Saturday, Januory 22, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fdge I hete I e S . events and entertainment week of January 22-28 Happenings film reviews are' writ/en by Christopher Potter.' all Week COMMERCIAL CINEMA Black Emanuelle - (Campus) -For a few precious days last week, a new French film called' The Clockmaker played at The Campus-it turned out to be one of the most profoundly sensitive studies of human, relationships you're ever likely to see. It left town Thursday, the victim of poor publicity and a u d i e n c e apathy, to be replaced by a mon- strosity whose title speaks for itself. And we wonder why American producers are afraid to be inventive?? A Star is Born -(The Movies, Briarwood)--Barbra Streisand's gargantuan remake of the Judy Garland classic is overwrought emotionally, underwrought vis- ually and barren musically. Ap- parently a victim of too many cooks, from the stories we hear. King Kong - (Michigan)-The season's other celebrated resur- rection really can't be compared to the original, since the trum- peted special-effects amount to approximately three seconds of jerky mechanical ape move- ments with the remaining time devoted to a stuntman running around in a gorilla suit. Other- wise, the mod updating of the storyline is only intermittently effective and often irreverent. * 1/ The Enforcer-(State)-Dirty Harry Callahan once again gets to vent his spleen against the assorted toadies, incompetents and liberals impeding his right- eous path to )justice, while sin- glehandedly cleaning up on a group of ruthless terrorists. Not too bad for this type. * * * Young D r a cua - (Fifth F o r u m) - A third-time run- through for the 1974 Warhol- M o r r i s e y film, first called Blood for Dracula, then Andy Warhol's Dracula. The name changes don't improve the film, which carries just enough liter- ary pretensions to lift it out of Warhol tedium into normal te-, dium, w h i c h means DULL. Please avoid. * The Seven Per Cent Solution -(The Movies, Briarwood)-A completely s t e r i1 e, bloodless "thriller" taken from Nicholas Meyer's equally stillborn novel involving a fanciful teaming of Sherlock Holmes and Sigmund Freud to crack a kidnapping- cocaine cartel. * * The Pink P a n t h er Strikes Again - (The Movies, Briar- wood)-Herbert Lomn's frazzled Inspector Dreyfuss completely takes the play from Peter Sel- lers in a brilliant comic per- formance that makes this fourth in the Clousseau series the best of a not too great lot. saturnay CINEMA All Screwed Up-(Ann Arbor Film' Co-op,} MLB 4, 7, 8:45, 10:30)-An early Lena Wertmul- ler film that tends to display her :growing pains more than her genius. Two Italian country rubes arrive in the big city, attempt to cope with the varied and trying adjustments to urban living; the picture is quietly amusing, then with no discern- able warning lurches into a grim proletarian call to action that baffles the viewer in light of what preceded it. All Screwed Up is an interesting look at an awesome talent just beginning to fit things together, but those familiar with Wertmuller's later work will find this effort just a little on the embarrassing side. S e v e n Beauties - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05)- Here is truly vintage Wertmul- ler in this extraordinary epic 'life and times' of an Italian stud dedicated to the single pur- pose of survival above all-even if it means selling his own soul to do it. Wertmuller follows her protagonist from his debonair, woman - chasing d a y s in the, 1930's through a murder trial, mental ward and eventually in- to the Dore-like visual horrors of a Nazi death camp; eventual- ly she forces him the choice of surviving only at the cost of his warped sense of "honor," and thus whatever idealistic notions he may have once held about his own instincts. The lengthy plot and cynical theme of Seven Beauties don't entirely hold together, but Wert- muller's technique is exquisite and gloriously e n h a n c e d by Giancarlo Gianin's inspired conception of her craven hero- whose final line may someday rank with Gable's Gone With the Wind utterance in screen immortality. * * * * Deliverance-(Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 & 9:30)-A quar- tet of cityfied middle-class Geor- gians set out on a quest for the "humanizing" effects of nature, in the form of a canoe trip through the perilous Chattanoo- ga rapids; instead they find terror, perversion and death. The James Dickey novel had a tanalizingly ambivalent conclu- sion .filled with inferences of a' kind of mystic macho fulfillment to the venture; John Boorman's film version eliminates the ob- tuseness and portrays the ad- venture as an ironic, disillusion- ing horror (apparently not dis- illusioning enough, as the many Deliverance - inspired fatalities over the same rapids since will attest). Philosophical differences noted, the film still serves the novel well in its almost breath- less excitement. * * * , Butch Cassidy and The Sun- dance Kid - (Couzens Film