Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, May 31, 1974 'Extemperaneous wy':Ce Eusrm f wriw r~s~ ! cvuInIg lN Henr MIewI I fyo (Continued from PageS) If you can stand the mundane (Continued from Page5) This particular piece comes very close to the realm of - n- temporary music composition, with the actors singing vowel sounds and performing rhyth- mic lines on rattles and bongos. A speaker delivers a line which is then kinetically given life on the stage, in a series of niove- ments that are extremely ritual- istic. The supermarket drama extol- ling the virtues of orang' juice is part of "Perfect People", a witty chop at the Madison Ave- nue - Nationwide TV conception of American life. If for nothing else, you should atte'd The Ex- temporaneous Body for the sterling portrayal of constipa- tion in this skit. The pictures of humanity giv- en in these playlets are disturb- ingly real, a tribute to the qual- ity of this small but energetic company. The familiar and the absurd sides of contemporary society are well blended in a rainbow of dramatic entertain- ment. K~arl Malden -and he's in this one a lot - this picture may turn out to be one of your fav- orites, too. Waterfront is definitely four- star melodrama, with a dyna- mite Lee J. Cobb pitted against the short fuse of Marlon Brando in possible one of the greatest films to come out during Koz- an's never-ending career. This film won a whole hand- ful of Oscars, include B e s t Picture. --Michael Wilson The New Centurions Friends of Newsreel, MLB 3 Sat., 8, 9:45 ._ UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ARTISTS & CRAFTSMEN GUILD SHOW & SALE VARIED ENTERTAINMENT NOW THROUGH JUNE 2 9:30 A.M.--9:30 P.M. SUNDAY 12--5 P.M. BRIARWOOD 85 STORES & SERVICES 1-94 & STATE ST. ANN ARBOR, MICH. George C. Scott might just possibly be the closest thing we moviegoers now have to com- pare with the richtalents of a Spencer Tracy from long ago. Even though Scott still consents to starring in bombs like Day of the Dolphin and Oklahoma Crude, it is to his credit that the performer has made a small handful of notable triumphs, giving forth his superb acting many times in the midst of in- significant screenplays. The New Centurions (1972), adapted from real-life Joseph Wambaugh's best-seling novel, is another super Scott perform- ance thrown in during a boring and otherwise inconsequential crime drama. Unfortunately, Wambaugh, now a self-made television mil- lionaire, dreams up the kind of police situations you'd sooner laugh at than want to take ser- iously. The Los Angeles Police Force has already asked him to retire and leave them alone. Ntw Centurions is cheap El- liott Ness, but features a sui- cidal George C. Scott along with a fairly psychotic Stacy Keach whose mind is blown w h e n George blows his own brains out. If you like simple crime THE PLA CE TO BOWL UNiON LANES win a free game! 85 full page photos (12" x 16") from the amazing work of Edward Curtis' portrayal of American Indian life. Probably says more in pictures than most books on American Indians say in thousands of words. $14C98 melodrama, and cheap photo. graphy as well, this is the one. -Michael Wilson Three Musketeers Fifth Forum When we last saw director Richard Lester some five years ago, he was quickly fading out of the film scene with a series of British pseudo - surrealistic movies after experiencing a brief success as the director of the Beatles' pictures. He had stepped out of the his area of strength - comedy - and the lackluster nature of his films showed it. Then last year the former Philadelphia TV writer who left in the early '0s for England and the Goon Show managed to drum up financial support from producer Ily Salkind and some Panamanian interests for another Richard Lester comedy. The product, The Three Mus- keteers, is hilarious. Lester hasn't ironed out all of the problems that plagued him in his Hard Day's Night era- Musketeers is plagued by some slow pacing in a few places. But his subtle, witty touches are, just magnificent. Michael Tork stars as D'Ar- tagnan, the apprentice Muske- teer, and turns in a fine per- formance. Simon Ward, Raquel Welch, and Geraldine Chaplin round out the cast (and by the way, Raquel can act). -David Blomqust What's Up, Doc? Campus Peter Bogdanovich takes no chances when it comes to mak- ing a comedy. The ingredients for his slap-happy and slightly hysterical What's Up Doc? in- clude filming a partial remake of Howard Hawe's screwball Bringing Up Baby (1938), en- listing the penmanship talents of not only Buck Henry (who did the screenplay for Mike Ni- chols's smash The Graduate) but David Newman and Robert Benton as well (they wrote Ar- thur Penn's celebrated Bonnie and Clyde), and finally, as- sembling a cast with spectacu- lar stars like Barbra Streisand, Ryan O'Neal, Madeline Kahn, and Kenneth Mars. Having realized what appears to be the ultimate in comedy production, Bogdanovich then hired every out-of-work Holly- wood stuntment he could find to make his dream come true. The result is sheer physical chaos from start to finish. 1 guarantee the laughs because nobody makes good smash-'em- up comedies anymore, and young Bogdanovich seems to compensate for this gap all by himself during the course of one picture. What's Up, Doc? -may not be very funny, but it at least brings meaning to the word zany again. Many feel Streisand and O'Neal are mere puppets and hinder the film. Believe me - nothing could hinder What's Up, Doc?. -Michael Wilson Thunderbolt and Lightfoot The Movies, Briarwood Just what we all needed to get through the summer - an- other dull, predictable, and to- tally absurd police - bad guys melodrama. Breaking windshields, fish fights, pulp- novel - quality dialogue, and wailing sirens abound in this liatest in a string of complete- ly forgettable nothings from United Artists. Clint Eastwood and Jeff Bridges head up the cast, but who really cares? After all, how watchable can a police film be when the plot calls for the bank robbers to use a cannon to break into the vaults? -David Blomqu st Special "PORTRAITS FROM NORTH AM. INDIAN LIFE" by Edward Curtis. List price $30.00. SALE $14.98. - [ NEW SHIPMENT OF AMAZING DISCOUNT BOOKS 40% TO 80% OFF Q EXCELLENT SELECTION OF HARDCOVERS $1.00 TO $1:98 Z OVER 1,000 PAPERBACKS 1/ PRICE 316 So. State St. Ann Arbor OPEN TILL 10 P.M. MON-SAT., SUN. 11-6