The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, February 15, 1978-Page'g 'Fantasy Island "* Mii diess fairy tale By NINA SHISHKOFF EVERYONE TALKS ABOUT escapism on TV, but no one does anything about it - except ABC, which puts on more and more. It started with the type of shoxw an NBC executive labeled "kidvid" - shows like "The Six Million Dollar Man" and "Laverne and Shirley." These aren't particularly well written or well acted, but certainly don't represent the worst on TV, and would have to try very hard to offend anyone. Escapism took a more ominous turn with. the success of a mindless romance anthology called "The Love Boat." On this show people board a luxury liner, fall in love, have hilarious adventures using ex-wives, old flames and misunderstandings as props, and eventually live happily ever af- ter. The show itself isn't ominous; the fact that it's one of the biggest hits of the season is. To cash in on."The Love Boat" success, ABC constructed a similar show and aired it directly afterwards on Saturday night. It's called "Fantasy Island," and this time various guest stars board an island where Ricardo Montalban grants their fondest wishes, which usually include, romance, adventure and suspense, in one form or other, guaranteed to be resolved within the hour. ON THE SURFACE, 'the fantasies are as shallow as the romances on "The Love Boat." On one show, two poor working girls and a magician travel to Fantasy Island. They're greeted by, Montalban and his midget sidekick. The two girls want to spend one day posing as rich heiresses. The magician wants to pull off the ultimate escape. Here's where the gimmick comes in: the fantasies the people are given aren't the ones they expect. "Fantasy Island" turns into "Nightmare Island" as the characters discover they aren't in control. The two girls find out, Cinderella fashion, they'll be revealed for what they really are at mid- night. The magician finds out that if he doesn't succeed in escaping from the prison he's been put in, he'll have to stay there forever. Not to worry, however. Everything turns out happily in the end; not the way the characters expected, but in a way all too obvious to us. One girl finds a millionaire who loves her for herself, not for her money. The other finds out that the millionare she fell for is really - and I shudder as I write this - a phony just like her. They go off to Mexico to build a clinic for poor Indians. The magician doesn't make the escape alone. It's within his grasp when he turns back to rescue another magician who lost his nerve. Underneath these superficial fantasies lie the true ones; the ones that give "Fantasy Island" its atmosphere of creeping perversion. Contrasted with the two girls' simpering hopes of true love is the leering advances of the dwarf. The magician may learn the value of friendship, but not until the television viewers are titillated by the scarred and deformed face of the prison warden. There's nothing wrong with a little escapism, as long as some sort of in-' telligence is connected with it. A clever line or two in "The Love Boat" could redeem it. But, too much intelligence leads to shrewd manipulation of the baser longing in the viewer - and that's why someone should do something about it. 'One an By MICHAEL BROIDY THERE'S AN OLD show business adage that says that it is impos- sible to make the jump from television stardom to silver screen fame. Many have tried - Dick Van Dyke, Andy Griffith, James Garner, to name a few - but their attempts met with little or no success (who remembers Griffith's Angel in My Pocket, Van Dyke',s The Comic, or Garner's A Man Called Sledge?) The merits of these films are certainly debatable; whatever their virtues, these films sent their stars scurrying back to the warmer, more familiar ground of the small screen. The seventies, however, have wit- nessed the rise of two young superstars whose popularity is so immense, their following so devotedly intense that they've not only made a successful jump to motion pictures, but have been able to balance both mediums with an impressive dexterity. Of course I'm speaking of John Travolta and Henry Winkler. The for- mer, after making his mark as Vinnie Barbarino on TV's Welcome Back, Kot- ter, entered into another strata of star- dom as the troubled disco dancer in Saturday Night Fever. Winkler, after several years of playing The Fonz on "Happy Days," a recently appeared as the slightly crazy Vietnam War veteran in Heroes y THE FACT that these films, like their