Friday; December 8, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three CULTUR CALEDAiR DANCE-10 choreographed works will be resented by students at the Schorling Aud. in the School of Ed. tonight at 8. Admission complimentary. DRAMA-The U Players' production of Jellicoe's "The Knack" continues its run at Lydia Mendelssohn tonight at 8. The Ann Arbor Junior Light Opera presents Hello Dolly to- night at the Power Center at 7:30. SCHOOL OF MUSIC-Benefit Concert tonight with the U Symphony Orchestra and Choir performing Beethoven's Ninth and Bach's Brandenburg Concerto tonight at Hill Aud. at 8. WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-Ark, Friends of Fiddler Green '(Fri., Sat.) at 8:30, Admission, Jim Ringer and Mary McCaslin (Sun.) 8:30, Admission; Rive Gauche, Betsy Becekerman & .Friends (Sat.) 8:00, Admission; People's Ballroom, Ruby Dee and Pyrumus (Fri.), 8:00 Admision; Union Gallery, Dave Moultrap and Lorre Weidlich (Sun.), 8:00; Bimbo's On the Hill, Cricket Smith (Fri., Sat.) cover; Pretzel Bell, RFD Boys (Fri., Sat.) cover; Rubaiyat, Irish Bell Adventure (Fri., Sat., Sun.) no cover; Del Rio, Armando's Jazz Group (Sun.) no cover; Bimbo's, Gaslighters (Fri., Sat., Sun) cover; Blind Pig, Brooklyn Blues Busters (Fri., Sat.) cover, Classical Trio (Sun.) 9:00 no cover; Golden Falcon, Grant Green (Fri., Sat.) cover; Mackinac Jack's, Radio King and His Court of Rhythm (Fri., Sat., Sun.) cover; Mr. Flood's Party, Mojo Boogie Band (Fri.) cover, Diesel Smoke and Dan- gerous Curves (Sat.) cover: Odyssey. Rockets (Fri.) cover, Lightning (Sat.) cover. 4A Lfor d dLon Orphans of the Storm Cinema Guild Fri. 1). W. Griffith's 1921 master- piece about the French Revolu- tion. Dorothy and Lillian Gish come to Paris only to get involv- ed with Robespierre and Danton. Melodrama and sentiment, all of which is capped off with a truly exciting climatic chase to the guillotine. Top notch stuff. As is Donald Sosin's fine piano accompaniment (Tonight he is playing for the 7:00 show). -STAFF Nosferatu Cinema Guild Sat. & Sun. Even before World War I there were demonic figures popping up in German movies. One of the first was Homunculus, a synthet- ic man bent on conquering the world through the exercise of his great power. Later came Dr. Caligari, the hypnotist, then the Golem. Nosferatu fit right into the pattern: he was a vampire and, had dark thirsts like his predecessors. He managed as well as he could for a while, but when faced with the love of a "pure" woman, life, even a phan- tom one, was no longer tenable. A couple years after Nosferatu (1922) German expressionism faded out and took these mon- sters with it, but desires for power and or subordination to renaissance amounted to one play - Look Back in Anger, by John Osborne. The play was an attack on the middle class, its drudgery and stagnation. Its hero -or anti-hero-Jimmy Porter, is a talented young trumpet player and jazz lover who is condemn- ed to run a candy stall. He rebels against his environment, his job, and the people around him, rant- ing through the play in a refusal to accept despair. Kauffman found it all rather sophomoric. Porter, he said, seemed to be looking back "in puny resentment instead of full- bodied anger." There is nothing special about him; anyone would like things to be better, anyone would raise the same questions he does. Nevertheless, the film version of this play remains a powerful ,and according to anoth- er reviewer, "ferocious" revolt against hopelessness. Its greatest virtues lie in the acting. Richard Burton plays Porter with a mixture of sensi- tivity and fury,and Claire Bloom plays his distraught wife with a fine range of emotions. Tony Richardson, who staged the play, made his debut as a film director here, and later went on to make Tom Jones. Film not seen by press time. -DAVID GRUBER Casablanca Cinema II Sat., Sun. song "As Time Goes By" (itself resurrected from a forgotten Broadway musical) sums it up best: "You must remember this." (And don't worry if you have to leave early - you can catch the final sequence in Woody Allen's Play It Again, Sam. -A.M. KRIECHMAN Cream Modern Lang. Bldg. Fri., Sat. If a contest was ever held for Most Unexciting Stage Show Ever, Cream would undoubtedly win hands down. Which doesn't structional film calle Hygiene Dilemma in w devil contends with Don the soul of a rock star me, it's much metterc than on celluloid." They Only K Their Maste Fox Village Hemingway once said of the best ways to wr thing was to start with statement and proce there. So I will: asa They Only Kill Their M d Dental tion." Even Christianity itself which the is