Co- op, Couzens Cafeteria, 8 & 10)- George Roy Hill's dress rehear- sal of The Sting, only much more palpable. Hill's directing is as soulless as usual, but Wil- liam Goldman's script is quite funny and the visual atmosphere much less claustrophobic. The first - time Newman - Redford matchup is exciting and amus- ing, whereas in The Sting it's just a stale routine. * * * Special Section - (Cinema I, Ang. Ad., 7 & 9:15)-The latest socio-political X-ray by Costa- Gavras (Z), directing its search- light on a special tribunal set up by Vichy France to try its own countrymen in the timor- ous hope of pleasing the occupy- ing Nazis. The usual Costa- Gavras theme of the inner rot in one's homeland is again milked for all it's worth; and while his films have usually premiered with much accom- panying international furor, this effort has been surprisingly ig- nored by the critics. For all his notoriety, Costa-Gavras has re- mained a technically crude, conceptually limited artist, and his reliance upon sensational case histories can only camou, flage that fact so long before you begin to catch on to his meagre bag of tricks. I haven't seen Special Section yet, but perhaps he has simply played his hand once too often. EVENTS PTP-Sherlock Holmes, Pow- er Ctr., 8 p.m. Ark-Mary McCaslin and Jim Ringer. sunday/ CINEMA Jules et Jim - (Cinema U1, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9)-The ulti- mate romantic trio: Jeanne Mo- reau loves both Oscar Werner and Henri Serre; they reach an arrangement-no backbiting, fro head trips. Lush and lyrical Francois Truffaut that goes on much too long, but who could possibly mind? Play it again. Phantom I n d i a - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., in four parts; "The Impossible Comera" at 7, "Things Seen in Madras" at 8; "The Indian and the Sacred" at 9, "Dream and Reality" at 1)- The first fourepisodes of a much - acclaimed documentary on Indian made by Louis Malle in 1968. The last three parts will be shown the following Sun- day. Alice in the Cities-(Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7 & 9- A film by Wim Wenders about the wanderings through America of a young German journalist and a nine-year-old girl. Sounds a bit Paper Moon-ish, hope it comes off better than that. EVENTS PTP-Sherlock Holmes, Pow- er Ctr., 2 & 8. Music School - Javanese-Ga- melan Ensemble: Hill Aud., 8 p.m. f monday CINEMA Nothing scheduled. EVENTS Music School - Composer's Forum, SM Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Tuesday CINEMA' Riddance and Wives - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, Riddance at 7, Wives at 9)- Two entrees in the Film Co-op's Festival of Women Directors. Marta Meszaros's R i d d a n c e deals with young love and class differences in cdrrent-day Hun- gary; Anja Breien's Wives in- voleves three Norwegian house- wives who take off from their families and indulge themselves on a spree of activities tradition-t ally considered the male's pri- vate domain. Sounds delightful. Scarface-(Cinema Guild, 7 &1 9:05)-One of the Great Trium- virate of '30's gangster films, ranking beside Cagney's Public Enemy and Robinson's Little Caeser. Howard Hughes sat ont the rights to this picture for1 years after its initial release, and it's only recently that the, film's again been available for public view. Scarface's techni- cal side is a little old-fashioned, but still brought viciously to life by director Howard Hawks and star Paul Muni's thingly-dis- guised portrait of Al Capone. * * 1 / EVENTS Michael Ponti, pianist-UMS,; Rackham, 8:30. Wednesday i CINEMA M*A*S*H - (Ann Arbor Film Cop-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 only)- Item: An army doctor is aurally spied upon by his fellow workers during lovemaking, is subse- quently taunted about it so un- mercifully that he goes berserk and is carted off to a mental1 hospital. Yuk. Item: A disliked' nurse is publically humiliated when her shower curtain is de- liberately yanked and she is ex- posed to the rest of the medical; corps, who have set up chairs' for the event-she goes into hys- terics. Haw. I , skeptically await the day someone is able to define the intrinsically humorous value of such scenes permeating this leering, heartless excuse for a comedy; until then, I will con- tinue to regard M*A*S*H as an3 anti-war film that makes me long to root for the generals.