xi Saturday, November 13, 1976 THE MICHIGAN bAiLY Page Thee Saturday, November 13, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three 0 I- c~I S.. o events and entertainment week of Nov. 13-19 Happenings film reviews are written by Christopher Potter. all week COMMERCIAL CINEMA Two-Minute Warning - (Fox Village)-A mad sniper decides to use a huge football crowd for target practice. Sorry, Bo, it's not West Lafayette,and Captain America Chuck Heston's on hand to save the day. Shot at the Devil-(The Mov- ies, Briarwood)-Your guess is as good as mine. The Next Man-(The Movies, Briarwood) - A new spy flick starring Sean Connery and the world's worst actress, Cornelia Sharpe. The Ritz - (State) - Richard Lester's film version of the Terernce McNally comedy about a Cleveland garbage man who hides out i na gay New York bath house in order to escape his murderous brother - in - law. About half of it is deadly, but the other half contains enough really hysterical gags to make things w o r t h the admisison price. * * 1/ Marathon Man - (Michigan- John Schlesinger's mn u d d l e d thriller about an ex-Nazi dentist (Laurence Olivier) stalking a Columbiagrad student (Dustin Hoffman) over the possibility of a stolen fortune. The film has some exciting, well-spaced se- quences, but is thematically in- comprehensible so much of the time that what suspense there is tends to submerge in viewer confusion over just what the hell is going on. * * /2 The Front-(Campus)-Woody Allen stars in this "serious" comedy p b o u t entertainment blacklisting of the early '50's. Is it supposed to funny or tragic? Obviously the film's creators never made up their minds, and e are left with a weak-kneed mouse of a film that does little credit either to the witchhunt victims of the time or to the unremembering audiences of to- day. * * Burnt Offerings--(The Movies, Briarwood)-Surprise! This pre- sumed horror howler by Dark Shadows' Dan Curtis turns out to be a well-paced, low-keyed psychological chiller, involving a mysterious force housed in an ancient mansion and the sinister upheavals it wreaks upon the emotion of a family of sumner residents. Some of the usual ghoul-cliches crop up including an ending lifted straight from Psycho, but by and large Burnt Offerings stands out as one of the more intelligent and patient products of a normally oral- gratification genre. * ** Silent Movie - (The Movies, Briarwood)-Mel Brooks' one- word-only film may appear a parody of the silent genre, but really isn't at all; it's a full- fledged member in good stand- ing of the wordless art, ready to take its place beside the best works of Chaplin Keaton and the other geniuses of the field, to which Brooks's name must cer- tainly now be added. * * * * saturday CINEMA Dr. Strangelove - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 3, 7 & 10:30)- The recent chic of detente does nothing td dim and ,in fact, only illuminates the timeliness and brilliance of Stanley Kubrick's ultimate Bomb paranoia study. Obviously more a period piece, this hilarious and terrifying film will be played and replayed so long as mass hysteria and brute force are employed as substi- tutes for human intelligence and human love. A work of genius. * * * * Paths of Glory-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 3, 8:45 only)- Stanley Kubrick scored his first major success with this World War I film about the trial and execution of three French sol- diers selected to symbolically represent a regiment falsely accused of cowardice by a psy- chotic general. Kubrick's 1957 effort was probably the first American anti-war movie since All Quiet On the Western Front nearly thirty years earlier, and though its matreial seems less powerful today than at the time (we've been through a lot since then), it remains an uncompro- mising and riveting film. * * * % Truck Stop Women and Teen- age Doll-(Ann Arbor Film Co- op, MLB 4, Truck Stop Women at 7 & 10:30, Teenage Doll at 8:45 oly)-The titles probably say it all. Truck Stop Women is supposedly an intentional