As THE MICHIGAN DAILY rts & Entertainm ent Friday, April 2, 1976 Page Five Fri.-Sat.-Sun. $2.50 JOHN ROBERTS and TONY BARRAND from the British Isles Presdents i By JAMES VALK N THE past few years, it has become somewhat of a Holly- " wood tradition to adapt run- away best sellers to the screen, converting them into "bigger- than-life" motion pictures. Itn accidently started with Love Story, continued with the monu- mental successes of The God- father and The Exorcist and be- came an international phenome- t<'' non with Jaws. Yet when Warner Brothers purchased the screen rights to Bob Woodward and Carl Bern- stein's All the President's Men. for Robert Redford's Wildwood Enterprises, the scenario was somewhat different. The subject was no longer that of pop fic- tion-it was history, and its . sense of immediacy was fright- ening All the President's Men seems to have everything going for it: two of the hottest actors in the¢ business (Redford & Hoffman- both are presumedly so big now that their first names are being dropped in the ads), a story that has become familiar with vir- tually everyone in the country, and thus a guaranteed slew of publicity. Y E T W H I L E moviegoers ] spend millions to see Redford and Hoffman in action, there is a Jack Warden as Harry Rosenfe good chance the majority of Alan Pakula's film of "All the them may be disappointed.. (One must not forget that All the opens April 9 at selected theal President's Men is being releas- ed on the basis of its universal problem was unavoidable. It appeal to the entire country, not would have been all too easy to, just to a particular segment of make it into little more than a filmgoers. Thus, the majority of cheap political shot, and director its audience will undoubtedly Alan Pakula realized the need. consist of those who see perhaps for restraint. The result is a film 2,3 films a year - the same that exists more as a dramatiza-{ crowd that frequented Jaws will tion of fact than a cinematict be wanting to check out the adaptation of the book. This! latest "blockbuster.") isn't to suggest that the decision The reason that All the Presi- was wrong-it wasn't. Yet in dent's Men will encounter this the final wake of Pakula's con-! klen 7 Pakula remains loyal until near the film's end, Halde- *, man or Nixon. * I FIND myself at odds as to drawing the line between fac- Xj ".tualizing and fictionalizing.? *,${There are elements of film that, without disturbing the issue of fact, enhance the basis of pre- sentation-an altered camera angle, a mismatched cut, an overlapping soundtrack. Eviden- tially Pakula encountered the; problem and, realizing the risks he would assume by remaining a filmaker, proceeded - but more as a documentarian +han as an artist. In the long of it, I believe his decision to be both an honorable and correct one. But in the same context, his direction remains S. .overly cautious, guarding itself from becoming too dramatized, ,Y with Pakula himself failing to realize that he is making a film and not merely recording one. The elements of filrm which k a make the medium more tan just, another mode of expression are scarcely present in this movie. Gordon Willi, whose cinematography could stand as a film in itself (Godfather II), anpears remarkably flat. In this /1 film, he is forced to indulge his camera in mere juxapositions of } :r.... television sets blaring Nixon's K in -ngural with shots of the Wshineton Post newsroom. e Washington Post reporter's findings in David Shire's music is sparce by CarlBernstein and Woodward. The film to the point of being suoressed, being heard almost exclusively wit'i witomobiles. BUT All the President's Men nurky leads, no violence, no exotic scenary -s, above all, a -chronicle of nes any de- except for the majestic interiors °vents. a oaasi-mystery where t even here of the Library of Congress. whi-oone-it is reolaced by 3f prevailing 'v t'Q how-it-was-done. Tt s the hen Redford' Perhaps the film will prove too 11ln 'Redford envisioned in early is life is in narrow in perspective for the 13. and is the film that he and o'lrt3elves average viewer. Those who paid k have created. Admitting- facts-Wood- to see Robert Redford of Butch I.it is a sterling, precise trans- n are alive Cassidy days or the Dustin Hoff- "nrmation from book to screen. man of Midnight Cowboy, may rlans those more intimately any doubt or well be disappointed. Instead -ttaThed with the matters of the manu- they may discover themselves 'o tics and journalism will find that Pakuaa lost in two hours of Bernard 're comfort with the film. Un- rly the head- Barkers and High Sloans, not frarfnately, its historical and appears on even finding solace in the ta- nolitical significance far out- after a cru- miliarity of Ehrlichman or, not weighs its cinematic relevance. guitar, banjo, concertina English music hall (vaude- ville) drinking songs, sea chanteys, ballads, novelty songs. SAT. 1 P.M.