* Brewster McCloud-(Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 9 only) - Aesthetics should im- prove as the current Robert Alt- man Festival progresses, since I can't conceive he'll ever again make a film quite as bad as this one. Brewester McCloud is a pseudo-absurdist fantasy about a strange youth (Bud Cort) who wears mechanical wings, has a fairy bird-godmother (Sally Kel- lerman) and hides out in the Houston Astrodome. This seems to be a movie one either loves or hates; it's cherished by many as what they perceive as a ni- hilistic nose-thumbing atasociety,, but from this corner it's simply a coddled, crashing bore. Inept- ness is m a d e insufferable through scene after scene trail- ing off into nothingness, through amateurishly non-realized char- acterizations all presented with cutesy stares and smug winks to the audience, implicating it Pick of the week ... Diana Ross, in "Lady Sings the B l u e s" (Friday), Old Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) . . . and Francois Truffaut' s "Jules et Jim" (tomorrow in Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9). Diana Ross Truffaut as a knowing partner in a joke Aud. A, Aloise at 7, Nathalie which was obviously unknown Granger at 9) - The second to the cast and director them- half of the Festival of Women selves. It's all topped off with Directors. Liliane de Kerma- a circus finale that's such a dec's Aloise tells the factual blatant rip-off of Fellini's 8 story of a middle-aged woman ,-- :_ - 1... 1 A 7 .._ L - ...--. - 4 C 1 -,9 that some critics should be! s ashamed at themselves for not i taking Altman to task. Will they, avail themselvbs of the oppor-i tunity come the director's ap-t pearance in April? BOMB Pretty Poison-(Cinema Guild,1 Arch. Aud., 7 only)-The cloak- and-dagger fantasies of a dis- turbed young man (Anthony Perkins) take on frightening reality when he finds a partner (Tuesday Weld) all too willing1 to put his criminal daydreamsC into action. This was one of thet most notable "sleeper" films off the '60's, with Perkins investing a complexity to his part con- siderably beyond his standard psychotic shtick, and W e 1 d comes across genuinely terrify-? ing as his murderous girll friend. * * * % Play It as It Lays - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 9:05 only)- One of the most persistent un- derground rumors among film' critics used to be that Tuesday' was a potentially brilliant ac- tress if she woul donly be given the chance. These whispers swiftly ceased following the ap- pearance of Play It as It Lays, from John Didion's novel of a young woman's emotional and s p i r it e d disolution. Director Frank Perry seems only to un- derstand t h e ultra-pretentious technique of depicting the exis- tential emptiness of humanity by having people sit around dis- cussing the emptiness of human- ity. It's bad enough when An- tonioni does it, and since Perry has none of the Italian's genius for visuals Play It as It Lays gives us absolutely nothing. BOMB EVENTS Music School/Multi Ethnic Al- liance, Alina Brychova, Stefan Ehrenkreutz, "Songs of Many Lands," Lec. Hall, Rackham, 81 p.m. thursday CINEMA Aloise and Nathalie Granger - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. who has spent most of her lire in a mental institution, who sub- sequently does a series of paint- ings which bring her interna- tional acclaim. Marquerite Du- ras' Nathalie Granger reported- ly depicts a day in the life of several characters in a French town, and features Jeanne Mor- eau. Metropolis - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - In- habitants of a giant futuristic city are forced to live as vir- tual slaves to a small ruling elite. Fritz Lang's looney 19271 silent masterwork is one-third science fiction, one-third sorcery and one-third labor-management relations seminar; the film makes a minimum of sense as it spirals out its bizarre plot, but is often crazily brilliant. The babel-like images of the soaring city are unforgettable (Hitler loved them), and a flood scene near the end remains one of the best choreographs of mob panic you'll ever see. *** An Evening of '60's Protest/ Riot Films - (Peoples' Bicen- tennial Commission, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 & 9:15) - A blood-and- guts nostalgia trip to where it was at a decade ago. Food boy- cotts were joyously joined; Uni- versity football crowds chanted peace slogans instead of cheer- ing Jerry Ford. Was it all so superficial? In not, how could it have died so fast? Perhaps this retrospective might pro- vide some sober answers. EVENTS Guild House - Poetry read- ing, Kerry Thomas: 802 Mon- roe, 7:30. Bensinger Library - Poetry reading, Jim Grondin: EQ, 10 p m. I f riday CINEMA Lady Sings the Blues-(Qine- ma Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Diana Ross's spectacu- lar portrayal of Billie Holiday fights a running battle against the scriptual disjointedness and technical crudity of this film biography of the great singer. The result is approximately a standoff, but if there ever was a movie where a single per- formance is alone worth the price of admission, then this is it; Ross is incredible. *** The Reivers - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7 only) - In 1962 William Faulkner's last novel, The Reivers, won the Pulitzer Prize. It may. well be a good book, but you'd nev- er know it from Mark Rydell's insufferably cutesy-poo mon- strosity that makes Walt Dis- ney look like Henry Miller in comparison. Rydell lards on the story of a young boy (Mitch Vogel) growing up in Mississip- pi who falls under the influ- ence of a lovable scalawag (Steve McQueen). The two