The Michigan Daily-Thursday, May 24, 1979-Page 7 Namesake illuminates Manhattan Continued from page six) piece on the Times' op-ed page while Michael O'Donoghue, looking like he just flew in from the planet Psycho, pops up as a director planning a movie about a guy "who screws so great that when he brings a woman to orgasm, she dies." In an early scene, Keaton, hiding behind a maelstrom of cultural arcana, rattles off a list of artists and writers she and Murphy have righteously relegated to their "Academy of the Overrated" (members include Gustav Mahler, F. Scott Fitzgerald) and Lenny Bruce) while Woody looks on in barely- contained fury. She's even more ob- noxious than the pompous Fellini-baiter who chewed Alvy Singer's ear off in that movie line. Here, though, there's no Marshall McLuhan around to puncture anyone's pretentions. Some of this might seem better suited to the satiric setting Allen honed to per- fection in Annie Hall's California send- us that his relationships with women could be summed up in the old Groucho Marx joke, "I would never want to belong to a club that would have me as a member," he converted a lifelong conflict into a stinging one-liner. Manhattan, easily the most hilarious movie I've seen since Annie Hall, isn't a comedy; except for a disquietingly, funny scene with macabre skeleton as metaphor, it doesn't use humor as much as it throws it in for sideline spice. Now, it's the drama that reached Herculean heights. Allen and Keaton whisper ner- vous encouragement to each other while silhouetted by a planetarium's ghostly lunar surface, and the effect is stunning. The end, with a Mona Lisa smile creeping onto Allen's face as Hemingway implores him just to "have a little faith in people," is sublime. HOLDING ALL THIS together is the backdrop of Manhattan as the mythical paradise of Gershwinesque skylines, a vision at once affirmed by the charac- v. pire State Building, Times Square, and Central Park are plainer shots of tenement housing and riverside dum- ps-the glamor has accrued some of the grit of modernity, but it's survived. The film concludes with several of the same shots, only the melodrama in between lends them a deeply moving resonance. The final shot is a warm but "unglorious" picture of a bridge swathed in heavy fog; it says that Manhattan isn't simply a land of romance and opportunity, but a place where real people (yeah, just like you and me) carry on with their lives. To expand on the opening of Isaac's novel, it's a metaphor for the survival as well as the decay of contemporary culture. Woody Allen's feelings about New York are roughly the same as his feelings about life in general: Sometimes, it may look like it's going down the tubes, but it's still the most wonderful thing on earth. Film critic Owen Gleiberman's ardent en- thusiasm for "Manhattan " will be answered by his colleague Christopher Potter in a more restrained review on tomorrow's arts page. More shots from the latest Allen vehicle will appear as well. --Arts Ed. Allen wittily expostulates on a modern sculpture's "negative capability" in his magnificent new film, "Manhattan." Diane Keaton, as his sometime lover Mary Wilke, amusedly looks on. up; the scene with Keaton is funny, but sticks out as a rather pointed and pre- packaged. But Allen is also intent on exploring the relationship between per- sonal integrity and its societal and cultural foundations. The book Isaac's. ex-wife is cashing in on is a tacky self- help manual, though Streep righteously calls it "an honest book," content that her culture reveres "honesty" (as in, "Ya gotta be true to yerself, man ... ") above all else. MANHATTAN is further evidence for those who insist that Woody Allen is America's (long-awaited?!) answer to Ingmar Bergman. The analogy may not be so bad, though, because there are moments when pain drips from the screen like huge tear drops. Part of this comes from the way Woody's lighthearted comic sensibility plays with our expectations. When Isaac leaes Tracy for Mary and Hemingway begins crying helplessly into her ice cream soda, the effect is truly-to borrow aphrase-devastating. Annie Hall registered its emotions through comedy; when Alvy Singer told ters' ambitions, their lust for living, and undercut by their mutual waywar- dness..The opening montage of skylines (with Rhapsody in Blue in the background) is a rapturous vision of the Manhattan of crystal dreams. Mixed in with classic views of the Em- Residential College Summer Players announce open auditions & technical crew meeting for Bertolt Brecht's PUNTIA AND MATM, HI/S HIRED MAN May 25, 26, 27 at 4:00pm Residential College East Quadrangle For info call 764-0084