=9 THE MICHIGAN -DAILY cinemo aw ekn Friday, October 31, 1975 Page Five Pick of the week.: Mr. Smith Goes to Washington Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sat., 7, 9 Few American directors have ever succeeded in developing as distinctive a style as the brilliant Frank Capra. There is, indeed, a "Capra look" to his films: a homespun humor mix- ed with some genuine flair. And that "look" was the root of some of the best movies of Holly- wood's biggest years. Mr. Smith Goes To Washing- ton is a fine example of Capra's exceedingly delicate subtlety. On the outside, Mr. Smith is a humorous yet somewhat tragic picture about a naive young man who almost becomes the yictim of a vicious political sys- tem. Underneath the trappings, however, the picture is a biting comment on something that has become all too familiar to us as of late - corruption in the Congress. James Stewart portrays Jef- ferson Smith, the backwoods do- gooder recruited to serve in the Senate by an aggressive Tammany Hall-type political machine. Jean Arthur backs him up to the hilt as a dedicated secretary, while Claude Rains, as the machine's veteran Sena- tor, provides the final ironic twist. Perhaps Mr. Smith is kitsch. To be sure, it plays right for the gut - there's no psychological fol-de-rol on this Capra effort. But then, Pauline Kael said it best: "Our best work transforms kitsch, makes art out of it." And I don't think anyone can, deny that Frank Capra films are, in the end, a unique art. -David Blomquist ** * Psycho Mediatrics, Nat. S. And. Sun., 7, 9:30 Psycho is a film of incongrui- ties. For 40 minutes it follows the step-by-step process by which a secretary embezzles $40,000 and flees-pretty stan- dard stuff, but well filmed and helpful in providing character introduction. The scene shifts to a modern, yet run-down motel. There the thief meets its pathetic owner who lives behind the motel in a conspicuously out - of - place Gothic mansion. Then, merely one-third of the way through his film, director Alfred Hitchcock inexplicably kills off his heretofore ever- present heroine in the film's legendary shower sequence. Hereafter, the emphasis shifts to the missing person investiga- tion by various supporting char- acters and the unmistakably strange goings-on at the motel. .Psycho is an unquestionably brilliant work, and perhaps Hitchcock's best. Filmed in barely a month, the master re- gards it as no more than a joke-an experiment in audience reaction. But Hitchcock underestimates himself. The performances of Janet Leigh and Anthony Per- kins (in the ultimate expression of his typecast neurotic) are brilliantly stiff. Filmed with television equipment, Psycho is uncharacteristicly stark, gritty and black-and-white. 'No other film so represents the distinct Hitchockian vision, and perhaps no other film so influenced the filmmakers of its time. Panned by critics uon its initial release (1960), Psycho's reputation has improved so steadily over the years that to- day to praise the film is alnost cliche. And yet for anyone interested in film history and development, Psycho is a must. -Chris Kochmanski The Man Who Knew Too Much Matrix If the title The Man Who Knew Too Much conjures up memories of Jimmy Stewart, Doris Day, Technicolor and "Que Sera, Sera," then you'd better take another look at the date Think instead of Leslie Barks, Peter Lorre, Edna Best, black- and-white, and the merciful ab- sence of an Oscar-winning song. The story lines are similar, but the real common denomna- tor is Alfred Hitchcock, who made the original version while HALLOWEEN SPECIALi Bloodthirsty still a director in England. ,"::.::."r. .:;.::.::. :.::.... :..::. . :..:..:is without question one of the getic, dynamic qualities have and Ales McGowan turn in what r One would really be hard best films I've seen, with Peter found a perfect compliment in are probably the best perform-! pressed to pick the better of the What's playing this Cinema Weekend Falk and Gena Rowlands main- this role. Fonda has truly