reborn. novan for When it was first released the . Believe film obviously struck a nerve. It on paper reaped in the young audiences, was considered in 'bad taste' by -STAFF some older people, and was re- soundingly denounced as a poor, till and unsubtle, cliched movie by a few critics. It is doubtful, though, 'rs that it was intended to be any great work of art. It is very clearly a well planned film, cal- that one culated to build a tremendous ite some- identification with Benjamin. In- one true deed, there is hardly a shot when ed from we do not see at least a part of a movie, him in it, and we constantly see Masters is things from his point of view. m ' But it did show a talent in Mike Nichols for the cinematic hand- ling of satire, and if it was able to touch a sensitive spot in American culture (which it evi- dently did) then, it is well worth seeing. -DAVID GRUBER cinema weekenc I to tonigh 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones 56 Bridge with Jean Cox j 6:30 2 4 7 News I0Dream of Jeannie 50; Gilligan's Island 56 Book Beat 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies * 501 Love Lucy 56 World Press 7:30 2 What's My Line? 44 Hollywood Squares 7 Wait Till Your Father Gets Home 4 9 Lassie 56 Wall Street Week 50 Hogan's Heroes 8:00 2 Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer 4 anlor ana ~ 7 Brady Bunch 9 Billy Graham Crusade 56 Washington Week in Review 50 Dragnet 8:1j0 4 Little ePople 7 Partridge Family 50 Merv Griffin 56 Off the Record 9:00 2 The Homecoming: A Christmas Story 4 Ghost story 7 Room 222 9 News 56 Net Journal 9:30 7 Odd Couple 9 Woods and Wheels 10:00 4 Banyon 7 Love, American Style 9 Tommy Hunter 50 Perry Mason 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 Rollin Helen Reddy, Kenny Rogers and The First Edition. 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "A Boy Ten Feet Tall." (En- glish; 1963) 4 JohnnyCarson 7 In Concert Blood, Sweat & Tears, Chuck Berry, Poco, Alman Brothers Band 50 Movie "The Burning Hills," (1956) power remained in Geri ma. These tendencies c head with the electio Nazi party in 1933.l made his comeback. F seen by press time. Look Back in Cinema II Fri. & Sun. In the late '50s there mors of a renaissance i drama. Writers whol "starved for causes" h ently found some. Film ma critic Stanley Kauff to England to invest matter, and determine 12:00 9 Movie "The Electronic Mot glish 1958) 1:00 7 Movie "Circle of Deception (English; 1961) 1:30 2 Movie "The Nylon Noose." 1963) 3:00 2 7 News man cine- The caricatured globe of the ame to a opening sequence characterizes n of the the bolder line and broader Nosferatu stroke of an era now cloaked in ilm not nostalgia. Movies were made like plays, with split-second wit and -STAFF the blinding glare of Hollywood celestials emanating from the 4nger screen. No one actor seems to summon up more of the brash- ness and strangely contradictory passions of the times than Hum- were ru- phrey Bogart, here paired with n English some veterans of the Bogart Re- had been pertory Theater, Peter Lorre and ad appar- Sidney Greenstreet. Ingrid Berg- and dra- man, the "kid" of Bogie's now man went famous- line "Here's looking at igate the you kid", once confessed in an d that the interview that the writers wrote each day's dialog the night be- fore, and only in the end did she nster." (En- know she'd be sacrificed by Bo- gie for "The Code", as was Mary . Astor for a very different reason in The Maltese Falcon (another hint at the script-writers' empha- (German; sis on dialog at the expense of plot). The memorable trio of Dooley Wilson on piano, "Cuddles" on the whiskey glass, and espe- cially Claude Rains on the French mustache balances the sometimes unbelievable idealism of Bogart, Bergman and Paul Henreid (the Other Man in In- grid's life). C a s a b 1 a n c a is not Bogart's best, nor is it really a great film. It is a time capsule: a flashback summary of Ameri can cinema's star system, melo- drama, quick-fire exchanges, in- trigue and glamor. The theme give Cream, a film of the group's last concert, much to work with. The film's redeeming feature, besides the music, is its energet- ic vapidity. This movie's so dumb it's funny. The director tried to make up for the group's statue-like stage presence with a lot of camera gymnastics, but this approach is about as anti- climatic as sneaking up on a tree (a lightning-quick cut to a new camera angle: WHAM!