'%taYt STE~CIIrAiU leiei-i R7 % I~v r krgrp Ic i . I W .. ... %JU & U I UU Y, %i'- tjulu a f W, # 4F 1 ;.p I 1 Iit IV II N-I II V!NJ V VI 11 L.I I I I IN ~ .,...,.........rte.. all week long, COMMERCIAL CINEMA A Woman Under the Influence - (The Movies, Briarwood) - John Cassavetes' searing, mer- ciless study of non-communica- tive marriage, with Gena Row- lands and Peter Falk working the director's improvisational technique to an almost unbear- able intensity. **** Fantasia - (State) - For those who don't mind cartoons set to classical music, Fantasia remains the supreme Disney creation and admirably demon- strates the cartoon medium's potential as a legitimate art form. The Happy Hooker - (The Movies, Briarwood) - Lynn Redgrave's seductively comic performance just isn't enough to redeem this otherwise very tepid film version of the adven- tures of Xaviera Hollender. ** Return of the Pink Panther- (The Movies, Briarwood)-1975 sequel to Peter Sellers' famous Inspector Clousseau films of more than a decade ago. Sadly, what is past is past, and the film comes on as nothing so much as a flat, desperate mu- seum.piece. ** Farewell, My Lovely-(Mich- igan) Minimally entertaining adaptation of the Raymond Chandler novel, filmed much better thirty years ago as "Mur- der, My Sweet". * saturday SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18 CINEMA Oliver - (Bursley W. Cafe- teria, 8:30 only) - Rollicking, exciting version of the Dicken's classic is better than the Broad- way musical it was based on. Normally, musical comedies are bowdlerized to death in over- glutted film versions, but in Oliver's case the elimination of some of the weaker songs and the transposition of others to more crucial moments improve the show's unity and add to the thrills. It's certainly not Dick- ens, but so what -enjoy your- self.**** Some Like It Hot - (Cine- ma Guild, Arch Aud., 7 & 9:05) - A pair of 1920's musicians are accidental witnesses to the St. Valentine's Day Massacre, subsequently hide out in an all- girl band to avoid pursuing mobsters. This Billy Wilder film was considered the quint- essential comedy of the '50's, combining the usual belly- laughs with risque transvestite overtones hitherto taboo in American films. Given a fif- teen-year retrospective, though, the whole enterprise seems con- siderably less daring and rob- ably a lot less funny than it did .pei then. Still, Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis mug hilariously as the musicians, and Marilyn Monroe is at her best as a boozy member of the band. And the great Joe E. Brown de- livers what is still considered by many the greatest closing line in the history of comedy. The Great Gatsby - (Me- diatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 & 9:45) - The most pre-bally- hooed cinematic event of the decade emerges as a mouse.L Director Jack Clayton's adap-I tation of the Fitzgerald novel events and entertainment LgS.. . for the week of Oct. 18-m.24 Cobo (Detroit) - James Brown, 8, tickets $5.50 to $7.50. Bimbo's - Gaslighters, rag- time, 6-1:30, 50c after 8. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, bluegrass, 10, $1.50. Blind Pig - Aldaberan, jazz, 9:30, $1. Ark - Michael Cooney, folk, 9, $2.40. Depot House - Gemini, folk- sy blues, 9, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Melo- dioso, Latin jazz, 9:30, $1. sunday i is so reverent that it scarcely -MW -®- N twitches at all - it just sits there like an honored, slightly SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19 decaying statue. It is compli- CINEMA mented by spectacularly impre- The Misfits - (Cinema Guild, fect casting, from poor Rob 7 & 9:05) - Monroe, Gable, Redford on down. ** John Huston, Arthur Miller - The Passenger - (Cinema II, rarely has such a galaxie of tal- Angell Aud. A., 7 & 9:05)-Dis- ent been poured into such a to- illusioned journalist switches tal inconsequence. This mod- identity with a dead acquaint- ern-day Western seems vague- ance in Northern Africa, soon ly to be about freedom and finds himself dangerously im- civilization's encroachments up- mersed in the other man's for- on it, but by and large neither mer existence. Antonioni's first stars, director nor writer seem film in five years boasts his un- to have any idea just exactly challenged mastery of the cam- what the hell it is they're try- era plus a wonderfully evoca- ing to say. Interesting for nos- tive performance by Jack Ni- ! talgic reasons only - this wasI cholson as the journalist, but the last screen appearance for falls flat whenever the director both Marilyn and the King. Too decides to inject his chronic bad it couldn't have been bet- pop-existentialism