The Michigan Daily-Friday, March 17 1978-Page 7 appen gs ..For The Week ofh4 Happ ning March 17 thru March 24 ALL WEEK COMMERCIAL CINEMA Julia (Campus) Lillian Hellman's autobiographical short story, turned in- to a glossy, arty movie. ** American Hot Wax (State) Supposed- American Hot Wax (State) Supposed- ly a look at the rebellios birth of rock 'n roll, featuring appearances by Chuck Berry and one or two other name ar- tists. High Anxiety (Michigan) Typical Brooksian zaniness along with some visual facsimiles of famousHitchcock scenes. As far as the jokes go, they're a cut above Silent Movie, but most often a cut below funny. ** Coma (Fifth Forum) Genevieve Bujold stars in this unexceptional thriller about hospital homicide. A maddeningly routine thriller, com- petently assembled, **% Close Encounters of the Third Kind (Fox Village) Steven Spielberg's won- drous UFO fantasy may not have the profundity to do more than feed the dreams of pop-religious fanatics seeking to escape their earthly traumas, but Spielberg knows how to exploit the vastness of his medium for grand and beautiful effects.**** The Betsy (Briarwood) Harold Rob- bins' sleazy best seller is transformed into an equally sleazy movie. * Saturday Night Fever (Briarwood) The script (by Norman Wexler) doesn't exactly avoid the cliche, but Saturday Night Fever is an exhilarating attempt to capture the raw energy of contem- porary popular music. ***2 The Turning Point (Briarwood) This one has a story straight out of the soaps. Starring Anne Bancroft and Shirley MacLaine, directed by Herbert Ross.** The Goodbye Girl (Briarwood) Neil Simon's latest little concoction is, for once, fairly funny and engaging, largely by virtue of Richard Dreyfuss' dynamite performance. *** Friday, MARCH 17 Cinema The Producers and The Twelve Chairs (MLB 3, The Producers at 7:00 and 10:15, The Twelve Chairs at 8:35) You can ski% The Twelve Chairs. The Producers is a bit uneven, but so feverishly manaical that it remains one of the few movies ever made that can truly be called insane. ***1/2 The Ann Arbor 16mm Film Festival (Old A&D, 7:00, 9:00 and 11:00) This is the fourth night of the annual festival. The results are generally quite in- teresting, and there are always a few genuinely superb entries. Well worth checking out. The Little Foxes (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00) Excellent version of the intri- cately conceived Lillian Hellman play, starring Bette Davis and directed by William Wyler. ***% Yellow Submarine (Nat Sci Aid, 7:00, 8:30 and 10:00) The Beatles take a whirlwind tour of Pepperland, in this unfailingly enjoyable animated feature. Play It Again, Sam (Room 100, Hutchins Hall, 7:00, 8:40 and 10:20) Woody Allen as a nebbish film critic who wants to be like Bogart, but has a rough enough time avoiding tripping over himself. The Harder They Come (MLB Class- room 1, 7:30 and 9:30) A bit crude on the technical side, but nonetheless an in- vigorating, vibrant tale, with Rggae Music providing a spiritual backdrop. Starring Jimmy Cliff*** Saturday, MARCH 18 Cinema Carnal Knowledge (MLB 3, 7:00 and 9:00) Jack Nicholson and Art Garfunkel star as two college students who follow the road to middle age amid a torrent of sexual aimlessness and betrayal. The film's style (slick and harsh) matches its content, but doesn't exactly give you a life.*** The Graduate and Petulia (MLB4, 7:00 and 9:00, respectively) The Graduate is an undeniable classic, with an hysterical script by Buck Henry, and a performance by Dustin Hoffman that seemed to sum up the arrogant rebellion of an entire decade. Petulia, directed by Richard Lester, looks at Southern California in the 60's. Not very interesting. **** and ** 16mm Film Festival (Old A&D, 7:00, 9:00 and 11:00) See listing for Friday. The Lion in Winter (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:15) The formula this light- hearted film follows makes it a bit cut- Gay Academic Union SPONSORS Don bt~ger: "New Horizons in Research on Gay History & Literature" at the Gay Community Center,, 3:30 pm, 612 S. Forest, No. B Sl lu 1- l - and-dried, but it works. *** Bobby Deerfield (Nat Sci Aud, 7:00 and 9:30) Last year's bomb features Al Pacino as a spiritually depleted racecar driver and Marthe Keller as the warm, wacky (but, tragedy of tragedies, terminally ill) light in his life. *1/2 Sunday MARCH 19 Cinema Film Festival Winners (Angell Aud A and Old A&D, both at 7:00 9:00 and 11:00) The best films of the festival are featured in three completely different shows. This is the night to go. events Yeats Festival-tBrunch at 10:30 a.m. at the University Club in the Union. At 3 p.m., "Words for Music, Perhaps," dance and poetry recital. greek Week - a swimathon benefit for the American Cancer Society and Women's Crisis Center, at Matt Mann Pool, 7-11 p.m. Monday, MARCH 20 Cinema Pickup on South Street (Angell Aud A, 9:10 only, free showing) This one's about a pickpocket whose vocation gets him into trouble with some powerful bigwigs. Entertaining action. *** EVENTS Vietnam Teach-in - David Dellinger, ex-SDS president, highlights the evening's events. Teach-in continues through Thursday. Trotter House - Benjamin Hooks, executive director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Rackham Auditorium, 7 p.m. Tuesday, MARCH 21 Cinema The Exorcist (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:15) William Friedkin's technically slick horror story has a few good moments (mostly in the beginning), before it turns into a veritable circus of over-explicit special effects. Pather Panchalli (Old A&D, 7:00 and 9:05) The first film in Indian director Satyajit Ray's classic Apu Trilogy. The Mother and The Whore (MLB 3, 7:00 only) A brilliant exploration of con- temporary sexual fragmentation. Wednesday MARCH 22 Cinema Alice in the Cities (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00, free showing). Alice explores the Americanization of German culture through the story of a young girl traipsing around with a freewheeling German journalist. Animal Crackers and Duck soup (Old A&D, Animal Crackers at 7:00 and 10:00, Duck Soup at 8:30) The kings of comedy wreak havoc in the art- collecting world and in the absurd coun- try of Freedonia.