- Jack Bruce's thigh). The film is also spiced up with some incredibly dummb interviews ("Eric Clap- ton is widely recognized as, not merely another pop guitarist, but a real virtuoso on his instru- ment. Mr. Clapton, could you tell us what those knobs on your guitar are for?"). A terrible movie, but a toler- able flick. -HERB BOWIE Guest Film Critic 200 Motels Modern Languages Bldg. Fri., Sat. Incredibly fine Daily ex-film critic Neal Gabler wrote a typ- ically superior review when 200 Motels opened here a little over a year ago. Here are some ex- cerpts: "a whopping phantasma- goria with no direction except down. The purpose of all this swirling junk, Theodore Bikel tells us, is to show how 'touringr can make you crazy.' So we get tedious snippets of The Mothers trapped in their prime mover's (Frank Zappa's) fantasies: a hu- man vacuum cleaner beating off, a nun groupie, an exposition on the various names of the male reproductive organ, a town nam- ed Centerville with a cafe call- ed Redneck Eats, an anti-erotic nude scene, and an animated in- bad news. I mean what can one say about a film that co-stars two otherwise fine actors like James Garner and Katherine Ross in the emptiest roles they will probably ever have, features recognizable supporting actors in bit parts they ought to be ashamed of, and stumbles through the old tale of the de- tective in search of the "real killer". The assumed killer is a fierce - looking Doberman pins- cher named Murphy who theoret- ically ripped out his mistress' throat but is perfectly docile any other time - hence the title. There is not much else to say about They Only Kill Their Mas- ters except that I got the feel- ing as I was watching it that it might originally have been made for television - and that's anoth- er good reason not to go see it in a theater. -WILLIAM MITCHELL The Graduate Campus Nothing better for a book on "American Culture at the Break- ing Point" than to cite a popu- lar film which seems to. give voice to the conflicts causing America's disruptions. So, in The Pursuit of Lonliness, sociol- ogist Philip Slater saw The Graduate as something of a land- mark as it ultimately refused to compromise or disguise the emo- tions seething onboth sidesof the generation gap. During the wedding ceremony at the film's end Benjamin wails furiously against the glass overlooking the chapel, and Mrs. Robinson, along with others of her ilk, becomes absolutely venemous. The cross is brought out of the church and is used as a glaring symbol of a regenerated form of purity, "love triumphant over conven- Have a flair for artistic writing? If you are interest- ed in review ing poetry, and music. or writing feature stories a bo0ut the arts: contact Art$ Editor, c/o The drama, dance, film, POTTERY HANDW,[EAVING STUDIO SALE Dec. 9-15, 11 a.m.-8 p.m. 7280 Platt 1 mile south of MICHIGAN AVENUE Darling Campus In Midnight Cowboy, John Schlesinger proved himself cap- able of creating live, deep char- acters and of evoking strong emotional responses to their es- capades. Darling (1964) lacks this emotional depth, but the life is there in full force. Julie Christie portrays a capricious, self-centered model who climbs the social ladder affair by affair. As she goes, Schlesinger makes a point of satirizing various En- glish society types, high-lighting the ironies that punctuate their lives. Ann Arbor veteran movie-goer T. M. Kutsche says that this is, "the film that made Julie Chris- tie famous. It also caused a "re- view-feud" and later a letters- to-the-editors feud in the Daily when it first played locally. Some praised it to high heaven for its do-what-you-please-even-if-you- don't-know-what-pleases-you atti- tude, which they labelled per- fectly indicative of our times; others admitted it was technical- ly brilliant, but otherwise point- less, senseless, repetitious, and endless." --LARRY LEMPERT Reefer Madness Fifth Forum Fri., Sat. In 1936 what worried the anx- ious parents of America was not widespread use of heroin, mor- phine, cocaine, or even WW II but, according to the pseudo- documentary film Reefer Mad- ness, the illegal, illicit drug Marijuana. Death, or worse, awaited those youngsters tempt- ed by the devil to try this dan- gerous weed. Today this ana- chronistic film brings, a smile to the face of the hip drug so- phisticate; even William F. Buckley can join in on the gag now. Our clean cut hero Bill, and his sweetheart Mary become en- tangled with a sinister clique of drug fiends, and there is no escape . . . Marijuana is a one way ticket to kicks and degen- eracy, my friend. Bill's life was once concerned with grades, ten- nis and his best girl friend. Now he's inextricably involved in death, murder, rape, and reefer madness. The standout performance of the movie belongs to Bill's friend, who after partaking of that wild cigarette