The Michigan Daily-Tues3*y, October 25, 1977-Page 7 'Joseph Andrews' gives money's worth By OWEN GLEIBERMAN Joseph Andrews is Tony Richardson's second screen adaptation of a Henry Fielding novel, the first being the ever-popular Tom Jones. Like its predecessor, the film is a bawdy, freewheeling excursion through the not-so-dainty world of seventeenth-century England, with an emphasis on fast-paced action and slapstick humor. Joseph Andrews just wants to have fun, and achieves its goal by piling episodes on each other so quickly you barely have time to catch your breath. The movie is a cheerful bit of tomfoolery, and by the time it ties up its complex series of loose ends, you'll have gotten more than your money's worth of amusement. Kubrick's Barry Lyndon was stately and elegant, portraying the lives of those too crusty and high-society to ever get excited. Joseph Andrews exposes the other side of the coin, as the characters are led through a world of rotting debauchery. At one point the heroes are captured by a group of gothic perverts so obsessed with death, they garnish their dining room with skeleton-supported chan- deliers and torture instruments. The mood of the film is nevertheless one of rollicking fun, derived largely from the happy knowledge that we are light years away from this wretched era. The plot unravels slowly at first, but eventually manages to work up more confusion than I care to recreate here. Suffice to say that Lady Booby (Ann- Margaret) has the hots for her young footman (Peter Firth), a "gentle boy" whose true love is a plain young girl named Fanny Goodwill. After being fired for his un- willingness to fulfill Lady Booby's desires, Joseph meets up with his love, and the two of them go off with a priest friend, planning to be married. Along the way they encounter several people who tell them stories about children stolen at birth, stories that eventually prove there's more to Joseph or Fanny's backgrounds than meets the eye. The intertwined stories are eventually unwound, determining which baby was stolen from where and who is therefore related to who. It's no surprise when things turn out for the best. Despite the involved, multi-stranded plot, Joseph Andrews takes a while to get moving. What little comedy there is in the opening portions is restricted to clowning buffoonery by the stock seventeenth-century movie grotesques that per- meate the film, Even more than the detailed, accurate Barry Lyndon, this film abounds in the repellingly ghostlike faces of men and women laboring under poun- ds of makeup and false beauty marks. Along with these types are thrown in a selec- tion of obese, big-lipped scowlers, whose lives seem to be carried on amidst a flurry of barn-floor hay and slop. In spite of the fact that such a slobbering collec- tion of crazies has been put on the screen before, Joseph Andrews manages to get many a good laugh out of its deranged gallery of creepies. A big-nosed local magistrate is told that three men bore false witness, and without a moment's thought he strikes the three of them dead with a single bullet. A more-than-slightly- senile physician complacently examines an obviously stone-dead corpse, listening for the heartbeat, and finally comes to the conclusion that the stiff customer is in- deed dead. The first third of the film contains little more of interest than such episodes, but before too long the plot begins to develop its terminal thickness. Many of the story turns are confusing, as the film moves choppily, in skips and bounds. Torn Jones utilized a similar life-at-high-speed feeling, but Richardson kept the frenzied pace constant, and the viewer was kept on guard. Joseph Andrews' movement is' more inconsistent; new characters come crashing in unexpectedly on all sides, and the essential rhythm of the story is often lost. Although most individual scenes= are successful, the tendency is toward stringing action sequences together, as if Richardson felt compelled to keep the whole thing moving. Joseph Andrews lacks the smoothness that can make a contrived plot slide by without your worrying' about it, But what the film lacks in stylistic perfection is more than made up for by the good-natured vitality of the humor. A few fight sequences are superb, especially one in which a woman discovers her husband with the local wench and proceeds to fling a freshly-dead and bleeding chicken over everything in sight. The priest who travels with Joseph and Fanny has many fine moments of comic befud- dlement, as his mind is always three seconds behind everyone else's. In general, all the perormances involved are fine, especially Peter Firth's innocent but courageous Joseph. Ann-Margaret - who has seemingly graduated permanently from the roles where acting meant tight sweaters and a cooing pussycat voice - is perfectly devious as Lady Booby (almost embarrassingly ap- tly named), her moments of stifled control in