Friday, Moy 14, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Friday, May 14, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Happenings . This week's HAPPENINGS column was written by Kim Potter. All week long COMMERCIAL CINEMA One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - (The Movies, Briar- wood) - The first film in over forty years to win all five ma- jor Oscars (Best Picture, Ac- tor, Actress, Director and Screenplay) - but still, for all its accolades, just not as good as it should have been. Direc- tor Milos Forman opts for characature instead of pathos in his disturbed inmates, plays for the easy laugh over the grim undertones of Kesey's no- vel, and alters the ending just enough so that McMurphy's final tragic sacrifice seems less a liberating martyrdom than a deluded act of self-de- struction. Cuckoo's Nest is tech- nically superb and splendidly acted, but for fervent admirers of the novel this may well be one of the most depressing films ever made. *** Echoes of a Summer - (The Movies, Briarwood) - The Love Story syndrome con- tinues its weepy journey, this time in the form of a young, fatally ill girl living out the last idyllic days of her all-too- brief existence. As the doomed teenager, Jody Foster pulls off a versatile switch from her hooker's role in Taxi Driver. The Dutchess and the Dirt- water Fox - (The Movies, Briarwood) - An utterly rou- tine, standard-formula Western comedy that is none - the - less packing 'em in at Briarwood. Stars Goldie Hawn and George Segal may have been wasting their times artistically, but certainly knew a good business venture when they saw one. ** All the President's Men - (TeMveBirod)This splendid film from the lernstein - Woodward best sell- er proves less a chronicle of Nixon's downfall than a day- -to-day study of the highs and lows of newspaper reporting. The picture contains a surpris- ingly large number of thrills, (since we already know who won) but it is above all a thor- ough, precise and remarkably compelling study of the pains- taking detective work that just may have preserved us as a nation. Robert Reford delivers the best performance of his ca- reer as Woodward, and Dustin Hoffman turns in his usual fine one as Bernstein. **** s I The Exorcist - (State) - Warner Bros re-release of the famous horror thriller provides the opportunity for an objec- tive re-examination of a film that was submerged in freak- show hoopola during its initial run two years ago. When view- ed minus the trapping of the -giggling, screaming audiences of that time, The Exorcist emerges as a pretty compelling flick (certainly a superior one for the horror genre), but one that falls considerably short of greatness. Director William Friedkin's decision to film the Blatty novel in a realistic mode without any chair-rat- tling scare-film cliches seemed sound in theory, but proves out of kilter in the finished pro- duct. Blatty'sthorrifics seems frightening when left to the imagination, but when trans- posed literally to the screen, the roaring obscenities, green vomit and other shock effects serve to detract from, rather than add to the suspense. The film cries out for the shadowy, phantasmagoric style of a Fel- lini or a Ecorcese; despite the power of th-e story, Friedkin visual graphics just don't meet the requirements of invention or taste needed tosmake The Exorcist a film classic.** i saturday MAY 15 CINEMA Husbands - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7:30 & 10) - John Cassavetes' study of a few days in the lives of three white col- lar husbands approaching the trauma of middle age. Over- long, often boring and deter- *- -- , - S Specializing in * Refreshing Drinks! ORANGE g PINEAPPLE * STRAWBERRY i JULIUS * ALL MADE WITH ACTUAL FRUIT! * FEATURING .. . : t/3 lb. Ground * Round-95c * BRIARWOOD MALL * S. UNIVERSITY -K- UNIVERSITY TOWERS NOW OPEN minedly disjointed, Husbands is nonetheless one of the few films to provide some insight into the psyche of the married male, and the natural pitfalls involved therein. Endlessly fas- cinating.* Head - Cinema IT, Ang. Aud. A., 7:30 only) -- 1968 Mon- kees' film that bombed out due to group's lack of talent, which unfortunately obscured a movie that in many ways eclipsed ei- ther of the Beatles' films in style and content. Ignore the mediocreties of The Big Four and concentrate instead on Bob Rafealson's imaginative direction and Jack Nicholson's nihilistic screenplay -- it's a treat that shouldn't be missed. O Lucky Man - (Cinema It, Ang. Aud. A, 9 only) - Lind- say Anderson's epic allegory of a modern-day Candide wan- dering innocently and hopefully through a world which seems created for the precise purpose of disecting him. A sprawling, loosely - connected film that surprisingly works most of the time, due in large part to Mal- com MacDowell's wonderful portrayal of the bright-eyed, gullible protagonist. 0 Lucky Man is one of Ann Arbor's cer- tified "cult" film, so you'd bet- ter come early. *** BARS Mr. Flood's Party - Coun- try Folk, 9:30, $1.50 Bimbo's - The Gaslighters, 6 pm, 50c, Blind Pig - Silvertones, 9:30, $1.00 Golden Falcon - Melidioso, 9:30, $1.00 Chances Are - Brainstorm,. 8, $2.00 Pretze. Bell - RFD Boys, 9:30, $1.50 Old Heidelburg -- Mustard's Retreat, 9, no cover, sunday MAY 16 CINEMA The Blue Angel - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 8 only) - VonSternberg's famous film of a straight - laced schoolteacher slowly enveloped and destroyed by a voluptuous nightclub vamp. Blue Angel features Mar- lene Dietrich in her most fa- mous role, and is the second of Cinema Guild's FREE Sun- day night showings. How can you lose? **** BARS Mr. Flood's Party - Catfish Miller, 9:30, no cover Chances Are - Brainstorm, 9, $1.00 monday MAY 17 CINEMA Nothing scheduled. BARS Mr. Flood's Party - Aging Children, 9:30, no cover. Blind Pig - Boogie Woogie Red, 9:30, $1.00 Chances Are - Mojo Boogie, 9, $1.00 tuesday MAY 18 CINEMA See HAPPENINGS, Page 6 1 Palestine SOLIDARITY DAY I Assembly Hall- U j Mich. Union FRIDAY, MAY 14 Sponsored by: - Org. of Arab Students, U-M chapter 7:00 p.m: speaker: DR. AMIN SHAFIE, "The Palestinians, A Continuous Revolutionary Struggle" 8:30 p.m.: POETRY of the Palestine Resistance. 9:30 p.m.: FILM: Revolution Until Victory. SThe just Jeans season. New jeans, tops & belts Latest styles & colors Great Just Jeans prices Good times comin'on1 J JA JUSTJEANS Briarwood Mall ' - Ann Arbor, Mich. 2f am's tiead Leather t !, Works, Ltd. 539 E. Liberty next to John Leidy HAND-MADE WALTER DYER MOCCASINS (We h a v e the m o s t complete selection available in town.) "Get the feel of spring thru the soles of your feet." Happy feet . . . smiling toes. -WALTER DYER HAPPY BIRTHDAY, JOHN HEEBNER x