Saturday, October 2, 1976 THE !MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Saturday, October 2, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three I 01 1k . gSo.. events and entertainment week of Oct. 2-8 HAFPENINGS film reviews are written by Christopher Pot- ter. all week COMMERCIAL CINEMA Seven Beauties - (The Mov- ies, Briarwood) - Lena Wert- muller's flawed but extraordi- nary film of an Italian stud in the 1930's dedicated to the sole purpose of survival above all else, even if it means selling his own soul to do it. Wert- muller follows her protagonist from his relatively carefree days inhthe late 1920's into the rigors of World War II and Dore-like horrors of a Nazi death-camp, allowing him to survive only at the cost of any innocent or idealistic notions he may have once possessed about his own instincts. The lengthy plot doesn't all hold to- gether, but Wertmuller's tech- niques is exquisite and glorious- ly enhanced by Giancarlo Gia- nini's masterly conception of the craven hero - whose final line may eventually rank with Clark Gable's Gone With the Wind utterance in immortal- ity. **** A Clockwork Orange - (Cam- pus) - The grotesqueries of Alex and his droogs sit less and less well with me as the years go by; Stanley Kubrick cinema- tizes Anthony Burgess' sterile, soulless future through a film so static and soulless itself that it becomes more a product of Burgess' nightmare vision than a depiction of it. Yet crowds of moviegoers still flock to Clockwork, then sit snickering nervously at the unpleasantries unfolding on screen. They seem akin to a groupnof chain smokers longing to kick the habit, but rendered helpless by the inexolicable, mesmerizing lure of the evil product. Use a little will power, folks; there are far greener cinematic and socialogical pas- tures than this one. ** Leadbelly - (State) - Gor- don Parks' biographical drama of the famed black blues singer. St. Ives - (The Movies, Briarwood) - Charles Bron- son's latest Neanderthal stomp, and from my prejudiced per- spective probably worth avoid- ing for moral as well as artistic reasons. A Woman Under the Influence - (Michigan) - John Cassa- vettes' merciless study of non- communicative marriage, with Gene Rowlands and Peter Falk working the director's impro- visational technique to an al- most unbearable intensity. Row- lands is simply spectacular, de- serving of every award on re- cord including the Oscar she didn't win. **** Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore - (Michigan) - Mar- tin Scorcese's ever-more-fam- ous film of a New Mexico housewife who packs un her baggage and her 12-year-old son and strikes out for Califor- nia following her husband's death. Alice has in some ways become a sort of metahor for Women's Lib although it would hardly seem in step with that particular banner given its bland, conventional everv-wo- man's dream conclusion. Good but hardly great cinema from a man who made Mean Streets and Taxi Driver; in contrast to the electric breathlessness of those two eics. Alice Just pert- lv meanders along from scene to scene.*** Sex With a Smile - (Fifth Forum) - 'Cause sometimes it's a pretty grim affair. saturd aV CINEMA The Bicycle Thief - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - The above mentioned sobering spectre for many Ann Arbor- ites actually carried far more catastrophic consequences for inhabitants of post-WW II Italy, where possession of a bicycle was often an absolute prere- quisite for obtaining a job. Vittorio de Sica's study of one victim's endless, wrenching city-wide search for his stolen vehicle stands as one of the great cinematic documents on the redemptive power of hu- man love, even in the face of overwhelming tragedy. The Bi- cycle Thief was one of the first products of the host-war Italian Cinema, n-"d remains one of the finest f+1"s of any era. **** The Killers - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op MLB 4, 7 only) - A remake of the1946 Burt Lan- caster film based on the Hem- ingway short story. Orieinallv made as a TV movie although eventually released in theaters instead, this version is reputed to be on a pretty shoddy over- all level, including a very TV- ish budget; but it does present us with Ronald Reagan (in his last screen role) as the villain - a part all nice folks should relish. Young Frankenstein and B r i d e of Frankenstein - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 