Saturday, February 7, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Af ce l events and entertainment S " "." for the week of Feb. 7-13 all week klong ALL WEEK LONG COMMERCIAL CINEMA One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - (The Movies, Briar- wood) - This long-awaited film emerges as an earnest, osten- sibly faithful re-creation of the novel, but somehow manages tc reverse the book's philosophical point almost entirely. Jack Ni- cholson is certainly the ideal R. P. McMurphy, and Louise Fletcher creates a Big Nurse much subtler and, in the pro- cess, more terrifying than that in Ken Kesey's original. But di- rector Milos Forman has alter ed the ending ever so slightly, so that now McMurphy's final tragic act seems less a liberat- ing martyrdom than a deluded act of self-destruction. True, Broom still escapes, but no one else is saved, the patients' ward remains the same, and The Big Nurse's dominance seems as strong at the end as at the beginning. Forman seems to be saying, "No, you can't beat the System" - an absolute negation of Kesey's redemption- of-freedom theme. As such, this may be one of the most depress- ing films ever made. *** A Boy and His Dog (Fifth Forum) - A dreadful piece of film that's billed as "kinky" be- cause the distributors knew they couldn't attract an audience based on the flick's merit. Not so much kinky or even sexy as just plain ridiculous. The movie presents a post-2000 world view in which dogs apparently are smarter than their masters. "Why Jason Robards bothered with this trash?" and "How do I get my money back?" are the only questions A Boy and His Dog provokes. * Barry Lyndon - (The Movies, Briarwood) - Stanley Kubrick takes four years between films, and unfortunately this one isn't worth the wait. After making three brilliant films in a row that take place in the future, Dr. Strangelove, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and A Clockwork Or- ange, Kubrick's latest effort has regressed both in time and quality. Lyndon's weaknesses are apparent from the outset- a badly miscast Ryan O'Neal in the lead, and a plot that lags excessively. This is not to say that Lyndon is awful; it isn't. Kubrick's cinematography is magnificent and the supporting actors help keep the film afloat. ** The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes's Smarter Brother - (State) - Gene Wilder has en- listed the entire Mel Brooks troupe for this unsuccessful film. The movie just goes to show that comedy is not Gene Wilder without a script, Made- line Kahn without a German accent, and Marty Feldman with only a pair of bulging eyes. BOMB, The Hindenburg - (The Mov- ies, Briarwood) - George C. Scott stars in yet another dis- aster film. This movie could have been really good, but the director attempted to make a serious dramatic work with Scott cast as the man of the hour. The film culminates with the destruction of the Hinden- burg, which means there will not be a sequel-schucks. * The Sunshine Boys - (The Movies, Briarwood) - Two fa- mous vaudvillians (Walter Mat- thau and George Burns) are re- united to do a TV skit after years of not speaking to each other. Neil Simon's fling at Che- kovian pathos just doesn't work at all - it's offensive when it's trying to be funny (the endless gags about the comedians' sen- ility), and dull when it's trying to be serious. (After Matthau has suffered a heart attack, Burns muses: "When he yelled at me onstage, he got a mil- lion laughs - when he yelled at me offstage, he got a heart attack". Obviously this line is supposed to have some deep philosophic content, but I am unable to decipher what it is). As the more acerbic member of the duo, Matthau grossly ov- erplays his part, but the age- less Burns brings just the right touch of dignity to his gentler role -the only real class in this unpleasantly overblown sit- uation comedy. ** Dog Day Afternoon - (Fox Village) - Al Pacino sustains this often funny, sometimes brilliant film. The story deals with an actual bungled bank robbery that took place a couple' years back in New York. In the end of the film, Pacino is ar- rested and thrown in jail. Per- haps he should have enlisted j the aid of Marlon Brando. **** Romeo and Juliet - (Michi- gan) - Shakespeare purists howled with rage when Franco Zefferelli's film was released: Imagine, having 15 and .17 year old kids playing the parts of 15' and 17 year old kids! Well, here's one instance where thel public has it all over the elit- ists; Romeo and Juliet is the greatest love story to date on i film, something millions of mov- 1 iegoers know even if most pro-t fessionals don't. * The Man Who Would Be King1 --(Michigan) - This Kipling ad-1 venture story receives a good, but not monumental treatment.E Directed by John Huston andz starring Sean Connery and Mich-< el Caine, the film is an absorb-t ing tale about a couple of cock-E neys living in 19th Century In- dia who travel to Turkey in the hopes of gaining political pow- er.