Friday, October 3, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Fridoy, October 3, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Pick of the Week: Give 'Em Hell, Harry! Fifth Forum The country judge frim Inde-I pendence, Mo. brought' a re- freshing sense of simplicity to the White House when he rose ma movement that flowered im- Boy. to the presidency in 1945. Unlike ' mediately after World War II. De Niro is the. standout here' his wealthy Harvard-educated I In sharp contrast to the glossy as he involves the audience in predecessor, Harry Truiaa.1 fit appearance of the typcial Hol- a somewhat loony character the ideal mold of the common lywood product of the late '40's, who blows up mailboxes, throws American man - the enterpris-! DeSica's movie is raw and crude money away, and brawls in ing Horatio Alger-type who in the extreme. barrooms with ilttle or no pro- made it to the top by putting Filmed on location in haste vocation. You get the feeling his nose to the proverbial grind- with amateur actors and a that Scorsese seems to be more stone and relentlessly pprerv- shoestring budget, the movie is, interested in depicting details ing at hi strade. nevertheless, much more power- of characterization than in tell-' The amiable yet forceful Tru- ful in its depiction of everyday ing a coherent, meaningful man that James Whitmore rich- reality than more "professional" story. lv portrays in Give 'Em Hell, works. Bicycle Thief tells the The plot is, admittedly, con- Harry impeccably cantures the story of Antonio, a poor worker fusing at times and the ending' colorful character that presi- whose most prized possession, is violent to an inappcoprite dential lore so vividly recalls. his bicycle (which serves as his degree, but the atmosphere of Using text actually drawn from only means of transportation to Mean Streets is unmatchable. Truman's writings and sneeches, work) is stolen by an even poor- Down to every manerism, the Whitmore presents a remark- er and more desperate citizen characters are living, breath- ably introsnective depiction of than himself. ing 1 human beings, a qaah ty the humble and totally forth- In the end, it's Antonio's re- that many American films are rieht personality that motivated lationship with his son, Bruno, sadly lacking. both the personal and olinical that provides some solace, an -Jeff Sorensen boliefs of the nation's 33rd pr-s- example of real human com- * * * ident. munication in an unfeeling Coie With The Wind This film version of the origi- world. DeSica takes the sub- UAC Mediatrics nnl stage nroduction is rrinted stance of ordinary life and ., from a videntnne prepared dur- colors it with personal experi- Fri., Sat., Sun., 7:30 ing a national tour Witrvre ence of the most vibrant, dra- 'irt thevetvhing about Gone made earlier this year. The matic kind. This movie still pro- Wit th W i r to ess tane-to-film conversion ,rocss vides a much needed breath of but it's that particular kind of isn't perfe'ted vet, but new fresh air. reveled in. laser 1yrinting technology bemns -Jeff Sorensen het yo,'r on sunn *resfi somP of the erost * * * Whether you're on your first, { .ot, f rth (or sixth . . . ?) time; and grain. What neradillos re Meia Streets ro'Md, try matching the minar, main are w-ll wnrth "earanrn. Cinema tI characters, especially Ona Mun- fnr Whitmor 's enthnsiasm and Friday, Saturday 7, 9 !on as Heart-of Gold Belle Wat- sbril in . ;ii'-"t role m k; Mean Streets (1973) is ore of ling. George (Sinerman) Peeves GTh'e 'Em Hell, Harry a major those rare American films that is a Tarleton Twin and Laura' release. avTaeon And Lura :iic wee)"O What's playing this Cinema Weekend This weekend in cinema has a rather political tinge to it, but the combinations are unwieldy. Lina Wertmuller s Seduction of Mimi is a hilarious yet at times bittersweet accounting of an earthy politico who goes bourgeois on the job. UAC \Iediatrils brings back that slushy Civil War epic of epics, Gone With the Wind. And on Sunday, the weekend blows wide open, as Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway re, turn with Chinatown, Roman Polanski's mesmersing and brilliant film of 1930s Los Angeles. And if none of those seem appealing, there's always Wcek of Two of the State's Animation Holiday, this week featiring that entrancing garden of dreams, Fantasia. Friday-Seduction of Mimi, Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05; Mean Streets, Cinema II, Aud. A, Angell, 7, 9; Gone With the Wind, UAC Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud. 7:30; The Andromedia Strain, Couzens' Coop, Couzens Cafeteria, 8, 10:30. Saturday-Seduction of Mimi, Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05: Mean Streets, Cinema II, Aud. A, Angell, 7 9; Gone With the Wind, UAC Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30; The Andromeda Strain, Couzens' Coop, Couzens Cafeteria, 8, 10:30. Sunday-Point.of Order, Cinema II, Aud. A, Angell, 7, 9; Bicycle Thief, Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 9:05; China- town New World Film Coop Nat. Sci. Aud., 7, 9:30; Gone With the Wind, UAC Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30. of the music - which includes works by Bach, Beethoven; Schubert and Stravinski. How- ever, episodes like the one based up(. Dukas'. "The Sorceror's Apprentice," where the music is already built around a story, al- low a translation into a cartoon episode that isn't nearly so jar- The Seduction of Fantasia ring for the viewer. Mimi State Theater In these scenes that do work, Cinema Guild Although most of Walt Dis- Disney is at his delightful best, Friday, Saturday, 7, 9:05 ney's pioneering work in anima- as he fills the screen with an The important seduction in tion from the '30's and '40's has amazing variety of colors, in- this movie isn't sexual. A young dated considerably, Fantasia triguing animals, and other vis- worker, Mimi, travels the famil- (1940) is still every bit as fresh ual delights. In such segments iar odyssey from idealist to today in its appeal to the senses, as "The Dance of the Hours" bourgeois worker, and only when The film - Disney's most am- from Tchaikovsky's "Nutcrack- he has renounced his former be- bitious work - accompanies a; er Suite," Disney's imagination liefs is his surrender complete. number of pieces of classical continues to boggle the mind of The subplot involves Mimi and music with short, animated even the most jaded 1970's ls- the two women he's involved films. tener. Because of this "Disney with, his wife and lover. But The movie is generally quite touch," Fantasia still stands as even in love, Mimi is more mo- successful, but it must be ad- one of the finest, most enduring tivated by social concerns than mnitted that some of the scenes examples of filmed animation to sexual ones. When he discovers that depict cavorting centaurs, dat his wife is having an affair, he's elephants and mushrooms are date. angry at her for making flcompletely at odds with the tone -Jeff Sorensen m ockery of him in tow n. ... .. Lina Wertmuller has made aVI poignant film here, using farceFRDY N as a tool to mask the real grav- FRIDAY ONLY ity of the subjects considered. Academy Award-Winning It's worth viewing. CA '"THE PAPER CHASE" -Stephen Selbst 7:00 and 9:00 * * *Openat64 Open at 6:45 tempests tha lett so handso See it on th the tube shr pizzazz. t Rhett and Scar-! omely endure. ' e big screen before inks down all the -C vnthia Cheski -David Bmq ist iiu~~j~bIa J~U1LCI Davi Blmcigist is oreotapersonal vision toan bone _ rewes as Htnt iityont. - n ti cS *tba factory-line production. Di- Also be aware of the mam- rected by Martin Scorsese, the' moth score by Max Steiner and F w ll M Lovely Bicycle Thief movie is set in the "Little Italy" the marvelously effective and; Cinema Guild section of New York City. lar- an-ro'riate Technicolor. Michigan Theatre Sunday, 7, 9:05 vey Keitel stars as a young mob- GWTW is not a movie to on- Here's a flick for trash lovers. Vittorio DeSica's Bicycle Thief ster and Robert De Niro co- der deenly while seeing. The fun According to the old censorship (1948) is the most enduring