3, Young Frankenstein at 7 & 10:30, Bride of Frankenstein at 8:45 only) - A first-time-ever pairing of the best of the Kar- loff thrillers with Mel Brooks' masterful takeoff. It should be a fascinating experience to watch the Old and New match each other sometimes scene for scene, although the effect might prove unsettling for purist ad- mirers of the original. Impos- sible to say what the mix will make, but a very definite **** for either film taken separate- ly. Dead Pigeon on Beethoven Street - (Ann Arbor Film Co- op, MLB 4, 9 only) - Crime thriller by Samuel Fuller, a perennial grade-B movie direc- tor who, despite the determined non-distinction of his work, is revered as a virtual deity by the auteur film critics. As the advertising blurb for Pigeon says, Fuller is glorified in al- most every country but his own - and judging from what I've seen of his work, I think we should comment ourselves on our excellent taste. * Fox and His Friends - Cine- ma II, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9) - A 1975 German film about the adventures of a suddenly-rich homosexual and the effects of his money on himself and his acquaintances. Unseen here, but possibly a trend-setter. 2001: A Space Odyssey - (Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 & 9:30) - Stanley Kubrick's outer space Genesis II is - among many other things - one of the most completely personalized works in all cinema. A madden- ingly cryptic film, the merits of which will probably be de- bated forever - perhaps it's not even a good film, but cer- tainly an incredible one. Itis, of course, a movie which has to be seen at least twice - but most of -17ii have probably pro- gressed '-ond that score al- ready.*"" EVENTS Benny Goodman - Musical Society, Hill Aud., 8:30 pm. RED SKELTON SHOW CAN- CELLED appearance at Cris- ler, refunds available thru to- day. I Do, I Do - musical drama, Ann Arbor Inn. Contemporary Di- rections - Uri Mayer, cond., Rackham Aud., 8 pm. BARS Ark - Michael Cooney, folk 9, $2.50, no alcohol. Bimbo's - Gaslighters, old- time singalong, 6, 50 cents after 8. Casa Nova - Sequoia, blue- grass, 9, no cover. Golden Falcon - Melodioso, Latin jazz, 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Red Mountain String Band, hoote- nanny,9:30,$1.50. Old Heidelberg - Mustard's Retreat, folk-rock, 9, no cover. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, bluegrass, 10, $1.50. Rubaiyat - The Celebration, top 40, 9:30, no cover. Second Chance - Salty Dog, rock, 9:30, $2-2.50. sunday CINEMA Walkabout-(Cinema II, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9) - A Nicholas Roeg film about the intercul- tural adventures of two Euro- pean and one Aborigine child in Australia. Rarely seen, but any Roeg film should contain some- thing worth viewing, and what few critics that have seen it consider it a gem. the Father's House, 4:10 Pendleton Rm. of Union. p.m., BARS Golden Falcon - Roots, jazz, 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Eric Glatz, folk, 9:30, no cover. Cann ~honn }.nth Grey Gardens - (Cinema iIU t.anceI-t 5h Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) _ rock, 9:30, $1-1.50. A documentary look by the Maysles brothers into the fart W side of the Camelot mystique- w n e s focusing on the recently pover- ty - stricken lives of Jackie CINEMA Onassis' relatives Edith Bou-; vier Beale and her daughter. What? - (Ann Arbor Searing and reportedly often: Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 on embarrassingly explicit, but' A reportedly surrealist fa probably an ego booster for our by Roman Polanski, no society's underlings. which for some reason EVENTS hardly ever been seen by Encores From Interlochen_ one, despite the fact tha Music School faculty, Rackham only a few years old. I Aud., 8 p.m. much in the dark about University Symphony Band almost everyone else. and Wind Ensemble. - Hill Dr. No - (Ann Arbor Aud., 8 p.m. Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 9 on Ann Arbor Symphony - 3:30 The granddaddy of al p.m., Power Center. James Bond epics and Organ Concert - Marilyn many imitators, and itn Mason, 7:30 p.m., 1833 Washte- an interesting restrospe naw (1st Church of Christ Sci- The film is still exciting entist.) the corresponding mass BARS of sadism and stridentn Ark - Michael Cooney, folk, ethos seem far more rep 9, $2.50, no alcohol. and infantile now than in Mr. Flood's Party - Gwen innocent days of the & Kevin, C&W, 9:30, no cover. 