perfect counterpoint to her purrding seductions. Buffs will also recognize, as Joseph's older sister, the girl who played one of the children in Mary Poppins. The film's climax in which the true scheme of family relations is sorted; out - doesn't have quite the force of Tom Jones' conclusion. This is due largely toy an inherent weakness in the plot, which lacks the romantic rivalries and overlaps that sparked Tom Jones. Joseph remains pure to the end, with Lady Booby's ad_ vances providing the only sexual twist in an otherwise straight love story. Ultimately, Joseph Andrews never takes itself seriously enough to allow its; romantic undertones to dominate. Joseph and Fanny are the only likeable peopkd in the film who are also sane, and Richardson's style is too tongue-in-cheek to let us, care about the outcome per se. This film may not be as completely successful as Tom Jones, but is nevertheless jolly good entertainment. - ..i. ... ._______ E- "11 ""I l Avoi 'dLove Boat' at all cost By NINA SHISHKOFF TV is not an inventive medium. There was a time when television portrayed old people as sweet old grannies or wise old grampas; people who sat in rocking chairs and knitted, unless they were getting up to take their constipation medicine or clean their dentures. Sud- denly a change occurred; the old gran- nies rode motorcycles, and the gram- pas jogged to the store for the Dentu- Grip. There's nothing wrong with either image; only neither is true alone. The first might be stifling to an active senior citizen who wants to do more than the Bingo-crazy stereotype allows, while the second might by physically impossible. TV is partial to Jekyll-Hyde charac- terizations. The typical TV woman is either a dingbat or a rabid woman's Libber. Pychiatrists are omniscient Viennese with goatees, or worse 'Love Transfusion a treat from Rockets By KEITH TOSOLT Take a look at the state of art in rock and roll these days, and chances are it won't look all that promising. The pop professionalism of groups like Fore- igner and Fleetwood Mac might seem repulsive to you in its commercialism. Or the punk rockers, who are trying to recycle the energetic hard rock of the original "punks" like the Stooges and MC5, may be equally repulsive in their philosophic stance. If you need a shot of traditional rock and roll to recover, listen to Detroit's Rockets on their first album Love Transfusion. The Rockets have a list of rock credits that would impress the' most discerning groupie. Lead singer Dave Gilmer is a survivor of a period in the wilds with the Motor City Madman, Ted Nugent. Lead and slide guitarist Jim McCarty was a. member of Mitch Ryder's group, Detroit, as was drum- mer John Badjanek. Dennis Robbins, slide guitar, comes from the South where that technique is deeply rooted and has played sessions with the Drif- ters. John Frata, bass, was also a session musician, having done a lot of work for Motown. Love Transfusion was recorded on Tortoise International Records and is being distributed by RCA. The new Tor- toise label was formed by Don Davis, former Stax producer, who worked on Trower's new album as well as this one by the Rockets. : The songs on Love Transfusion are in the vein of early Seger: plain ol' good rock and roll. The Rocket's make great use of the tradition started by Chuck Berry and his interpretation of R&B and by the Rolling Stones handling of Berry. If you have ever seen the Rockets (who usually play at the Red Carpet Lounge, Detroit's prime rock club on the city's "respectable far- east side) then you know that they concen- trate heavily on R&B material and lots of Rolling Stones. Fast Thing In Detroit is the best ex- ample of how the Rockets can rock. The tempo of the song is indicated in the title. It churns along with McCarty throwing in these short Johnny B. Goode licks. The chord changes here are the most original of the whole al- bum. Another good rocker is She's A Pretty One, which hints slightly at the Stones' Gimme Shelter for its melody. The interesting thing about Love Transfusion is that it has the greatest number of songs, six out of nine, with slide guitar leads in pop music history, not counting the Allman Bros. Band. McCarty and Robbins definitely have the technique down pat and can damp their slides with the best. These types of leads fit in nicely on the Rockets' three slow ballads, of which Ramona is the best. They make unique use of slide on Looking for Love, a boogie not to be associated with a similiarly titled tune by J. Geils, where it is played through a voice synthesizer for a very good effect. If there is one thing the Rockets aren't on this first album, they're not innovative. Their songs are based around the same chord progressions that have been going down for years. But there is a potential expressed in Love Transfusion through the musical ability of the Rockets.; I have already mentioned the ability of the guitarists. They