Page 8-Friday, May 11, 1979-The Michigan Daily 'Partner's' silence was welcome Canadian crime thriller that proves so By CHRISTOPHER POTTER dour, charmless and often downright Point: Canadian television drama tacky that its rather ingriguing plotline. normally outstrips its American coun- is effectively eviscerated. terpart by a country mile both THE FILM'S locale for felony is a technically and artistically. branch bank deep in the confines of Point: Canadian-made feature-length Toronto's huge Eaton Centre shopping movies-are as rare as the great auk. mall. A retiring bank teller (Elliott Considering the resultant glut of Gould!) accidentally ferrets out the hangover video talent, one might ex- robbery scheme of a crook disguised as pect that rare flick that does emerge a charity Santa Claus. To the surprise from north of the border to prove an in- of everyone including himself, the teresting, perhaps memorable, at the meek teller, aptly named Miles Cullen, very least competent cinematic import. proves a latent criminal mastermind. That's what's especially disappoin- Anticipating on a hunch the robber's ting about The Silent Partner, a new heist, Miles contrives to pocket the bank's cash himself while making it appear his assailant has gotten away with all the loot. The robber, a sadistically repellent type -named Reikle (Christopher Plummer), swiftly puts two and two together and belatedly sets out to claim his booty by whatever grisly means necessary. Astonishingly, Miles con- tinues to outwit him at every turn, even framing his antagonist into jail for a time. The two men's stealthy beyond- the-law duel builds by leaps and sometimes gruesome turns, building to a climax that might seem ingeniously satisfying if only the film had even an ounce of charm in it. Unfortunately; charm, a mandatory element in any movie featuring a hero as ignobly dishonest as his peers, is ruinously lacking in Silent Partner. Director Daryl Duke and screenwriter' Curtis Hanson have contrived through accident or design to make Miles as mercenarily unappealing as those around him, a sycophant among sy- chopants. WE LEARN early on that our protagonist is rather luckless with women and also that he likes tropical fish; if Duke could only have included one endearing scene of Miles bumbling his way out of a potential date, just one shot of him making faces at a fish through the glass of his aquarium, we might have come to like him enough to care whether he pulls off his Walter Mit- ty caper. But as directed, and as played by Elliott Gould, Miles remains distant, sour, and unlovable. Gould's presence (Presumably a casting sacrifice to lure Americap audiences) remains a grotesque anomaly throughout. Shackled with a character the antithesis of his usual oafish wisecrackers, the actor seems so befuddled that he almost ceases per- forming altogether. His Miles becomes an immobile, blank-eyed mannequin; his lips pursed slightly together as if he were saying a perpetual "Oh!" to the assembled chicaneries he both obser- ves and precipitates. Christopher Plummer, a glorious ac- tor in a good role but often unbearably hammy in a bad one, is given too little motivation and too loose a reign as the slimy " Reikle. Plummer plays his character simultaneously half- supermacho and half-swish, a fascinating combo in - itself but shamelessly hotdogish within the context of anything else in the film. The gorgeous Celine Lomez radiates appropriate body heat but little else as Reikle's treacherous moll, while Susannah York remains a total mystery as her British accent and the film's murky sound system render most of her dialogue inaudible. Most disappointing is director Daryl Duke, whose 1973 film Payday is probably the best unknown movie of the last decade. During the intervening six years, Duke seems to have forgotten everything he ever knew-his scary scenes carry no menace, his gentle scenes no joy; his pacing is erratic, his editing sloppily confused. Duke makes virtually no cinematic use of his in- tricate Toronto locale, relying instead on endless closeups of Plummer preening, of York and Lomez inhaling heavily, and of Gould incessantly imitating a befuddled wombat. Worst of all, the director's clockwork insertions of nudity and violence come across, even in this jaded age, as unmistakably and venally gratuitous. It should be noted in passing that The Silent Partner recently won the Canadian version of Best Picture Oscar, perhaps through lack of com- petition. But lest one dismiss our nor- thern neighbors as cultural eunuchs, merely watch any CBC dramatic production or go to any show at Strat- ford to see just how masterfully honed Canadian showbiz can be. Considering its trans-border mobility, The Silent Partner isn't just bad cinema, it's downright bad diplomacy. No top hat? Fred Astaire, grandmaster of fleet feet and star of scores of MGM musicals, celebrated his 80th birthday yesterday. Here he is shown in costume on the set of "Battlestar Galactica" earlier this year.