1960's. Perhaps Vietnam Old Heidelberg - Mustard's all its related horrors fore Retreat, folk-rock, 9, $1, Caba- ( all to grow up a little, an ret Night. to our credit if the value Second Chance - Salty Dog, tems in Dr. No seem u rock, 9:30, $2-2.50. fortably out of kilter with of today's audiences. *** Wild Strawberries - M on a ma Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & Ingmar Bergman's chroni CINEMA the intermingling of pas It Happens to Us - (Women's present in a day in the l Studies film, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 an aging Swedish profess p.m.) Women discuss abortion. little slow-moving, but l Also, Taking Our Bodies Back, ly - wrought and giveni the Women's HealthsE x by its acting. andgien ment; and Self-Help, both about BARS areas of women's health move- Ark - Hoot Nite, 9, 75c ment. About hour each. no alcohol. BARS Casa Nova - Sequoia, Golden Falcon - V-II-I, jazz grass, 9, no cover, fifteen-piece band, 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Mr. Flood's Party-Dick Sie- horn, C&W, 9:30, 75 cents gel, folk, 9:30, no cover. Second Chance - Si' Second Chance-Stone Front, rock, 9:30, $1-1.50. rock, 9:30, $1-1.50. Hooter,? ly Film ly) - antasy less, has. y any- at it's 'in as it as Film ly) - remains more coherent and riv- eting than anything in 2001 - taut, straightforward and in the later stages rather inspiring asi Earth battles to preserve its freedom against the seemingly invincible invaders. Even ifl you're not a sci-fi fanatic, this; one will grab you. **** EVENTS University Philharmonia - Hill Aud., 8 p.m. BARSj Golden Falcon - Silvertones, blues, 50's, 60's rock. 9:30, $1.I Mr. Flood's Party - All Di- rections, jazz, 9:30, 75 cents. . Second Chance - Shooter, rock, 9:30, $1-1.50.1 with. P e r f o r m a n c e-; wise, Bruce Dern stands out in an absolutely straight, non-bu- foonish embodiment of a bas- ketball coach - moderate on the surface but possessing (as1 his character development subtly reveals) an absoluate win-at-any-cost mania lying be- neath the exterior. ***a Bedazzled - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7 & 9 - The Peter Cook - Dudley Moore fantasy about a modern-day; Faust and his implausible mis- adventures. Totally in the Mon- ty Python - Firesign Theatre style of comedy, and if you like them you'll undoubtedly: ' ie tis (I i). * desperation of urban living as in no other picture I've evert seen, Gene Hackman and Roy Scheider are brilliant as the edge of society cops, even the underrated musical score con- veys a grinding, pulsating ten- sion. Indeed, the film itself al- most seems a musical composi-. tion, building and slowing at , regular intervals in an awe- some display of pacing. a To be sure, The French Con- nection's exciting as a thriller, too; but next time you go see it, look a little closer - there's! so very much more to this re- markable film. **** MASH - (Mediatrics, Nat. French Theatre - Les Chai- ses, Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p. m. BARS Ark - Bob White, folk, 9, $2.50. Mr. Flood's Party - Jaw- bone, rock, 9:30, $1.50. Old Heidelberg - Mustard's Retreat, folk-rock, 9, no cover. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, bluegrass, 10, $1.50. Rubaiyat - The Celebration, top 40, 9:30, no cover. Second Chance - Shooter, rock, 9:30, $2-2.50. Sci. Aud. 7 & 9) - Item: An The French Connection - army doctor is aurally spied (Cinema II, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & upon by his fellow workers dur- 9) - I think this is one of the ing love-making, is subsequent- best and most important films ly taunted about it so unmerci- CINEMA ever made about American so- fully that he goes berserk and The African Queen - (Cine- ciety and how we adapt to it, is carted off to a mental ward. Iand fa-f-- -- - f 4 r. than h Y 41k It A dcisliked reis tuesday CINEMA Citizen Kane-(Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Sim- ply put, The Greatest - Orson Welles gives birth to the mod- ern film. Shown many times on TV, but just can't be seen too often - something new invari- ably turns up with each view- ing. A required work for any- one interested in film, art and the concept of success in Amer- ica. **** Satyricon - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9:15)- The gluttonous, overblown dregs of Frederico Fellini's ca- reer. Based very loosely on