of them emberk on all kinds of gee-whiz keen adventures guar- anteed to make even the bland- est viewer fumble for the Mal- lox. McQueen squints, twitches, winks and scratches in his at- tempts to look impishly rustic; his efforts stand in good stead with the aw-shucks-we's-jest- plain-folks impersonations of the rest of the cast, the three-day- old banana split color photog- raphy, and topped off by the most throbbingly obtrusive neo- Coplandesque musical score that ever stopped up an audience's ears. The Reivers presumably had some serious literary as- pirations hidden in there some- where, but it comes out as Faulkner by way of Lassie. BOMB King of Hearts - (Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 9 on- ly) - Did it ever occur to the disciples of this film that the idea of the sanes on the inside vs. the crazies on the outside isn't exactly the most original theme in literature or film? And that even in its inception the notion 'carried a distinct phony- superiority leer that rendered it all too smugly arch even from the start? Or am I being a pseudo-intellectual snob? (I don't think so; don't forget -- I liked Freebie and the Bean.) Gimmie Shelter - (Cinema II, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9) - Billed as the dark side of Woodstock, this film chronicles The Rolling. Stones' 1960 American tour, cul- minating with the apocalypse at Altamont. Gripping and hor- rifying, although there has al- ways been some lingering doubt as to how much of the docu- mentary may have been stage- managed by the filmmakers. It's certainly an absorbing mob- rock psychology study nonethe- less. *** The Longest Yard - (Medi- atrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 & 9:45) - Director Robert Ald- rich's crude tribute to macho sadism is one of the most re- pellent films to emerge thus far from the '70's. A washed- up pro quarterback and current con (Burt Reynolds) is coerced by a fanatical prison warden (Eddie Albert) to organize a ragtag group of inmates to play Warden Eddie's crack team of guards. Naturally, everything climaxes with The Big Game. This film prides itself in be- ing about REAL men bravely and humorously bucking' the system, but comes across about as funny as a Brownshirt rally. Aldrich obviously expected au- diences to cheer and laugh at the collection of stomps, gouges and assorted brutalities on- screen, and Longest Yard's box office receipts have proven him right. Can's we find better value systems than this? * Construction of the first blast furnace in the United States be- gan at Falling Creek, Va., in 1621.. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 92 Saturday, January 22, 1977 Is edited and managed by students at the University a Michigan. News phone ?64-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published c a il y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $N, Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mai outside Ann Arbor. I ANN AIrIcDIF[LAACC=CU TONIGHT in the Modern Languages Building ALL SCREWED UP (Everything's Ready, Nothing Works) (Lino Wertmuller, 1976) MLB 4 Wertmuller's least seen film is certainly her funniest and probably her best. Completing her trilogy (LOVE & ANARCHY, SEDUCTION OF MIMI) on class, work, and sex in industrial so- ciety, ALL SCREWED UP tells of a group of Sici- lian immigrants living together in a commune in Milan, struggling desperately to survive econom- ically and spiritually. "Breathtaking . . . Exhuber- antly funny! Watching ALL SCREWED UP is to be witness to a great talent."-Vincent Canby. SHOWTIMES-7, 8:45 & 10:30 ADMISSION-$1.50 SUNDAY IN MLB- "AI.ICE IN THE CITIES" TUESDAY IN AUD. A, ANGELL HALL- A FESTIVAL OF WOMEN DIRECTORS Marta Mezaro's "RIDDANCE" AND Anja Breien's "WIVES" FRI.-SAT. $3.00 MARY McCASLIN AND / JIM RINGER SINGER-SONGWRITER oxmw -d i Rolling Stone: "An exceptional album right up there with today's best. McCaslin's unorthodox guitar tunings create unusual, ethereal melodies of striking beauty." "Jim Ringer seems plucked out of a Tijuana *r> barroom." Sun.: TONY BIRD from South Africa SINGER-SONGWRITER An excellent writer with a great deal to say. I 1421 HILL 8:30 761-1451 LINA WERTMULLER S 1975 SEVEN BEAUTIES Giancarlo Giannini stars as the bewildered brother of seven ugly sisters whose honor he is sworn to defend. His commitment or foolishness leads him to prison, then the Italian Army and eventually to a German Concentration Camp where he determines he must survive. This biting satire is one of Wertmuller's finest films-rich in texture, long on meaning and realistic in its comedy. SUN.: PHANTOM INDIA CINEMA GUILD -TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:00 AND 9:05 Admission $1.25 COSTA-CAVyRAS 1975 -ANN ARBOR PREMIERE SHOWING OF t 04 w wAm 'A OR /fnu/f, 3II U ______ ________ i P--r,-ng nd Diso' ANJN AFE30R I rJ-5J55 215 N. Main Ann Arbor 6637758 The Professional Thee Best of Broadwa} itre Program v DON'T JUST READ THE SHORT STORIES y Series t U I 9 GminaA. New'Vorker Moooz~ine 1