given ances in a Hitchcock film sincec two, but this version does have Hitchcock thrillers (five of them, including his most taming an exquisitely painful everything she has into it and, North by Northwest.; advantages over the remake- famous (Psycho) and horror films dominate the film group tension throughout the two-and- for once, she presents a cnar- Indeed, in several scenesZ Hitchcock makes excellent use offerings this weekend with one commercial extravaganza,"a-half hours. acter that appears comple:ely (most particularly, the already' of black-and-white film-eerie ofeig hsweed ih n omrileaaaz, true to life; obviously she 1aospoaotrc pi1e Diana Ross in Mahogany, making its Ann Arbor debut. Ms. Rowlands plays a homy famous potato truck episode) shadows and strange atmo- The entire weekend schedule looks like this: Wife to Peter Falk's bewildred thought a great deal about her Hitchcock actually seems to spheric sets create a 'oggy bntee-eken sheulrkorslneshine role and about the lives of call mood. Peter Lorre's perform- Friday-Testament of Dr. Cordelier, Aud. A, 7 9 blue - collar worker. In scene ion that his once infallible taste 4? ,A l A d 7~ T ftrsee olad'prom girls before the film was made. ance, a literally crashing jimax Secret Agent, Old. Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05, The Haunting, Nat. ance is siply dazzling-at the Sutherland's performance, as and the hunt for Hitch's walk- Sci. Aud., 7:30, 9:30 end elyex at he Klute, is less spectacular, but on more than compensate for Saturday-The Little Theatre of Jean Renoir, Aud A, wrung out (a fact which seem- some stiff acting and a very 7, 9, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Old Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05, ed to irritate sme viewers). namic, often overly-emotional sthe"oin- boring first fifteen minutes. Frenzy, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30, 9:45, Klute, Bursley West Cafe- This movie asks a now-familiar Bree. He is the model of small- C , -Cynthia Cheski teria, 8:30 question, especially for Psy- tawn, middle American samty, THE DAILY IS A GREAT * ;* *og tuens -namely,' n envrlsshsco. I Sunday-The Crime of Monsieur Lange, Aud. A, 7,9, cooy suet n envrlsshsco. SabotThe Man Who Knew Too Much 7Sabotage,9 Aud. 3, LB who is crazier, the "lunatic," All things considered, parts Y meet other good1 Matri The Heiress, WOl Arch. TA , 7, 9:05,syo, N. S. d L or everybody else? I ended up of Klute will irritate the dis- N drink 5c Cokes In bi rweken forTHi H dA .A .,,9 ,Pyh, t. .d, sympathizing with her. She cerning viewer, but even the * learn the operati Inc a big weekend for Hitch- 7:30, 9:30 seemed to be slowly driven most skeptical filmgoer can't * write stories cock flicks, Sabotage is prooably All weekend-Mahogany, State (662-6264), 3 Days of the over the edge by the lack of im- fail to be impressed with the * see your name in the one the least people will Condor, Michigan (665-6290), Lisztomania, Fifth Forum agination of her family, her sort of rapport Fonda and Suth- * earn a little mon see. It's one of those anonymous (761-9700), Luther, Campus (668-6416), The Man Who Knew doctor and her friends. If 7ou're erland establish with the audi- thrillers of Hitchcock's British Too Much and Sabotage, Matrix (994-0627), Tommy, A looking for a ha movie, ence and between the characCome on down to 420 period in the '30s that began TlokingorAahappy movemeneoan beteen heocarac with the classic 39 tes ad Woman Under the Influence, Return of the Panther, Hearts don't go; but if you want to see ters, Bree and Klute. eoin the business, news, finished with the yet better Lady of the West, Briarwood, (769-8780). darel * * * Vanishes. .