***a ably the most enduring popular cover. Loma Linda - JB & Com- film of the 1960's. David Lean's Loma Linda - Mixed Bag, pany, 9:30, no cover. Russian Revolution epic gets jazz, 9:30, no cover. Mr. Flood's Party - Catfish pretty gloppy in the later stages Rubaiyat - Open Road, top Miller, jug band blues, 9:30, no as Yuri pens poetry while Lara 40's, 9, no cover. cover. worries about wolves, but is for the most part irresistable. Try not to concentrate on Omar Sharif's doe-eyes and Julie Christie's pouts, but instead CINEMA CINEMA groove on the splendid support- The Sorrow and the Pity - Harold Lloyd Films - (Cine- ing cast. ** (Cinema II, Angell Aud. A, 7 ma Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 only) Paper Chase - (Matrix, 7 & only) - Marcel Ophuls' gargan- - Collection of works by the 9:30) - Chronicle of a Harvard tuan documentary on occupied man generally ranked withj law student's first year makes France during World War II. Chaplin and Keaton as theI a pleasant but not very drama- The film has been banned in greatest of the silent come- tic film. It's notable for John France since its release and dians, although to this writer's Houseman's Oscar-winning film I nti ttiindP.r,,.,A eve Llonever annroached the it's not difict t.o de staU.' d ey Lod eeraprac te i . ' 9:30) - See Saturday Cinema. EVENTS Jonathan Kozol - Future Worlds presents the educator, speaking on "Alternative Use of Education". Hill Aud., 3 p.m. Sam Hamod - poetry reading at the Pendleton Rm. in the Un- ion. 4:10 p.m. Birth and Death of a Star This and two other films at 8 p.m., MLB Aud. 3, courtesy of the Astronomical Film Festival. BARS Blind Pig - Jack Orion, jazz,I 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Gemini, folksy blues, 9:30, no cover. Loma Linda - JB & Com- pany, 9:30, no cover. Chances Are - Sky King, rock, 9, $1 to $1.50. !wednesday CINEMA Zardoz - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 only) - John Boorman's tongue-in-cheek sci-fi thriller was then taken very seriously (and angrily) by a lot of film critics, feministsf and philosophy majors when it America. Probably the best of debued a couple of years back. all the recent "road" films - Don't sweat it folks; Zardoz Paul Mazursky's script flirts makes no pretensions toward with but never slips into the anything but escapism - and mawkish sentimentality often succeeds pretty admirably. In j inherent in films of this kind. the lead role, Sean Connery Harry is a tough old coot, and lurches around hilariously as a the movie reflects his nature. sort of space-age Conan the Art Carney gives the perform- Barbarian. *** ance of his life as Harry, and The Private Life of Sherlock richly deserved his subsequent- Holmes - (Ann Arbor Film Co- 1y unexpected Academy Award. op, Ang. Aud. A, 9:15 only) - Ha lm ( One of a series of "lost films" HIrold Lloyd Films - (Cine- - pictures recently made but ma Guild, Arch. Aud., only) - then promptly forgotten by the See Tuesday Cinema. critics, film distributors and the Illicit (Summer) Interlude public. An admirable resurrec- (Cinema Guild, 9:05 only) - tion project, but in the case of Early Ingmar Bergman film P r i v a t e L i f e of Sherlock that stylistically helped pave Holmes, this bland, pseudo-hip the way for his more mature Billy Wilder version of the sup- later efforts. ersleuth definitely deserves the EVENTS obscurity in which it has justly U PI-'yers Studio Theater - languished. * "The Creation, Disobedience, Harry and Tonto - (Matrix, and Fall of Man and the De- 7 & 9:30) - An elderly man is lIge". Quite a tall order. Arena ousted from his New York Theater, Frieze Bldg. 4:10 p.m. apartment by a housing project. BARS He rejects living with his chil- Bli*d Pig - Friends Road- dren and decides to take off show, comedy, 9:30, $1. cross-country with his loyal cat Chinces Are - Sky King, to see what's happening in See HAPPENINGS, Page 4 debut as a brilliant, icily im- personal law prof, but there's little else that's memorable. A certified campus "cult" film, however, so you may end up en- joying it. ** Carnal Knowledge - (Couz- ens Cafeteria, 8 & 10) - The famous Mike Nichols - Jules Feiffer film about American makes hung up in eternal ado- lescence over the opposite sex. The movie structures itself pretty much like a Feiffer com- ic strip, with most scenes con- fined to two-person dialogues or one-person monologues-a tech- nique rarely used in American films but very effective here. However