Saturday, ,January 31, 1976 THE MICHIGAN' Z;AILY rage i nree Saturday, January 31, 1976 THE MlCHICM~ IAILY rage inree I Adr-**-j IgNooo events and entertainment week of Jan._31-Feb. 6 all week long COMMERCIAL CINEMA Dog Day Afternoon - (Fox Village - Sidney Lumet's 'film about an actual bungled bank robbery strikes a very tenuous balance between farce and trag- edy. But the electric perform- ance by Al Pacino as the ex- hibitionistic "brains" of the rob- bery and John Cazale as his silent, psychotic sidekick make this a better film than it de- serves to be. ** One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, The Hindenburg & The' Sunshine Boys - (The Movies, Briarwood) - Beginning of a blockbuster month at Briarwood (Barry Lyndon is due in another week or so). The Hindenburg and The Sunshine Boys are un- previewed at this time, butI probably a good bet for the theater's (presumably) one dol- lar daytime price. As for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, the most awaited film in years emerges as an earnest, osten- sibly faithful re-creation of the: novel, but somehow manages to, reverse the book's philosophicall point almost completely. Romeo and Juliet - (Michi- gan) - Shakespeare puristsz howled with rage when Franco Zefferelli's film was released: Imagine, having 15 and 17-year- old kids play the parts of 15' and 17-year-old kids! Well; here's one instance where the public has it all over the elit- ists; Romeo and Juliet is the greatest love story to date on film, something millions of mov- iegoers know'even if most lit professors don't.,** - filmly based in logical plots,f and enriched with his genuine gift for gags. Leave the nihil- ism to Woody. **** Take the Money and Run -! (Matrix, 7 & 9:30)-Chronicle of harneded con Virgil Starkwell's{ descent into crime and degrada- ; monday CINEMA Take the Money and Run - (Matrix, 7 & 9:30) - See Satur- day Cinema. U tJAXL LSLL UL HIMai UrgL aBARS tion. Woody Allen's first self- Blind Pig - Boogie Woogie directed film is a bit rough Red, blues, 9:30, $1. g around the edges but mostly funny, and in some ways better Chances Are - Express, rock,. than his more opulent later ef-|9, $1 to $1.50., forts. *** ' Golden Falcon - Silvertones,'j The Devil in Miss Jones - fifties, 9:30, $1. 1( (New World, MLB 3 & 4 7 Loma Linda-J.B. and Coi- 8:30, 10)-No comment is need- pany, 9:30, no cover. l ed, beyond the fact that anyone| Mr. Flood's Party - Eric willing to pay two dollars and Bach, country, 9:30, no cover. fifty cents to watch this anti- Ark-Tom Paxton, folk, 8 and art, anti-sex monstrosity will 10:30 (doors open at 7:30), $3. get exactly what he deserves. BOMB l EVENTS Arms and the Man - A mov- inng and witty play about war, men and machines. The Acting Company, Power Center, 8 p.m. $3, $4.50, $5.50, $6 and $7. Loot-Joe tently funny, playing at th Frieze Bldg.C tnlrA nrn1 nl Orton's intermit- dated satire is he Arena, in the Go if you like, but Itd'c Anfninnr CINEMA Stagecoach-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 only)- The adventures of a group of travelers on a plains country, stagecoach could be termed the original Airport, as the oc- cupents battle Indians, outlaws, the elements and each other.: Good John Ford sagebrush epicI but doesn't merit its oft-cited ratings of Best Ford Film, Best Western Ever made, etc. (Ford's little-noted Drums Along thej Mohawk, released the samek vear, is a distinctly superior film). Still, Stagecoach contains a seris of memorable erform- I Mr. Flood's Party - Gemini, Chances Are - Chopper, rock, >itted againnst each other in a gradually exacerbating into bit- $ folksy blues, 9:30, no cover. 