-diately. - F~ The film is based on Joseph Frenzy Conrad's novel The Secret The Heiress I'm sorry to say that whoever *MediatriesNa w , . The U'JQ r Mfdiatrics, Nat. Sc. Aud. may again fail us. But it never does. Frenzy may not be Hitch- cock at his most humane or intense. Still, it is an exceptin- ally entertaining, beautifailly crafted, clever and relaxed sur- prise from a director I had begun to think no longer cap- able of such a film. -Rich Glatzer the DAILY? T PLACE TO: people ons of a print ey newspaper Maynard anytime and sports or photography 1 Agent (which paradoxically he. came the title of another tatally unrelated Hitchcock film), and receives rather bland treatment from the great filmmaker. Oscar Homolka is nonetheless' interesting as the small time saboteur, perhaps symbolicly running a movie theater in his spare time. Apparently Hitchcock was dis- appointed in the casting of John{ Londer and S lvin Rdnevn the wasrsp usieiur t casu jg Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. of the movie apparently neglect- lut Sun. 7, 9: OS ed the fact 'that those stars, al- Bursley Hall, W. Cafeteria The Heiress could just as though effective box oifice 8:30 p.m. easily be called The Way We draws, have absolutely no muLsi- Klute (1971) is remarkable' Were, referring to the lengths cal abilities whatsoever. only because of the outstanding to which a woman formerly Russell has directed the film performances of Jane Fonda and felt she had to go to win a man as a visual extravaganza in Donald Sutherland. The film is and please her family. which everything but the kitch- a competently-directed murder- In this adaptation of Henry en sink is thrown in for a num- mystery of the same kind that James' Washinggton Square, ber of sequences. The movie graces television screens several Olivia deHavilland plays a plain makes use of an extraordinary times every evening after the f_ 4-: lf l .Fnnumber of special effects that ! c,.. h:. i l l ,1 ,j 1 II yae ynt Y'i yu1c as Ln rich spinster wno tau for a 1 11iL P~~- - - ami ynour is over romantic pair. handsome fortune hunter and is just don't come off.*Ak ' But Sydney has the film's best abandoned by him when her Put simply, Tommy is the one kThe director,kAlanPakula, is- scene-a classic Hitchcock "set-, father disowns her. movie this year that should be k piece" in which she wordlessly This film is more of a char missed by anyone interested in cision in carrying off a project stabs her husband to death andfisina etranng ahoa- st es her uilt d acter study of the three main sJeff.Sorensen though he is unimagineative, as throgh facal xpressons. people, though than a comment , * * s 'Klute's use of every cliche in fortunately, that's about all nthe mores of the time, andn'the book demonstrates.L forunteytht'sabutal should be viewed as such. A Woman Under r there is of interest. Nevertheless, Jane Fonda s -Chris Kochmanski lDeHavilland, Mo n t gomery The Influence portrayal of a prostitute, 'Bree, * * * ft as the fortune hunter, and Sir alpthe Rcrdone ner as d tThe Movies Briarwood is probably her finest perform- Sir Ralph Richardson as the AWmaUdeth nuncanetdt.Hrmstnr- The Haunting cold, imperious father give uni--- A Woman Under the lnfInce ance to date. Her most Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud. forml excellent performances , > Fri., 7:30, 9:30 with Olivia (long past her Errol Robert Wise is one of those lynn days) deserving every all-purpose Oscar-winning Holly- ounce of the Oscar she copped ,a &I2 - wood directors who can apply t year. Cheskiy --Cynthia Ce I < I himself to any film genre- * * */_ ' . musicals (West Side Story, - ku IW Sound of Music), historical Tommy fiction (Day the Earth Stood Ken Russell has always had Still),. etc.-and usually churn a flare for heavy-handed, often I out a respectable product. , overly-pretentious cinema, but IMPORTS AND CRAFTS FROM THE AMERICAS However, one Wise film, The in Tommy, Russell has reached 309 E LIBERTY 995-4222 Haunting, falls short of even the nadir of his admittedly in- that rather dubious praise. consistent career. While W6men (Across from Sovbean Cellar) Based on an intriquing, psy- in Love had Glenda Jackson and' --FEATURING- Hn o chological horror story by Shir- The Music Lovers was at least Zuni and Navaio Hand Woven ley Jackson, Wise was unfor- well- scripted, Tommy s1'ows Jewelry and Clothing tunately forced by censorship Russell's worst impulses run - Coat Sweaters Blankets pressures to discard the novel's rampant.