Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY MAGAZINE February 20, 1977 February 20, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY MAGAZINE *0@@o. events and entertainment week of Feb. 20-26 This week's IHi'/f>wuiins fin reviews were written by Christopher Potter and Mark Hill. The bars and events listings were compiled by Jin Sinmson. sunday CINEMA Experimental Films-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7 & 9:30)-A collection of nine short films. Story of a Love Affair - (Cinema II, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9)-Michelangelo An- tonioni's first feature film, concerning the suspicious involved in an unhappy marriage. This Sporting Life - (Cinema Guild, Arch. And., 7 only)-A brilliant English critic as well as filmmaker, Landsay Anderson directed this film before he subsequently ascend :jto the surrealistic pathos of If ... and (0Lucky Man. ***1/2 The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner-(Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 9:05 only)-Tony Richardson's film from the Alan Sillitoe novelette about an incor- rigible, individualistic teenager in an English reform school. BARS Blue Frogue - Fito (salsa rock) $2 cover, $1 for students. Second Chance-Masquerade (rock 'n' roll) $L50 cover, $1 for students- EVENTS Musical Society-The Guarneri Quar- tet, Rackham And., 2:30 p.m. (sold out). Trombone Students Recital - Recital Hall, 2 p.m. Percussion Students Recital - Recital Hall, 4 p.m. Degree Recital-William Allgood, DMA bassoon: Recital Hall, 6 p.m. Degree Recital-Stephen Smith, DMA piano: Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Horn Students Recital - Cady Music Room, Stearns Building, 8 p.m. mond r CINEMA Nothing scheduled. BARS Blue Frogge - Fito (salsa rock) $2 cover, $1 for students. Second Chance - Mojo Boogie Band (rock) $1.50 cover. $1 for students. Win Schuler's-Jason (soft contempo- rary) no cover. EVENTS Musical Society-Alvin Ailey Dancers, Power Center, 8 p.m. Tuba Students Recital-Recital Hall, 8 p.m. University of Michigan Wind Ensemble -H. Robert Reynolds, conductor, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. tuesday CINEMA Red River-(Cinema Guild, Arch. And., 7 & 9:05)-Howard Hawks' great film follows the lives of a cattleman and his adopted son as their relationship evolves from love into bitter emnity during the course of a huge cattle drive West. John Wayne, Montgomery Clift. **** The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoise -(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 only) - Luis Bunuel's film is an immense dream-within-a-dream-within-a- dream absurdity that lacks the bite of some of Bunuel's earlier savages on the privileged, but at the same time, is con- siderably funnier. **** The Phantom of Liberty-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 9 only)-Bu- nuel's s u r r e a 1 extension of Discreet Charm, only fare more labarynthian and far less funny.** Titicut Follies-(Sociocinema, MLB 1, 4 & 7:30; FREE admission)-A terrify- ing look at the inner workings of a seedy state mental hospital by a master of documentaries, Frederick Wiseman."** BARS Blue Frogge - Fito (salsa rock) $2 cover, $1 for students. Second Chance - Sonic's Rendezvous Band & The Rockets (rock) $2 cover, $1.50 for students. Win Schuler's-Jason (soft contempo- rary) no cover. EVENTS Musical Society-Alvin Ailey Dancers: Power Center, 8 p.m. University Philharmonia-Concertos- Clark E. Suttle, conductor; featuring winners of the graduate and undergradu- ate performance competitions: Hill Aud., 8 p.m. Degree Recital-Phil Thompson, clari- net: Recital Hall, 8 p.m. CINEMA The Prisoner of Shark Island-(Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 only)-Early '30's John Ford film about the luckless doctor imprisoned for giving medical aid un- knowingly to John Wilkes Booth. Young Mr. Lincoln-(Cinema Guild, 9:05 only)-John Ford's paen to Abe Lin- coln as a lawyer in Illinois. ' Jimi Plays Berkeley-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 10:30)-Hendrix at the Berkeley Memorial Day Concert, presumably of 1970. Sympathy for the Devil (One Plus One) -(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Ad. A, 8:45 only)-Godard uses a Rolling Stones rehearsal as a kind of Greek chorus to his usual socio-political broadsides. BARS Blind Pig - Benson-Drelles Quintet (jazz) $1 cover. Blue Frogge - Fito (salsa rock) $2 cover, $1 for students. Second Chance - Mighty Joe Young (Chicago blues) $1.50 cover, $1 for stu- dents. Win Schuler's-Mustard Retreat (folk) no cover. EVENTS Musical Society-Alvin Ailey Dancers, Power Center, 8 p.m. University of Michigan Jazz Band - Louis Smith, conductor, Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. Degree Recital-Thomas McGee, cello, Recital Hall, 8 p.m. thurs day CINEMA Zatoichi-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 only)-One of an ongoing Japa- nese series about-no kidding-a blind swordsman. Apparently he always wins. