The Michigan Daily-Friday, February 17, 1978-Page 7 appen 'ngs . ",For The Week of February 17 through 23 All Week COMMERCIAL CINEMA Julia (Campus) Fred Zinneman's stodgy, overly impeccable film, based on a true story by Lillian Hellman. Follow the adventures of Lil (Jane Fonda) as she tries to smuggle money to her friend Julie (Vanessa Redgrave) to help subvert the Nazi cause. A spirit- ually enervated creation, that takes it- self 10 times too seriously. **% The One and Only (State) Henry Winkler stars as Andy Schmidt, an un- controllable show-off who winds up a star in "big-time wrestling." Despite a few funny gags, the character and the film get tiresome. **% High Anxiety (Michigan) Mel Brooks' Hitchcock pastiche isn't bad, but just about everything funny in it has nothing whatsoever to do with suspense or Hitchcockian idioms. This isn't a parody of Hitchcock - it's Brooksian zaniness crossed with blueprints of Hit- chcock's most famous scenes. *** The Other Side of the Mountain, Pt. 1 (Fifth Forum) More sugary, sweet mu'sh, from the same accountants who brought you Pt. I. Close Encounters of the Third Kind (Fox Village) Steven Spielberg's won- derous look at a visit from benign extra- terrestrial creatures who ride around in a ship the size of Ann Arbor. A cele- bration of child-like innocence and the pure vastness of the medium.'**** Turning Point (Briarwood) The story's pure oatmeal, but the fantastic ballet sequences (with Mikhail Bary- shnikov) make up for it. *** Saturday Night Fever (Briarwood) The script is dumb and predictable, but somehow the music, direction and per- formance of John Travolta all charge Saturday Night Fever with infectious energy. Dynamite disco sequences. *** 1/2 The Betsy (Briarwood) Laurence Olivier sleazes his way through this boring adaptation of Harold Robbins' novel.. *% The Goodbye Girl (Briarwood) Annie Hall it's not, but this recent Neil Simon concoction is a good-humored and en- joyable look at an unlikely courtship. Richard Dreyfuss steals the show. ***1/2 friday February 17 CINEMA Everything You've Always Wanted to Know About Sex (Old A&D, 7:00 and 9:05) This random assortment of sket- ches includes some of Woody Allen's all-time best material. Highlights in- clude a take-off on flaky Italian movies (complete with Italian dialogue and subtitles), Gene Wilder as a respect- able physician who has an affair with a sheep, and Woody as a sperm cell. **** Top Hat (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00) The plot of this Astaire-Rodgers classic is completely uninteresting, but who cares? The dancing is grace, beauty, etc. personified. **** The 8mm film festival (Schorling Aud, School of Education, 7:00 and 9:00) This diverse collection of short films contributed from all over the U.S. and Canada is usually a mixed bag: some are boring and pretentious, others extremely imaginative and amusing. The Big Sleep (MLB 4, 7:00 and 9:15) Everyone's heard the story: the script of this Raymond Chandler thriller was reportedly so labyrinthian, that direc- tor Howard Hawks and screenwriters William Faulkner and Leigh Brackett had to call in Chandler to untangle it. Even if you don't catch all of the plot's intricacies, this is still an immensely entertaining detective drama, as taut and well-paced as they come. With Bogart as Philip Marlowe, and Lauren Bacall. **** Return of the Dragon (Nat Sci Aud, 7:30 and 9:30) Bruce Lee kicks, screams, and rolls his eyes through one of those mindless but entertaining (for some, at least) kung fu spectaculars. Where Eagles Dare (Room 100, Hut- chins Hall, 7:00 and 10:00) Richard Burton leads a team of rescuers to an American general held captive in a Bavarian mountaintop Starring Clint Eastwood. fortress. Events Wrestling - U-M vs. Wisconsin: Cris- ler Arena, 3 p.m. Lloyd Minority Council - Nothing But a Man: Alice Lloyd Hall, 7:30 9 p.m. Hockey - U-M vs. Colorado College: Yost Ice Arena, 7:30 p.m. Music School - Chamber Choir, all Bach program: Hill