9, $1 to $1.50. trial of an attempted husband- j terness and eventually divorce, Loma Linda - J.B. and Com- slayer (Judy Holliday). This concluding with a vague, very U pany, 9:30, no cover. battle-of-the-sexes comedy was temporary reconciliation. Mar-;4 SMr. Flood's Party - Stoney considered a classic in its time, ! riage is in many ways the mosta wCreek, country, 9:30, 75c. but now seems awfully shop- mature study of human inter-O CN Aworn. For Hepburn cultists only. action yet seen on film, but CINEMA n ** !sometimes suffers from a cur- East Co Eeng- And Aro 7Only Angels Have Wings - iously remote quality that makes B only) -The conflicts between (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, it hard to get overly involvedG two youthful brothers and their CINEMA 7 only) - Howard Hawkes air- in it.9 domineering father in World Le Bonheur - (Cinema Guild, plane drama, with Cary Grant. Paper Chase - (Matrix, 7 & War I California. Elia Kazan's Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Film by Angels With Dirty Faces - 9:30) - See Wednesday Cinema. t film covers about the last third French director Agnes Varda. (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, King of Hearts - (Ann Arbor of John Stennbeck's huge bibli- Unseen by this writer, but if it's 9:15 only) - 1930's tale of two Film Co-op, MLB 3, 7 & 9) - cal parable, and is excellently if even remotely as good as Var- childhood friends, one of whom . . . And again. Alan Bates con- leisurely made. But Eden is da's Les Creatures, then it's becomes a priest (Pat O'Brien), quers all. *** remembered most as the film worth seeing. the other a hardened criminal EVENTSc which introduced James Dean Blow-Up - (Ann Arbor Film (James Cagney). One of the You're Too Fat! - Public to the filmgoing public. Dean's Co-op, Angel Aud. A, 7 & 9) - truly classic effort s of the Health Films. Aud. SPH II,t effect on an audience is so A young, amoral photographer Warner Bros. ganster-film gen- 12:10 p.m.c overwhelming that Eden often accidentally catches a murder re, containing, among other vir- The Way of the World - Con- loses sight of its Cain and Abel on his film, then is unable to ties, one of the most memorable greve's Restoration comedy, asj allegory, and becomes a sort muster up the positive action to finales of this or any other produced by John Houseman of personalized Dean statement do anything about it. Antonioni's school of filmmaking. **** and his absolutely fabulous (yes,b -a communication between ac- quintessential portrait of swing- Murder on the Orient Express you heard it here first) Acting tor and viewer perhaps un- ing mid-sixties London is his!- (Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. And, Company. Power Center, 8 p.m.4 matched in film history. If most enjoyable film, and dis- 7 & 9:15) - Sidney Lumet's voI've never seen it, by all plays his complete mastery of blockbuster film from then means go-rest assured you'll visual cinema, if not, as usual,>Agatha Christie whodunnit con- never forget it. **** of plot. **** tains an interesting premise for Elmer Gantry - (Ann Arbor To Die in Madrid - (New murder, and an unexpecte Film Co-op, And. A, 9 only) - World, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 & 9) - solution. But what, oh paying An overly slick film version of An excellent, wrenching docu- customer, can be so fascinating Sinclair Lewis' satanic evange- mentary of the Spanish Civil I about a dozen or so dull, WASP- list. A justly fascinating story War. The film trains soecific ish rich people sitting on a Your about the changeability of good focus upon the destruction stalled