The Michigan Daily-Thursday, July 26, 1979-Page 7 Summer cinema sappy, not scary (Continued from Page 6) sch, there's not enough of it-or of anything else, for that matter. It is probably the most laid-back horror film I've ever seen, beholden to no one, of in- terest to few more. NIGHTWING'S villain is a giant hor- de of vampire bats that suddenly begin terrorizing southern New Mexico, its heroes are a near-psychotic professional bat hunter (blatantly lifted from the obsessed shark catcher of Jaws) and a less-rapt (but wiser) In- dian deputy. The film unfolds slowly and deliberately, a process which could have proven a welcome change of pace from the loose-ends mania endemic to most horror cinema. Yet any slow build needs a solid, shivery payoff to build toward, and Nightwing ultimately provides none. It's a monster movie virtually without a monster. Responsibility for this strange void presumably lies with director Arthur Hiller, probably the least talented American filmmaker alive and a per- petual bane to dozens of more able ar- tists who work far less regularly than he. Martin Cruz Smith's original novel, while no work of art, at least provided a goodly share of gruesome thrills and atrocities prerequisite to netting a hefty readership. But despite a huge budget, director Hiller and screenwriter Steve Shagan have simply eliminated many of Smith's shock scenes and whittled down the remainder to the level of Rocky the Flying Squirrel. Nightwing's bats from Hell occupy no more than ten minutes of the film's two hours of running time, and are largely painted onto the screen as crudely as were the feathered friends of Hitchcock's The Birds-save for one oft-repeated closeup of a cuddly rodent grimacing and arthritically flapping his wings following a trip to the taxidermy shop. It's no mystery why the kiddie corps has avoided this epic in droves- Nightwing is not only idiotic, it isn't any fun either. And in this genre, that's by far the greater sin. MOONRAKER, the eleventh and by far the most financially lavish of the limitless James Bond epics, suffers from a similar handicap in that its most memorable scene occurs during the fir- st five minutes of the film-even before the opening titles, in fact-and thus all the lavish machinations that follow comprise a visual if not thematic an- ticlimax. Its opening sequence, in- volving free-fall hand-to-hand combat between Bond (Roger Moore) and an adversary over a parachute, is so daz- zingly delineated that one is caught halfway between skittery apprehension over whether the hero will emerge triumphant and open-mouthed in- credulity over how they ever managed to stage the thing at all. When moments later the lovable leviathan Jaws (Richard Kiel) swoops Dracula-like out of the sky hot on Bond's airborne trail,. one gets the giddy feeling that Moon- raker's potential for wizardly adven- ture is going to be limitless. That this promise isn't fulfilled shouldn't really be that surprising. What's fascinating is how durably popular the Bond genre has remained since its inception in the early 60's, how the series' intransigent formula pastiche of mod weaponry, megalomaniacal villains and exotic females has survived intact through a decade and a half of assassinations. Vietnam, Watergate and Werner Erhard. Yet how fresh cana formula remain when it is repeated to the point of somnam- bulism? Beneath its bevy of slapdash gizmo machinations, Moonraker exudes an overbearing weariness, a lack of creative energy symptomatic not so much of social rigor mortis as of simple cinematic lethargy, of a timorous disinclination to tamper with a heretofore inexhaustible money machine. DIRECTOR LEWIS Gilbert pulls all the usual strings, but his frenetic pacing does little to camouflage the film's absence of invention and flare. Moonraker's action scenes rarely exhibit the ferment or humor charac- teristic of the series' earlier days, its time-honored sexual double entendres fail to rouse anything more than a lukewarm snicker. The film even exudes an unmistable technical tackiness, notably during a climactic, planet-saving outerspace battle which never rises above the level of a Bat- tiestar Gallactica shootout-rather less than one would expect from a (much- advertised) 30 million dollar budget. Gilbert's vapid direction extends down to most of his actors. 'Roger Moore again proves all too whinsically bland a Bond (though I always found Sean Connery's basically vicious inter- pretation equally unsettling). Michael Lonsdale projects the most stodgily vapid supervillain ever to grace the series, while the untalented Lois Childs is so remote and passionless as Bond's fellow agent and bed partner that one is barely aware she's in the film at all, even though she occupies a goodly por- tion of it. Which leaves the charisma depar- tment pretty much solely up to the 7'2" Kiel, who lurches, grunts and gouges with a bouncy, determined vigor. Too bad he's not given more than two speaking lios or allowed to flash his steel chopperk on less than a hundred occasions; even charm has its limits. END OF PART ONE W VEiFZSlT'Y IUSICAL c OCIETY present8 0 hie is preserved on The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard Street AND Graduate Library Fonnerift orum ieer r COME FOR THE "Ei ird" WOODY ALLEN DIANE KEATON MICHAEL MURPHY MARIEL HEMINGWAY ENDS ERYL STREEP SOON! NNE BYRNE Wed Sat. Sun. (Adults $1.50 tit 3:00) 2:30, 4:20, 6:20, 8:10, 10:00 Mon. Tues. Thurs. Fri. (Adults $1.50 tit 6:3016:20,8:10,10:00 Philippe enT RGmonT This popular French pianist makes his fifth Ann Arbor appearance. His recital program is: Four pieces from Op. 118 . . Brahms Symphonic Etudes ...... Schumann Five Preludes............ Debussy Sonata No. 2 ........... Prokofiev Tickets are $4, $5.50 and $7 at Burton Tower, weekdays 9-4:30, Sat. 9-12. On the night of the 30th, also at the box office after 7 pm Tel: 665-3717. Mon.,July 30 8:30 pm in Rackham Auditorium