into the pro- i ter. ** ceedings. Still, if not taken Lady Sings the Blues - for more than it is, an enjoy- (New World, MLB 4, 7 & 9:30) able film. *.I -Diana Ross's spectacular por- The Last Detail - (Matrix, trayal of Billie Holliday fights 7 & 9:30) - A slick, entertain- a running battle against a dis-. ing tragi-comedy by Hal Ashby jointed script and technical (Shampoo) about the odyssey of amateurishness of this film bi- two Navy MP's and a likable, ography of the great singer. born - victim prisoner they The result is approximately transport to a far-away New a standoff, but if there ever England brig. Another in the was a case where a single per- line of "road" films, describing formance is alone worth the the trio's mostly humorous ad- price ofsadmission, then this is ventures en route to their 'sad, it - Ross is indestructible. ** inevitable destination. Jack The Eclipse - (Cinema II, Nicholson and Otis Young are Angell Aud. A, 7 & 9:15) - An- excellent as the MP's, but are tonionni film of lovers' triangle outshown by the remarkable gets, as usual, high marks on Randy Quaid as their young, visual technique, failing marks gullible ward. *** on plot. The directors' ever- Hearts and Minds - (Ann Ar- present alienation theme con-I bor Teach-In, MLB 3, 7:30 & tains nothing that wasn't putI 9:30)-The Vietnam debacle as forth more interestingly 50 viewed from the Left. An ad- years ago.' ** mittedly and unabashedly one- The Last Detail - (Matrix, 7 sided documentary re-living a & 9:30) - See Saturday Cine- tragedy that most of us would ma. like to - but must not ever - MUSIC forget. For all its flaws, this Loma Linda - Mixed Ba film is almost required view- .g azz7 6-2 nn cover. MUSIC Bimbo's (Ypsi) - Curbstone Beauties, rock, 9:30, no cover. Golden Falcon - Ann Arbor Experimental Jazz Band, 9:30, $1. Blind Pig - Boogie Woogie Red, blues, 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Eric Bach, folk, 9:30, no cover. tuesday TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21 CINEMA The Raven - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9) - A French village goes raving paranoic over a series of anonymous hate-letters. Wages - of - gos- sip film is previously unscreen- ed in Ann Arbor, but sounds fascinating. The 400 Blows - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Angell Aud. A, 71 & 9) - Truffaut's first (andI most famous) film of a young unloved boy drifting poignant- ly, inexorably toward disaster. This autobiographical effort is perhaps not quite as immortal' its champions contend, but is undeniably a beautiful and heartbreaking film. Most im- portant, it is gutsy Truffaut-, a crucial contrast to his subse- quent featherweight sequels. **** A Clockwork Orange - (New World, MLB 3, 7 & 9:30) - Ku- brick's absorbing, imperfect adaptation of the Anthony Bur- gess novel. One of the most thoroughly unpleasant films ever made - which was ob- viously the director's intent. For all its nastiness, the pic- ture strikes a profound chordI with many people, or else we wouldn't see the jammed-pack- ed audiences every time Clock- work plays here. ** I'm No Angel - (Matrix, 7 & 9:30) - See Monday Cinema. The Phenix City Story - Billy, Michael Sacks conveys (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 9 both youth and age with equal: only) - A crusading young dexterity, and a uniformly ex- lawyer combats gangster ele- cellent supporting cast helpsi ments that almost literally own make this a memorable film a small Southern town. The adaptation. ****j original Walking Tall, made two Cries and Whispers - (New decades earlier by the same di- World, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 & 9) rector, and like its successor Bergman's psychological study theoretically based on fact. All of three sisters and their ser- the elements of the anti-shades- vant girl pitted against each of-gray philosophy are present: other amidst the trappings of an the lone shining knight battling isolated summer estate. Hailed for the right, the monstrous by many critics as the Swedish monolithic enemy opposing him, director's greatest achieve- and blood on both sides by the ment, but from this writer's bucketfull. And one must admit perspective, a thoroughly pre- that, for all its repellent good tentious bore. Overwritten, vs. evil simplification, the film floridly directed, poorly. acted is well-made and deeply affect- (save Harriet Andersson as the ing. dying sister), the film comes The Conformist - (Matrix, across as almost a parody of 7 & 9:30) - Bernardo Berto- Bergman's other works. It lucci's film of a young Italian claims profundity, but strikes who joins Mussolini's secret