satire, Teenage Doll an unintentional one, but the only true objects for parody may be the paying customers. Proceed entirely at your own risk. The Story of Adele H-(Cine- ma II; Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9)- Francois Truffaut's recent film about the daughter of Victor Hugo and her almost comically self-destructive years-long pur- suit of an army officer who cares nothing for her. Falling in love with love is the name of the game here, and though Truf- faut's direction is rather stolid- ly severe, Isabelle Adjani's en- ergetic portrayal of the doomed heroine succeeds in bringing the film off. * * * The Three Musketeers-(Me- diatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 & 9)- The first of Richard Lester's two-part Dumas epic, and by far the weaker of the two segments. Lester's decision to divide his film in half rather than over- condens,°t was probably a good decisio,; rtistically (and cer- tainly commercially), but Part One inevitably suffers since most of the important action oc- curs in the last half of the no- vel. The result is a succession of roughhouse. scenesobviously employed as a substitute for meaningful plot progression, but a wonderfully off - beat cast keeps things alive reasonably well. * */ The Lady Vanishes-(Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05)-A little old lady disapears from a train. I've never seen this film, but many people consider it the best product of Alfred Hitch- cock's British period. EVENTS Naughty Mariotta-University Musical Society operetta, Power Ctr., 8 p.m. Camelot - Musket/M&M pro- ductions' musical; Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. Men's Glee Club Joint Concert -Michigan and University of' Illinois singers; Hill Aud., 8 p.m. Contemporary Directions En- semble-Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. Ars Musica-Baroque Ensem- ble, 8:30 p.m., St. Clare Episco- pal Temple Beth Emeth, 2309 Packard. Ark-The Natioinal Recovery Act, with David Prine and Ty- ler Wilson, 8:30 p.m. BARS Bimbos - Gaslighters, rag- time, 8. Blind Pig - Buntline .Special, 9:30. Golden Falcon - Melodioso, Latin jazz, 9:30. Mr. Flood's Party - Mueller Bros., 9:30. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, 10. Rubaiyat - Celebration, 9. Second Chance - Dr. Bopp and the Headliners. j sunday CINEMA The Stranger-(Cinema Guild, Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Visconti's straightforward cine- mazation of Camus' alienated evervman. An almost impossi- ble novel to film successfully, given the plot perspective com- ing exchisively from the inside of Me'irsault's head and the dif- fic'ilties of Camus' long existen- tialist sermon near the, end. But Visconti succeeds about as well as anyone could; you can really feel the stifling, enervating heat of the Algerian sun burning mercilessly down, and in the process catch at least a little of thenprota Onist's- calm des- paration. ** Utamaro and His Five Women - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7 only)-Japanese film about a painter in the 1700's, who sub- ilgates the lusty times which surround him into a total dedi- cation to his art. Throne of Blood - -(Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 9 only) - Akira Kurosawa's famous adantation of Macbeth, altered to the Middle Ages of the Far East, I haven't seen this, but it's thought by many to be the best of all variations on The Bard. Diary of a Chambermaid - (rinema II, Ana. And. A, 7 & 9) - Jean Renoir's first Ameri- ran film, which I'm afraid I know nothing ahont. VENTS London Philharmonica - Uni- --ersity Musical Society, Hill And., 8:30. Collegium Voicum - Eng- lish Baroqiue Music in Court and Country; School of Music Recital Hall, 4 n.m. BARS Del Rio - Jazz, 5 to 9. Golden Falcon - Benson-Drel-' les Onartet, jazz, 9:30. Mr. Flood's Party - Madcap Maruga Band, 9:30. Second Chance- Masquerade, ly silent save for the musical numbers, but still sent out shock waves that ruined some careers and saved others. The Jazz Sin- ger's historical