- Ninotchka (Nat Sci Aud, 7:00 and 9:00) A Garbo classic, directed by Er- nst Lubitsch.I Thursday, MARCH 23 Cinema The Conformist (Nat Sci Aud 7:00 and 9:15) Bernardo Bertolucci's. Visually one of the most stunning films ever made, The Conformist is an ab- solute triumph of its director's stylistic virtuosity. Citizen Kane (Old A&D, 8:00 only, free showing) A well-paced, witty story of muckraking journalism (the parallels with Hearst are undeniable). Niteries Second Chance-Thunder, the rock/funk group fronted by two black female vocalists, plays through Sun- day. Tuesday through next weekend, Masquerade mixes oldies from the 60's with more current rock and roll. Abigail's-That ever-popular rock combo known as Stonebridge plays power chord classics as well as a good share of their own material this weekend. Roadhouse-The Detroit Skates will play the music which has made the PREPARE FR 40thI MCAT DAT LSAT GRE GMAT -"OCAT -VAT -SAT NMB It1,1,1 ECFMG-FLEX-VQE NAT'L DENTAL 80ARDS NURSING BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours There IS a dfference!! jMP N EDUCATIONAL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For Information Please Call: (313) 662-3149 For Locations In Other Cities, Call: TOLL FREE: 800-223-1782 Cente rin MajorU S Cities ioronto Puerto Rico and Luk:aIn. itzerland~ Motor City the home of rock and roll through Saturday. Mr. Flood's-Native Sons will play country and folk this weekend. Wed- nesday and Thursday, great R&B with Ann Arbor's own Silvertones will be the musical fare. Blind Pig-Improvisational piano of the highest order with Larry Mander- ville and Friends will be featured in the basement club this weekend. Then it's Blue Monday with the ever-present blues pianist Boogie Woogie Red. The Ark - Hedy West picks the banjo and sings some traditional folk songs this weekend. Blue Frogge-"Saturday Night Fever" happens every night except Sunday at everyone's favorite disco. Dooley's-No self-respecting partier would pass up a St. Patrick's Day celebration here. The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative Presents of MLB Friday, March 17 THE PRODUCERS (Mel Brooks,.1968) 7&10:15-MLB3 ZERO MOSTEL ploys the producer, hen his accountant (GENE WILDER) shows him how producing Broadway flop con make more n iey than a hit, he buys a horrible, hilarious musical calle "Springtime for Hitler!" One of the Ki iniest movies in recent years, at was Mel Brooks' first movie a one of his best. "Pure lunacy ... uproariously funny! "-TIME. Academy Award. Best Original Screenpla THE TWELVE CHAIRS (Mel Brooks, 1971) 8:35 only-ML3 3 MEL BROOKS has directed this classic Russian comedy in his usual zany, fast-paced fashion. A dying woman confesses separately to her son-in-law and the village priest that she sewed valuable jewelry into one of ;e twelve dining-room chairs before fleeing from the palace during the Revolution. This sets off an outrageous chose as one person after another learns the secret and dashes across Mother Russia in search of treaosre ".. a complete joy! Mel Brooks is a major delight in a hilarious role."-Judith Crist. With RON MO DOM DE LUISE, FRANK LANGELLA, and MEL "FUN" BROOKS. Saturday: CARNAL KNOWLEDGE. THE GRADUATE and PETULIA at MLB Jr - in-' 1'i L l l1'A v l'5AE.I1: L1: :P1h s u DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES -- Adults $1.25 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 MON. thru SAT. 10 A.M. tI 1:3b 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 .-CINEMA II FRIDAY, LITTLE FOXES Director-WILLIAM WYLER (1941) BETTE DAVIS as a turn-of-the century Southern belle who stops at nothing even murder of her invalid husbahd in her relent- less pursuit of power and prestige. She schemes to gain control of the family fortune for a chance to escape the con- fining Southern mansion life. Adapted by Lillian Hellman from her own acclaimed drama. Magnificent photography by Greg Toland (CITIZEN KANE). I 1. Tickets sold no sooner than 30 minutes prior to showtime. 2. No tickets sold later than 15 minutes after showtime. TICKET SALES 7&9 p.m. ANGELL HALL - AUD. A $1.50 SATURDAY: Harvey's THE LION IN WINTER SPRIN G STEREO CLEEIN-UP 5KW FISHER HARMON- KARDON Receivers AutoSystems IN STOCK 20% TO 40% of f suggested list /1 UR{D l1J 11/lG H " Your chance to good stuff at savings. buy the honest Also SAVE on: TAPE DECKS TURNTABLES SPEAKERS VIDEO RECORDERS NOMINATED FOR 5 ACADEMY AWARDS 10:30 1:00 3:45 7:a5 9:45 Sorry, No We're just the sale. Phone Quotes- too busy during NOMINATED FOR 11 ACADEMY AWARDS including BEST PICTURE BEST ACTRESS-ANNE BANCROFT BEST ACTRESS-SHIRLEY MacLAINE BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS-LESLIE BROWNE BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR-MIKHAIL BARYSHNIKOV STARTS: NOW ENDS: APRIL 3 Ann Arbor The Extraordinary , Adventures of I. (ot ,