The Michigan Diy-Friday, April 7, 1978--Page 9 *enFor The Week of Happenings April 7 thru April12 AllWeek COMMERCIAL CINEMA Julia (Campus) Fred Zinnemann's ponderous exercise in artsy film- making. ** The Big. Sleep (State) A remake of Howard Hawks' legendary detective thriller. - Close Encounters of the Third Kind (Michigan) Steven Speilberg's inven- tive and marvelously playful UFO fan- tasy. **** Coma (Fifth Forum) The director, Michael 'Crichton, fails to exploit the lurid premise behind this hospital thriller, and Genevieve Bujold's engaging performance as a doctor- cum-detective can't raise it above the level of routine directorial manipulation. *** The Iury (Briarwood) Brian De Palma's flamboyant thriller about a young woman (Amy Irving) with telekinetic powers who becomes the target of a diabolical government con- spiracy. De Palma's visual flashiness is up to his. usual standard of glittering surrealism, but the story, a complex suspense-mystery, could have used some tightening. *** . Saturday Night Fever (Briarwood) This movie's energetic rock'n'roll spirit will take you over, and the opening, with John Travolta sauntering down a seedy Brooklyn avenue to "Stayin' Alive," has got to be the sequence of the year. ***/2 The Turning Point (Briarwood) Schlocky melodrama about ballet and its attendant fanatics.. *% The Goddbye Girl (Briarwood) Neil Simon at his best - hollow but enter- taining. Richard Dreyfuss gives a frisky, very funny performance. *** Friday April 7 CINEMA The Maltese Falcon (Old A&D, 7:00 and 9:30) Humphrey Bogart as Dahiell Hammett's Sam Spade, in what is arguably THE classic detective movie. Directed by John Huston. **** Harok and Maude and Where's Pop- pa (MLB 3, Harold and Maude at 7:00 and 10: ,, Where's Poppa at 8:40) Hal Ashby' ultra-cult film, Harold and Maude o en strains too hard to be zany and fun, but nevertheless remains a warm and humorous depiction of two mismatched social outcasts. Where's Poppa is Carl Reiner's (Oh, God!) fun- niest fil ***% 2 Rebeca (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:15) One of Hitchcock's finest, starring Joan Fontaine and Laurence Olivier. Silver Streak (Nat Sci Aud, 7:30 and 9:30) This comedy-suspense drama blatantly rips-off from Hitchcock and various other directors, but a fine cast (Gene Wilder, Jill Clayburgh, Richard Pryor) gives it an amiable spirit. Face to Face (MLB Lecture Room 1, 7:00 and 9:30) Ingmar Bergman out- Bergmans himself in this ponderous, pretentious dissection of a psychiatrist's neurotic breakdown. Werner Herzog described it beaufifully as having all the life of a still-born baby. Even Liv Ullman's powerful per- formance can't save it. * 1/ Shampoo (Couzens cafeteria, 8:00 and 10:00) Warren Beauty as a swinging hairdresser in Hal Ashby's minor classic about a 48-hour romp through election day in the Beatles 60's. The Hound of the Basketville (Hut- chins Hall, Roorh 100, 7:00 and 9:00) Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes, in one of the very best films to ever come out of the Holmes-movies of yesteryear. EVENTS Michifis, - "Recurrents" water show: Bell Pool, 8:15 p.m., .also Satur- day night: Musical Society/Music School - 4th annual benefit concert, featuring soprano Jessye Norman: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. saturday April 8 CINEMA Face to Face (Old A&D, 7:00 and 9:30) See listing for Friday. Romeo and Juliet (MLB 3, 7:00 and 9:15) Franco Zeffirelli's ultra- romanticized rendition of Shakespeare's play stars Olivia Hussey and Leonard Whiting. ***% Belle de Jour (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00) Bunuel's superb story of a woman who becomes a prostitute by day after sustaining a tedious marriage. One of Bunuel's very best. **** Chinatown (Nat Sci Aud, 7:00 and 9:15) Roman Polanski's superb film begins as a