en r-lC MlCl-llt~AN DAILY Friday, July 23. 1 97~ Y ien rit MICHIGAN DAILY, Friday, July 23, 1976 .F Happenings ,. HAPPENINGS film reviews are written by Kim Potter. All week long COMMERCIAL: CINEMA Lady Sings the Blues and Mahogany - (State) A pair of poorly wrought Diana Ross ve- hicles, of which she triumphs over her material in the for- mer, helps drag dawn her ma- terial in the latter. A mixed bag, but mostly negative. ** Silent Movie - (Michigan)- The first Mel Brooks picture to also star Mel Brooks, in the role of a director who decides to make a silent picture as a novelty gimmick in modern-day Bolls-wood. Long - awaited and doubtless very funny. The Shootist - (The Movies, Brirwood) - The esoteric title is presumably the sole umisual item in this latest John Wayne sagebrush runthrough. Murder by Death - (The Mo- vies, Briarwood) - Neil Sim- on's gentle satire in which a group of Hollywood's most fam- the ann arbior film cooperative TONIGHT in Air conditioned MLB 3 MONKEY BUSINESS Norman Mcleod 1931) MLB 3-7 & 9:30 Is a ptiOt seoe-ary ii a Marx Bros. fim? For the sake of tradtitoti tts t11- ito- boys are trying to stow away on a trailAtjaiitic lier aiti somehow end up paired off as rival atnstsrs, bod-gmatet. In between, the laughs tiy as fast as file tptn, HORSE FEATHERS Norman McLeod, 1932) MLB 3-8:10 and 10:40 Ititstime the Brothers take their madness to the college campustt. Urom'1to retutrns to his alma mater as the new coI- ice preotshnt topes to win the annual footall classic. En roate, they trougtsah toas atftheir most tamous routines-- 'irjw t i o-au sodih. BANANAS (Woody Allen 1971t) MLB 4 - 7, 8:45 & 10:30 Allens tmser at its tifitt T'h i only logic is the logic o I "itOt >y A thacatih atteaaied teotee ar Robe Goltberg gadgets ise-()It Vt- i hati tih Aneitieunatry where he istoranormsease nto a revtitiotattry oath a talse beard. Louise Lasser in her bestiIii-.try mirtmanrole. $1.25. DOUBLE FEATURE $2:00 onis screen detectives are men- aced in the proverbial old dark house by the unlikely personage of Truman Capote. A low - key farce that is quite harmless and for the most part quite fun- ny. *** Buffalo Bill and the Indians- (The Movies, Briarwood) -- A splendidly made but largely un- moving study of the famed cowboy's Wild West show of the 1880's. Based loosedly on Arthur Kopit's play, Indians, the film swiftly establishes its dual theme of The White Man's bigotry toward The Red Man and of the power of image-mak- ing and salesmanship to distort and often obliterate reality, then plays variations on the subject the rest of the way. Di- rector Robert Altman seems at last to have evolved a cinematic style fully and legitimately his own, and it is a pleasure to watch this talented filmmaker in complete - if somewhat me- andering - control of his ma- terial. But for all its virtures, Buf- falo Bill lacks something unde- finable - perhaps it's simply the fact that most of its charac- ters are such schmucks that it's hard to get really involved with them. Their innate rotten- ness is thoroughly established ten minutes into the film, and Altman, for all his cinema vir- tuosity, has nothing to develop further. The end result is a film consistently stimulating to the mind and senses, but aridly circumnavigating the heart. The Omen - (Fifth Forum) - This Summer's runaway box office blockbuster is many cuts above the crass exploitation film one might reasonable as- sume from its overheated pub- licity campaign. The story about the rebirth of Satan in the form of a five-year- old boy manages stylistically to avoid both the overt grotesques- ness of The Exorcist and the overamorphous subtleties of Rosemary's Baby, and is also in no way an artistic rip-off of either; it is a straight, stark exercise in terror, complete with some of the most profoundly frightening sequences ever put in a film. In its own way, The Omen is a cinematic masterwork, but for God's sake leave the kids at home; they'll have nightmares for weeks (so wiill you). **** Logan's Run - (Fox Village) - A post - apocalypse tale of a 23rd Century domed city hous- ing the remnants of humanity, and the efforts of two individ- ualists to escape its stagnant confines. The first half o fthe film is brilliant, spine - tingling sci - fi; the second half