train talking incessantly and evil, but this Richard wreaked upon civilians, perhaps 'for more than two hours? The Brooks production is just too the worst in history to that most overrated film of 1974. ** S o much the "well-made film" to point and an onimous preview of; Scne'rocaMrra really scorch the coals of man's World War I. An unflinching, Scenes From a Marriage shades-of-gray dilemma. What- portrait of 20th Century bar-j(Cinema II, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & ever is memorable about this; barism,, made all the more 10) - A three-hourcondensa nicture lies in its nerformances poingnant by the knowledge that tion of Ingmar Bergman's sixToday - esnecially Burt Lancaster, on this occasion the bad guys one-hour films detailing various who is clearly having the time won. marriage. Originally made for of his life as the flamboyant, Paper Chase - (Matrix, 7 & Swedish televisionMarriage.jr76g4 -05d5 8 comolex Gantry. ***' 9:30) - See Wednesday Cinema. choneds threlatiionshipaof a I74-0558J What's Un. Tiger Lilly? - EVENTS seemingly model couple (Liv (New World, Nat. Sci. And., 7 & David Oleshansky and Nels Ullman and Erland Josephson) 9) - An ambitions if off-target Johnson - Poetry reading. 802 -- - ~ ~~ Woody Allen innovation - a Monroe, 7:30 p.m. featre-length Jaanese thriller BARS .y. re-dthbedtent e thlle Pretzel Bell - RFD BoysW hy not join the DAILY one-liners. Sertainlv an ingen- bluegrass, 9:30, $1. io-s idea which produces a fair > Mr. Flood's Party - Mike THE DAILY IS A GREAT PLACE TO: nlotment of laughs, but list1Smith and his Country Volun- 0 meet other good people can't hold un over the film's ' teers, 9:30, 75c. 0 drink 5c Cokes eatirP hoer-and-a-half runninai Sure Thing - Stone Bridge, learn the operations of a newspaper l ncth. Certainly an honorable S T rock, 9, no cover. t wrte oe fibyre. tho lh - if Woody *k9 n Are- C write stories i n I wIrIn't null this off. no one Chances Are - Chopper, rock, j see your name in print $3, $4.50, $5.50, $6 and $7. A.C. Walker - of Harvard University, Lee. Rm. 1, MLB, 4 p.m. Topic: "Ramapitchecus and the Problems of Hominid Origins." IBARTS Ark - Paul Jeremiah and Bob White, folk, 9, $2.50. Golden Falcon-Meodioso, jazz, 9:30, $1. Bimbo's - Gaslighters, rag- time singalong, 6-1:30, 50c after 8. Chances Are - Chopper, rock, 8, $2, to $2.50. Mr. Flood's Party - Jawbone, country, 9:30, $1.50. Heidelberg Rathskeller-Mus- tard's Retreat, folk, 9:30, no cover. Loma Linda - Mixed Bag, jazz, 9:30, no cover. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, bluegrass, 10, $1.50. Rubaiyat - Open Roard, top 40's, 9, no cover. Casa Nova - Him and 1, 9, no cover. Sure Thing - Stone Bridge, rock, 9, $1. I axe earplugs.its aenmg. 8 p.m. $2. Folkdancers - Clogging and Mountain Dance Workshop; Bar- bour Gym, 10 a.m. BARS Mr. Flood's Party - Copeland Blues Band, 9:30, $1. Heidelberg - Jacob Ramig, II G erman, 9:30, no cover. ances (especially Thomas Mit- Heidelberg Rathskeller-Mus- chell as a drunken doctor) and; tard's Retreat, folk, 9:30, no holds your interest throughout.I cover. The film also established John I Ark-Paul Siebel, folk, 8:30, Wavne as a major star, which $3. he's remained for nearly forty Loma Linda-Mixed Bag, jazz, veers. *** 9:30, no cover. Youne Mr. Lincoln - (Ann' Bimbo's-Gaslighters, ragtime Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, singalong, 6-1:30, 50c after 8|9 only) - Fine Ford explora- Pretzel Bell-RFD Boys, blue-, tion of Lincoln's early years. Not grass, 10, $1.50. esnecially dramatic (bioarpnbies Casa Nova--Him and I, 9-1, no seldom are), but sensitively cover, handled without the usual over- SeTr.nnose of reverence. And Henrv Sure Thing - Inner Visions, Fonda gives probably the hest rck, 9, $1.