characters, have a plethora of problems hasn't stopped them from making barrelsfull of money-Fever is running a close second to Close Encoun- ters, while Heroes has become one of the top five money-making films of 1977. dOnly' Although one film does not make a movie career, it is apparent that these two have made it in filmdom. Travolta will soon be appearing in the big-budget fifties extravaganza, Grease, while Winkler can now be seen in Carl Reiner's The One and Only. The One and Only is a comedy about one Andy Schmidt (Winkler) whose desire for stardom is matched only by his inflated ego. Andy thinks - knows - he is the greatest; the problem is that he's got to convince the world of this. He begins this task by wooing Kim Darby - a girl from a nice middle-class family. In a zany courtship, our hero (always the showman) even tries to win Ms. Darby over by singing "Getting to Know You" while the two are eating in a plush restaurant, much to the amusement of the other patrons and the embarrassment of the poor girl.: INDEED, ANDY'S whole life revolves around attempts at getting people to know him: he plays football so that he is able to fake an injury ("just another performance," says he) and isn't above sabotaging his class play in order to strangle a few laughs from the audience. Despite all this, the girl marries him (because "I'm too embarrassed to have you for a date," says the much put-upon wife) and they head for the Big Apple and "inevitable" stardom. What he fin- ds, of course, is inevitable failure and frustration, that is until he takes up with a midget who's a part-time wrestler and full-time womanizer (Herve Vallechieze) and his acid- tongued promoter (Gene Saks). Andy finally finds his niche, an occupation where his ego can be turned loose to an' adoring and insatiable public. He becomes a professional wrestler. WINKLER'S CHOICE OF roles makes it clear that he doesn't like to make things easy for himself: Andy Schmidt is such an egomaniac that to make him likable requires more than talent; it requires an unqualified ap- preciation of Henry Winkler. If Winkler does something for you, then Andy probably becomes an adorable, if slightly crazy, personage. If one is not a Winkler fan then Andy becomes an ob- noxious egotist, a two-dimensional car- a bland. comedy Steve Gordon's script and Carl Reiner's direction. Ms. Darby's role is certainly not a challenging one - and neither is her performance; she fills her role like cement fills a hole. On the other hand, Saks, a director of stage and screen when not acting, injects in his brief role a warmth and character that breathes life into a film which often finds itself sinking under a wave of Winkler cuteness. Vallechiez, (whom you might remember as the assistant in the James Bonder The Man With the Golden Gun) too, brings humanity to his role; his growing relationship with Andy provides the film's high points. Unfortunately, scripter Steve Gordon and director Carl Reiner fail to take this relationship as far as it could have gone. The rapidly escalating tensions between Andy and his wife are the product of his friendship with "freaks" (the midget and the wiseacre promoter); she cannot come to terms with this part of Andy's "craziness". What could have become a meaningful - while still humorous (the link bet- ween tragedy and comedy is a close one) sequence of events, ends up totally unresolved in an ending that is much less than it could have been. It's' a shame because The One and Only has an inherent warmth which, alas, is desperately in need of an author. Henry Winkler dboard cutout with the biggest ego this side of Muhammed Ali. I find myself in between these two factions; Winkler has some good moments, some bad. In short his per- formance, ostensibly central to the film, becomes neither here nor there. Subsequently greater weight is thrown on the other performers - Kim Darby, Gene Saks, and Herve Vallecheiz - and /" I L', I I L1A LTE'I AiAi 1 DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES - Adults $1 .25 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 MON. thru SAT. 10 A.M. ti I1:36 P.M. SUN. & HOLS. 12 Noon til 1:30 P.M. EVENING ADMISSIONS AFTER 5:00, $3.50 ADULTS Monday-Saturday 1:30-5:00, Admission $2.50 Adult and Students Sundays and Holidays 1:30 to Close, $3.50 Adults, $2.50 Students Sunday-Thursday Evenings Student & Senior Citizen Discounts Children 12 And Under, Admissions $1.25 TICKET SALES 1. Tickets sold no sooner than 30 minutes prior to showtime. 