film stars as his friend, an aimless comes from being helnlessly red standards, any court could ban from the Italian neorealist cine- drifter/gambler named Johnnyithrovah all the travails and it; Farewell My Lovely is to-I ifRobertson caps careel tally without socially redeeming value. But that doesn't mean it's all bad. In fact ... well, even if I can't quite bring myself to call it a good movie, I can say I en- joyed it tremendously. Forget the fact that Robert Mitchum is old, and acts like it. Forget the foolish drug scene' where Mitchum's head spins like' a top. Just lie back and enjoy Charlotte Rampling's perform- ance as the ultimate witch. The dialogue tries hard to crackle, sometimes it snaps, but on the whole, it's good for a few laughs. Definitely a good movie for after an hourly. -Stephen Selbst Chinatown New World Film Co-op Sunday, 7, 9:30 For my money, Chinatown is easily the best movie of the 1970's. Roman Polanski's look at Los Angeles in the sleepy, sleazy 1930's is beautifully evocative of the period. It's an example of all that movies can be and why they're such a perfect reflection of our dreams. Faye Dunaway is tough, beau-3 tiful and inherently amoral; she's the leitmotif of the movie. Jack Nicholson's private eye owes a tip of the hat to Sam! Spade and Phillip Marlowe, buta it's not just a cheap ripoff, it's a brilliant synthesis that will stand alone without excuse. A so-called thriller about a public water system sounds, duller than freshperson English,' but this is one movie that made me glad I bought my popcorn before the lights dimmed. The pace is relentless. -Stephen Selbst Sat. "Zardoz" (R) Sun. "Marigolds" (PG) Mon. "Rabbi Jacob" (G) Tues. "1 s Harrowhouse" (PG) S.20thCENTURY FOX " tpj IV . ' , Y's (WMSUAYWAGE~ K"HOO J5MW AU - 45 -COMING- STARTS TONIGHT Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 Open at 6:45 The Spirit of Bogart Lives On as actor, aviator in Rr M By :JAY SHARBUTT did he get the flying bug? working all the time and the AP Television Writer "Oh, Christ, I soloed illeg- government takes most of it,"' It's sort of ironic that Cliff ally when I was 14," laughed Robertson said. "I wasn't hav- Robertson is appearing in a Robertson. "In the summer, I ing any fun. I was single then made-for-TV film called "Re- used to go down to an airport and I said, 'What the hell. Ij turn to Earth." The earth isn't near San Diego and I was an should be doing something on really his element. The sky is. airport rat, the side that I enjoy. What doa The old-time kind of sky. "In exchange for cleaning air- I want to do?' Consider: He owns and flies planes and working around the "And I suddenly realized I1 one of the most famous fighters shop, I'd get a free ride and a wanted to get back into flying." of World War II Britain's lesson at the end of the day. He began with gliding, "andj Spitfire. He also has a lesser- And I wasn't alone. There were from that I went into old an- known relic of that war, a Ger- other little airport rats. tique airplanes because that, knon relicfttrwar."In those days it was all kind was really the romantic age of man ME-1Ok trainer. of romantic. Now, the kids, flying, the biplanes and the wind-in-e-wire listnohe's gotthey're so jaded." aerobatics and all that." wind-in-the-wires flying, he's got He sighed and muttered Robertson bought all six of; them 1934vintage avllandre osomething about kids who are his antique airplanes before his them 1934-vintage DeHavilland so dense they don't realize how marriage nearly 10 years ago Tiger Moth trainers much fun the wild blue is. to actress-socialite Dina Mer fourth a French-built Stampe' "Anyhow," he went on, "after rill, heiress to the multimillion-j His only modern crate is the I soloed, I kind of got away dollar General Foods fortune.! twin-engine Beech Baron he from it for years." "When I got married," he3 keeps at an airport in Farming- I nthose years, he attended laughed. "I told her, 'You know, dale, N.Y., and rents out when Antioch College, working his I've got seven kids.' She said,< he's not using it