- Wtprnretation of Abe on film.I Blind Pig - Jimmy Walker,j *** you see news col Saturday CINEMA Marnie - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Al- fred Hitchcock's last really first-rate film was unaccount- ably blasted by the critics when it came out, perhaps due to the marginal thespian abilities of star Tippi Hedren. The story involves a beautiful kleptomani- ac (Hedren) and a wealthy book publisher (Sean Connery) who coerces her into marriage, then uses Freudien techniques to dis- cover the root of her klepto- mania and her corresponding terror of men. That's essen- tially all there is to the plot, but Hitchcock spins his direc- tor's web so skillfully that you don't realize it; the film seems as complex and suspenseful as the tautistxmurder and intrigue thriller. One of Bernard Herr- mann's best musical scores aids considerably towards this end. Greetings - (Cinema II, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9 - Early 1969 Brian De Palma satire contains a fair share of -dated images (LBJ, evade-the-draft, computer dating) but still merits atten- tion as one of the most un- pompous spoofs ever produced. Even the greatest satires usu- ally contain a certain air of self-inflated superiority, an ele- ment totally absent in Greet- ings. De Palma has a charming- ly disarming style that seems to say "Kick me" along with everyone else - but not too hard. A gentle, funny film which is standing the test of time and taste extremely well. *** Horsefeathers - (Couzens Cafeteria, 8 & 10) - The Marx Brothers utterly destroy the American university. Not their best film, but probably their funniest. Groucho's anatomy lecture ranks among the lunatic' interludes of all comedy. **** Young Frankenstein - (Medi- atrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 & 9:30) - Mel Brooks' best film, due to its solid, cohesive story line. It seems that the more chaotic Woody Allen's films are, the more successful (Bananas), while the opposite is true of Brooks - Young Frankenstein and The Twelve Chairs standing superior to the more anarchistic Blazing Saddles and The Pro- ducers. I think Brooks' true genius lies in comic narrative t s i s t t 1 c E 1 r 7 Pete Crawford and Billy Branch, Wild Strawberries - (Cinema ceii * 9, $1 blues, 9:30, $1. Gmild. Arch. And., 7 only) - Wild Strawberries - (Cinema He Chances Are - Foxx, rock, T3Qraman's study of old age,' (1ild. Arch. A'ud., 7 only) _tard ,$2t$25.mrynificently c o n v e v e d by Sa ~ Gda C'ea.cover Golden Falcon - Melodioso, Swadish actor Victor Sjostrom To Jov - (Cinema Glild, Go jazz, 9:30, $1. in his nortraval of an elderly jr-h. And.. 9:05 only) - Early jazz, nrnfessor. A little slow, but lov- 'Rr-nan film lh-rit a conductor Lo Rubaiyat - Open Road, top ; crafted and deenly felt "ho is interrted during a ner pany 40's, 9, no cover. Bpraman's gentlest film. * * f-rmance of B'ethoven's Niinth Son of the Shiek - (Cinema Srvinnonv with the news that G'10d, Arch. Aud., 9:05 only) -j his wife has been killed. An oh- Valentino's seanal to The Shiek, I scnre nictvure to say the least., in aroleqsed after his death. Creaky, Mhb-t the nlot sounds interestinglvy CINEMA ;corny marginal cinema, but ner- rff beat and probably worth see- Ad The Damned-(Cinema Guild, hans should be seen simnly to inn. Arch Aud. A, 7 & 9:05)-Visconti's witness the phenomenon of Pner ('hnse - (Mrix, 7 & Trac windy epic about the moral and America's first national heart-' 9:30) -- Chroni-le of a Harvard play spiritual perversions of a weal- throb. Robert