Saiturddy, Jonuory"24, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Vage Five Saturday, January' 24, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I'age Five 4- 1 C events and entertainment .."O" for the week of Jan. 24-30 all week Ion didn't understand Michael's: motivations and could nevert really get into the role). *** Straw Dogs - (Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 & 9:30) Sam Peckinpah's one great ilm, and one of the most com- plex and affecting motion pic- ALL WEEK LONG' tures ever made. An American COMMERCIAL CINEMA mathematician (Dustin Hoff- Amarcord - (Campus) - man) moves with his wife to a Fellini's most touching, low-key small Cornish village in an ef- Flmin's yes, fouing on-kis fort to escape U. S. civil vio- film in years, focusing on his lence, soon finds himself sur- childhood in a small Italian lene by fin hisel sur- town. Slight on plot but incred- rounded by it in his new dwell- ibly rich in atmosphere, Amar- ng place. An extremely contro- cord consists of a series of versials film due to the very vio- loosely-connected events in the lent sequences, but they are a town - most comic, some necessary part of PeskinpahsI t serious, all affectionate- exploration of the dark side of starkly seiualafcint~iman's psyche. He is not advo- ly and stunningly crafted by the mangpthe.bre it adsos director. This is the kind of ating the brutality hetshows film Fellini used to make be- -he issimply asking whether fore he fell into the abyss of such violence is an unavoidable opulent trivia; let's hope he elmnt in the human soul. A has permanently found his way aaidedfiiJery crafted film, backagai. ~ aided by Jerry Fielding s ri- back again. ,ie -liant musical score which en- C hpsy (C gal veloes you' like a coiled snake. pus) Bergman's psychoocal, study of three sisters and their servant girl pitted against each Dirthy Harry - (Couzens other amidst the trappings of' Caf, 8 & 10) - Famous film of an isolated summer estate. pistol-toting cop Harry Callihan, Hailed by many critics as the boasts exceptionally imagina- Swedish director's greatest tive directing by Don Siegel and achievement, but from this an exciting if over-melodrama- writer's perspective a thorough- tic story line. These plus fac- ly pretentious bore. Overwrit- tors are counter-balanced by a ten, floridly directed, poorly parade of one-dimensional card- acted (save Harriet Andersson board characters, notably a as the dying sister), the film hysterical, too - bad - to - be- comes across as almost a par- true murderer. Also, the influ- ody of Bergman's other works. ' ence of Clint Eastwood is a It strains mightily for profund- liability both dramatically and ity, but strikes one as nothing philosophically - in his mono- so much as a master director tone portrayal of Harry and in running scared, trumpeting his his unrelenting eye-for-an-eye greatness to a public which had concept of justice, which goose- already acknowledged it lon'g steps its way across thedscreen. ago. ** No, Clint, the Old West does not Romeo and Juliet - (Michi- apply to today - and thank gan) - Shakespeare purists God for it. ** howled with rage when Franco The Groove Tube - (Matrix, Zefferelli's film was released: 7 & 9:30) - A collection of sa- Imagine, having 15 and 17-year- tirical skits mingling sex and old kids play the parts of 15 TV, about half of which are and 17-year-olds! How disgust- funny. ** ing! Well, here's one instance Pink Flamingos - (Matrix, where the public has it all over midnight show) - An abortive the elitists; Romeo and Juliet attempt to make a serious art is the greatest love story to form out of bad taste. Don't let date on film, something mil- the nonsense and the perverse lions of moviegoers know even sex throw you-they were add- if most lit professors don't.**** ed to appeal to the whips-and- Monty Python and the Holy black-high-heels crowd. One of Grail - (The Movies, Briar- the only truly unified films go- wood) - The overrated British ing. John Waters could be con- group's interpretation of the victed of poor judgement, but Arthurlan Legend - come of it not poor filmmaking. Either very ,funny, some just sopho- I **** or *, depending on the morie. Go if you want, but ' strength of your stomach. don't set your hopes - or your mUSIC standards - too high. ** Blind Pig - Tribe, 9:30, $1.50. Death Wish & 'he Longest Chances Are - Cheap Trick, Yard - (The Movies, Briar- rock. 8, $2 to $2.50. wood) Golden Falcon - Melodioso, jazz, 9:30, $1. Heidelberg - Sorgebrecher, German band, 9:30, no cover. Heidelberg Rathskeller-Mus- tard's Retreat, folk, 9:30, no JANUARY 24 cover. CINEMA Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, Rebecca - (Cinema Guild, bluegrass, 10, $1.50. Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Hitch-' Loma Linda - Mixed Bag, cock's American debut - and 9:30, no cover. * j the new influence of the Holly- Ark - Norman Blake, folk, wood studio heads unfortunate- 8:30, $2.50. ly shows through. Based on Rubnivat - Bar None, top Daphne du Maurier's Gothic; 40's, 9:30, no cover. ,suspense story, the film comes Mr. Flood's Party - Griev- over as pretty stodgy stuff, os Angels, country, 9:30, $1. lacking the creative flair of Sure Thing (formerly Bim- Hitchcock's British films. But bo's-Ynsi) - Inner Visions, Lawrence Olivier and Joan Fon- rock, 8:30, $1. taine are quite wonderful as Casa Nova - Him and I, 9, a mismatched couple, and no cover. Hitchcock somehow keeps the Bimbo's - Gaslighters. rag- whole enterprise lumbering time singalong, 6-1:30, 50c aft- along entertainingly, although er 8. rather like an elephant carry-' Arts Chorale and Collegim ing a couple of hundred suit-:Musicum - Richard Crawford cases on its back. Rebecca won conducting a concert as part of the 1940 Oscar for Best Picture, the Midwestern Musical Con- the only Hitchcock film ever so ference. Power, 8 p.m., free. . ! t . ., . tl. > F , . i ., r boy emotionally destroyed by missed by this writer for years the big city, while Hoffman is;(even on television), but has remarkable as his sidekick, a: acquired a considerable cult sickly hustler. The two are off- following in recent times and beat pair, aiding in the film's may be pretty good. total impact. One of the great The Ballad of Cable Hogue- studies of human loneliness and (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang.' of h u m a n companionship Aud. A, 9 only) - Low-profile, amidst the aching isolation. almost gentle Sam Peckinpah **** film about a rugged individual- The Groove Tube - (Matrix, ist (Jason Robards) making a 7 & 9:30) - See Saturday Cine- go of it alone in the 20th-cen- ma. tury West. Atmospherically a MUSICMchange of pace for the director, Chances Are - Masquerade, and a little too long, but inter- rock, 9, $1 to $1.50. esting throughout. *** Loma Linda - Mixed Bag,' Ivan the Terrible, Part II -' jazz, 9:30, no cover. (Cinema Guild, Arch Aud., 7j Ark - Norman Blake, folk, only) - At last, Ivan Two ins 8:30, $2.50. Ann Arbor! (It hardly ever ap- Mr. Flood's Party - Griev-I pears here). More compelling ous Angels, country, 9:30, 75c. than Part I, as Ivan gains ulti-, Sure Thing - Inner Visions, mate triumph over his throne-, rock, 9, $1. room rivals. The film contains Del Rio - Tribe, jazz, no a dazzingly beautiful color seg-. cover. ment towards the end. **** EVENTS Buster Keaton Collection - Prague Madrigal Antiqua (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., Rackham Aud., 2:30 p.m. 9:05 only) - A group of films Piano Chamber Recital - starring and directed by possi- Music School Recital Hall, 4:30 bly the greatest of all film co- pm medians. ing, and Joshua Logan's direc- tion is properly intimate or epic as the situation requires. And Vanessa Redgrave is a stun- ningly memorable Guinevere. Take the Money and Run - (Matrix, 7 & 9:30) - Chronicle of hardened con Virgil Stark- well's descent into crime and degradation. Woody Allen's first self-directed film is a bit rough around the edges but mostly funny, and in some ways better than his more opulent later efforts. ***j Ivan the Terrible, Part II - (Cinema Guild, Arch, Aud., 7 only) - See Tuesday Cinema. Three Strange Loves - (Cine-$ ma Guild, Arch, Aud., 9:05 on- ly) - Marital problems of a traveling couple. Another in the series of early Bergman films. MUSIC Blind Pig - Melodiosi, jazz, 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - All Di-! rections, 9:30, 75c. Ark - Hoot night, folk, 9, 75c. Loma Linda - J. B. & Com- pCv, 9:30, no cover. Chances Are - Foxx, r'ock, 9, $1 to $1.50. EVENTS National Marionette Theatre- Children's show, sponsored by UAC: Mendelssohn., 1 p.m. Loot - University Showcase Production. Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg., 8 p.m. Max Lifchitz - Piano recital, works by University composers. School of Music Recital Hall, 8 p.m. th rsday heoric and funny as a Brown- shirt rally. Aldrich obviously expected audiences to laugh and cheer at the stomps, gouges and other unrelenting brutalities on the screen, and by and large he's been proven right. Can't we find better val- ue systems than this? * Something Different - (Cine- ma Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 $ 9:05) - Czech film of two wo- men experiencing similar con- flicts despite widely differing' life style. Yojimbo - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Angel Aud., A 7 & 9) - Kurosawa's Japanese spoof of American Westerns. Unseen by this critic, but said to be one of the funniest films ever made. Take the Money and Run - (Matrix,. '7 & 9:30) - See Wednesday Cinema. MUSIC Golden Falcon - Melodioso, jazz, 9:30, $1. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys,' bl'iegrass, 9:30, $1. Blind Pig-John Mooney and Rob Weiner, blues, 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Mike Smith and his Country Volun- teers, 9:30, 75c. Casa Nova - Him and I, 9, no cover. Sure Thing - Purple Gang, rock, 9, $1. Heidelberg Rathskeller - Mustard's Retreat, folk, 9, no cover. EVENTS Arms and the Man - This time, the Acting Company takes on Shaw. At Power, 8 p.m. Tickets $3, $4.50, $5.50, $6,: and $7. Piano Chamber Music-School of Mlrsic Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Natio~nal Marionette Theater - Adult production sponsored by UAC. Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. University Philharmonia Or- ehestra - "Pops" concert. Frank , H1nter conductor. Hill And. 8 p.m. Christmas Eve, is diverted by an angel who shows him in ex- plicit terms just how valuable his life it. The plot sounds thor- oughly goopy, but it's not - it's one of the most remarkably en- joyable pictures ever put to- gether, and Frank Capra's last great film strong story line as for any overt garishness involved. Des- pite its notoriety, really a very good film. Even Dwarfs Started Small - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 8:15 only) - No doubt, no doubt. Flesh Gordon - (Matrix, Young Frankenstein - (Me- Midnight diatrics,- Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 &; ballyhoed 9:30) - Mel Brook's best film, ' a rip-off show sex & from only) - Much scisfi comedy is start to finish She Stoops to Conquer - The Acting Company in a superb presentation of Oliver Gold- smith's classic farce. Power, 3 'and 8 p.m. Tickets $3, $4.50, $5.50, $6, and $7. JANUARY 26 CINEMA Nothing scheduled. MUSIC Mr. Flood's Party - John Moonev, blues, 9:30, no cover. Blind Pig9- Boogie Woogie Red, bles, 9:30, $1. Chances Are - Mojo Boogie Band, rock, 9, $1 to $1.50. Golden Falcon - Silvertones, blues, 9:30, $1. EVENTS Carole King - UAC presents. Hill Aud., 8 p.m. tieday JANUARY 27 CINEMA El Dorado-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Angell Aud. A, 7 only)- MUSIC Loma Linda - J. B. & Com- pany, 9:30, no cover. Chances Are - Lightnin, rock, 9, $1 to $1.50. Blind Pig - Cory Sea Quar- tet, jazz, 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Gemini, folksy blues, 9:30, no cover. EVENTS Carole King - UAC presents, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. Karen DeCrew - President of NOW speaks at Hill Aud., 3, p.m. "Expanding the Women's Movement". Sponsored by Fu- ture Worlds. wedneeday JANUARY 28 CINEMA Camelot - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Angell Aud. A, 7 & 9:45) - This film version of the stage musical was roundly blasted by the critics when re- leased, but really isn't that bad. To be sure, some of the best songs have been foreshort- ened or even eliminated entire- ly, and Richard Harris' soupy due to its solid, cohesive story line. It seems that the more chaotic Woody Allen's films are, the more successful (Ba- nanas), while the opposite is true of Brooks - Young Fran- kenstein and The Twelve Chairs standing superior to the{ more anarchistic Blazing Sad- dies and The Producers. I think: Brook's true genius lies in com- ic narrative - firmly based in logical plot progressions, and enriched with his genuine giftE for gags. Leave the nihilism to Woody. **** The Phantom of Liberty - (Cinema II, Angel Aud. A, 7 &' 9) - Bunuel's sequelfto his h u g e l y successful Dis- creet Charm of the Bourgeoisie may come as a disappointmentj to admirers of that work. Once -gain we have a series of loose-! lv - connected absurdist eni-3 sodes generally involving the' upper classes, but often with a lot less humor this time around, Audiences that could laugh at' the reasonably