Aud., 8p.m. saturday February 18 CINEMA The Story of Adele H (Old A&D, 7:00 and 9:05) Truffaut's assured rendering of the true story of Victor Hugo's daughter is an exquisitely-photograph- ed, almost agonizingly moving account of a woman for whom perfect love was a total, spiritual obsession. Starring Isabelle Adjani. **** The Wild Child (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00) A young boy is found living wild in the woods, and a physician (played by Truffaut) attempts to in- troduce him to civilization. The film uses some interesting visual effects to give it the look and feeling of old photo- graphs, resulting in one of Truffaut's most provocative efforts. ***% The 8mm film festival (Schorling Aud, School of education, 2:00, 7:00 and 9:00) See listing for Friday. Every Man for Himself and God Against All (MLB 3, 7:00 and 9:00) Bruno S. is brilliant as Kaspar Hauser, a young man with no knowledge or memory abandoned in a small German village during the nineteenth century. Written and directed by Werner Her- zog, this 1975 film shifts from moments that are enormously disquieting to ones of warmly compassionate humanity. An utterly remarkable film - should be seen by all.**** Loony Toons Cartoon Fest (Nat Sci Aud, 7:00, 8:35 and 10:10) The best of Bugs Bunny, Road Runner, Foghorn Leghorn and other mythical heroes from Saturday Morning TV-land. "I wecomend it compweetwy!" - E. Fudd. Events PTP - "Same Time Next Year": Power Center, 8 p.m. Synchronized Swimming - Michigan Invitational: Bell Pool, 9 a.m., 1 p.m. Res. College "Original Music by Jim Robb": R.C. Aud., E. Quad, 8 p.m. Gymnastics - Crisler Arena, 7:30 p.m. su nday February 19 CINEMA The Harder They Come (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00) This 1973 reggae film is technically a bit on the crude side, but the music and energetically-acted story are invigorating and enjoyable. 8mm film festival - Winners' night (Schorling Aud, School of Education, 7:00 and 9:00) The best of the festival, and most probably the best night to go. Events Gymnastics - Crisler Arena, 1:30 p.m. PTP - "Same Time Next Year": Power Center, 2, 8 p.m. Lloyd Minority Council - African, Contemporary Dance Workshop: Alice Lloyd Hall, 2 p.m. Mosher Jordan - Jazz Festival: Jor- dan Lounge, 7-10 p.m. * monday February 20 CINEMA D.O.A. (Angell Aud A, 9:10 only, free showing) An ultra-suspenseful poi- soned-man-looking-for-antidote tale. With Edmund O'Brien. Events Musical Society - Eliot Feld Ballet: Power Center, 8 p.m. tuesday February 21 CINEMA Pride and Prejudice (Old A&D, 7:00 and 9:05) Jane Austen's classic is given reasonably accurate (though almost overly upright) treatment on the screen. Starring Laurence Olivier. *** Enter the Dragon (Angell Aud A, 7:00, 8:40 and 10:20) More Bruce Lee fun. This is the best of them. Donkey Skin (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00) Catherine Deneuve portrays a young woman "pursued by her father - a man convinced that she is the only woman alive as beautiful as his late wife." Hmmmm. Events Women's Basketball - U-M vs. West- ern Michigan at Crisler Arena, 7 p.m. Musical Society - Eliot Feld Ballet: Power Center, 8 p.m. wednesday February 22 CINEMA Hollywood on Trial (Old A&D, 7:00 and 9:05) A documentary about the heyday of McCarthyism, with more recent interviews with Zero Mostel and Ronald Reagan. Bruno Der Schwartz (Bruno the Black) and Cria (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00, respectively) Bruno Der Sch- wartz is the documentary that inspired Werner Herzog to use real-life social outcast Bruno S. in Every Man for Him-, self and God Against All, as well as Her- zog's most recent film. Cria is a recent, highly-acclaimed Spanish film, starring Geraldine Chaplin. Both are A2 premieres. Sounder (Nat Sci Aud, 7:00 and 9:00) A supremely moving tale that follows a poor black family's desperate attempt at survival during the depression. Cicely Tyson is superb. **** Events Musical Society - Eliot Feld Ballet: Power Center, 8 p.m. thursday February 23 CINEMA Cover Girl and Broadway Melody of 1940 (Old A&D, 7:00 and 9:05, respec- tively) Two vintage musicals - fine, if you like that sort of thing. The Touch (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00) This ridiculous failure from Ingmar Bergman is the closest thing he has ever done to unintentional self- parody. The performances are quite decent (even that of Elliot Gould, whom the critics lambasted mercilessly), but something just doesn't click; despite an occasional fine moment, this story of a woman (Bibi Andersson) caught up in a tempestuous relationship with a self- hating archeologist (Gould) is almost completely uninsightful, and at times embarrassingly contrived. *% The Seduction of Mimi (Nat Sci Aud, 7:00 and 9:30) Lina Wertmuller's worst film (i.e., it's a very bad film) has one amusing idea involving a fat woman, and that soon becomes tiresome. *!/z Events Basketball - U-M vs. Illinois, Crisler Arena, 8 p.m. Niteries Second Chance - The horn-laden sound of Air Condo is featured through Sunday. Monday, the well known and popular Detroit area group known as Stonebridge brings their rock to A2. The group of local players masquerade rocks on from Tuesday to next weekend, except on Thursday when the Jazz Crusaders perform in concert. Abigail's - The Look, a group com- prised of former members from some of Detroit's more formidable bands, rocks this weekend. Roadhouse - Rainbow Bridge, whose name comes from the title of a bizarre movie starring Jimi Hendrix, plays through Saturday. Sunday and Monday, The Friends Roadshow brings in their particular brand of comic music. Blind Pig - The Prismatic Band fuses rock and jazz this weekend. On Monday, club regular Boogie Woogie Red plays his .natural blues on the piano. Underground - Kick 'em out on the dance floor with Kicker this weekend. Mr. Flood's - Dick Siegel and the Ministers of Melody play bluegrass and string band music this weekend. Wed- nesday, The Tucker Blues Band will do it Muddy Waters' style. More blues on Thursday with Detroit bluesman Willie D. Warren and the Progressive Blues Band. The Ark - Legendary folkie Ramb- lin' Jack Elliot grins and picks through Sunday. Pretzel Bell - The R.F.D. Boys, house band for at least the last six years, continue weekend gigs of fine bluegrass music. Bimbo's - For those with more mun- dane tastes, The Gaslighters play gay 90's and lead sing-alongs every week- end amidst the peanuts. Blue Frogge - For those with the in- clination to a faster paced evening's en- tertainment, disco dancing is offered every night except Sunday. Film reviews by Owen Gleiber- man. Niteries recommendations by Keith Tolsolt. The American League of Physical Culture, founded Dec. 5, 1929, in New York City, was America's first nudist . organization. Midwest's largest selection of European Charters canad"an and U.S. f rom $299 also Budget &" 1n By fares to Europe & Orient CA LL 769-1776 a S ** E S 216 S. 4th Ave., Ann Arbor Swim Just for the. health of it* Get moving, America! Nr"J nal l ij 'PhV di Ih E u(aon ;rd SpolWok Physical Education Public Information American Ahlance for Hea h 1201 1 61h S' N W Washinglin D C 0036 Physcal ducaior'and ecre " SPECIAL at the BagelFactey 1306 S. University INTRODUCING ALWAYS FRESH. 7 days Our New Cream Cheese Spreads: strawberry-blueberry vegetable-walnut 49C per sandwich on your choice of bagel (Good thru Feb. 28) . "Expert in Troy Catering" INTRODUCING SOMETHING NEW FOR YOU - -'4f Wlest Bank SUNDAY FAMILY BUFFET 12-8 Dick Simzak (Formerly of Holiday Inn, Howell) invites you and your family to enjoy a culinary tour de force of our Sun- day Buffet, laden with all the rich, filling, tasty morsels that one could imagine. - Just to mention a few of the items that will be served - Cattleman's Roast Round of Beef, Maryland Style Fried Chicken, Baked Lasagne, Swedish Meant Rall PlumnJuicy Fried Shrimp Tidbits. Snowflake Potatoes. Vegetable du Jour plus