simple, hard-boiled detec- tive flick, before slowly transforming into a menancing nightmare of con- spiratorial evel. **** Targets (MLB Room 1, 7:00, 8:45 and 10:30) Peter Bogdonavich's directorial debut. Shampoo (Couzens cafeteria, 8:00 and 10:00) See listing for Friday. Sunday April 9 CINEMA The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:15) Billy Wilder's witty evocation of the Holmes idiom - a lightly satirical film, done with true affection for its subject. *** / Rules of the Game (Old A&D, 7:00 and 9:05) Jean Renoir's classic film about corruption in the French aristocracy. EVENTS Solar Expo '78 - Conf. Rms. 1 through 6, Michigan League and Regents' Plaza, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. First Unitarian Church - Pianist Tibor Szasz plays selections of Bach, Beethoven and Chopin;7:30 p.m. Chur- ch located at 1917 Washtenaw monday April 10 CINEMA Eika Katappa (Angell Aud A, 9:10 only, free showing) Highly acclaimed in Germany, this film by Werner Schroeter "consists of seven scenes which show how faulty and doubtful the ceremonies of bodily movements are in movies today." Midwest premiere. EVENTS Women's Studies - Heidi Hartmann, U.S. Commission of Civil Rights, "The Unhappy Marriage of Marxism and Feminism": W. Conf. Rm., Rackham, 4 p.m. Recreational Sports - Fitness film, Coronary Counter Attack: Exercise Rm., North Campus Rec. Bldg., 7 p.m. Japanese Music Study Group - Japanese classical music and dance: Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. tuesday April 11 CINEMA Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00) Paul Newman and Robert Redford are outlaws on the run. ***1Z The Bitter Tears of Petra Van Kant (MLB 3, 7:00 and 9:15) Rainer Werner Fassbinder's movie about three lesbians and the manifestation of power in their tumultuous relationships. Balls of Fire and Only Angels Have Wings (Old A&D, 7:00 and 9:05, respec- tively) Two Howard Hawks flicks, the first a mediocre screwball comedy starring Barbara Stanwyck and Gary Cooper, the second the story of mail pilots and their treacherous voyages in- to South America. " wednesda) April 12 CINEMA The Godfather, Pt. I (Old A&D, 7:00 and 10:00) Pauline Kael called it "the greatest picture ever made," and she just might be right. Coppola's sprawling, powerful epic is one of the most intelligent American films of the 70's, and features superlative perfor- mances by Brando and Pacino. **** and 9:05) Although not the best of the Mr. Hulot films, this early Jacques Tati work is a wonderful introduction to the world of the man many have called the French Chaplin. ***% EVENTS INFACT -Efilm, Bottle Baby: Multipurpose Rm. UGLI, 11:15N 1:15, 2:15 p.m. Guild House - poetry reading 7:30 p.m. Hillel - concert, "Israel's 30th Bir- thday": 1429 Hill St., 8 p.m. UAC - Remarque's "Full Circle": Schorling Aud., SEB, 8 p.m. . 5 Ni teries Second Chance - Foxx rocks through Sunday and Cyprus does the same Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday, the Chance presents another of its New Wave Shows. Appearing will be the Stranglers, who apply the concept of the power trio to new heights, along with Tuff Darts and Destroy All Mon- sters. Dr. Bob lectures on the music of the 50's from Thursday to next weekend. Abigail's - Mugsy is not just your basic Zeppelin/Arrowsmith imitators, though they play the genre better than any band' around. Lots of extended leads and excellent original material. They play through Saturday. Roadhouse - Headwind plays through Saturday. Sunday, Bill Wallace and his Green Mtn. Boys play bluegrass. Blind Pig - Larry Manderville and Friends perform their straight ahead Hey Baby. going my way? mainstream jazz compositions on Friday. The Silvertones play many variations on the R&B theme on Satur- day. Boogie Woogie Red plays the honky tonk blues piano as