goes raving mad. His eyes become glazed and firey, his breath quickens, and ie froths at the mouth like a rabid dog. This is the awesome effect of marijuana, and Reef- er Madness depicts it vividly. One point escapes me; why are Bill and his friends so fortunate that they have found a pusher who doesn't charge cash? This fact lends credence to the belief that the Boss and his team of brazen hussies work in direct collusion with Satan, just for the joy of doing evil. They aren't greedy - just seeing America's most prized national asset, its youth, head for ruin is satisfac- tion enough. Actually Reefer Madness was way ahead of its time. In recent years high schools and commun- ity groups have crammed truck- loads of anti-drug propaganda down the throats of adolescents, with reckless abandon. Reefer Madness can be considered the father of all Health Ed and Dri- vers Ed flicks. You probably laughed at those movies hard enough, so there is no reason why Reefer Madness won't be equally hilarious. -JEFF EPSTEIN And Yet Another W eek O f. . Ladies Sings the Blues-State -Mediocre but enjoyable movie about Billie Holiday's depressing life that makes Diana Ross a first rank star in one swift, stun- ning stroke. Fantasia - Disney's combination of beautiful 'music and generally brilliant anima- tion. Unfunny 'Knack'- At a turtle's place, EBONY PLAYERS (BLACK MARKLEY COUNCIL) in Cooperation with PRESENT Ted Shine's CONTRIBUTION AND Douglas Ward's HAPPY ENDING music by *December 9 2 P.M. and 8 P.M. December 10 2 P.M. and 8 P.M. Arena Theater (Frieze Building) $1 .75 for matinees $2.00 for evening performances The Mothers of Invention The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra -plus- Cream Tickets are on sole on the first floor of the Michigan Union beginning Wed., Nov. 29 thru Fri., Dec. 8 from 12 P.M.-4 P.M. *Due to the nature of the theater, late comers may be delayed in being seated 10-20 minutes. ---------------- --- TOMORROW NITE Aliman Brothers Band IN CONCERT-SAT., DEC. 9 By JAN BENEDETTI I laughed twice, chuckled three times and smiled twice at t h e University Ulayers' production of Ann Jellicoe's "The Knack". Though the play is, theoretically, a comedy, Director Robert Ben- nett has somehow mysteriously transformed it into a mildly amusing wake. Tom, Colin and Tolen are three mod types who live in a junky London apartment. Tom is the zany madcap who wisecracks his way through life and is immor- talized in countless modern farc- es. (Remember Alan Bates in Georgy Girl?) Colin is the poor dumb bumbler who wants to know the knack of getting girls. Tolen is the slick pick-up artist, who tries to teach a course in ap- plied male chauvinism to Colin. Enter Nancy, a poor dumb bumb- ler from the provinces. T o m wisecracks, Tolen teaches a n d Colin bumbles. Many jokes and one pretended rape later poor Coin gets poor Nancy. Happy ending. The director has poured mo- lasses over the wild comedy of The Knack. The show c r a w l s 01 FRI. D. W. GRIFFITH ORPHANS OF THE STORM 1921. The screen's spec- tacular adventure of the French Revolution. With tender romance, touching rescued once more-this pathos. Lillian Gish gets time from the guillotine. SAT./SUN. The original Dracula L . CE' n U A -3 I along, like a steamroller, crush- ing the characters' mania. The humor depends on a speedy bom- bardment of gags, noises and movement. As Jellico says, in the pro- gram notes, "The theatre is a medium which works upon peo- ple's imagination and emotion." I don't think she meant that the audience should have to imag- ine the humor in the play. As Tom, Richard Frank mur- ders the comic bits. He wrecks Tom's spontaneous frenzy with slow pacing. Frank tries to show the method in Tom's madness, but only suc- ceeds in making Tom's funny nonsense into dull word patterns. Evan Jeffries is good as the awkward Colin. Jeffries stumbles around the stage as he mimics Tolen's style, tripping over both his feet and words. Acting like a transplanted Eliza Doolittle from a tenth-rate pro- duction of My Fair Lady, Pa- tricia Ursin yells "a-owwww" in a distinctly unappealing, e a r splitting way whenever the ac- tion slows down. Jamie Farbman, exhibits the appropriate dyed-in-the-wool sex- ism for Tolen. Throwing on his , sexy Foster Grant sunglasses whenever a pair of female legs passes by the room's window, he dashes out to conquer another "lucky" woman. In one of the best bits of the show, Tolen, badgered by Tom's kidding, asks Tom is he is a homosexual. Tom, after a preg- nant pause, replies, "No (anoth- er pause) but thanks anyway." r-A RADIOKN AV% 9 AV% 1 - I- I- I r m io Eh i ---J ^o Vegr