falls flat on its face. largely through the pe- destrian efforts of the formerly talented Peter Ustinov. Cast as the lone remaining inhabitant of the outside Earth. Ustinov as- satilts ius with a grotesque semi- W. C. Fields imitation so out of kilter with anything else in the filtm - or any other film, for that matter - that one longs to yank him off the screen and give him a solid kick in his self- indulgent rear. He's old enough to know better. It's all rather a same, be- cause mich of Logan's Run riv- als 2001 in both scope and imag- inative fling - too bad the filmmakers couldn't carry their vision all the way through. *** Friday CINEMA The Phantom of the Opera - (Michigan, 1 & 3 p.m.) - Lon Chaney's greatest horror class- ic, featuring the most gor- geous face this side of Marty Feldman, complete with live organ accompaniment and all for only a buck. **** You Can't Take It With You (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7:30 & 9:45) - Frank Capra's good but not great cinemaza- tion of the famous Broadway Comedy. Capra was always at his best when working from scratch, and the obvious stage origins of this work tend to drag it down in contrast to the freewheelingness of the direc- tor's more original efforts. Of course, Capra with one hand tied behind his back is still more entertaining than most other filmmakers and Yft Can't Take It With You re- mains a very funny offering. Stalag 17 - (Cinema II, Ang. And. A, 7:30 & 9:30) -- An ex- citing comedy - drama about a group of American soldiers in a Nazi POW camp, one of whom is a German informant - the question is, which one? Some of the G. I. humor employed in the film will seem a little dat- ed now, but director Billy Wild- er achieves a remarkable blend of the grim and the comic, making any resemblance be- tween Stalag 17 and a certain nightly Ch. 50 TV abomination purely coincidental. The film's excellent cast is headed by William Holden, who won an Oscar for his por- trayal of a wise-guy loner who may or may not be the Nazi stool pidgeon (we won't tell). Monkey Business - (Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, MLB 3, 7 & 9:30) - The Marx Brothers' first non-stagebound movie, and still hilariously intact nearly half a century later. **** Horse Feathers - (Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, MLB 3, 8:30 & 10:40) - The Marx Brothers destroy utterly the American university - maybe not their best film, but probably their funniest. Groucho's anatomy lecture ranks among the luna- tic interludes of all comedy. Bananas - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 8:45 & 10:30) -- Sex-starved New Yorker Field- ing Mellish seeks to improve his stock in life, somehow winds up dictator of a small Latin American country. Woody Al- len's most disjointed film is also his funniest; the negligible plot is offset by such a hyster- ical series of gags and situa- tions that one really can't stop laughing long enough to follow what story there is. Watch the magnificent and now - famous Louise Lasser reaffirm Diane Keaton as the worst artistic (and perhaps personal) mis take Woody es-er made. 000 See HAPPENINGS, Page 11 ( f FRANK CAPRA'S 1938 YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU Capra's screwball version of the hit Kaufman and Hart comedy about a non- conformist American family. Lionel Barrymore is great as the leader of his clan-a man who has never paid income taxes yet promotes the pursuit of happiness. James Stewart is a banker's son who would rather find out why grass is green. He falls for Jean Arthur who invites him to meet her family and friends. Also starring Edward Arnold, Spring Byington and Donald Meek. SAT.: John Wayne in John Ford's THE SEARCHERS CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:30 & 9:30 Admission $1.25 BILLY WILDER'S 1953 STALAG 17 Billy Wilder (Some Like It Hot, Sunset Boulevard) wrote, directed and pro- duced this unlikely comedy about life in a prisoner of war camp. William Holden puts in a performance for which he netted great critical acclaim. One of the N.Y. Times Ten Best Films of 1953, it makes you laugh with just enough seriousness to let you know that war and prison camp aren't really funny. CINEMA I1 TONIGHT AT ANGELL HALL AUD. A 7:30 & 9:30 Admission $1.25