Page 6-Tuesday, April 11, 1978-The Michigan Daily Brian De Palma's furious chaos THE BITTER TEARS ~ay ' OF PETRA VAN KANT Director-RAINER WERNER FASSBINDER (1972) The story deals with shifting power relationships among three lesbians, -a successful "liberated" fashion designer, her contented slave girl, and a sultry model who makes the master the slave. Accompanied by the music of Verdi and thes Platters, dressed in glitter. The three women act out a supercharged melodrama of passion. "A trogi-comic love story disguised as a lesbian slumber party in high-camp drag."-Molly Haskell, Villaae Voice. German with subtitles. 7& 9:15p.m.MLB 3 $1.50 FRIDAY: Wyler's WUTHERING HEIGHTS The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative Presents at ANGELL HALL TUESDAY, APRIL 11 BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID (George Roy Hill, 1969) 7 & 9-Aud. A Two legendary outlaws find themselves crowded out of a West made less wild by ever more modern and efficient lawmen. One of the quintessential films of the 60'sm BUTCH features a wry, hip script by William Goldman, crisp direction by Hill, and the winning screen couple of NEWMAN and REDFORD. Wonderful-entertainment. Academy Award-winning music by Burt Bacharach. With KATHERINE ROSS. Cinemascope. Plus Short: MISSISSIPPI HARE (Chuck Jones, 1947) Bugs on the Big River f Tomorrow: Herzog's HEART OF GLASS at Aud. A By CHRISTOPHER POTTER I DON'T KNOW of another director who appears to revel so in the sheer cathartic joy of filmmaking as does Brian De Palma. His pictures radiate the manic exuberance of a kid let loose under the Christmas tree, wallowing through piles of strange and exotic presents, discovering suddenly- realized dreams of stupendous unex- plored universes. Yet, like a child, De Palma often seems so bedazzled by the wondermen- ts he uncovers that he rarely seems to know just what order to put them in. He emerges as a director who often can't see the forest for the trees, who keeps sacrificing the whole for the fascination of the moment. As an artist, he can make a film pulsate with a dynamo of energy and imagination that few direc- tors, if any, can presently match; then, just as abruptly, he can let pace, style and plot strangely, simply drop in a heap. SUCH HAS BEEN the frustrating pattern with virtually all of De Palma's films, from the early, semi- underground Greetings and Hi, Mom, right down through his current big- budget mainstream entry, The Fury. His latest is of special interest in any attempt to discern a maturation process in De Palma. It comes directly on the heels of Carrie, the director's fir- st genuine commercial success and the only work that combined his usual NEWS FROM THE MAJOR EVENTS OFFICE Jazz-pop artist Al Jareau will bring his white-hot intriguing vocals to Ann Arbor for the first time on May 3 at 8:00 p.m. in Hill Auditorium. Jarreau's unorthodox vocal work has invariably confounded any descrip- tion; he's best described as a vocal musician with an "orchestra in this throat." Cashbox named Jarreau the "Number One Jazz Vocalist for 1976." In 1977, the German Academy of Music awarded Al his second German Grammy as "Best Inter- national Artist." All of this critical acclaim set the stage for Jarreau's third Warner Brothers' release, "Look To The Rainbow- Live In Europe." This exquisite double- album has launched Al into a mammoth new dimension as artist and performer. Live- that's the only way to hear him. Tickets for the Al Jarreau Concert are $6.50, $5.50 and $4.50 and go on sale beginning this morning at the Michigan Union Box Office (11:30 to 5:30, M-F). For more information, please call 763- 2071. If you want to hear the music of Linda Ronstadt, Jennifer Warnes, John McVie, Mick Fleetwood, John David Souther and Jackson Browne, then go ahead and buy Warren Zevon's new album, "Excitable Boy." With a list of credits sounding like an invitation list to the Grammy awards, Zevon has created more excitement and enthusiasm than any' other songwriter- turned-performer since Jackson Browne, who incidentally, produced this album. Warren's lyrics are weird, demented and savage-but can be very, very funny. With songs like "Roland The Headless Thomson Gunner" and "Werewolves Of London," Warren has run the gamut from crazy lyrics to beautiful ballads. But don't try to under- stand Zevon, just enjoy his absurdity. We are in the process of bidding on his cross- country tour. If things work out, you might see him in May in Hill Auditorium. Check with our box office (763-2071) after April 17 for more information. Tidbits: Bob Seger has finished the final mix of his upcoming Capital LP . . . the Year One Band, who played a concert last July in the Grand Canyon, is planning on- other bash next month on the roof of the 110-story World Trade Center in New York City. As Steve Martin said, "isn't it amaz- ing what people will do to attract atten- tion?"..