are botl1 equally talented, no denying about it. Gilmer holds his own as a rock singer, possessing a decent range and strong voice control. He can sing in the scat style of -Arrowsmith's Steven Tyler, only with clearer enunciation. The rhy- thm section has no problem driving a song, another must in maintaining the energy of any rock song. Whether Love Transfusion will get the Rockets into the national spotlight or not will remain to be seen, and will depend on the album airplay and styles in other markets other than the hometown. My guess js that it is strong enough to get them booked as a warm- up act on a concert tour. But con- sidering that other Detroit-based musicians had to struggle mpny years to reach that stardom,tthe Rockets may well be destined to that long, hard climb as well. maniacs than their patients. Children are either spoiled monsters or geniuses who make fools of their parents. The rule isn't a hardfast one; Mary Richar- ds isn't a dingbat and only mildly feminist, and Bob Hartley is a human phychologist. In general, name a char- acter and television has two personali- ties for him, each equally annoying. A case in point is The Love Boat, which should be avoided every Satur- day night at 10:00 p.m. It's alleged star is Galvin MacLeod, as the captain of a luxury liner. I say "alleged" because MacLeod appears only briefly in each episode. Either he has a terrific con- tract, or his part embarrasses him. The concept of The Love Boat is sim- ple; each week, a group of people board the ship, fall in love, get into hilarious situations, and get off again. It's an adolescent idea to start with, and it gets worse. Everyone falls in love at fight sight. After being smitten, they confide to the ship's crew who then play' imatchmaker. The characters are of the Jekyll- Hyde variety. On one show where the pattern was followed faithfully, there came on board an elderly English lady and her nephew. Elderly English lady two obvious choices. Either she's a proper prude, or an eccentric old bat. Nephew - either spoiled or a smart aleck. As it turned out, it was the old bat and the smar aleck combination. On the same episode, there was a group of re- tirees from a rest home; either a de- crepit batch of near corpses or ... 'As it turned out, they were the Motorcycling Granny type; alternately jogging, dancing or playing poker all night. The Love Boat started as a made-for- TV movie. Its success spawned a sequel and then the series. It is presumable that someone must be watching and en- joying these idiotic escapades. Ac- tually, that's not too hard to under- stand. As escapist entertainment, the shipboard romance genre is ideal; love at first sight, an exciting romance with. no responsibilities, and if it doesn't work, the romance is over at the end of the voyage. That's the secret message behind the common ending to all the subplots in each episode; the couple says farewell and promises to keep in touch. A happy ending, certainly, but in two senses. The successful conclusion of the romance satisfies the viewer, and the promise of "I'll keep in touch" relieves him from any anxiety about the feasibility of a lasting relationship between the two characters. As for the Jeckyl-Hyde syndrome, there is hope, and the hope is on Satur- day nights, too. At 8:30 on CBS, the seeker of real people can watch Weve Got Each Other. It's about a man who stays home and does the cooking, and his wife who goes off to the office. The acharacters can't be summarized in lit- tle "catch-phrases." The writing is ex- cellent and the acting is superb. We've Got Each Other has faults, but the prob- lems are minor next to the enjoyment it" will bring to people who are avoiding The Love Boat. I alBudget TollDil ing: Get a 30% discount on your ]Long Distance study bek If you've found yourself making a lot of long distance calls to the folks or friends at home, Budget Toll Dialing is a service you might want to check out. It costs only $2.50 a month' on residence service, plus a one-time service charge of $5.00, and voila, you get a 30% discount from the normal customer-dialed rate in effect at the time you call. Budget Toll Dialing service applies to calls dialed direct within Michigan between the hours of 10 p.m. and 7 a.m. Monday evening through Friday (norning, and from 5 p.m. Friday to 5 p.m. Sunday. You might want to turn your parents on to this service, too, if they like an inexpensive way to keep in touch. For more information about Budget Toll Dialing and how it might save you money, call your Michigan Bell Business office. With Budget Toll Dialing, you can go ahead and cram a call into your studying without cramping your financial style! "Tax notincluded Michigan Bell P Join The Daily Staff tRe nn arbor film cooperative TONIGHT! Tuesday, October 25 r i NETWORK (Sidney Lumet, 1976) 7 & 9:15-AUD. A A box office smash in 1976. NETWORK savagelv satirizes the twiliaht zone of , N