The Michigan Doily--Saturday, November 5, 1977-Page $ I 0V. Icy,'Deer field'flops Bobby Deerfield, Sidney Pollack's latest ultra opus, predictably takes on an air of such cosmic self-importance that its entertainment value is ren- dered insignificent. The picture strains and strains for an immense, haun- ting ly'icism, but comes out tedious, empty and very long. Its marginal story centers on the title character, a champion Grand Prix driver (Al Pacino) transplanted far from his New Jersey roots to the glamorous race car circuit of Europe. Bobby is a professional life-evader; a cold, constricted man voluntarily locked into a guarded, rigidlypatterned existence. As tne beauteous Lillian (Marthe Keller), his eventual physical and spiritual Prometheus, says accusingly: "You spend all your life trying to avoid dying." A DRAMATICALLY POTENT CHARGE, perhaps, but philosophically illogical to the proceedings at hand. Bobby races autos, surely one of the most hazardous and least entrenched professions available. Moreover, we know he isn't just any old driver but a champion driver right up there hob- nobbing with the celebrity gods of his sport. One surely does not achieve such. Olympian status through vigilant avoidance of all risks. I suppose Pollack meant to illustrate a primal paradox in Bobby's unhappy value system, but in doing so the director heightens inconsistency into unbelieveability. Bobby Deerfield's heritage springs from the "come alive!" genre, a long and often goopy line of movies juxtaposing lovers and skulkers (Zorba the Greek, Harold and Maude). The standard plot features a social-emo- tional recluse who gets lifted out of his molehill by an inveterate free spirit who, through crazy chatter and kooky deed, exhorts the morose hero to "get out and live! Live!!" Thus it is with Bobby and Lillian. They meet inadvertently while Bobby is visiting an injured driver at a hospital. She is meant to symbolize everything he is not: high-spirited, fun-worshiping, creative - a giver of life. Of course life means ever so much more to her since unbeknownst to Bobby she is suffering from a terminal illness (presumably leukemia, though the disease is never specified). DURING THEIR HALTING COURTSHIP she berates him for being dull, for not making up stories or screaming in cars and for his reluctance to ride in a hot-air balloon. Eventually, of course, Bobby mellows, shucks his smothering, mother-image French mistress and starts to trip the life fan- tastic with Lil. Soon we find him celebrating his new liberation by bellowing out "Red Sails in the Sunset" and doing what for Pollack must be the ultimate emancipation - a Mae West impersonation. Ah, life! Ah, love! Ec- ch, Hollywood! Their conjugal bliss, alas, cannot last; As he gets stronger, she gets weaker, her sick blood cells betray her soaring spirits. Though she doesn't seem physically wasted by her illness, Lillian takes on a progressively matronly countenance both in dress and manner until by the film's latter stages she seems to have gone positively dowageresque. This sedentary transformation is certainly no help to Marthe Keller, a lovely but icy performer who needs allthe directorialy-enhanced warmth she can get to convincingly play a bouyant life bestower. Even the natural sparks one might have expected to overlap from the real life Pacino-Keller love-in fail to ignite very often; Bobby and Lillian are rarely seen so much as touching each other as they wend through their cathartic but doomed rela- tionship. BOBBY DEERFIELD is a cold, cold concoction that seems every moment to give creedence to its hero's sterile view of the world even as he begins to thaw away from his own inhibitions. To his credit, Pollack has the aesthetic decency to spare his two lovers (and us) the smarmy-poo hijinks of Harold and Maude-type pseudo-adorables; but he doesn't fill the gaps with anything else save a montage of prolonged, winding shots of Town and Coun- try Europe, shots in which Bobby and Lillian occasionally appear. Pollack is tempermentally ill-suited as director imaginable for any let- yourself-go genre effort. Never for a moment in Bobby Deerfield do you lose the feeling of calculation, of a watchmaker's wheels turning in an ever- precise, rigid-patterned anithisis of th zany and loose. Indeed, I have i watched so beautifully +loodless a cinematic work since Stanley Kubric foisted Barry Lyndon-ipon us two seasons ago. It is a tribute to Al Pacino's range as an actor that he large transcends the straightjacketed limitations of his role. Pacino utilizes every tool at his disposal to liberate his character from the zombie restrictions of script and direction, and succeeds in subtly modulating Bobby into a poignantly tangible self-victim struggling to break free of his cloistered corners. You - believe in him even if you doi't believe in or care about anyone else in the film. That is Pacino's individual triumph, and also Bobby Deerfield's collec- tive disaster. ~r Script handicaps Cabaret , Cabaret Mendelssohn Theater Emcee..................... Rodney Saulsberry Clifford Bradshaw........'