straight forward comedy of Bourgeoisie may; find themselves perplexed and exasperated at the cryptic, eso- teric quality that characterises Phantom. Iut perhaps it mat- ters little. Bunuel at 76 stands with only a few others as a filmmaker supreme; his repu-: tation at last secure, he doesn't have to Play up to an unnredict- able public any more. He can create whatever is meaningful to him - which is " the true standard of an artist in the first nlace. I don't think we can ask any more of him than that. *** Freaks - (Ann Arbor Film - bad porn, bad fantasy, bad jokes. The original played it straight - and was much fun- nier. BOMB. Take the Money and Run - (Matrix, 7 & 9:30) - See Wednesday Cinema. . MUSIC Golden Falcon - Melodiosi, jazz, 9:30, $1. Chances Are - Foxx, rock, 8, $2 to $2.50. Ark - Paul Siebel, folk, 8:30, $2.50. Heidelberg Rathskeller - M'ustard's Retreat, folk, 9, no cover. Bimbo's -- Gaslighters, rag- time singalong, 6-1:30, 50c af- ter 8. Pretzel :Bell - RFD Boys, bllegrass. 10, $1.50. Loma Linda - Mixed Bdg, ja77, 9:30,. no coser. Rubiavat - Bar None, top 40'x. 9-30. no cover. Blind Pig - Jimmy Walker with Pete Crawford, old Chi- Scagepinro blues, 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Cope- lhnd Bl1es Band, 9:30, $1. Casa Nova - Him and I, 9, no cover. EVENTS Folkdancers - Clogging and Mountain Dance Workshop. 8 p.in,-11:30 p.m. Barbour Gymnasium. With GP-nn Bannerman of Virhinia. Christonher Parkening - Gui- tar concert. Power, 8 p.m. Howard Hawkes' Western with portrayal of King Arthur's is John Wayne, Dean Martin, rather hard to take. But the Ricky Nelson, et al. Somehow story is eternal and heartbreak- eynolds leads 'U' bands to success Continued from Page 4) | Reynolds, without the least energy. , patronizing air, gave a few Bernstein-style words of ex- The climax of the concert, and planation to aid listeners in probably a point of anticipation following the complicated wrk. for members of the audience at- and had sections present each tending the Midwest Conference, I theme, individually. Presented j was the performance of, as immediately before the perform- Reynolds described it, "A land- ance, the oral program notes mark piece, a glorious piece": made the experience all the the Hindemith symphoiy. more accessible r NOT ONLY one of tne finest works in band repetoir e, but' also one of Hindemith's finest1 compositions, tie Symphony in B-flat is rarely performed with real excellence. This was one of those rare times, wher . the individual lines, the sectignal contrasts and the dens-, massei areas were equally clear and full. The complexity did not! ,become confusion, but remned crisp and precise, even through the final section, where three themes are superimposed with counterpoint and accompani- ment. To have a wind ensemble and symphony band of such high caliber is wonderful. To hear them play fine works i.i a well- balanced, carefully planned pro- gram as musicians in concert black dress is a relativeiv new experience, and indicative of the movement away fr.om the band's military past toward the musical level which their repe- toire warrants. Nancy Coons periodically 'writes about classical music for The Dailh's Ar/s and Enlertair- ment page. honored. *** The Godfather - ((Cinema II, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 10) - Coppola's Mafia dissection is splendid entertainment by any standard, but falls short of pure greatness due to Al Pacino's wooden performance as Mich-: ael Corleone (the same apt-lies to Part II). Both films rise or fall on the shoulders of the Godson, and Pacino, a sunerb actor in practically evervthing else he does, simply doesn't measure up to the comnlex character of Michael. (Interest-, ingly, . Pacino himself agrees with this view, saying that heE sunday JANUARY 25 CINEMA 3 Films by Straub and Huil- let - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Short works by two contemporary women directors in Germany. Midnight Cowboy - (Cinema U1, Angell Aud., A, 7 & 9) - Jon Voight and Dustin Hoffman star in this most effective, sometimes memorable film. Voight portrays a Texas- cow- i, _ ___ __ ._ _-._____ .__, _ _.- ___A_ ____ ------- . _... __.__ _..__ _. ANN ARBOR CIVIC BALLET AUDITIONS Wednsday, Jan. Junior Corps-i I years up . . Senior Corps-Pointe ...... 28 7:00 7:45 p.m. p.m. OFFICE OF STUDENT LIFE Presents i SYLVIA STUDIO OF DANCE 525 E. LIBERTY Telephone 668-8066 I ACAPULCO Peter Gary Frampton a"d Wright E' 0 / A h