importance as- sures its immortality, but that shouldn't obscure the fact that the film's pot about a young sin- ger making it big doesn't carry much excitement. ** Swept Away - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang.. Aud. A, 7 & 9) - Lena Wertmuller's class- sex warfare film about a right- wing female aristocrat and a Communist sailor on a Mediter- ranean cruise who mutually loathe each other, then ironical- ly find themselves stranded to- gether on an uninhabited island. Mostly extraordinary. *** % EVENTS Latin American Teach-In-No Time for Tears, Campamento, Campanero: Multipurpose Rm., UGLI, continuous showing, noon- 5 p.m. Elly Ameling - Soprano; Mu- sical Society, Rackham Aud., 8:30. Yeats' Ensemble/Museum of Art - "The Cuchulain Saga and Celtic Mythology": Pendleton Rm., Union, 7:30 p.m. BARS Golden Falcon - Roots Jazz Band, 9:30. Mr. Flood's Party - Gemini, 9:30. Second Chance-Black Pearl, 9:30. wednesday CINEMA Enter the Dragon - (Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9) - Super-agent Bruce Lee poses as a tournament entree at an island martial arts school, which is actually a front for a massive drug operation. Be- neath Lee's visual poetics and the usual campy mayhem, Dra- gon 'seems to me to be chronic- ling - indeed, rejoicing - in the collective withering of the human spirit. Negatively speak- ing, this is probably one of the least hypocritical works of re- cent cinema: Some films such as Clockwork Orange make a great show of pretending to ab- hor the brutalities they depict onscreen; Dragon makes no such pretensions - it revels in its violence, feasts on it. Lashing out is the sole cath- arsis,the onlysmeans to assert one's manhood, the lone proof that you'e alive. Apologists for the film can al- ways write off its sadism as mere patterns of Oriental re- venge and face-saving; but Dra- gon was made for Western audi- ences and has obviously touch- ed - however innocently-some drak chord in our collective na- tive psyche, as the phenomenon of its jam-packed war-hooping audiences will attest. Pow! Zap! - Will this be the Brave New World of the '80's? * Persona - (Cinema Guild, Arch. And., 7 & 9:05) - Prob- ably the most quixotic film Ing- mar Bergman ever made. It may not help much to grope for hidden meanings in this story of the relationship be- tween a disturbed actress and he nurse and the gradual mesh- ing of their personalities; bet- ter to just sit back and bask in the director's spellbinding technique and in the incredible performances of stars Bibi An- dersson and Liv Ullmann, who clearly understand things most mortals are not allowed to grasp.****I - - EVENTS Ark - Hoot Nite, 8;30 p.m. BARS Blind Pig - Benson-Drelles Jazz quartet, 9:30. Casa Nova - Tom Sabada, 9. Mr. Flood's Party - Tucker Blues Band, 9:30. Second Chance-Black Pearl, 9:30. thursday 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 in- variably turns up with each viewing. A required work for anyone interested in film, art and the corrosive concept of success in America. **** 2001: A Space Odyssey-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 6:45 & 9:30) - Stanley Ku- brick's outer space Genesis II is, among many other things, one of the most completely per- sonalized works of all cinema. A maddeningly cryptic,film, the merits of which will probably be debated forever - it may not even be a good film, but certainly it's an incredible one. It is, of course, a movie which has to be seen at least twice - but most of you have prob- ably progressed well beyond 'that score already. *** EVENTS Pendleton Ctr. - "Open Hearth" lectures, Mark Rees- man, "Photography," 2nd fir., Union, noon. Latin American Teach-In - The Arts and Repression"; 1261 EO, 4 p.m. Gnild House - Poetry read- ing, 802 Monroe, 7:30. Residential College Players- Pirandello's It is so! (If You Think So): RC Aud., EQ, 8 p.m. The Crucible - Music School Opera, Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. - BARS Casa Nova - Tom Sabada, 9. Mr. Flood's Party - All Di- rections, 9:30. Second