one regards its philo- soohic premise, Carnal Knowl- edge is richly entertaining and comic, bolstered by Jack Ni- cholson in his best performance (tvnsecast, perhaps), and an exhilirating supporting cast. why - it emerges as a terrify- ing indictment of French col- laboration with the invading Na- zis, and implies thattheir coun- try was done in as much by their own deceit and inaction as by the German armies. At four hours-plus, Sorrow demands considerable stamina from itsi audience, but is a harrowing,, involving experience once you I get into it. **** Jonathan - Cinema Guild, 7 & 9:05) - Horror film billed as genius of the other two. A fun- ny set of films nonetheless. *** l Red River - (Cinema Guild Arch. Aud., 9:05) - Howard Hawkes' great film of the lives of a cattleman and his adopted son. As the years pass, theirE relationship evolves from love into bitter emnity during the course of a huge cattle drive west. John Wayne delivers his{ greatest performance as the father and Montgomery Clift is equally good as his son-turned- CINEMA Dial M For Murder - (Cine- ma Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Evil husband arranges to: have his wife murdered, and subsequently manipulates the unexpected results to his ad- vantage. Unusually talky Hitch- cock film bertays its stage play origins, but remains a reason- ably engrossing thriller. Ray Milland and Grace Kelly apply just the right touch to the un- blissful couple, and Robert Cummings is only intermittent- ly ridiculous as Kelly's boy- friend. *** Scenes From a Marriage - (Cinema II, Ang. Aud. A, 7 &1 10) - A three-hour condensa- tion of Ingmar Bergman's six one-hour films detailing various. stages of an upper-middle class} marriage. Originally made for Swedish television, Marriage chronicles the relationship of a seemingly model couple (Liv Ullman and Erland Josephson), gradually exacerbating into bit- terness and eventually divorce, concluding with a vague, very temporary reconciliation. Mar- riage is in many ways the most mature study of human interac- tion yet seen on film, but suf- fers from a curiously remote quality that makes it hard to get overly involved in it. And a personal observation: The film should have more visual sex. I mean that seriously - it is glaringly absent from a film' which purports to treat all sides of a marriage evenhandedly. Obviously there were unavoid- able TV restrictions involving! anything overt, but still, the sight of a supposedly worldly couple bundled up to the chin even in bed is jarring out of kilter with the verbal sophisti- cation displayed throughout. I think it seriously damages the film's integrity. *** Murder on the Orient Express - Mediatrics, Nat. Sci., Aud., 7 & 9:15)-Sidney Lumet's block-' buster films from the Agatha Christie whodunnit contains an interesting premise for mur- der and an unexpected solution. But what, oh paying customer, can be so fascinating about a dozen or so dull, WASP-ish rich people sitting on a stalled train talking incessantly for more than two hours? The most over- rated film of 1974. ** Doctor Zhivago - (New World, MLB 3, 8 only) - Prob- CTION r : 1 1 1 t i£ EVENTS The Way of the World - The Acting Comnanv in their final nroduction for the city of Ann Arbor. Congreve's classic Res- toration niece - and judinga from their past efforts, nrobab- lv excellent. $3. $4 50, $5.50, $6 and $7. Power Center. 8 pm. BARS Ark - Patl Geremia and Bob White, folk, 8:30, $2.50. Bimbo's - Gaslibters. rae-1 time singalong, 6-1:30, 50c af- ter 8. Mr. Flood's Party - Jaw- bon'e. coluntrv, 9:30, $1.50. Blind Pm - Cory Sea QO'ar- tet. ia77, 9.30, $1. Chnces Are - Chnnner, rock, 8. $2 to SI 50. Sra' Taing - Stone Bridge, "the first anti-fascist vampire rival-both of which help make movie". That's a relief. Red River a reasonable choice Paper Chase - (Matrix, 7 & for the best Western ever made. 9:30) - See Saturday Cinema. *** EVENTS 2001: A Smace Odyssey - The Way of the World - The (Ann Arbor Film Co-on, Ang. Acting Company takes their Aud. A, 7 & 9:30) - Stanlev Ku- final bow for Ann Arbor this brick's Outer Snace Genesis year, in Congreve's sly, witty IT is, among many other things, little number. You'll just love one of the most completely per- it. $3, $4.50, $5.50, $6 and $7. sonaliz7d works in all of cine- Power, 3 and 8 pm. ma. A maddeningly cryptic Trombone Choir - Music film, the merits of which will School, SM Recital Hall. At 2:30 nrobhlv be debated forever - p.m. nerhans not even a good film, BARS b'ut certainly an incredible one. Mr. Flood's Party - Grievous This is a movie which has to Angels, country, 9:30, 75c. he seen more than once - al- Del Rio - Jazz, 5, no cover. thouugh most of von doubtless Loma Linda - Mixed Bag, have seen it at least half a doz- jazz, 9:30, no cover. en times. *** Chances Are - Windjammer, Paner Chase - (Matrix, 7 & rock, 9, $1 to $1.50. f=~c Sure Thing - Stone Bridge, rock, 9, no cover. r FEB 14IS 9:0 on a VALENTINE DAY CINEMA Paper Chase - Matrix, 7 & Remember Someone 9:30- See Saturday Cinema. i EVENTS'VALENTINE The Romeros - Guitarists, brought to you by the musical GREETINGS' society. Power Center, 8 p.m. BARS Blind Pig - Boogie Woogie DEADLINE: NOON Red, blues, 9:30, $1. FRI., FEB. 13 I Golden Falcon - Silvertones,, 0 blues, 9, $1. ! Sure Thing - Stone Bridge, Specl Rates rock, 9, no cover.SR Chances Are - Mojo Boogie Sorry No Phone Orders Band, rock, 9, $1 to $1.50. - roctk. 