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance- (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. And. A, 9 only)-No, not the end-all Western, not John Ford's -end-all Western, not even really much of a Western. Ford's story of the post-dated unravelling of a famous sagebrush shootout is old hat plotwise and often downright shoddy in execution (practically the entire film was shot on a studio set). **% Top Hat-(Cinema Guild, Arch. And., 7 only)-Astaire and Rogers musicals, like Busby Berkely musicals, are an acquired taste but difficult to shake once hooked. This particular episode is con- sidered by many to be the top of the form. *** Gay Divorcee - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 9:05 only)-Whimsioal whispy plot which serves only to deliver the dancing scenes, as in any Astaire-Rogers film.* A Doll's House-(Peoples' Bicenten- nial Committee, Nat. Sci. Aud., 8 only)- Can a liberated woman be a lover? Henrik Ibsen raised more than a few eyebrows when he posed this question in 19th century Europe, in his play. This Joseph Losey-directed film remains quite faithful to the play and Jane Fonda does a creditable job as Nora. BARS Second Chance - Mighty Joe Young (Chicago blues) $1.50 cover, $1 for stu- dents. Win Schuler's - Mustard's Retreat (folk) no cover. EVENTS University of Michigan Concert Band- Allan McMurray, conductor, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. Degree Recital-Robert Grim, trumpet, Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Noah's Flood (a play?)-First Presby- terian Church. friday CINEMA Samurai, Part III - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 only)-The third install- ment of director Hiroshi Inagaki's tri- logy of a Japanese warrior. With Toshiro Mifune. The Left-Handed Gun-(Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 9:05 only)-A cerebral study of Billy the Kid. Arthur Penn's first fea- ture film illustrates his notion of a civ- ilization t e e t e r i n g on the edge of chaos. The Smallest Show on Earth - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7 only)-A very early Peter Sellers film about a decrepit traveling circus. Coconuts - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 3, 7 only)-The Marx Brothers' film debut, and still hilariously intact almost half a century later. */2 Monkey Business - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 3, 8:45 only)-The Marxes run wild, first at sea, then on land. Slightly stagebound, b u t continuously hysterical. ** Horsefeathers-(Ann Arbor Film Co- op, MLB 3, 10:30)-The Marx Brothers utterly destroy the American university. Probably not their best film, but almost surely their funniest. ** The Damned-(Cinema 11, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9:30)-Visconti's windy epic about the moraland spiritual perversions of a wealthy German industrial family at the time of the rize. of the Nazi regime. Lolita--(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 8:45 only)-This was Stanley Kubrick's first big success on his own terms. Vladi- mir Nabokov did his own adaptation of the screenplay, but unfortunately en- countered opposition from the censors for the sex s c e n e s. Nonetheless, the movie benefits from his literary genius and the perfect character casting, in- cluding James Mason, Sue Lyon and Peter Sellers. *** Catch-22-(Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 & 9:45)-How does one film an unfilm- able novel? Mike Nichols' 1970 film from Heller's absurdist work is a valiant but generally unsatisfying effort, due is much to the director's casting concept as to his literary conception. **% Westworld) - (Couzens Film Co-op, Couzens Cafeteria, 8 & 10)-Richard Ben- jamin and James Brolin vacation at the ultimate Disneyland extention, which is serviced exclusively by dozens and dozens of human-like robots. Westworld contains the usual sci-fi loose ends, but is, at least, a lot more satisfying than its recent lamebrained sequel, Future- ,world. ** BARS Blind Pig-Bill Heid Group, $1 cover. Casa Nova - John Brown & Georg Mallory (guitar-bass duo). Second Chance-Dr. Bop & the Head liners ('50's rock) $3.50 cover, $3.00 for students. Golden Falcon-George Overstreet & Friends (jazz) $1 cover. Pretzel Bell-RFD Boys (bluegrass) $1.50 cover. Win Schuler's - Mustard's Retreat (folk) no cover. EVENTS PTP-"Raisin": Power Center, 8 