this try to make us forget. Wisely, director Bo Widenberg has refrained from blowing this up into a big pro- duction, and concentrated on simply depicting his romantic idyll. If the nineteenth century had really been like this, too bad the twentieth came along. -TERRY MARTIN * *art 7 cinema A R T S LFIRST RUN AUMOIES 4 ( 8:00 4 Hollywood Squares 7 Wait Till Your Father Gets Home 9 Lassie 56 Wall Street Week 50 Hogan's Heroes I 2 Oral Roberts on Campus 4 Sanford and Son 7 Santa Claus is Coming to Town 9 Amazing World of Kreskin 56 Washington Week in Review 50 Dragnet< J- "AN ORIGINAL WORK OF MOVIE ART" -Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post "***V2*-An acid-paved freeway trip which has the sting of a rattlesnake! Tuesday Weld is extraordinary! Anthony Perkins plays his part beautifully!" -N.Y. Daily News "BEAUTIFULLY PERFORMED" -Canby, N.Y. Times __________________I U STARTS TODAY! 603 E. LIBERTY PHONE 665-6290 CULTURE fCALENDAR MUSIC-The Choral Union will perform Handel's Messiah tonight at 8:30 at Hill. The School of Music presents Reid Stringer, baritone, performing at the SM Recital Hall tonight at 5, and Patricia Deckert, contralto, at the Recital Hall at 8. FESTIVAL-The Center for Russian and East European Stu- dies presents a Russian Festival, consisting of three or- iginal plays and music, tonight at 7:30, at Schorling Aud., SEB. ART-Joan Miro opens an exhibit tonight at the Lantern Gallery, reception from 7-9. DRAMA-Ann Arbor Civic Theater continues its run of Cole Porter's Anything Goes tonight at Lydia Mendelssohn at 8. WEEKEND BARS ANb MUSIC-Ark, Kate McGarrigle (Fri., Sat.) admission; People's Ballroom, Stroke and Manikoss (Fri., Sat.), admission; Union Station, Jane and Craig (Fri., Sat.) free; Bimbo's on the Hill, Gabriel (Fri., Sat.) cover, Pretzel Bell,RFD Boys (Fri., Sat.) cover; Rubal- yat, Iris Bell Adventure (Fri., Sat., Sun.) no cover; Bim- bo's, Gaslighters (Fri.; Sat., Sun.) cover; Del Rio, Ar- mando's Jazz Group (Sun.) no cover; Odyssey, Deliver- ance (Fri., Sat.) cover; Mr. Flood's Party, Diesel Smoke, Dangerous Curves (Fri., Sat.) cover; Mackinac Jack's, Ramblecrowe (Fri., Sat., Sun.) cover; Golden Falcon, Grant Green (Fri., Sat.) cover; Blind Pig, Houston Stockhouse (Fri., Sat.), cover, Classical Music (Sun.) no cover. OPEN 12:45 FEATURE promptly at 1 p.m., 3 p.m., 5 p.m., 7 p.m., 9:05 DOMINICK DUNNE AND F P FILMS INC.ERESEI A NEW FRANK PERRY FILM The show YOU ASKED FOR r4-CAMPU DIAL 8-6416 TUESDAY WEI REST PERFORMI 1972 VENICE FILM TUESDAY WELD ANIHONY PERKINS 4 PLAY IT AS IT LAYS' ai dn I o TAMMY GRIMS ADAM ROARKE 1ANCE bon flnnorve F ,"WA, b FESTIVAL JOAN DIDION aw JOHN GREGORY OUNNE -JOANDIDION P'd b D-1.0 by FRANK PERRY adDOMINICK OUNNE ,fRANK PERRY-Ai A NOWICiuIE " llCHiCG[Dl' THE ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE FOR EVERYONE ! May well be the most beautiful film ever made. -Newsweek L 0 1% %6 nI VOTED ONE OF THE TOP TEN FILMS OF ALL TIME! _ r. . . .._1...._ . ... . J . ...a-. . . . .L . _ I . . . "RANKS HIGH AMONG THE BEST 1 'IMT-Ml = - I