Friday, August 16, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY cinemQ weekend Pqge Five Picks of the week: Bergman weekend Hour of the Wolf Cinema I Sat., 7:30, 9:30 Ingmar Bergman has explored the themes of maddness in film more than any other film maker. The interesting aspect of this is that he is able to deal with this theme over and over and can offer new insights in each work. One of his best in this genre is Hour of the Wolf, a tale of maddness and suicide on a lonely Swedish island. Max van Sydow portrays an artist, who, with his wife, Liv Ullman moves to an island in the North Sea. While there he is plagued by ghosts, monsters, and traumatic memories of his past, all in a surreal light. His wife, out of her intense love for him, begins to live in some of the fantasy of her husband. It is never made clear whe- ther the apparitions are really there or not. Bergman explores the power of insanity in a way that borders on the real, we never really know if what we see is the product of a madman, or if we are going mad. The questioning of everyday reality is also an important ele- ment in this film, and Bergman frames his scenes in a halflight that adds to the surrealistic. An excellent film that poses many important questions about the mind. -David Warren Winter Light Cinema II Fri., 7:30, 9:30 A small church in Sweden is the setting for Winter Light, a film that deals with the dilem- ma of religion, and its applica- tion to the atomic. In'gmar Bergman has made another of his excellent films about the human condition. Gunnar Bjornstand is the min- ister of the parish, whose mem- bership is dwindling at a rapid rate. His relations with the parishoners is meaningless, be- cause he cannot relate any of his clerical training to their plight. His mistress, Ingrid Thulin, a drab school teacher, cannot understand his feelings of inefficacy, but throughout the film tries to give him some meaning to his life. The film spans one day in the minister's life, from morning mass, with an attendance of five, to vespers in the evening, when no-one attends. He goes through the ritual, but he is mechanical, and hollow. Bergman exhibits his feelings about religion, and the loss of meaning of ritual to the com- mon man. Moreover, he also shows the doubt that must come from a man of God who does not have the ability, or faith to cope with the modern world. -David Warren His Girl Friday Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sat., 7:30, 9:30 Howard Hawkes film remake of the stage play Front Page was made in 1940, and was re- named His Girl Friday. It stars Rosiland Russel and C a r y Grant, giving a very strained performance. This is the story of Hildy Johnson, a woman reporter re- cently divorced from Walter Burns, her editor. They both get involved in trying to stop an execution of an innocent man. Throughout the film, Hildy threatens to marry another man, portrayed by Ralph Bel- lamy, but in the end Walter wins her heart again. This is a funny film, with some great dialogue, but much of it is lost because of poor sound. The direction is good, but it will seen apparent why Howard Hawkes got the repu- tation for being the hardest di- rector to work for. -David Warren Jules and Jim Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Fri., 7:30, 9:30 , Jules and Jim (1962), directed by the unique and captivating French filmmaker Francois Truffaut, is a highly sensitive film about a romantic triangle. There is comedy, but not high comedy, and there are melodra- matic moments. but, the most noteworthy aspect of Jules and Jim, is the way Truffaut man- ages to understate everything. Thus, if you go thinking it's an entertaining film, you're bound to be bored within 15 minutes. Jeanne Moreau is the girl ev- erybody wants but can't have; Oscar Werner, the stone face from Farenheit 451 is excellent as the husband with seemingly everything: Henri Serre plays the friend of the family beauti- fully. During its time Jules and Jim was alone in the race for "meaningful" films. Today, it may be perhaps one of the most meaningful films of all time. But it's still not great. -Michael Wilson 100 years ago. One was the Sand Creek Massacre (1864), and the other was the Wounded Knee Battle (1889). Director Ralph Nelson, one of the most inconsistent Holly- wood talents to emerge from 50's television, took these two catastrophes of - American His- tory and turned them into a quasi-metaphorical document- ary - apparently he cannot make up his mind. Avco Embassy pictures pro- duced this film to supposedly show the degradation and hu- miliation we subjected the In- dians to so long ago; their facts about the massacres are cor- rect. Yet why did they choose to star Candice Bergen, which only makes the picture 30 times harder to take seriously? Why pick a director like Nelson, who has done congenial features like Soldier in the Rain (1964), Father Goose (1964) and Char- ly (1968)? It's one big super- ficial mess, and there's a Chey- enne massacre of U. S. soldiers at the start which