po- one as nothing so much as a lice in order to gain some emo- great director running scared, tional foothold in an increasing- trumpeting his greatness to a ly bankrupt society. The film's public which had already ac- prevailing theory that moral knowledged it long ago. ** verversion led to the political You're a Big Boy Now - insanity of the times may be (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 questioned, but Bertolucci's & 9:05) - Francis Ford Cop- directorial abilities are so awe- pola's film debut surrealistic- some that they totally envelop ally depicts a young man's in- any thematic shortcomings that troduction to the wicked ways may exist. A perverse and bril- of life in The Big City. Well liant film. '***'done. but a little too immersed { ii . l t FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24 Alexander Nevsky - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Eisenstein's saga of the war- rior - savior of Thirteenth-Cen- tury Russia is probably the most remarkable battle epic ever conceived for film. Unfor- tunately, a corresponding script which can only be described as corny deprives this work of a; true place among the all-time film greats.*** Fritz the Cat - (Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7, 8:30, 10:00)-- Middling, only intermittently funny cartoon version of Rob- ert Crumb's immortal feline. Crumb himself disowns the film, and upon viewing it, it's not really too hard to under- stand why. ** California Split - (Cinema II, [Angell Aud. A, 7 & 9) - Rob- 1 LMA!j o Death in Venice - (New World, MLB 3, 7 & 9) - Vis- conti's film of a famous auth- or's doomed pursuit of a young boy in Venice takes too many liberties with the famous Thom- as Mann story that inspired it. What emerges is a kind of over- ripe pornography .study that is woefully untrue to Mann's con- cept of the author's tragic dis- covery of the inadequacy of his life - long principles. Dirk Bo- garde is only fair in the role of Gustav Aschenbach. ** MUSIC Casa Nova - Susan Michaels, blues, 9-1, no cover. Bimbo's (Ypsi) - Curbstone Beauties, rock, 9:30, $1. Rubaiyat-Strutter's Ball, top 40's, 9:30, no cover. i Loma Linda - Mixed Bag, jazz, 11-2, no cover. Heidelberg Rathskeller-Mus- tard's Retreat, folk, 9:30, no cover. Golden Falcon -- Headwind, jazz, 9:20, $1. Bimbo's - Gaslighters, rag- time, 61:30, 50c after 8. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, bluegrass, 10, $1.50. Blind Pig - Dave Workman Blues Band, 9:30, $1. Ark - Bryan Bowers, folk, 9,' $2.50. Depot House - Aging Chil- dren, folk, 9, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Jawbone, country-rock, 9:30, $1. . a { I [ ert Altman's film about com- pulsive gamblers in Las Vegas is typically long on mood and short on plot, but this time around the atmospheric quali- ties are engrossing and true enough that they make the pic- ture a success all by them- selves. In the leads, George Se- gal is excellent as a desperate born - loser, Elliot Gould some- what less effective as his more worldly chum. *** i s i I MUSIC Bimbo's - Grievous Angels, country, 9, no cover. Blind Pig - Melodioso, Latin jazz, 9:30, $1. ' Ark - Hoot night, folk, 9, 75c. Bimbo's (Ypsi) - Curbstone Beauties, rock, 9:30, no cover. Casa Nova - Susan Michaels, blues, 9-1, no cover. thursday THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23 CINEMA in 1960's pop to really be effec- tive today. ** The Birds - (Ann Arbor Film! Co-op, Angell Aud. A, 7 & 9:15){ - Probably Hitchcock's most famous film, but not really one of his best. Filled with delic- iously terrifying moments, but too many of the bird effects are sloppy in their phoniness, and the unrelentingly dull perform- ances by the lead actors make it somewhat difficult for the viewer to get involved in their terror. Still, -Hitchcock's final shot is so beautifully droll and Sunexpected that it redeems any of his earlier laziness. ** MAKE $5.00 Work as a Marshall for the Homecom- ing Bike Race: 8:30-1 1 30 a.m. We also need additional people, from 7:00 a.m. on to earn an additional $2.00/hour. Coil 763-1107 i .*** i " MUSICI Casa Nova - Susan Michaels, blues, 9-1, no cover. Rubaiyat - Strutter's Ball, top 40's, 10, no cover. Loma Linda - Mixed Bag, jazz, 11-2, no cover., Heidelberg - Sosgenbrecher, German, 9-1:30, no cover. Heidelberg Rathskeller - Mustard's Retreat, folk, 9:30, no cover. Golden Falcon - Headwind, jazz, 9:30, $1. Bimbo's (Ypsi) - Salty Dog, rock, 9:30, -$1., Baker's (Detroit) - Richard Grooveholmes, jazz, 9:30, $3.50. jz, 01, nu - u Ark-Alistair Anderson, folk, 9, $2.50. Bimbo's (Ypsi) - Salty Dog, rock, 9:30, nocover. Baker's (Detroit) -- Richard Grooveholmes, jazz, 9:30, $3.50. Mr. Flood's Party - Idaho MUSIC Slaughterhouse - Five - (Ma- MUSIC BUSIC ntrix, 7 & 9:30) - That rarest of Casa Nova - Susan Michaels, Blind Pig - Reunion, jazz, happenings - a film which ac- blues, 9-1, no cover. 