Friday, July 26, 1974 THE MCHIGAN DAILY cinemo weekend Page Five Pick of the week: Darling Friends of Newsreel, MLB Fri., Sat., 7 Darling is a 1965 British film that has got to be seen to be believed. Julie Christie receiv- ed an Academy Award for her portrayal of the young and swinging London model who sleeps her way to the pinnacle of sucecss, only to have the price of the laundry bill topple her over so the end. Directed by John Schlesinger, who deserved an Academy Award for making Christie look like a star (but didn't get one), Darling is a sometimes bril- liant, often emotionally draining work of art for the Midnight Cowboy director. Of course, Schlesinger could hardly do no wrong, seeing as how Frederic Raphael did t h e script for a cast that also in- cluded Dirk Bogarde and Laur- ence Harvey. Harvey is the pro- fessionaldoutcast ofythe film, and his death last year makes his presence even more sinister than ever on the screen. Bogarde, meanwhile, is his typical Death in Venice brooding self, but gives a nice imperson- ation of English manners, mor- es, and morbidity. The picture is a worthy achievement in that you hate it because it works so well. They just 'don't make them like this any more in any studio. -Michael Wilson WUSA Cinema II, And. A Sat., 7:30, 9:30 Stuart Rosenberg's WUSA (1970) was a financial bomb be- cause nobody wanted to go see Paul Newman in a serious poli- tical statement about the times we live in. Still, the picture is a sleeper, filled with excellent characteri- zations by Newman, Anthony Perkins, and Joanne Woodward. The dialogue sounds phony at first, but just remember New- man wrote (sans credit) 80 per cent of the script himself, out of anger and frustration. Like so often, Paul plays a drifter - super-cool, smiling, and smoking the way we're used to him. This time, however, he drifts into a country-western ra- dio station with the "wrong" political leanings. The result is, granted, struc- turally a mess, but the scenes involving Newman and W o o d- sard are the best they've played together in years. Perkins works for the welfare depart- ment and almost satirizes his hopelessly neurotic, imagina- tively psychotic working-class idiot into his finest performance since Psycho. Watch for Cloris Leachman in a bit as a cripple with more on her mind than crutches, and for one incredible scene where the old Wally from Ozzie and Harriet pops up as an over- weight radio station executive. WUSA is super fun, and a heck of a picture as well. Go see it - it's a high-class achievement. ---Michael Wilson For Pete's Sake Michigan Barbra Streisand stars in this quasi-sequel to the very success- ful What's Up, Doc? Pete's pace is just as frantic and some of the lines are just as funny as the material in the original Peter Bogdanovich feature. Bas- ically, however, Pete s i m p 1 y doesn't stack up. Streisand portrays a harried housewife who, having plunged her husband into debt to cover a nebulous investment, now must come up with a scheme to raise $3000 in a hurry. Her Everything You've Always Wanted To Know About Sex The Movies, Briarwood Never in a milion years wilt WoodyeAllen approach the tal- ent he displayed in the late six- ties as a nightclub comedian and rising filmmaker. In be- tween all the hoopla about his talent and cute looks and funny plays, Woody made this f ii m based on the infamous David Reuben book and turned in some of the best acting and directing of his career, True, Everything has its low points, but there are scenes in this film that have got to be some of the most hilarious and imaginative satires to c o m e around in a long time. There are some great foreign film takeoffs, for example, featuring Allen in a deft pair of sun- glasses. Everything is being shown as a double-bill with Mr. Majestyk, Michigan Daily Arts e 4 answering the age old question "Why a Duck?" than any other is Duck Soup. Perhaps the best of the Marx Brothers comedies made for Paramount, Soup is a tale of political intrigue, love, and war in the. mythical nation of Freedonia. The fun begins at the first appearance of Groucho, and doesn't stop until the clos- ing credits. Full of the glib banter of Groucho, the terrible puns of Chico, and the superb panto- mime of Harpo, .with a great supporting cast of characters, including Zeppo Marz, Margar- et Dumont, and Edgar Kennedy, this is a tremendously f o n n y movie. The brand of comedy