has no place in the film's intention. The dia- logue is "hip", unfortunately, and the unfortunate thing is Michigan Daily The Whole Town's Talking Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sat., 7:30, 9:30 The Whole Town's Talking (1935) is an extraordinary John Ford feature about a meek and mild white - collar worker who looks exactly like Public Enemy No. 1. Edward G. Robinson, who by now had already defined his razor-edged Little Caesar role with an almost incredible flair for gangster-like flamboy- ance, plays a tough dual role as both the clerk and the gang- ster. Jean Arthur is his sweet- heart. Originally a W. R. Burnett story (he achieved f a m e through Little Caesar, Scarface, High Sierra and Asphalt Jun- gle), Talking was a distinctive John Ford vehicle, a gangster story with practically no vio- lence and lots of laughs. In the same year he directed Talking, Ford also received an Academy Award for his bril- liant Informer, and directed Steamboat Round the Bend in the process. There is no other director then or now who can equal a track record like that - it's like hitting three grand slams in one baseball game. Jean Arthur lends a tough ex- terior to her portrayal of Bill, the sweet Eddie G's sweetheart; she was the infamous heroine in all these Frank Capra come- dies and has made a career out of being pure professional. She's charming, and so is this film. -Michael Wilson Soldier Blue Friends of Newsreel, MLB Fri., 7:30; Sat., 9:30 Soldier Blue is one of the bloodiest movies ever made, and for this reason alone it is hard to qualify the film as an un- precedented disaster. Flop, or nonsense, may be a better word. Starring Candice Bergen, who in her spare time does Harper's Bazaar covers and insists she's just "waiting for the right script", the film is a semi- fictional fountain of human blood based on two actual mas- sacres that took place almost these real massacres are left in a cloud of Hollywood dust. -Michael Wilson Butch Cassidy State Butch Cassidy (1969) marked the directorial downfall of what once looked like promising tal- ent in the backbone of one TV- turned-movie director George Roy Hill, the man responsible for last year's slick Sting and, the year before, a disgusting adaptation of Slaughterhouse Five. Hill threw away his profes- sionalism in accepting these last three assignments, and sold out to cigar-chomping phony Hollywood executives that en- gineer sucker campaigns which involve milking box office suc- cesses like Butch for every dime before Television makes an offer they can't refuse. Thus Butch Cassidy graces our viewing screens for what seems like the 19th time and it's still the same boring cast with the same mechanically profound William Goldman screenplay about two "groovy" bank and train robbers in a hurry to get to the cemetery. Katherine Ross, the outstanding idiot of the cast, delivers her lines so badly only the wretched "Raindrops" musical sequence can make you feel worse, Director Hill, who once engi- neered the excellent Henry Ori- ent (1964) and Period of Adjust- ment (1963), is the perfect cap- tain for the Newman-Redford battleship; he salutes them on time with the proper and effec- tive close-ups to cover up any reason for the two stars to act even meagerly if at all. Watch for TV's Lurch from the Ad- dam's Family in an incredibly hysterical cameo role during the first 15 minutes. --Michael Wilson Serpico Briarwood The Movies One of the more celebrated films to come out last year was Sidney Lunet's interesting Ser- pico, an independently-financed- outside-of-Hollywood produc- tion (which is why it won no .Academy Awards) starring Al Pacino in the role of Frank Serpico, the New York City Cop who wouldn't take a bribe. Most of the film is pretty accurate in describing his ups and downs as he made the dis- appointing rounds with New York's Finest. There is a dis- turbing superficiality about the whole thing, yet it is hard not to like Pacino's brilliantly effective characterization. Most of the supporting actois are straight from television commercials and Walt Disney commercial features (one not- able actor in the cast has sev- en Disney losers under his belt), which may explain why Paci- no's is the only outstanding per- formance. His relationships out- side the force, with his two girl- friends and the Serpico family, are almost laughable in their trite overstatedness. The on-location scenes in Brooklyn and Manhattan do nothing but lend a strange aura to the already sinking pic- ture as many real-life ghetto- dwellers gaze thoughtfully at the camerastand Pacino during take after take. The musical score by the Greek musician who did Z is annoying, but the photography and Big Al seems to make it all worthwhile. -Michael Wilson The Golden Needles Briarwood The Movies There is something absolutely weird about The Golden Nee- dIes. It has to be the most biz- astro and insensitive monstros- ity to ever come out of Ameri- can International Pictures, the company responsible for Roger Corman and all these