to add to the way through as a general as- 'No, you've only got one, - II 1,500 or so flying hours he's signment reporter for the had one by a previous mar- logged. Springfield, Ohio, Daily News, riage - but I said, No, theret Robertson, a lanky,.easy-going but found "I didn't have the are six others.' La Jolla, Calif. native who won liver for newspaper work." "And I said 'If you want me' an Oscar several years ago for By this he meant the rumor to reject or neglect them, for- a movie called "Charly," is the that newspapermen drink. get it.' So I had to make an sort of pilot whose flying occa- Then came wartime service agreement. I used to balloon, sionally seems to dovetail with as a nonflying Navy officer on so I gave up ballooning. Also his work. He has what you ammuunition ships. After that, gave up the little black book." might call the "any excuse will he got the acting bug, studied Said book contained phone num-1 do" syndrome. at the Actors Studio in New bers of lady friends, not flying Forexample, in 1964 he star- York, and worked his way to hours. "So, that was, my sacri- red in a fine war movie called fame after lean years of pave- fice," he said. "I kept the old "663 Squadron," which just ment - pounding and audition- airplanes." happened to be about a British ing In "Return to Earth," which fighter-bomber outfit that flew "About 13 years ago, I took ABC-TV says will be shown in and he got to fly - a ship stock of my life, just looked November or December this called the Mosquito. back at it, and I said, 'Jesus, year, Robertson portrays astro- After an interval of nonfly- I'm breaking my back and naut Buzz Aldrin, the second ing roles, he produced and starred in "Ace Eli and Rodger * 'K of the Skies," a nifty barn- THE UNIVERSITY OF MICMGAN storming film released about a* ; year ago. He flew an old Jenny * PROFESSIONALTHEAT RE PROGRAM biplane in that. This year, he's * 'r. worked in four feature films, * Iil' but only one of them, "Mid- way," has a flying theme - the Battle of Midway in World War II. No matter. He's currently try- * ing to line up financing for a World War I flying comedy which he'll write, produce and direct. It's called "I Shot the Red Baron -I Think." * and Oh, yes, he'll also star and *' fly in it. 'K A silly question, but when ______ 1_____ * ;*. $2.50 SL* ARTHUR MILLER'S * ..E. This Weekend EATH F FRt.-SAT. * ' WADE MAINER STEVE LEDFORD * AND THE *featuring Ledford String Band { WILLIAM LEACH Mainer and Ledford were the * GUEST ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE leading string bond of the * w e Ir o 10 'K man on the moon. The film, based on the book by Los Angeles Times newsman Wayne Warga, concerns the mental anguish Aldrin endured when he returned from the moon and faced a new - for him -- frontier of endless in- terviews and public appear- ances. According to the book, he suffered such severe de- pression he required hospitaliz- ation and psychiatric help. Robertson said the show gives relatively little emphasis to the preparation for Aldrin's historic flight or the flight it- self. "It's really more of a character study than it is a study of capsules or the actual logistics of space flight," he ex- plained. After finishing the film, the actor said, he'll goof off for a few weeks, then go from the world of astronauts to the worll of ancient open-cockpit flying with his Red Baron movie pro- ject. It was mentioned that Robert- son is sort of an actor's version of aviator Richard Bach, the "Jonathan Livingston Seagull" author who used to write more than he flew, but now does both in equal proportions. Michigan Daily the university of michigan artists and craftsmen guild grounds of community high school, across from the farmer's market in ann arbor. 75 guild artists with entirely handcrafted works fair sat., oct. 4, 8 a.m. to 6 sun., oct. 5, noon to 6 k r1 po" "AN INCREDIBLY REVOLUTIONARY FILM... THE MIND CAN RUN RIOT !" - The NYU Ticker "FAR AHEAD OF ITS TIME ... BEST AUDIO- VISUAL EXPERIENCE IN TOWN !" ---William Wolf, Cue lnrr-rP - .A- iA A rI-/ iI AA1 I