--MORRIS DANCE WORKSHOP-FREE Tues.--BIFF ROSE-comedy 1421 HILL 8:30 761-1451 eld and Robert Redford as Bob Woodward discuss th President's Men," based on th e best-selling book b tres across the country. servative artistic judgement, All ward through his n the President's Men comes off that the film assur as a highly polished educational gree of intrigue. Ye film. there is no sense o Pakula's goal, not to fiction- danger, for even wk alize Woodward and Bernstein's' is informed that hi book, has been so totally realiz- jeoiardv we find ed on film that one loses grasp shielded by the f of perhaps the film's biggest ward and Bernstei commercial draw-the personas and well. of Redford and Hoffman. Both THERE IS never are so equally counterbalanced suspense, and thus by the other and mutually factured moments dwarfed by Pakula's emphasis interjects (particular U What's playing this Cinema Weekend Another week-end has arrived, and once again comes another exciting Cinema Week-end: Friday--Love and Death (Ann Arbor Co-op, MLB 3, 7, 8:45, 10:30) Bananas (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7, 8:45); Treasure of the Sierra Madre (Cinema Guild, 7, 9:05); Shampoo (UAC Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30, 9:30) Saturday-Skiddo (New World, MLB 3, 7, 9); Patton (Bursley Hall Enterprises, West Bursley Cafe., 8:30); The Big Sleep (Cinema II, Aud. A Angel 7, 9); Black Orphes (Cinema Guild, Old Arch Aud, 7, 9:05); Shampoo (UAC Mediatrics,'Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30, 9:30) Sunday-Partner (Cinema Guild, Old Arch Aud., 2:30); The Missles of October (Cinema II, Aud. A, 7, 9:30 p.m.) All week long - Robin and Marian, State (662-6264) Inserts, Fifth Forum (761-9700); Swept Away, Campus (668-6416); Dog Day Afternoon, Michigan (665-6290), Cuckoo's Nest, Blazing Saddles, Taxi Driver, I Will, I Will, For Now, Briarwood (769-9780) Winterhawk, Fox Village, (769-1300) on the material that the film loses the personalities of the pair in exchange for a penetrat- ing look at their work. HOFFMAN has said that the film is not an actor's film, and desnite the numerous excellent performances, I not only concur but go one step farther: All the President's Men is not a direc-1 tor's film, either. Pakula's work is so totally de- voted to its material and self- conscious of its execution that it becomes, for all purposes, cinematically bankrupt. Except, for a couple of shots by cinema- tographer Gordon Willis (most notably a high angle shot in the Library of Congress), there is hardly a memorable scene,' either visually or dramatically, in the entire film. It is only in the sequences with "Deep Throat," the name- less informant that guides Wood-, light that suddenly Redford's face just cial rendezvous with Deep Throat) fail to make the film t h e "investigative mystery" that the director had hoped for. The deft seriousness of the! film may prove annoying t o those whose interests are not overtly political. There are, of course, no chases through thel streets of Washington, no sex, SUNDAY at H ILLEL APRIL 4 12:30-2:30 ISRAELI DANCING 1 :00-2:30 P.M. PASSOVER WORKSHOP ALL AT 1429 Hill St. __ .. It Pays to Advertise in The Daily k ........Iwas swept away by the volcanic, slam- bang performances of :> its two stars." --Gene Shait, NBC-TV Au Awy:" { .. 3rd Big Week 1214s unversi SHOWTIMES Mon ,,Tues., Thurs., Fri. K il~ J' U ,7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Sat., Sun., Wed.: Theatre Phone 668-6416 1 :00,3:00, 5:00, 7 and 9 STARTS TODAY For Love is the greatest adventure of all. COLUMBIA PICTURES and RASTAR PICTURES r AUDREY TONIGHT-WOODY ALLEN COMEDY FRIDAY, APRIL 2 DOUBLE FEATURE in the MLB! $1.25 single show $2.00 double feature BANANAS (Woody Allen, 1971) MLB 4-7, 8:45, 10:30 Allen's humor at its height. Its only logic is the logic of fantasy. A thoroughly alie- nated tester of Rube Goldberg gadgets takes off for a South American country where he is transformed into a revolutionary leader with false beard. Woody Allen. LOVE AND DEATH (Woody Allen, 1975) MLB 3-7, 8:45, 10:30 Woodv Allen's satire on Russian novels, Napoleonic Wars, and movie classics from Eisenstein to Beraman, complete with one- liners on just about everything. With Diane Keaton. SEAN HEPBURN ROuERT CONNERY IN SHAW "ROBIN AND MARIAN" A RICHARD LESTER FILM NICOL WILLIAMSON DENHOLM ELUOTT RONNIE BARKER KENNETH HAIGH IAN HOLM adRICHARD HAj j'RRIS .,Richrd tht Uohart A RAY STARK-RICHARD SHEPHERD roduaon * iby JOHN BARRY Exeutive Produ RICHARD SHEPHERD - Wrten by JAMES GOLDMAN PG Produced by DENIS O'DELL - Direted by RICHARD LESTER & r v s sSHOWTIMES Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri.: 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Sat., Sun., Wed.: 1:00, 3:05, 5:10, 7:20, 9:30 p.m. -w