- . scenaric intensity with the structural unity necessary to craft a truly memorable film. Like its famous predecessor, The Fury centers on the mysteries and terrors of telekinesis - a person's theoretical ability to move, destroy or even metabolically alter ob- jects non-living or living, simply by mentally willing it. Carrie was surely the ultimate "get- ting-even" film, a teenage wallflower's revenge of a lifetime that we could almost universally identify with, either on the giving or receiving side of the coin. The Fury contains no such cosmic cosmology, and despite some ab- solutely astonishing special effects represents a distressing regression to the usual De Palma mish-mash of engaging incoherence. THE FILM'S cluttered plot depicts the mutual evolvement into telekinesis of two paranormal (as the vernacular has it) teen-agers, Robin Sanza and Gillian Belluvar. Born of radically dif- fering backgrounds (the two don't even meet until late in the film), they are united only in their bizarre powers. These abilities seem unsettlingly all- inclusive: our duo can not only read minds but literally watch and feel what the other is feeling at any given moment. They can peer into past and future, they can levitate, and most frighteningly, they can destroy anything or anybody with impunity. This last power makes the two kids rather prized icons in the eyes of the government. Enter a super-sinister CIA-ish agency so secret no one's even heard of it (cliche time, anyone?), headed by super-slimey John Cassavetes as a slightly deformed arch- villain. Early on the agency kidnaps young Robin, appears to kill off his father (Kirk Douglas) - then spirits the sibling off to a mansion north of Chicago, where his powers are forcibly amplified to destructive levels by a cache of scientists and technicians (Primary Plot No. 1). MEANTIME YOUNG Gillian, in- creasingly uptight over her psychic un- derside, enters a grotesquely lavish pseudo-sanitarium for paranormal testing and soon is also ticketed for cap- tivity in service of Uncle Sam. We wat- ch Cassavetes chortling with pride over his two new secret weapons:. "The Chinese don't have one, the Soviets don't have one," he gloats gleefully. Meanwhile, the very much alive Douglas has embarked on an obsessive search for his missing son. The three protagonists' paths draw ever closer in their desperate struggle against their corporate adversaries, until they finally crash together in a climax so unnerving as to make the viewer vow not to think bad thoughts about anyone ever again. SINCE THIS is De Palma's second successive film on telekinesis and its putportedly universe-shaking poten- tialities, one must assume it's one of the director's prime pre-occupations. Is this shivery tale intended to signal the dawning of some dark new millenium in human evolution, its psychic demigods approximating Yeats' poetic rough beast slouching towards Bethlehem to be born? Alas, De Palma has supplied no such cosmic breadth to his project, even as his subject matter roars out for such an application. INSTEAD, THIS most imaginative of directors has inexplicably crafted a molehill out of a mountain, subjugating the apocalyptic thunderclaps of his story to a small-minded preoc- cupations. Is this shivery tale intended to signal the dawning of some dark new millenium in human evolution, its psychic demigods approximating Yeats' poetic rough beast slouching towards Bethlehem to be born? Alas, De Palma has supplied no such cosmic breadth to his project, even as his sub- ject matter roars out for such an ap- plication. INSTEAD, THIS most imaginative of directors has inexplicably crafted a molehill out of a mountain, subjugating the apocalyptic thunderclaps of his story to a small-minded preoccupation with the unoriginal notions that: a) Our government is run by baaaaad meni (yawn); b) Young love (however inter stellar) hasn't got a chance against an. uncaring and exploitive society (sob):. Armageddon is thus sacrificed for cloak-and-dagger, the foreboding future submerged by the hum-drurm heartbreak of the moment. De Palma treats both subject and style as if he were in a shooting gallery, his random thrusts ranging from the breathtaking to the abyssmal. Sometimes he touches the sublime: A small van parks late-night on a rooftop of a giant Chicago parking ramp as the camera slowly pulls back, the vehicle's ever-diminishing circumference for- ming an eerie, minute haven against the menage of the darklit city below. WHEN DE PALMA later stagesa multiple murder scene on a normally quiet residential street, his slow-motion rendering of the sequence carries all the frame-by-frame horror and agony of a Zapruder film, a nightmare depic- tion of people trapped in sudden con- vulsive acts too late to reverse. Inevitably though, De Palma balan- ces off his successes with segments so extraneous that one wants to make him write "pace" and "rhythm" on a blackboard 100 times. The director devotes long minutes to a visually striking but irrelevant and largely in- coherent night-time car chase; he jars us with a strained comedy interlude between fugitive Douglas and a captive Chicago tenement family straight out of Archie Bunker-land. At the film's climax, Gillian dispatches Cassavetes in gruesomely ingenious fashion, and the viewer waits breathlessly to find out what will happen next. Will our heroine, now fast-approaching superhuman capacity, walk out into the world and proceed to dismantle it? Or perhaps save it? \ IRRELEVANT, SAYS De Palma, who in the best grade-B tradition cuts the