Pe- tronius' novel of two bi-sexual young men in pre-Christian Rome, Satyricon displays an amazing lack of energy and imagination - it just lumbers along with its giant budget and cast of thousands from one sup- posedly fantastic - erotic ad- venture to the next, rather like a low-I.Q. hippopotamus on the verge of old age and sterility. Much of Fellini's best surreal work contained a kind of an- cient, quasi-mythological aura that hypnotized the viewer: Sa- tyricon is his first film which actually takes place in a long- ago period, and much of the previous effect seems to evap- orate into tedious history. ** EVENTS Poetry Reading - Reed Whit- temore, The Mother's Breast & atliursda CINEMA McCabe and Mrs. Mill (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Aud. A, 7 & 9:15) - Robei man's overrated film abo corruption of free enterpr the Old West. Loaded wi mosphere and wonderful porting performances, b with most Altman films thing less than boldly or and certainly far from the matic milestone that claim it to be. Things helped any by the rather jobs turned in by stars ren Beatty and Julie Ch Sleeper - (People's1 tennial Commission, Nat Aud., 7 & 9) - Back in screen, in case you misl on TV. Woody Allen's fc tic fantasy is his most turally solid and thou film, although as such it rifices some of the uninh mania of his earlier e Nonetheless, grade-A War of the Worlds -I ma Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & -It's Mars vs. Earth in G Pal's 1953 updating of the Wells novel. Pal's speci fects have since been dw perhaps by 2001 and o and I still don't like his stitution of mini-flying sa for the infinitely more t ing Martian tripods of th iginal book; but the plot 1 the im a Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) , 12." 1"L. Linur L1Ithe uK. hll: A £1 i lthe - Bogie and Kate ride the straight cops-and robbers thrill- publically humiliated when her their pids again in the i rtal er it is usually made out to be. shower curtain is deliberately makes I comedy - drama. All the The keyword to this film is yanked and she is exposed to ective. elements blend tomake this boredom and how one lashes the rest of the medical corps, g, but probably director John Huston s out against it, as personified by who have set up chairs for the doses best film **** both Popeye Doyle and his event - she goes into hysterics. macho partner Cloudy; the two pur- Haw. ulsive The King of Marvin Gardens sue their smuggler enemies those - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, across an almost metaphysical I skeptically await the day early MLB 3, 7 & 10:30) - Ever get plain almost unrelated to the someone is able to define the and the feeling Jack Nicholson s stream of daily events, as! intrinsically humorous value of ed us incapable of playing anythig though the only release to the such scenes permeating this id it's but the same basic wise-guy? sterility of their own existence leering, heartless excuse for a e sys- Well, it's a bum rap; his elo- can be achieved through the comedy; until then, I will con- ncom- quent interpretation here of a catharsis of physically strikingt ed t those brainy, introverted radio com- out, even if under the shield of tinue to regard MASH as an mentator should have dispelled the law anti-war film that makes one (Cn-Isuch rumors forever, but un- telw (Cine- ;uhrmr orvr u n long to root for the generals. & 9 - fortunatelytdidn'tt(hardly any- Practically everything comes EVENTS cle of . ,, a together in this memorable t and Iit'sa shame he doesn'tget film - William Friedkin's cam- Faculty Recital - Music ife of his unexpectedly awesome ver- era captures the raw, grimy School Recital Hall, 8 p.m. or. satility. -------------- - oving- aiiy_- wings As a film, Marvin Gardens [E M gs far from perfect- a rather Ass j 4DI j loose -jointed allegory about! two vastly differing brothersj cents, (symbollically named Jason TONIGHT in MLB and David), and the former's blue- attempts to draw the latter into Frankenstem Double Feature! his wild, dangerous, money- MEL BROOKS' Long-,making schemes. This is a mov- YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN " ie that lives on its perform- ooter,! ances, with Nicholson's with- el Brooks, 1974) 7 & 10:30 drawn, skeptical David match- Ingenious parody of famed horror taie from the mad master of ed brilliantly by Bruce Dern's mayhem. Mel Brooks. Gene Wilder, who wrote the screenplay with Brooks, is hilarious a as new Dr. Frankenstein who manically hopeful Jason. Per- creates a new monster. Transylvanian and laboratory trap- haps best of all is Ellen Bur- pings all there in stylish perfection. Black and white and whose portrayal of De's plywood. Peter Boyle, Marty Feldman, Cloris Leachman, Ken- neth Mars, Madeline Kahn. "The year's funniest film-one of cynical girl friend is certainly the year's best."