9,. F-tually improves over the novel Bimbo's (Ypsi) - Curbstone Mr. Flood's Party - Gemini, on which it was based. Director Beauties, rock, 9:30, no cover. folksy blues, 9:30, no cover. George Roy Hill (The Sting), Bimbo's - Grievous Angels, etc.) displays a most uncharac- country, 9, no cover. teristic sensitivity in depicting; Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, Billy Pilgrim's travels through bluegrass, 9:30, $1. past, present and future, bring- Blind Pig -- Mato Grosso, WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 22 ing to Billy's story the scope | Latin jazz, 9:30, $1. CINEMA and dignity that Kurt Vonne- Mr. Flood's Party - Mike A o fCN A n gut's indulgent, self - conscious Smith & His Country Volun- A Touch of Class - (Ann Ar- novel so painfully lacked. As teers, 9:30, 75c. bor Film Co-op, Angell Aud. A, 7 & 9:15) - Chronicle of a : "r" '"rr"rrrwrw"w' """"""""""r'""""""""r""w'"i comi - tragic affair between an I u American businessman (George ; GRAND GRAND 1 Segal) and a London fashion, OPENING OPENING I designer (Glenda Jackson).I That's all there is to it, and on.SELF-SERVICE CAR WASH te whole eylighdtJeikgh (and Vacuum)-9:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. stuff, but Segal and Jackson e perform with such charm and Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.-Sun.-Oct. 16-19 effervescence that the film:r 1 emerges with a great deal of (if. you'll pardon the expression) f Liberty Car W ash class. Steamboat Round the Bend- NEAR CAMPUS (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 only) -- Early, obscure John I 318 W. LIBERTY Ford film abond tnthing else At First-Just West of Railroad Tracks u known about it. i - """ninininininwini"""inininr r "rrrr rr"r"r"ininr aI . . , Steam Packet, Soc. country, 9:30, THE ANN ARBOR TEACH-IN Presents Hearts and Minds The Academy Award winning documen- tary on the American consciousness that led to our involvement in Vietnam. -ALSO- THE ZAPHUDER FILM Sat., Oct. 18S-M~LB 3 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. All Proceeds Go To Ann Arbor Teach-in, Nov. 2, 3, & 4 monday NYC avoids default as union buys bonds MONDAY, OCTOBER 20 CINEMA Hamlet - (UAC Shakespeare Cinema, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:45)- Lawrence Olivier's cinematic adaptation of the Bard's great- est. The film was the deserved recipient of many awards and prizes upon its release. A bit -ore condensed than one might like, but generally excellent. Olivier's actor's internretation of Hamlet is one of the more memorable events on film. **** T'm No Angel - (Matrix, 7 & 9:30) - Wild West show star Mae West pursues the charms of bachelor Cary Grant in unus- ual cowboy flick. Mae West is one of those American institu- tions one either loves or hates; For those who can stand her, this is one of her better films. *** (Continued from Page 1) t9 help the city. White House press spokesman Ron Nessen yesterday told reporters: "I can flatly say the Presi- dent will not take action to pre- vent a New York City default. - . . This is not a natural dis- aster or an act of God. It is a self-inflicted act by the people who have been running affairs for New York." But both Beame and Gov. Carey said that Washington must now make the next move to save the city. THE >GOVERNOR called on the federal government to guar- antee New York City obligations as a way to avoid having the city default on its debts, and the mayor said, "If there is no help from the federal govern- ment, we'll have to go through this all over again. The federal government must recognize its responsibilities." The President has remained adamant in the face of warn- ings from the financial com- munity that New York's d afault would have a "ripple effect" far beyond the city limits, and could shake the fiscal stability of other municipal and state governments, which depend for existence on short and long term borrowing. The market for their bonds was said to be in danger of vanishing if New York went under. WH ERE HOUSE RECORDS PRESENTS D eodato Semester in Israel A program of study in Jeru- salem, during Sprinq semes- ter, 1976, sponsored by Weslevan University. Spe- cially arrancied courses, con- ducted in Hebrew, on sub- iects including Ta n a c h, Modern Israeli literature, Medieval Jewish Philosophy, Wesavnn c.redits Au-,trnnsfer- Featuring JOHN TROPEA & NICK REMO LEAD GUITAR DRUMS Monday, Oct. 20th-8:00 p.m. I I i :Z)V P.m.