that is to be found in this film is trad- itional Marx madness. Their style has been studied to death in recent years, so suffice to say that if you like comedy at its best, you will love Duck Soup. -David Warren Terminal Man The Movies, Briarwood Terminal stars George Segal in a fascinating failure of a mo- tion picture. Directed and writ- ten by Mike Hodges from Mich- ael Crichton's best-selling novel, Terminal is one-third interest- ing and two-thirds ridiculous. Crichton's story of a slightly disturbed paranoid psychotic who submits to an operation for a cure to his "disease" was at best fairly nice paperback ma- terial. On celluloid, the results of this complex and frightening futuris- tic medical technology make a big joke of Segal and seems closer to a Dean Martin shoot- em-up than a valid comment on where we're all headed. The problem lies somewhere between the fact that G e o r g e is making far too many pictures and the sophomoric essence of the material. Jean Hackett and Donald Moffat are also featured in this terminally slick shock treatment. -Michael Wilson Pumpkin Eater Friends of Newsreel, MLB Fri., Sat., 9:30 One of the finest British films to come out during the '60s was a Jack Clayton masterpiece cal- led The Pumpkin Eater, star- ring Anne Bancroft, Peter Finch, James Mason, and Yee- tha Joyce. Pumpkin Eater details t h e double breakdown of a woman's marriage and personality in al- most Eugene O'Neill-like fash- ion. There are long, unnerving sequences of dialogue and over- worked characters that w il1l fray your nerves, but the per- formances are simply astonish- ing, with Bancroft the standout and Joyce running a close se- cond in her small role as a beauty parlor patron. Finch plays Anne's decaying husband and does well with his understated character, although standing continually in B a n- croft's shadow. The screenplay was prepared by Harold Pinter from Penelope Mortimer's fas- cinating novel. All in all, Pump- kin is a must-see. -Michael Wilson Bank Shot State We saw in Patton that gruff old George C. Scott actually could turn out a dazzling p e r- formance. But ever since he starred in Franklin Schaffner's 1970 war extravaganza, S c ott hasn't lit up the silver screen with anything resembling bril- liant acting. Bank Shot is no exception. It's a typical shoot-'em-up-and-rob- the-bank flick, and doesn't even have the black humor that made Thunderbolt and Lightfoot at least somewhat bearable. We're told now that Scott plans to peddle his next film through his own distributing company. I wonder why. -David Blomquist Chinatown Fox Village Roman Polanski has a repu- tation for being a great direc- tor. However, he also has a reputation for being inconsist- ent. His latest film, China- town, is possibly the best film he has ever made. It is a thrill- er mystery of the first order. It is the tale of a private in- vestigator, Jack Nicholson, who is caught up in a scandal and a series of murders involving the leading citizens of Los An- geles of the 1930's. The action is fast, and the acting is the best in years. Ni- cholson plays his role with a cool and cynical style reminis- cent of Bogart. Faye Dunaway plays the woman who is trying to run away from her past in the best performance of her career. Polanski has been compared to Hitchcock, but the compari- son is not justified. Polanski has proven in this film that he is equal to any of the great direc- tors of mystery movies. -David Warren ideas: prostitution and c a t t 1 e rustling. (That's part of the humor, gang.) It's an enjoyable picture, but it could have been better. -David Blomquist Hombre Cinema II, Aud. A Fri., 7:30, 9:30 Hombre (1967) is a slightly, sentimental, morally saturated Western with a penchant f or slow-moving dialogue and a brief pause now and then to sa- lute John Ford's classic 1939 film Stagecoach. Besides Paul Newman, t h e excellent cast includes Frederic March, Diane Cilente and Rich- ard Boone. Irving Ravetch and Harriet Frank colaborated on the "thoughtfully political" screenplay, which sometimes borders on tedium when the so- called "moral issues" are rais- ed and Newman has to figure out which side he's rooting for. Ravetch and Frank, also re- sponsible for the superior New- man vehicle Hud, created here a good old-fashioned shootout film. Director Martin Ritt weav- es it all into a great Western kinetic melodrama. -Michael Wilson the latest Charles