Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY? Friday, May 24, 1974 cineina weekend ... with the sound of music Jeff Johnson (left) and Tony Cecere (right) serinade the Diag this week with French horn duet favorites. Their music can be heard floating through the Diag on sunny days this spring. _il traight from the suc cess of his Iast album it's the great voice ~ and songs of Kris Kristof- ferson on his new album, "Spooky Lady's Sideshow." only 29 thru 5-25 (Continued from Psge 5) cism be brushed aside with the alibi that this flick is science fiction: the foundations of sci- ence fiction - imaginative speculation, alien-ness, removal in space and or time-are no- where to be found. That the film is set in a future century is irrelevant: it could just as well have been set in 13th century China, 18th century Ireland (remember A Modest Propos- al?), or 20th century (fill inryotr favorite continent). For a filmmaker who has been called visionary, Boor- man's visions seem limited to two: one of barbarian feudal- ism, and one of technocratic feudalism. Space limits me to just one comment on Boor- man's perception of a society where women are whole and strong: paranoia strikes deep. Save your money. -Marnie Heyn The Sting State The fascinating aspects of The Sting are limitless: you could spend days trying to figure out what makes this film so success- ful and never come up with the right answer because there is none. The movie is utterly de- void of cinematic talent and completely claustrophobic. The screenplay by David Ward is strictly third-rate stuff - most of the "plot tricks" a r e about as hard to figure out as a three letter crossword puzzle. Stars Paul Newman and Rob- ert Redford smile, sweat, swear and swing a lot, but you know underneath- it all they're just bluffing until the paychecks are cashed and the percentage man- ey starts rolling in. -Michael Wilson Glass Menagerie Gay Liberation, MLB 3 Fri., Sat., 8 The Glass Menagerie is an emotionally - charged - Tennes- see Williams-deluxe full of real people and real feelings. This version, originally produced for television last season, is far and away the best adaptation of the famous Broadway and Holly- wood melodrama. On the screen in 1950, Kirk Douglas was the gentleman caller who changed the lives- briefly-of a fragile mother and her two "marvelous children." In this production, 1974 Tony- Award winner Michael Moriar- ity plays the shy caller with more believability than Douglas could ever hope to generate. Sam Waterston, who plays Nick Carraway in this year's Great Gatsby, gives a fine perform- ance as the overprotected son who skips out to a movie every time his mother goes on an emotive binge full of worry and sensitivity. Waterston's narration provides the structure for this excellent TV movie which features an out- standing Katherine Hepburn in her latest and what many have now called her greatest role. As the lonesome Southern belle with her cracky voice and age- less smile, Hepburn will leave you totally breathless. -Michael Wilson Philadelphia Story Gay Liberation, MLB 3 Fri., Sat., 10 The Philadelphia Story (1940) is probably one of the funniest and best loved Katherine Hep- burn comedies ever made. Adapted for the screen by Don- ald Ogden Stewart from the suc- cessful Broadway play by Philip dIS.. COU 3If recur o ON MONUMENT RECORDS AND TAPES Distributed by columbia/Epic Records 300 S. STATI 1235 UNIVERSITY 665.3679 6689866 MON-FRI: 9:30-9 SAT: 9:30-6 SUN: 12- 6 Cary Grant Barry, Philadelphia is a fancy tale concerning the idle rich and their idle brains-Hepburn, a spoiled snob separated from hubbie Cary Grant for over two years, finds herself close to an- other wedding day and not exactly sure she wants to go through it all over again. The love of her current life (Roland Young, with .hat never- ending waxy smile and wavy hair) is a total sap, so she falls for a reporter covering the big matrimonial celebration (James Stewart) in typical Hepburn fashion: they get drunk and Kate swoons. As the wedding day approach- es, Kate finds herself in love with not one but three different men. Whom she will choose- Cary, Jimmie or Roland-is half the fun; the other half is con- tained in an absolutely top- notch supporting cast that in- cludes Ruth Hussey, John Hal- liday, Mary Nash, Virginia Weidler and Henry Daniell. -Michael Wilson THIS WEEKEND 8:30 $2.50 ELEKTRA RECORD'S Paul Siebel ARTISTS AND CRAFTSPEOPLE PARTICIPATE in the largest dowtown Detroit Festival ever held! FEATURING The Detroit Symphony Orchestra - DATS: une 21-23 The University of Michigan CONTACT: Artists and Craftsmen Guild 2nd Floor, Michigan Union Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 668-7884 COUNTRY-WESTERN SINGER-SONGWRITER wrote _Louise'. 'Any Day Woman".etc. ?4U7,W STREET