Chance-Black Pearl, 9:30. friday CINEMA The Adventures of Robin Hood -(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 3, 7 & 9) - A splashy, excit- ing 30's version of the Sherwood Forest Gang. Warner Bros. really pulled out all the stops budget-wise with this one, and came out with one of the true movie spectaculars of the dec- ade. Not that it doesn't have its flaws - the usual Holly- wood happy ending has been tacked on, the Sheriff of Not- tingham is for some reason eliminated from the proceedings entirely, and I've always felt Errol Flynn seemed a mite un- comfortable in a part that should have fit him like a glove. But these deficiencies pale un- der the sheer force of energy that only the Warner studio seemed able to alchemize with consistency, while the richer but stodgier MGM plodded stately on. **'/ Robin and Marian - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7 & 9) - Sam Peckinpah's Lost ApVerican Frontier is transposed to medieval England in Rich- -- - ard Lester's recent ;adaptation tagonist displays nary a tear' of the Robin Hood legend. This of grief or remorse - his sole version presents us Robin (Sean reaction is to worry and fret Connery) as a middle-aged, that the authorities will think world-weary warrior returned he himself is the culprit. His from 20 years of Crusading with response is not untypical - it the now-dead King Richard goes hand-in-glove with every (brilliantly played in a small other knee-jerk reaction in the part by Richard Harris). Re- film. Frenzy fairly reeks with united with his aging fellow contempt for human beings' thieves, he rescues his old love very humanness. Marian (Audrey Hepburn) from This, is a genuinely frighten- arrest by the Sheriff of Not- ing work - not because of any tingham, then returns to Sher- suspense in it (there is none), wood 'Forest to rekindle his but because the film would clandestine struggle for justice seem to reveal its director for (which, in Lester's version, Rob-t in had engaged in prior to the the first time not as The Mas- Crusades). ter of Chills, not as The Magic- Director Lester rather bla- ian of Terror, but plainll and tantly lifts and employs the simply, as a thug. * perennial Peckinpah theme of elderly ruged individualists Camelot - (Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 & 9:45) - This screen version of the Broadway musical received almost unani- mous critical brickbats when released, but isn't really all that bad. If one can tolerate Richard Harris' soupy portfay- al of King Arthur plus the elim- ination of many of the best songs, the show's very moving story line remains essentially intact. And. Vanessa Redgrave makes a truly stunning Guine- vere. ** Silk Stockings - (Cinema II, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9) - Fred Astaire and the absolutely bril- liant Cyd Charisse combine for this rema e of Garbo's Ninot- See HAPPENINGS, Page 8 trapped by an unfeeling, mono- lithic society; Robin and the Sheriff (Robert Shaw) are pre- sented as equally noble, aging antagonists - mututally admir- ing each other buit punshed by sinister, unalterable forces to-! ward a final Pyrrhic duel that' neither can hope to win. The net result is a very mix- ed bag cinematically: the first hour or so of the film is bril- liantly structured and crafted, but the picture gradually loses its focus motivationally, artisti- cally and historically, with Jam- es Goldman's pseudo-mod dia- logue and John Barry's numb- inly redundant musical score talking the plot into turgidity. Frenzy-(Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - This film marked the initial unleashing of Alfred Hitchcock under The Movies' New Morality, and the result was a monster-a brutal, anti-human formalism that dis- nlaved little of the director's fantasy - encased imaginative charm, and, more crucially, not the vaguest hint of compassion for any of its characters. Physical item: A protracted s':ene in which a woman is rap- ed and then slowly strangled is probably the most repellent sequence I have ever seen in a major film. The famous show- er murder from Psycho was ob- lique, original and shocking - the Frenzy sequence is blunt, unimaginative and nauseous. And obviously meant to be savored. Psychological item: When the nominal hero's sometime girl friend gets bumped off, our pro- GMUSKET' NEEDS DIRECTORS, DESIGNERS, STAFF for it's Spring Musical Apply at UAC, 2nd Fl. Mich. Union by NOV.17 763-1107 for info. . ... [ Inewaor a paramount pktew* . . n-.