Redford, eat your law student's first year makes --- thy German industrial family heart out. ** nl asant but not very drama- coinciding with the rise of the Take the Monev ari Rnn - t-i film. Tt's notable for John Nazi regime. Potentially sensa- (Matrix, 7 & 9:30) - See Satui-' nlsemnan's Onsar-winning film tional theme is bowdlerized by day Cinema. i abit as a brilliant, imnersonl the director into an astonishing- jEVENTS law nrof. but there's little else ly old-fashioned, florid fim that l String Recital - SM Recital that's memorable. A certified! lurches along like an overblown Hall, 12:30. camn,s "enlt" film, however' S Richard Strauss opera. Viscon- Rollo May - Future Worlds so von might end np enjoying it. p ti's plot machinations are often Snonsors the eminent psvchol- " 9 incoherent, his images overripe ogist, who will sneak on "Chang- EVENTS 1 -even the obligatory sex scenes ina Values in Future Society." Ars Musica-Campus concert, seem stodgy and, interestingly Hill Aud., 3 p.m. with works by Bach, Handel, 5 enough, almost chaste in their Duane Niatur reads poetry- Vivaldi and Purcell. Pendleton lack of energy. For all its lofty Pendleton Rm., Union, 4:10 p.m. R-., Union, 8 p.m. ambitions of disecting the Ger- BARS Faculty Recital-Keith Bryan man soul, The Damned ulti- Loma Linda-J.B. and Com- on flute: Karen Keys tickles theI-- mately seems akin to a large pany, 9:30, no cover. ivories. Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. I vat of grapes slowly-but very Chances Are - Masquerade, BARS primly-decomposing. ** rock, 9, $1 to $1.50. 1 Ark - Hoot night, folk, 9, 75c. Experimental Films-Cinema to $1.50. idelberg Rathskeller-Mus- 's Retreat, folk, 9:30, no r. lden Falcon - Melodioso, 9:30, $1. ma Linda - J.B. and Com- , 9:30, no cover. CINEMA am's Rib - (Cinema Guild, h. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Spencer y and Katherine Hepburn husband-and-wife lawyers Sun., Feb. 1st at H I L LE L BRUNCH I A.M. PROF. URI ZAMIR eaking on "ISRAEL-a eneration from now. $1.00 2:30-Israeli Dancing :30-6:30-Deli $2.50 H I LLEL, 1429 HILL ST. i ,i O earn a little money Come on down to 420 Maynard anytime and join the business, news, sports or photography staffs! i _ SALE_ 240% to 40%/o0FF ZUNI & NAVAJO JEWELRY " HAND WOVEN (p CLOTHING " LEATHER JACKETS, CAPS & . VISORS " BLANKETS SCARFS * ONYX IT Imports and Crafts -e ea ereSerpent from the Americas 309 E. LIBERTY 995-4222 HOURS: 11-6 Mon.-Sot. ?7~) -.-t.._ U< .,: <.. .)C-.-:3t -- >t- O yo WASIONATE MUSIC 1E L LIN M Y ONY EAR fE MU51C TH'A77HRILI.I.D THE ° FACE THAT ILAUA(CHEP A 77-ICSANC> SJP. !° LA DELLEELN iN HILARIOUS NGu _ ! OPENING WE2, FEg. 4 1hru 5.FE5. 7 6QO 0FICE OPEN MODA loam u -C6 pm P" 6-4 II, Ang. Aud. A, 8 only)-Collec- tion of short works, and prob- ably quite interesting. Take the Money and Run - (Matrix, 7 & 9:30) - See Satur- day Cinema. EVENTS Arms and the Man-The Act- ing and witty play about war, tions. Just go, go, go! Power, 3 and 8 p.m. $3, $4.50, $5.50, $6 and $7. BARS Sure Thing - Inner Visions, rock, 9, no cover. Chances Are-Du-whop, rock, 9, $1 to $1.50. Ark-Paul Siebel, folk, 9, $3. Loma Linda-Mixed Bag, jazz, 9:30, no cover. Mr. Flood's Party -Grievous Angels, country, 9:30, 75c. Del Rio-Jazz, 5, no cover. DON'T MISS THIS! I I I I 'a- 't I German Restaurant OPIC 1$LE Your Complete Pet Shop I Special ,, ,- ~I20% Off IMPORTED & DOMESTIC BEERS & WINES COCKTAILS GERMAN & AMERICAN FOODS of Ee G.. d a,+e ' ~w _ h, G 5 ' . '; s. j . ., S r ' k Y .:'4 ' 4.. y ' . n4 ' y f i 4 J Open SUNDAYS 11:30-8:00 p.m. HOURS: WED.-THURS.-FRI., 4 p.m.-1 1 p.m. SAT. 4 p.m.-1O p.m. ri' un- AA A kIAV A l T ~ Z1FclAV I