Bronson thril- ler. -Michael Wilson Love and Anarchy Campus This is beatifully constructed Italian pornography, starring Giancarlo Gianinni in a sort of Day of the Jackal takeoff about a man who has a bullet with the initials "B.M." that he plans to fire into Mussolini's skull. Unfortunately, Tunin, our hero, bumps into a pretty streetwalker (portrayed incred- ibly well by Lina Polito), an d becomes momentarily detoured. Many of the scenes take place in the inevitable house of il1l repute, and director-writer Lin- da Wertmuller makes this an advantage by using real-life to- cations and brilliant co-stars. Wertmuller is a fine technic- ian and willrno doubt be heard from again. She is a welcome addition to an industry that is desperately lacking in female directors. -Michael Wilson Duck Soup Cinema Guild The film that comes closer to Handel wins duel of musical rivals By CHARLES SMITH George Frederic Handel never man- aged to vanquish his musical rivals in 18th-century London.. It was left for later musicians to deliver the verdict of his superiority over his contemporaries, a verdict made all the more obvious on listening to a selection of pieces by the composers in question. In a program entitled "Handel and His Rivals", the Philidor Trio, a group of three young musicians, played a va- riety of pieces. Some were by Handel's lesser contemporaries, Porpora and Bononcini, and were wisely placed at the beginning of the program, followed by music of Handel himself (including arias in florid keyboard transcription by his pupil, Babell). A potpouri of songs and instrumental pieces associated with John Gay's The Beggar's Opera (with music arranged from popular tunes by Pepusch) ended the generally successful program. The Trio played best in the better music. Elizabeth Humes, the soprano, has a fine voice and seemed consistently the most enthusiastic and musically con- scientious of the three. Shelley Gruskin plays recorder excellently and flute well, although he got off to a relatively slow start. As the evening wore on, his play- ing became more colorful, well thought- out and interesting. Edward Smith's harpsichord playing was problematic. His accompanying was generally colorless, as he avoided using articulations to provide variety, relying on registration changes instead. There were problems in his pacing, as he tended to rush ahead of his two com- panions. Smith came to life in his performance of the solo transcriptions, however, al- though he could have allowed himself more room- to breathe and relax with the music. His playing was occasionally, sloppy in these more difficult pieces. The group as a whole played effective- ly, with nicely worked-out ensemble and a pleasing balance of solo and ensemble sonorities. Detracting from this overall favorable impression, however, was the poor stage presence of the two instru- mentalists, especially their tendency to cut off the ends of pieces as if in a hurry to begin the following piece. The best number of the evening was the storm aria from Handel's opera, Julius Ceasar, with excellent recorder playing and singing. The other Handel arias, from Julius Ceasar and Alcina, were also done well, although occasion- ally constricted by the rigid forms in which the music was written. The second time through an Aria da capo should never be allowed to sound like just the second time around. Al- though some pains were taken, especial- ly by the soprano, to reornament and to some extent reinterpret the music, the completion of the Aria da eapo structure was rarely projected as musically inter- esting as its beginning. Handel's Sonata in D minor for record- er and harpsichord and the three arias from Bononcini's Astarte which opened the program were well executed. By comparison, the pieces by Popora, his Sonata for flute and clavier, and the secular Cantata, 'Ecco infausto lido", were the low point of the program. Popora is remembered these days as an opera company manager who rivalled Handel, a singing instructor, and a teacher of Haydn, but not as a compos- er. Neither of these pieces seemed to be worth the trouble of performing, and, as the program was long anyway, might profitably have been cut. The encore, which was an 18th-century French setting of a la Fontaine fable, for soprano, musette, and clavecin, was so well performed that it made one regret that tIere weren't some Frenchmen in London rivalling Handel.