Wednesday, May 22, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Wensa, Ma 2 94TEMCIA AL aeFv Truffaut views exploitation in 'Such a Gorgeous Kid' By BRUCE SHLAIN Daily Film Reviewer The recognition of directors as attleurs, as creators of a complete body of work that en- compasses all of their films, has become an absolute necessity in viewing the most recent films of Bergman, Bunuel, and Truffaut. A director's relation to his own work can even be obsessive, as in Bergman's attempt to re- duce his chamber drama to a single pure emotion residing in the "cries and whispers" be- yond language, to the plane of blood red beyond ,he human im- age. BUNUEL'S last film, The Dis- creet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, also had this quality of cnping all of his previous work, at least insofar as a large part of the discreet charm involved tioe sur- realist Bunuel in his gesture of bowing out of the cinema. Similarly, Fellini's Roma was structured as a documeoary -on the city of Rome, but it was really more of a iourney through all of the man's previous films and where they fou-sd their seed. Truffaut, in his career as a film critic, was the foremost proponent of the auteur theory, and now his work is beginning to see itself in a retrospective sense and comment upon its cwn development. Truffaut has al- ways tread a very delicate line between soppy senti'sentaiism and real tragicomic drama. The artistic event, when it happen- ed, usually drew its trength from the differences i- tone, between what was happening and how it was preastei. Thus the child Leaud in 400 Bows is charming and witty while de- scribing his traumatic childhood to a social worker. This is the "Truffaut touch," which is al- ways double-edged; it is aisaoys part "sentimental," but th tra- gedy of romantic idealism is al.. ways played out in the back- ground. THIS IS the romantic tragedy of Truffaut's Antoine Domel shrouded in a se'imentality character, that his dilemma is that will leave him always co- fused. In Two English G i r I s, Truffaut buried the amazing character Doinel, having his re- lation with two sisters twist his C' EDITOR'S NOTE - In an attempt to make weekend moviegoing a little easier, The Daily has for several years run as a regular fea- ture each Friday the Cine- ma Weekend column. Well, with hopes of providing a similar service for midweek film freaks, the Cinema Week- end column - beginning today- becomes a daily feature under the title Cinema Tonight. Movies for Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, as well as pictures at the area commercial thea- ters, will continue to be review- ed on Friday, as in the past, as Cinema Weekend. But for Tuesday through Thursday movies, watch for Cinema Tonight each weekday. Tonight's best bet: Beat the Devil Friends of Newsreel, MLB 3 8, 10 One really can't say that Beat the Devil is a bomb - the cast and crew that made it are just too good to turn out a compktely bad motion picture. Let's just leave it at "this film dream of love into the lirenmoni- tion of old age. Now he is left with -he "Trif- faut touch" and 'h-s 'not tick- ed up another film persona to speak through, eveni'aly 'ising himself in Day for Night. the result is that he .'s llosving his style to clash more apenly with the events he is deoick'ng, he reality shifts are made shock- ingly obvious, and in general his movie Such a Gorgeous Kid Like Me is by far his most vio- lent, frenzied, and self parodic film. It resembles most closely the Italian film that 'von the Can- nes prize last vear, Le Grande Bouffe, in which Mtarreilo Mas- trianni and three other Italian gentlemen calmly eat themselv- es to death in a country home. Of course, after a while, things no longer stay calm, turning al- ternately to the m.snotsoaos md the obscene to sustain i~selt as a film. TRUFFAUT has never been as concerned with the perverse element in human exploitalon as he is in Gorgeous Kid. In this film everyone expl-uts each other as much as possibi, aid the horrible isolati tn and greed- iness that they display is only counterpointed by the accidental nature of everything that hap- pens to them, all twists of chance, as Ti-iffait enphas-ed in the screenplay re and God- ard did for Breathless. The spontaneity of Camilla Bhs es- caping from the leration home, donning her high-heeled shoes, hailing a car with some lasciv- ious gestures and marrying the driver is too outrage >os for us to consider if it was a ' good idea." It is something o, a pure event insofar as it is drained of meaning. Getting married is to Casilla the same kind of proposition as that of wrangling CamAl cigar- ettes from her sociologist inter- viewer while being interviewed in prison. THE KITSCH element of com- mercial art, the draining of meaning, becomes the subject matter of Truffaut'; art. He chooses a kitsch personality, an Xaviera .Hollander comnmercial figure (who Camilla resembles insofar as she becomes famous (See TRUFFAUT, Page 9) Francois Truffaut neMNa never gets off the ground." ema scen Humphrey Bogart plays the all filmgt lead in this wry little spy spoof of Fu A drawn from James Helvick's goodie re novel, but Billy Dannbreuther is Hollywoo not one of Bogie's better roles. Boris F A stellar supporting cast - their idol Jennifer Jones, Gina Lollobrig- is probab ida, Robert Morley, and Peter of Horro Lorre - tries hard, but just Everyone can't seem to get into the spirit thing to4 of the picture. supportin And behind the camera for all Lewis St this we find John Huston, who period di seems to have forgotten the bin. acting end of the movie entire- And, a ly and concentrated primarily enough, on having fun with photographic thrown in effects. That's nice, but this for good isn't one of Truman Capote's what sho better screenplays, and the film able prog could have used a stronger hand on the helm. Still, Beat the Devil is a rare- Eroti ly seen ninety-odd minutes. of Bogie, and perhaps in the end that makes up for this film's Ann other rather glaring shortcom- And ings. You mt -David Blomquist about th M *erotic in so -ago. Mask of Fu Manchu signial th Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. ing to of .7:30, 9:30 - Actuall For once we have on the cin- able feat ie a horro oers can en Manchu,a lic of theg d. Karloff fan 's perform bly one of rs' greate else wil cheer abo g cast (N one) and; rection by s if all I Cinema four Betty measure ould be a gram. --David tonight r movie that happens to be the first "adult" by a group njoy - Mask feature scheduled after the pro- student revo an oldie-but- nouncement of the Fleming ptr- The theme grand days of no guidelines. American st If you've got nothing better to revolution in s will enjoy do tonight, you could drop by is told throw nance (Mask Aud. A and put in your two of the revolu the Master cents worth as to whether or not proof that th st pictures). showing Zorro represents 'ma- tore is not a1 I find somne- ture judgment." But do to at claims, but t in a good your own risk: I have it on Good perfo Myrna L o y, good word that Zorro is no: an by all of the , some classic easy man to deal with. excellent pox Charles Bra- -Z by Yves Mon State of Siege makes a val that wa. n t New World Film Co-op rection, but .)uild has MLB Aud. 3, 7:30, 9:30 drag in spot; y Boot shorts State of Siege by Cos-ta-Gav- Neverthelet to top off ras is the account of the kid- articulate, at very enjoy- napping of an American CIA of American agent, Philip Michael Santore, of South American lutionaries. of the film is the sppressi'>n of the South America. It gh the ac a:tioas tionaries, and t h e iey have that San- businessman, as he a C.I.A. agent. rmances are given actors, including an rtrayal of santare tand. Costa-tavras ient attempt in di- the film seems to s. so, this film is ar nd bitter indictmen' imoperialism. -David Warren SBlomquist ic Adventures cif Zorro Arbor Film Co-op d. A, 7, 8:45,.10:30 ay have seen the spread is example ,c f cinema n Playboy a year or Usually, that's a good at the picture has noth- fer on its own. y, about the only not- ure of Zorro is that it Michigan Daily Arts