...Benjamin Whiteley Ernst Ludwig..................... Michael Goz Fraulein Schneider............Sandra Storrer Fraulein Kost.................Janna Morrison Herr Schultz....................Joshua Peck Sally Bowles .......... ......:. Susan Dawson Music and lyrics by John Kander and Fred Ebb Directed by Philip Paul Music direction by Lief Bjaland By JEFFREY SELBST THE STAGE Cabaret is a weak show. It is "based" loosely on the stories by Christopher Isherwood and the subsequent play by John van Druten. But it really isn't faithful to either of these sources, and its attempts to turn the point of the story away from nihilism and decadence and toward Nazism are annoying and have the sub- tlety of a brickbat. To facilitate this switch of emphasis, Kander Ebb, and Joe Masteroff, who wrote the book, created new, irrelevant characters, de- leted some important ones, and wrote a number of indistinguishable songs. Musket's production of this up-and- down show has its up-and-down mo- ments, too. Its cast is stronger in the small parts - isn't that frequently true with Musket? - than in the major roles. Herr Schultz (Joshua Peck) and Fraulein Schneider (Sandra Storrer) were both very fine. Storrer is perhaps the best actress in Ann Arbor, and Peck, while he cannot sing a whit, no, not even a whit, performed very cred- itably as the Jewish fruit store-owner (one of the invented roles). In particu- lar, his song "Meeskite" was very cute, and he sort of talk-sang it nicely. SALLY BOWLES, though, is rather too precious for her role. Susan Dawson makes Bowles into a mindless B-girl, which she is not, and never understands the depth of her character until the final scenes. She has a pleasant, though real weak, voice, and fails to carry off her numbers. The emcee (Rodney Saulsberry), is an object lesson in why an actor recre- ating a role should not view the per- formance of someone considered the role's definitive interpreter; in this case, Joel Grey. Saulsberry tried to emulate Joel Grey, but fell into the pit of Wretched Excess - and it was just awful. The gyrations and lewdness of the emcee must be kept under tight con- trol. Berlin, and the nightmare decadent world, isn't after all hell, but simply a gargoyle-populated world into which one dips for fun. The Berliners of the time weren't Satanists, merely mad pleasure-seekers. There were some problems with the direction, too. The Kit Kat numbers - "Two Ladies" "The Money Song" lacked energy, for all the energetic capering of the emcee, and I think this was because they lacked scope and definition Perhaps they would have been more defined staged on a stage- within-a-stage, surrounded by extras; who knows? Only the prepubescent- looking chorus girls lent an air of kiddie porn to the show as they ground their little hips Three of the others - Clifford Bradshaw (Benjamin Whiteley), Ernst Ludwig (Michael Goz), Fraulein Kost (Janna Morrison) - all did a nice job. I wish Morrison had had more to sing. They all semmed just a bit uncom- fortable with their roles - but that could have been dem old opening-night blues. I think the movie Cabaret is a work of art. That ought to have been evident. It was done with restraint, and verve, and charm, and gusto - a near-perfect film,. certainly the best movie musical extant. A lot of the problem with the stage musical is that the material is weak. So the show (perhaps a bad selection?) demands a doubly fine production, with'4 a superlative Sally. Musket, while itst wasn't bad, had neither. Too bad.} * Ut You can play late at the Union 'til 1 a.m. tonight BILLIARDS PINBALL and BOWLING ASIAN AMERICAN STUDENTS Dinner and Social Get-Together DATE: Saturday, November 5 TIME: 6:00 p.m.-1 1:30 p.m. PLACE: International Center, 603 E. Madison (across from South Quad) All students, faculty and staff, and community are invited. Come and meet some fellow students and students and friends! Spread the word and bring a friend! For more information or if you'd like to help, please call Ann Lyons at 764-5248. ,, Ywt I ยง Topeng Babakan A group of 12 dancers from Sunda, West Java will perform both Penca (The Art of Self-Defense), and Topeng Babakan (Masked Dance) on Saturday, November 12 in Rackham Auditorium. Rhythm and blues marks Parker's latest By MIKE TAYLOR HEN GRAHAM PARKER burst onto the rock scene last year, his talent seemed phenomenal. The two albums he released, "Howlin' Wind" and "Heat Treatment," dis- played his wondrous ability to fuse classic rhythm and blues forms with the rock styles of Van Morrison, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, and the Rolling Stones. Parker's backing band, The Ru- mour, is a stunning group of musi- cians. Their proficiency gives the