p.m. Musical Society-Jean-Pierre Rampal flutist: Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. University Symphony Orchestra-Con certos-Gustav Meier, conductor; featur ing winners of the gradaute and under- graduate competitions: Hill Aud., 8 p.m Degree Recital-Kathleen Segar, mezzc soprano: Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Noah's Flood (a play)-First Presby. terian Church. Saturday CINEMA Twentieth Century -- (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7 & 10:30) - Howard Hawks' classic '3$'s comedy about the- ater people, with John Barrymore, Carole Lombard and many other biggies of the era. Monkey Business - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 8:45)-Nof to be confused with The Marx Brothers' romp of the same title, this 1953 Howard Hawks comedy concerns a mysterious liquid which makes adults revert to child- hood. . The Conversation Piece - (Cinema II, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9)-A cultural clash between a mild-mannered art historian (Burt Lancaster) and a wild family which moves in on him. Luchino Vis- conti's last film. Women in Love--(Ann Arbor Film Co- op, MLB 3, 7 & 9:30) - A film which seems to get better and better as the vears pass. Ken Russell's work may not stick too clhse to the D. H. Lawrence original, but in some ways transcends it, taking on a legitimacy all its own as an erotic, literate work of film art. **** The Goldfather, Part II) - (Cinema Guild, Arch. And., 7 & 10)-Coppola com- pletes his Mafia disection with a film which probably surpasses Part I, but like its predecessor, is dragged down by the normally brilliant Al Pacino, whose stiff performance as Michael, subverts this work's shot at greatness. *** Andy Warhol's Dracula-(Peoples' Bi- centennial Commission, Nat. Sci. Ad., 7 & 9)-The second of three runthroughs for the 1974 Warhol-Morrisey film, first called Blood for Dracula, and lately Young Dracula. The name changes don't improve the film. BOMB Westworld - (Couzens Film Co-op, Couzens Cafeteria, 8 & 10)-See Friday Cinema. BARS Blind Pig--Bill Heid Group, $1 cover. Casa Nova - John Brown & George Mallory (guitar-bass duo). Second Chance-Dr. Bop & the Head- liners( '50's rock) $3.50 cover, $3 for students. Golden Falcon - George Overstreet & Friends (jazz) $1 cover. Pretzel Bell-RFD Boys (bluegrass) $1.50. Win Schuler's - Mu'stard's Retreat (folk) no cover. EVENTS PTP-"Raisin": Power Center, 2 p.m., 8- p.m. Degree Recital - R o n a 1 d Frkcler, piano: Recital Hall, 2 p.m. Degree Recital-Jutta Putzig, soprano: Recital Hall, 4 p.m. Degree Recital - M i c h e 1 e Cooker piano: Recital Hall, 8 p.m. The Arb mi A prisoner c for reasons By JAY LEVIN Photos by ANDY FREIJEJ ( 'RAMPED BY FOUR squat, grime-smudged wall chatting with a visitor thro"uh a pane of glas fingerprints. He has to sqnint to see throgh his own for a 20-year-old sbmereed in a period of wrenching i murder and he dn sn't know why. Wilson, hiwever. remembe's the e-tits of Pbmt rim An autumn evening, he and a female comanion, h slrilled through a tranquil Arboretlum. Suldenl, five fur Wilson, a stroll broke into a sprint. I was runnm' and the next thing I knew Icame to the end of the str running for . . . and then I had to run even harder Jeannine Boukai's nagging death wish. "I don't know why in my own mind I did it," granted the Daily last month, some four months after has rerouted his life. "There's no excuse for it . the pressure, yet my mind said no," he went on, "Finally, one part of me took over and committed thi capable of ever committing." Two stagnant months in the Washtenaw Conty Ja did little to catalyze Wilson's mind-probing process. I Ann Street cell for the Southern Michigan State pris begin a 20 to 40-year term. More empty hours, more me 'HE WIDE PUBLICITY of his bizarre case had w among his fellow inmates. But Wilson, sitting in reflects only despair. He draws on images of the sor ten-man cell block-"chipped and cracked, brick wall, coats . . ." More verse leaks from his pen, about months, Lea, whose weekly visits span the whole c through that soiled pane of glass. Though about to embark on at least a decade 1 directs his thoughts towards the future, weaving drea and their 4 [;e *+r e.\*' someday b ".with the c years ago The new his own di the Yamal a Univers im in ec were callin at those m jON EY? Wilson. better mod too. Dope? where. At answers. Wilson f ? s June, wle Jose told town wher f' living goo years in B town just moved to c a short sti Polk, La. "I was pressed st son recalk at the tim to occupy job, all mi here." Wilson d ..~>seen pretty They're c addicts or .3 other." He mad he says h streets. Bt with recoll here, one b ship with Jay Lev