-Gene Shalit, NBC-Tv. the most finely - honed, re- BORIS KARLOFF ler - strained performance I've seen BRIDE OF F RA NK EN STE IN Ang. her give in a film. *** rt Alt- Drive, He Said - (Ann Ar- (James Whale, 1935) 8:45 only ut the bor Film Co-op, MLB, 8:45) - One of the truly great films in the "horror" genre, BRIDE OF rsinAn extraordinary film which FRANKENSTEIN succeeds in being both a good film anda Ise in a good parody of a good film. Karloff is still the best Franken- th at- was left awash in the wave of stein ever, and Eisa Lancaster emerging from the bandages sup- college-rebellion flicks which is an image you'll never forget. Better than the originals ut as glutted movie houses in the ear- and the imitations.DONALD SIEGALS some- ly '70's. The eventual critical iginal, and public revulsion to these T H E K1L L E RS cine- Hollywood - huckster phonies with RONALD REAGAN some unfortunately also claimed as (Donald Siegal, 1964) 7 only aren't a victim this imaginative yet A typical Siegal film-tight, quick, exciting and unpretentious. numb thoughtful study of a college Based loosely on Hemingway's story about two professional War- basketball star who begins to assassins whose curiosity about a victim leads them to a iristi.qeto h million dollar bankroll, THE KILLERS contains what Lee question the value systems of Marvin considers his best role and Ronald Reagan his least. In society, especially as it relates his last screen performance, Reagan plays a corrupt heavy- Bicen- to the often regimented world -no jokes about type casting, please! With John Cassevetes :Sci. of the athlete, and Angie Dickinson. wide f ie, He S omand the Ann Arbor Premiere of SAM FULLER'S wie Drive, He Said contains some o sed it of the usual revolutionary trap- Dead Pigeon on Beethoven Street uturis- pings, but is actually involved (Samuel Fuller, 1972) 9 only struc- with less campus rebellion than American director Samuel Fuller is revered in every country ghtful with the Jock Ethic, and its but his own. He had to expatriate to Germany to film this t sac- recent slow evolvement away intense, taut tribute to the American private eye that was libited from Vince eolmbrisecawa the surprise hit of the Chicago Film Festival. Glenn Corbett tLombardi-style con- plays a detective trying to break an international crime ring fforts- formity toward the assertion of which blackmails political figures in compromised positions, gold. individual expression. Jack but as Andrew Sarris says, "Fuller's films must be seen, not Nicholson's lone directorial out- heard or synopsized." ". . . easily one of the most important films of the year."-Martin Rubin, N.Y. Cultural center. With (Cine- ing displays a verve and inven- Stephane Audran and Christa Lang. 9:05) tiveness tempered by a great ANN ARBOR PREMIERE eorge sensitivity to the basically quite $1.25, Double Feature $2.00 H.G. serious material he is dealing al ef- varfed thers, sub- rucers errify- e or- IyV itself >: t; }; ' ' : f . i you see news happen call 76-DAILY I iI~ . PZtRP t N - " FRIED CHICKEN DINNER with whipped potatoes and coleslaw $1.99 " Afternoon Ohio State vs. U.C.L.A. football on our seven foot T.V. " VICTORY PARTY after the game. " After 8:00 p.m. $1.50 cover/ $1.00 cover with student I.D. " For good FOOD, MUSIC, and FUN, GO BLUE FROGGEI!I Vittorio De Sica's 1947 THE BICYCLE THIEF One of the first Italian neo-realist films, The Bicycle Thief is the com- passionate story of a poor man's desperate search for the stolen bicycle essential to his livelihood. The late director's masterpiece and fine example of European cinema. Short: ANEMIC CINEMA-Marcel Du Champ SUN: Albert & David Maysles' GREY GARDENS TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. CIN EMA GUILD7:00 & 9:05 Admission $1.25 Ranier Werner Fassbinder's 1975 FOX AND HIS FRIENDS The story of a group of homosexual men who run the gamut from bums to genuine friends. Fox, a circus performer, wins a big amount of ' f We do it on atlrday! a - -. . a . i U I II