the Monday night regular. Mr.Flood's - The Tucker Blues Band plays those drivin' Chicago style blues- on Friday, Saturday and Wed- nesday of next week. The Tillson- Pearson Band plays redneck C&W on Thursday. The Ark - John Allan Cameron, a Canadian TV music show hostfor the past three years, plays a mixture of traditional and modern music on his guitars and fiddle this weekend. Zelda's - Magic plays dancing music which leans heavily toward disco this weekend. Blue Frogge - Disco down and check out the show day. every night except Sun Otcen G(,eibermnait. Nif'eries .recorn - m-en11dfafionl wie re rid Scby KeitbI ATTITUDE Marlon Brando The Godfather Heart of Glass (Angell Aud A, 7:00, 8:40 and 10:20) The midwest premiere of Werner Herzog's 1976 film about a disaster in a glass factory. EVENTS Infact - Bake sale: 9 a.m. on the Diag. Baseball - U-M vs. University of Detroit: Fisher Field, 2 p.m. The game will be broadcast live over WCBN and WRCN. Speech - 2 one-act plays, Chekhov and Strindberg: Arena Theater, 4 p.m. Hopwood Awards and Lecture - Tom Wolfe, "Literary Technique in the Last Quarter of the 20th Century": Rackham Lec. Hall, 4p.m. Major Events - Jackson Browne: Crisler Arena, 8 p.m. Music School - 19th century music, Clements Library, 8:30 p.m. Union Programming - Dance in the ballroom, 2nd floor Michigan Union, 9 P.m. " thursday April 13 CINEMA Day For Night (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00) Truffaut's story of a director (played by Truffaut) shooting a film is, above all, a loving and embracing hommage to the very process of film- making. Starring Jean-Pierre Leaud and Jacqueline Bisset. Mr. Hulot's Holiday (Old A&D, 7:00 PREPARE FOR: (401h MCAT " OAT " LSAT 9GRE GMAT - OCAT -"VAT -SAT NMB LI,I,E ECFMG-aFLEX*VQE NAT'L DENTAL BOARDS NURSING BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours There IS a difference~t K4 P 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 Centers in Major u sities brtonto Puerto Rico and Lugano. Switterian'! I ADJUSTMENT HOURS- 3:00-6:00 p.m. Monday-Friday %/ PRICE DRINKS 1 C HOT DOGS BLUE 11 Church 995-5955 R 9 r 5 f 4 r ' . d "3 a c 6 f "'¢ qa. I 0e find out!1 Advertise in the Daily Classifieds under Transportation. ? Fni i N-1. -- IIALOI Want To Know What's Going On In Ann Arbor Over The, summer?, SUBSCRIBE TO THE Call 764-0558 or stop by 420 Maynard Call 764-0557 . $6.50 $7.00 $3.50 $4.00 Spring-Summer Term by mail outside Ann Arbor Spring OR Summer Term by mail outside Ann Arbor Out of town subscriptions must be pre-paid FREE BAG L with every dozenI at the deli: purchased reg. $1.75 RUBEN SANDWICH $1 .49 THIS WEEK THRU APRIL 14 t Factory Always fresh 7 days .. MUSICIANS and ENTERTAINERS Enjoy s fantastic summer at Cystal Mountain Lodge Be a member of Crystal's summer entertainment group-the "Crystalettes Show Band." Representatives from Crystal Mountain will be on campus to audition vocalists and instrumentalists on Wednesday, April 12th. Contact the Summer Placement Office for an audition appointment- 763-4117. For more information, write or call: DAVE CHRISTENSON CRYSTAL MOUNTAIN LODGE THOMPSONVILLE, MICHIGAN 49683 (616) 378-2911 The Department of ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES presents The Annual HA YWARD KEAIISTOIVLECTURE PROF. HAROLD WEINRICH (Bielefeld University; Visiting Professor, Princeton) 'UCTIONI TEXT: S-YN-TAXAND SEMANTICS9 Monday, April 10-4:10 pm Rackham Amphitheatre Admission Complimentary # r s :'5. ° .. .°t a$...h J' Yf' ...9g ..4 . . I~44 t 'N. .J ~ 41,4...'I.. . F....4...: ~ .~ I SUPER$ 39 SIRLOI wENJOY OUR A GREAT TASTIN G STEAK AT A PRICE THAT'S EASY TO SWALLOW I GERBILTH { 0 N SALE 0. Our price includes a juicy steak with all the trimmings. Such as a baked potato, warm roll and butter, plus all the fresh, crisp salad you can eat from our Salad Bar I