2. No tickets sold later than 15 minutes after showtime. a 'Gonzo' b By KEITH TOSOLT D OUBLE LIVE GONZO is the per fect title for a live album by Ted Nugent. He is the ultimate player in the field of gonzo rock and rollers, blasting balls out, no holds barred destructo heavy metal music with a famed maniacial energy. It used to be that the name Nugent was synonymous with feedback. With the Amboy Dukes, Nugent was one of the prime purveyors of this harmonic creation of modern amplification systems. He manipulated his hollow- bodied Gibson Byrdland and Fender amp stacks to produce a wide variety of aural-effects while retaining a degree of control where lessers would fail to manage the awesome acoustical capabilities of the equipment. Nugent's first live album, Survival of the Fittest recorded in 1970 at the Eastowns Theater in Detroit, is filled with his 116 lts out fier However, Nugent is still inventing exciting guitar lines. His lead work is really showcased in the longer versions of "Stranglehold" and "Stormtrop- pin' "; his solos sizzle with almost blin- ding speed and intensity as he literally attacks the guitar. Nugent is (and always has been) one of rock's fastest and most aggressive guitarists, and the leads found in Double Live Gonzo sub- stantiate this claim. THE SOCIAL phenomenon that is a Ted Nugent concert is definitely cap- tured on this live set. Double Live Gon- zo was recorded, for the most part, in the summers of '76 and '77 down in Texas (other locations are Nashville and Seattle). The Lone Star State's rock audiences and their penchant for beer drinkin' and hell raisin' perfectly suits the mood of Nugent's loud and rowdy music. Nugent's stage (and also off- stage), personna as the MVotor City rock Madman and Wild Game Hunter comes through in his song introductions. At one point, he exhorts a crowd by saying "I know there is no one out there who wants to be mellow" and they respond with primal screams and a barrage of fireworks. This is typical fare for a Nugent show and both the performer and his audience love it. The album cover shows Nugent on his knees covering his ears, apparently at a moment when the sound decibels reached the threshhold of pain. His concerts are loud enough not only to cause permanent hearing loss, but can render an unprotected cerebrum tem- porarily unable to -function as well. Nugent's fans forego the possibility of suffering bodily harm from his massive P.A. system because they want their rock and roll loud and kickass. And as Double Live Gonzo proves, Nugent can deliver it exactly in that manner. "HIGH VOLTAGE ENTERTAINMENTI! -William Glover, Associated Press .roS RWussel X ame une, eYar broadway's smash hit comedy bernard slade POWER CENTER FEB. 17, 8pm, 18 8pm, 19 2 & 8pm 1fA IN YI4 LAS MENDELSSOHN THEATRE SUN., FEB., 26, 2 &8pm HAROLDC10:40 ROJBBINS?',4:00 LAURENCE OLIVIER KATHARINE ROSS gg 9:30: I2 ROBERT DUVALL The Mouse and Her Child10:15 1:45'a "A DELIGHTFUL SHOW FOR CHILDREN" 4:15 STEVEN FLYNN U.A.T.C.4w .-----6:30 9:15 - -- --P91 --- Catch Nell Simon 12:30 " 3:30 Richard Dreyfuss 6:45 Marsha Mason 9:00 10:30 1:00,. 3:45 lheTU~hllgpo7il Double Live Gonzo Ted Nugent Epic KE 35069 feedback techniques exploited almost to an excess. But then everything Nugent does is to excess. Gradually the emphasis on feedback gave way to a more riff-laden rock and roll. The last. two albuns done by the Amboy Dukes, Call df the Wild and Tooth, Fang and Claw contain shorter ,songs;i with heavy metal rhythm lines and extremely fast guitar leads. In 1975, he switched labels and management and released a powerhouse rock album simply entitled Ted Nugent. It was a huge success, thrusting his name back into the rock arena. Free for All and Cat Scratch Fever followed on the commercial coat- tails of Ted Nugent and received exten- sive FM airplay. Nugent heightened his exposure by touring 250 days out of the year, bringing his new music to his new fans. Nugent's current live set is a good cross section of his recording career. His early Amboy Dukes phase is represented by the now classic "Baby Please Don't Go", an old Big Joe Williams' blues tune which received the heavy metal treatment from Nugent. "The Great White Buffalo," which Ncontains what has to be the fastest riff ever laid down on masters, and "Hibernation", one of those ong drawn-out acid trip jams, comes from some of the Amboy Dukes earlier material. Nugent's current bassist, Rob Grange, was a member of that group when the original was recorded in 1974. 17... 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