9. $. Golden. eon - Melodioso, in" 9, -1. P-it el PPll - RFD Boys,. bll yramS 10. $1.50. Cra Nova - Him and T, 9. no cover. Heidelberg - Sorgenbrecher, German band, 9:30, no cover. Heidelberg Rathskeller - M istard's Retreat, folk, 9:30, no ADVERTISEMENT I LI 9 t N Featuring this week ... Thi Dine, dance, drink, and be merry. That's the old-style tradition that Fritz Kochendorfer's Heidelberg has been offering Ann Arbor diners and revelers for 15 years. A favorite gathering place for the city's Ger- man community. The Heidelberg is a pleasant escape from the impersonality of fast fooddom to the quaintness and comfort of a Bavarian country inn. The original alpine murals, woodcarvings, live German music and, of course, palate pleasing German specialties are authentic re- minders of old Europe. And for those people with more colonial than continental tastes, the Heidelberg serves a tempting variety of American cuisine. As a master butcher, Fritz knows his food. And the Heidelberg serves only the finest cuts of meat. The mouth-watering Wiener schnitzel, breaded veal, is carefully prepared to meet every specification of Fritz's special recipe. Sausage lovers will have a hard time choos- ing between the Heidelberg's own hearty help- ing of knackwurst made from a tasty blend of beef and spices, and bratwurst made from tender young veal. The Heidelberg's special .dishof rouladen and sauerbraten combines the best German beef preparations. Rouladen is roast sirloin of beef rolled around bacon,. swiss cheese and spices, then lightly sauteed and baked. Sauerbraten, which is served with red cabbage and light potato pancakes, is roast beef marinated in wine, vinegar and spices. And you can also try the kassler ripp- chen, two smoked pork chops, or fried German meat patties served piping hot with onions and just the right combination of savory spices. The hearty meal also includes a choice of German or French friend potatoes, German e Old Heidelberg potato salad, mashed potatoes, or spatzen- German potato noodles topped with a special, smooth and rich gravy. And there is also a choice of farm-fresh vegetables, cole slaw, jello, or tossed salad. And, of course, every dinner includes a selection of German rolls, crackers, bread sticks and sweet dairy butter. For the tireless eater who always has room for dessert, the Heidelberg offers oven-fresh apple strudel, ice cream, or delightful German cheesecake topped with sour cream and a choice of blueberry, strawberry, or cherry fruit sauce. Open from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Sundays, the Heidelberg is also a perfect place for the luncheon crowd. The menu displays a com- plete selection of sandwiches, salads, cold plates and omlettes. Its convenient location at 215 N. Main is only a ten minute walk from campus and near the heart of Ann Arbor's downtown business district. So if you're just looking for a place for quiet conversation with friends, compli- mented by the best in American and Bavarian spirits, the Hedelberg offers a complete wine and beer list as well as specially blended coffees combined with tasy liqueur. The colorful ethnic flavor of Kochendorfer's eatery is accented daily by the breezy sounds of folk performers in the downstairs Rath- skeller, and the rambunctious tones of Ger- man dance bands every weekend. From 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. on Tuesday through Friday, enjoy the Heidelberg's two-for-the-price-of-one cock- tail hour. And best of all, there's no cover charge. So whether it's good food, good times, rea- The Rathskellar Bluegrass Band CORRE The HI-FI BUYS ad in Thursday's Daily did not include their local address: 618S. MAIN ST., ANN ARBOR ;S'antkas 0 sonable prices or good service that plan an evening at the Heidelberg a taste of Old Bavaria. suits you, and grab Diners enjoying the easy sound of Rathskellar and the good food of the Heidelberg. 1K17t~~a91'I Heidelbergo Enjoy an intim dining with the of Rich Farner. ate evening of fine e soft piano music 11 IN