Poe Hor- ror Movies along with some landmarks in film history like The Trip, The Wild Angels and Beach Blanket Bingo. All of these oldies had either Don Rickles or Vincent Price in ca- noes doing shtick while the frus- trated and bloody humour of the sick screenplay would end- lessly churn on - they were absurd and funny. But Golden Needles is completely devoid of humor. In fact, I think they actually want us to take Joe Don Baker (the hero of Walk- Ing Tall and Making Money) and this farce about six magic needles that possess the im- mortality power seriously. However, be forewarned: it's all quite fascinating, and the violence is so twisted and imaginative you'll find it hard not to watch. Cobras, Karate, Nuns, claus- trophobia, Burgess Meredith- this one's got it all. If you're interested in-seeing what the advertising executives mean when they promote a picture like Golden Needles as "Incred- ibly exciting" and one that has "GUTS", go see what every- body's talking about. Ann Sou- thern, Jerry Van Dyke's old mother from the My Mother the Car TV series, has a cameo role. I think she plays herself. -Michael Wilson Lady Sinqs the Blues Briarwood The Movies This is hyped-up Hollywood melodrama at its best, smooth- ing over screenplay rough edges like heroin addiction by merely toying with the idea and not necessarily getting involved. Diana Ross gives an effective drowsiness to the eyes of Billie Holiday, but her part never gets off the ground. The problem is in the sterile direction (Sidney Furie, who's one hit, Ipcress File, seems more like a fluke everytime he makes a new picture), the cast- ing (Billy Dee Williams as Holi- day's Lover Man is about as ef- fective as his portrayal of Gayle Sayers in Brian's Song on TV), and the soundtrack (when you're not listening to the hor- rible strains of Michel Le- grand's violins as Billie is haul- ed off to jail, you have to put up with Diana Ross' imitations of Billie Holiday's songs - why didn't they use the real ones and just dub since they dub all her stuff anyway?). The only person in Lady worth looking at is Richard Pryor, the piano man who gets Billie her first job. He is a frantic mess and quite effective. Otherwise, Lady Sings the Blues is just one slick piece of slack slush. The a d d i c t i on sequences, which are so ridiculous the film turns into comedy at these low points, are painfully glossed over, and give us no clue as to why Billie was hooked on music and dope. Eventually, Lady seems pathetically tired. -Michael Wilson Uptown Saturday Night Briarwood The Movies Don't get suckered into paying the high price for seeing a low quality feature like Uptown Sat- urday Night - the advertising campaign probably costs double wvhatever cheap budget they filmed this mess on. Just be- cause some big names like Bill Cosby, Sidney Poitier and Harry Belafonte were involved the pro- ducers obviously felt little things like set design, cinemo- tography and acting were sec- ondary. This nonsensical garbage, which rightfully belongs on TV as a made-for-nausea-full-length feature for the Major Flop of the Week, concerns a group of witty, sarcastic and lower-class blacks that surprisingly bear a slight resemblance to entertain- ers Poitier, Cosby and Belafonte who obtain a winning numbers ticket in the midst of a frenzied night at a local gambling house. The place is robbed, the ticket taken, and the plot grinds into gear. Poitier directed Uptown, and does little better than his last directorial downfall, Buck and the Preacher (1971). Bela- fonte does a funny Marion Bran- do imitation straight from the Godfather but the joke pales after two minutes-the director drags it out for two hours. Co-star Cosby, working with a beard and cigar, is the only shining star of the otherwise incredibly boring cast - his mumbling routines and shuffling iconoclasm can really be quite hysterical in the midst of a flop like Uptown. Flip Wilson and Richard Pryor are also featured in cameo roles for a brief hiatus. -Michael Wilson Clair's Knee Campus Fri., Sat.: 7, 9 Claire's Knee (1971), directed by Eric Rohmer is a curious, charming movie. The beauty of the film runs from the exquisite color photography to enchant- tog performances by actors Jean-Claude Brialy (Jerome), and Auroru Cornu (Aurora). The storyline isn't much - Jerome, a diplomat stationed in Stockholm, returns to his child- hood home in a small French village and visits an old friend, Aurora, a Romanian noyelit. Jerome is then briefly involved in two flirtatious affairs with young girls - Laura, 16, and Clair, 18. There's very little depth of characterization to the movie- it's almost nothing but sur- face delights - but that doesn't matter because it's such gor- geous surface that the audience doesn't really mind much. Rohmer is no Bergman in this respect, but in Claire and the other films of his Six Moral Tales (including My Night at Maud's and Chloe in the After- noon) he shows himself to be perhaps the most talented of the post-New Wave generation of French filmmakers. -