Friday, June 18, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 18, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Happenings . N N This week's HAPPENINGS film reviews were written by Kim Potter. All week long COMMERCIAL CINEMA Midway - (Campus) - Screen re-creation of WW II's most famous sea battle, featur- ing a cast of thousands all jangled with sense-enervating SENSURROUND; all fragile eardrums and sinuses beware. That's Entertainment, Part II - (Michigan) - Gene Kel- ley and Fred Astaire dance their way through another round of MGM's musical self- congratulations. Presumably, the entertainment value con- tained therein will once again outweigh the inherent pompos- ity of the enterprize. All the President's Men - (The Movies, Briarwood) - Less a specific chronicle of Nixon's downfall that a pre- cise and remarkably absorbing look at the step-by-step jour- nalistic detective work that un- did him - and in the process probably saved us as a na- tions. * Goodbye, Norma Jean - (The Movies, Briarwood)-The latest biographical fancy on poor Marilyn Monroe; all vul- tures are cordially invited. The Missouri Breaks - (The Movies, Briawood) - The sup- erstar pairing of Jack Nichol- son as a noble outlaw and Mar- Ion Brando as a psychotic kill- er hired to track him down is about the only thing this con- fused, meandering Western has going for it, and it's not enough.** Friday JUNE 18 CINEMA Paper Moon - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 3, 7 & 9) - A downtrodden con man and his ten-year-old female ward hustle their way across the plains states during the De- pression. Peter Bogdanovich's film captures a nice feeling for the '30's countryside and sports an enjoyably gentle, low-key plot - if this is all you're look- ing for, then recommended. As the kid, Tatum O'Neal consist-. ently outdoes papa Ryan both as hustler and actor. *** Invasion of the Body Snatch- ers - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7 only) - Don Siegel's 1956 picture is probably the su- preme cult film of btheentire horror-sci-fi genre, and, as is typical of cult films, it doesn't quite live up to its reputation. It's chief virture is a very sol- id, scary plotline - mysterious seed pods-drift from outer space to a small California town, where one by one they take over first the minds, then lit- erally the bodies of the citizen- ry - turning them into emo- tionless zombies dedicated to spreading the seeds to the rest of the world. The story works well on both the thriller and al- legorical level (depersonaliza- tion of the Mechanized Age, etc.) and Seigel's direction is exceptional, but he is hamper- ed throughout by an obviously meager budget, mediocre act- ing, and a studio which clear- ly didn't place much faith in his project (They even forced him to tack on an unwanted phony-hopeful ending). It's still a good film, but the sci-fi reper- toire still awaits the optimum blending of talented artists with a parent company willing to give them the financial sup- port they deserve. *** Targets - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 9 only) - This was Peter Bogdanovich's first feature film, and he has never since approached its level. The unlikely plot of Boris Karloff (playing himself) stalking a psychotic mass murderer works surprisingly well, but it is Bogdanovich's camera that lingers; utilizing his Southern California locale, he captures a feeling of raw, souless Amer- Page Five icana matched only by William Friedkin's New York visuals in The French Connection. Bog- danovich leads us through im- ages of prefab houses, drive-in movies and the like, all bathed in a kind of blistering, sterile gray; we feel for the killer - a quintessential "nice boy" - when his suburban trap finally blows his mind apart, we sec- retly thrill even as we recoil with horror as he guns down motorists from a water tower and later at a theater. Targets brings us some insight to the violent underbelly of our own people, and it's an amazing, if uncomfortable, experience."" The Battle of Alglers-(Cine- ma II, Ang. Aud. A, 7:30 & 9:40) - Gino Pontecorvo's me- morable re - created depiction of Algeria's lengthy and ulti- See HAPPENINGS, Page 6 I i Theatre Company of Ann Arbor, Inc. presents ~aI'cH.YOU CRAZr r a kaleidoscope of women in American institutions JUNE 18, 19 and June 25, 26, 27 at SCHORLING AUDITORIUM IN THE U OF M SCHOOL OF EDUCATION BLDG. TICKETS $2.00 CURTAIN 8:00 P.M. CRAQD) 4EnEt * ,0 O F F o n lo fs o f shoes, hoofs agas under new ownership... come see our new look_!! t t iJ ,r i yiy 1 } 1 i 1 A { i .522 W- illiam