-IPOTT ERY from most interesting points - the The film stars Roger Daltry, homosexual relationship of the lead singer of the Who, as Tom- ' TZIN TZUN TZAN M CAPULA 0 PATAMBA two heroines, and the resulting my, a blind, deaf and dumb ><"" ><1"""> 0_9_ O love triangle when one falls in teenager whose skill is pinb.ll love with a doctor. playing. Admittedly, the plot is What's left is dime-novel rather thin, but on the original M School of Music spook-show stuff, with the en- Who album, released in 1968, tire cast (Julie Harris, Claire the focus was not on the story-'presents Bloom, Richard Johnson) over- line, but on the generally ex- acting the spiritualist shtick to cellent rock music. In the film-, a hilt. ed version, however, the sound- With his upcoming block- track is infinitely worse because ':k buster The Hindenberg in the it- features the singing, not of works, Wise is mercifully re- just the musicians from the- turning to safer ground-and Who, but also the rest of the x 3 probably more Oscar nomina- cast, which includes such vocal ... ; tions. talents as Oliver Reed, Ann: -Chris Kochmanski Margaret, and Jack Nicholson. Sat., 7:30, 9:45 The success of Alfred Hitch- cock's Frenzy (1972) might have been predicted by those familiar with scenarist Anthony Shaffer's talent for writing mysteries. And' Shaffer's script is, to be sure, a very fine one. But even so, who could have known that, alter' having churned out a decade or~ so of cheezy nonsense, Hitch- cock could have created as im- peccably well-directed and satis- fying a film as Frenzy. The director's sense of timing, has never been more finely tuned (the final scene, for in- stance, is an excellent example of perfect editing). Almost every scene is handled with care and imagination. And Anna Massey CHARING CROSS BOOKSHOP Used. Fine and Scholarly Books 316 S. STATE-994-4041 Open Mon.-Fri. 10-8, Sat. 10-6 ART AUCTION JAN MITCHELL GALLERY OF EVANSTON, 11., presents a superb Art Auction to be held at the Marriott (Win Schuler's) in Ann Arbor on Sunday, Nov. 2nd. This abso- luetely will be the most outstandinq auction ever held in the Ann Arbor area. Every work is orianol and is uncon- ditionally guaranteed without time limit!!! No funk art cut from books or posters. We will present on outstandinqj collection that includes hand sianed and numbered a r a p h i c s by VASARELY, PICASSO, CHAGALL, CALDER, CLAVE, MAX ERNST, SIOUIEROS, MOORE, ANDRE MASSON, MIRO, NEIMAN, DALI, POSKA, LAUTREC, SARGENT, LINDNER, APPEL, DURER, BOULANGER, ERTE, MAX, BAJ, etc. Inspection from 1:00 to 2:00 P.M. AUCTION STARTS 2:00 P.M. SHARP' FRIDAY at H ILLEL 6:30 p.m.-MINYAN DAVENING RAMAH DAVEN ING 7:30 p.m.-Shabbas Dinner 8:30 p.m.-Open Format Service Please make reservations for dinner by 1 p.m. on Friday. H I LLEL, 1429 Hill St.--663-3336 5. STATE ST - MON.-SAT. 10 A.M.-6 P.M. FRI. TILL 9 P.M. "FINE 1/V\PORTED AND DON\ESTIC CLOTHINC" "THE ANN ARBOR SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, Edward Szabo music director I' CARL ORFF'S CAR MNA BURANA and WILLIAM ALBRIGHT'S SEVEN DEADLY SINS Choreographed and Danced by University Dancers with the University Chamber Choir and the University Symphony Orchestra Featuring Original Choreography by Elizabeth Weil Bergmann and Gay Delange Conductors: Thomas Hillbish and William Albright with EVA LIKOVA, Soprano LEONARD JOHNSON, Tenor LESLIE GUINN, Baritone ,',rA flcrn ' Wicskbz° VERA EMBREE, Leonard Rose the renowned American cellist, guest soloist I MUSK 1976 SPRING MUSICAL CENTRAL COMMITTEE POSITIONS AVAILABLE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2 at 3:30 p.m., HILL AUDITORIUM Beethoven: Egmont Overture Saint-Saens: Cello Concerto Tchaikovsky: Rococo Variations Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 5 Butchers AND Director Muical2 flirPrtnr Technical Staff 11 I I