music a solid feeling. In fact, the "solo" album the band released a couple of months ago, "Max," proved they're good enough to stand alone. Needless to say, Parker's fans have been anxiously awaiting his third record, with the question, "could it be as good as the last two?" always firmly in mind. Stick to Me (Mercury SRM-1-3706) is finally out, but the question can't be answered with a simple yes or no. Though some of the tunes are the best Parker has done, others are sadly mediocre. Stick to Me reveals for the first time Parker's human =vulnerability. Like most people, he has his successes and his failures. MANY ASPECTS OF the album show strong artistic growth on the part of Parker. The average song length has been shortened to about three minutes - ideal pop song time. Within this seemingly restrictive format, Parker has blossomed. The tight, Phil Spector-esque, wall-of- sound arrangements give the music-a classic pop song ambiance. Strings are used in such a subtle fashion that they never seem outwardly evident, but they add flourish to the songs. The horns are not so discreet, but thev're arranged in a more nreeise getting better and better. The Morri- son and Springsteen influences are still important, but Parker's own relaxed but urgent vocal style is becoming increhisingly evident. THERE'S PLENTY of variety on Stick to Me, a marked improvement over Heat Treatment, which suffered from too much of the same thing. 'The New York Shuffle," 'The Raid,' 'Clear Head,' and "Stick to Me" are all essentially rockers, but each uses different tempos and in- strumental combinations. "I ' m Gonna Tear Your Playhouse Down" and "Watch The Moon" "Come Down" could be called ballads, but neither remains entirely within that format. "Problem Child," "Soul on Ice," and ,Thunder and Rain" are the type of songs Parker excels in - neither ballads nor rock 'n roll songs but something in between. "The Heat in Harlem, at seven minutes, is altogether different from the rest. The title track opens the LP in grand fashion. Properly promoted (it seems it's this that makes or breaks a song, not it's artistic value), this could be Parker's first big hit. Opening with ominous chords, it quickly becomes a hot rhythm and blues tune, complete with funky horns,-guitar, and piano. The lyrics are menacing and possessive. Unfortunately, the rest of side one doesn't fare as well. "I'm Gonna Tear Your Playhouse Down," the record's only cover, may have been a' good tune when it was first done, but it seems out of place on this album. "Problem Child," "Soul on Ice," and "Clear Head" have distinctive in- strumentation but lack focused' "The Fabulous Forties" sponsored by WCBN M..A -kA,;n nn lyi'ics. These songs seem insignifi- cant'and forgettable. SIDE TWO, however, is a master- piece. It's a thematically unified twenty minutes of music that in more pretentious days would have been labeled a "suite". The cohesive subject is oppression, and each of the five songs illuminates a different aspect of this compelling topic. The causes of oppression range from metaphoric weather conditions to the vicious reality of our police state. Whatever the causes, the results are always the same - human anguish. "The New York Shuffle" gets things off to a rousing start with its emotional condemnation of New York City politics. It's amazing that an Englishman can view New York with such perception. "Mr. Mayor - give me the key/ let me lock you up Throw that key down the U.S. subway" The band explodes on this number, and what better way to illustrate the savage, episodic images that make up this song? THE MOOD relaxes some with "Watch the Moon Come Down," a lusty ballad. 'Thunder and Rain," a tasty bite of rock 'n' roll featuring feverish guitar work, doesn't seem any more positive than the last tune - just angrier: "Lovers get caught just the same in the thunder and rain." It all comes to a head with "The Heat in Harlem," a complex epic almost on par with Springsteen's "Jungleland'' or "New York City Serenade." It begins with a swinging, finger-popping melody that perfectly frames the chaotic images Parker is presenting. The tempo slows down a bit later on, giving the impression of a lazy, static afternoon. Thus, lack of consistency is the only real flaw in Stick to Me. Had Parker been able to produce a first side as effective as the second, it would have been a great album. But perhaps that's asking too much. Songs like "The Heat in Harlem" and "The New York Shuffle" come along only every now and then. We should savor them, and hope that Parker's next album is filled with songs just as good. 9. - Athletic Footwear Enjoy those Wolverine games in comforti keep away the chill in your own spectotor blanket 100% Acrylis, it's 40 x 60". One super design; a 3O%=4O% of Selected Sizes Addidas, Puma, Nike, Converse, Tred 2 and others * Closeouts on Several Models * Thurs., Nov. 3 through Sun., Nov. 6