- screenplay by WILLIAM GOLDMAN from his novel produced by ROBERT EVANS 9:30. and SIDNEY BECKERMAN SHOWTIMES Friday: 7:00 and 9:05 Sat.-Sun.: 1, 3:05, 5:10 7:15,9:25 monday CINEMA Nothing schediled. EVENTS Bolcom, Morris Benefit Con- cert - Music School; Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. Contemporary Music Festival - Hill Aud., 8 p.m.- Latin American Teach-In - '.An Evening for Reymundo Gleyzer," film, Mexico: Thej Frozen Revolution: Aud. 3 MLB,I 7:30 p.m. Blind Pig - Boogie Woogie Red, 9:30. Golden Falcon - V-Il-I, jazz, 9:30. Mr. Flood's Party - Catfish' Miller, 9:30. Second Chance - Mugsy, 9:30.1 tuesday CINEMA King of Hearts - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7 & 9) -I All has been said. And said. And ... *** The Jazz Singer - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Al Jolson's golden tonsils warb- led forth over 1928 movie audi- ences, and ' the nature of film was changed forever. The first talking picture is actually most- FORUM H AVE. SHOWTIMES 1-3t5-7-9 JACK GENEV LEMMON BUJO ALEX & THE GYPSY 4EVE )LD "R i 2 i 4 s, university CA M PI S, SHOWTIMES Friday: 7:00 and 9:00 Sat. and Sun.: 1,3,5,7 and9 j U ANN AuIIcr ILAA CC-tv TONIGHT in MLB STANLEY KUBRICK DOUBLE PATHS OF GLORY (STANLEY KUBRICK, 1957) 8:45 ONLY The film that first brought Stanley Kubrick both wide acclaim and extensive controversy, PATHS OF GLORY is one of the most savage, most stunning and most moving studies of men in war ever filmed. Kubrick's vision of infantry as cannon-fodder for. the geperals' honor is still banned in France due to its subject matter. Kirk Douglas, Ralph Meeker and Adolph Menjou. DR. STRANGELOVE, Or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb (STANLEY KUBRICK. 1964) 7 & 10:30 Dr. Strangelove (Peter Sellers), an ex-Naxi adviser to the President of the U.S., advises him on the impending destruction of the world in this hilarious Cold War black comedy on sexual in- security and nuclear deterrence. Winner of 60 international ayards. George C. Scott, Sterling Hayden, Slim Pickens and Keenan Wynn. I ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S 1938 THE-LADY VANISHES A young lady, aboard a train, strikes up a companionship with a witty old woman, Miss Froy. In the middle of the journey, Miss Froy mysteriously disappears and all the other passengers deny ever"having seen her. A yyoung man comes to her aid-but he has some doubts about her himself. Vintage, classic Hitchcock starring Margaret Lockwood & Michael Redgrave. SUN: Visconti's THE STRANGER CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH..AUD. 7:00 & 9:05 Admission $1.25 FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT'S 1975 THE STORY OF ADELE H. Isabel Adjani as the true romantic, both in spirit and by birth, Adele H. is i liternllv the creation of the nreatest romantic writer Victor Huano Conceived li TRUCK STOP WOMEN (MARK LESTER, 1974) > 7 & 10:30 A hilarious satire and the first truxploitation film! Directed by Mark Lester (TRICA'S WEDDING), it tells the story of a woman whose truck stop-whorehouse-hyjacking operation Is threatened by the L.A. syndicate. An outrageous, must see film! "One of the only daring and satisfying American movies I've seen this year . . a dazzling display of story telling . . . outrageously funny and bizarrely moving . . . sick, crazy and as American as apple pie."-Jon Landau, Rolling Stone. Lieux Dressier and Claudie Jennings. ANN ARBOR (and I-94) PREMIERE. TEENAGE DOLL (ROGER GORMAN, 1957) 8:45 In the 1950's, Juvenile deliquency was the big box office and, as I I U