film short at the bad guy's demise, apparently unable to resist opting for the gut shock of the moment over the mundane havoc of the long run. De Palma makes a few jabs at studying the personalities of his, possessed teen protagonists, chronicling both Gillian's growing terror at her inability to control her own powers, and Robin's metamorphosis from All-American boy into rampaging psychotic. The idea of the necessity to maintain social conscience alongside absolute power could have been arrestingly depicted, but the director; proves too scatterminded, naturally, to. maintain focus on it. Yet, Amy Irving. and Andrew. Stevens still succeed, in converting~ meagre material given, them into performances which ex; cruciatingly blend horror and poignan- ce. -The rest of The Fury's characters are walking cartoons. A fine cast including Douglas, Carrie Snodgress (at long, last) and Charles Durning labor valian- tly but futilely under the neglectful abuse of a director who apparently couldn't decide whether he was making a science fiction film, a spy film, a lover's tragedy or a Saturday morning kiddie show. And after ten years of feature film making, it seems distressingly doubtful if he will ever figure out which is which. The average weight of centers in the Big Eight increased by 32 pounds in 20 years, going from 197 in 1957 to 229 in 1977. TOM WOLFEI is coming to Cenicore 336 Maynard 10 a.m. Thursday, April 13 4V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V fff ftfttffitifi The University of Michigan Alumni Association announces.. . 7879AUDITIONS for the 70 - 79 F aMai z idn3 Saturday, April 15 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. School of Music 2_ * Room 20580 The aMaizin' Blues is a student singing/dancing ensemble p tunes, vocal jazz standards and traditional Michigan favoi graphed and have been staged in Washington; D.C., Pitt Chicago, as well as all over Michigan. In addition, the grou where they performed at Disneyland and the Hollywood Pall FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL 7 * * * * ** A l -AA T f f f - - - files TT "yK yT yT Tyy T y yT yT T T Tl Tyy yT Ty yT T erforming popular music, show rites. Shows are fully choreo- sburgh, Cleveland, Columbus, p went to the 1978 Rose Bowl adium. 64-0384 or 76440593 A A A A " A AA iii N&N----~iii4i k -dr- f 15 ~ ~ 1515151515 AN O N E A NNOUN CE S AN EVENING WITH ISHWNPILP THIS, WEEK Tuesday, April 11th 8 p.m. Michigan Theatre Union Programming Committee presents: MINI COURSE: Your Rights as a Tenant- What do the new housing laws mean for you? Informal lecture/dicussion and question Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union, Wednesday, April 12, 3 pm-FREE UAC in Cooperation With The Actor's Ensemble present: FULL CIRCLE A powerful drama dealing with the Holocaust Schorling Auditorium, Thursday-Saturday, April 13-15, 8 p.m. Sunday, April 16, 2 pm-$2.50 Eclipse Jazz presents: JOSEPH JARMAN and LEO SMITH Duets between Saxophonist Jarman (of the Art Ensemble of Chicago) and Trumpeter Smith. Both are spontaneous and exciting musicians in modern jazz Residential College Auditorium, Friday, April 14, 8 pm-$2.50 Mediatrics presents: LADY SINOS THE BLUES Biography of Billie Holiday, perhaps the greatest American Blues singer. Not Sci. Aud., Friday, April 14, 7 & 9:30 pm-$1.50 PAPER CHASE Dramatic story of a first-year Harvard law student trying to date his professor's daughter. Nat. Sci. Aud., Saturday, April 15, 7:30 & 9:30 pm-$1.50 Cinema Lecture Series presents: TICKETS $7.50 - $6.50 Reserved Available at 'Michigan Theatre Box Office, Ann Arbor Music Mart, Bonzo Records and all Hudson's stores. A Son of Bamboo Production/Full Moon Production HnO INDIANA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS MASTER OF SCIENCE IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE The Master of Science in Environmental Science degree (MSES) is a 48 credit-hour program of preparation for ,both public and private-sector careers. A degree in physical, earth or biological science, engineering or mathematics is required for admission. The areas of study included are: MASTER OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS The Master of Public Affairs degree (MPA) is a 48 credit-hour inter- disciplinary program of preparation for public sector careers. Candidates are admitted from a variety of educational backgrounds. BASIC ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE Applied. Ecology, Applied Earth. Science, Environmental Chemistry, Mathematics for Environmental Sciences ENVIRONMENTAL U ntA AmC Aumr ft.I3Ir APPLIED ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE CONCENTRATION Specialization in a particular environ- mental science field: Environmental Impact Analysis, Water Resources, Geography and Land-Use Analysis, Geology, Ecology, Field Biology, Microbiology COURSES IN THE CORE CON- CENTRATION INCLUDE: Pubic. Management Publie Organization Quantitative Analysis For PubIlc Management Publie Management Eonomics Environmental andSocial Systems THE AREAS OF PROFESSIONAL STUDY AVAILABLE ARE: Comparative and International Affairs Environmental Policy Health Systems Administration Management of Public Affairs Planning Policy Analysis i I I