Page 2-Sunday, February 3, 1980-The Michigan Daily AM pt M 0 The Michigan Daily-Sunday Free space I like movies The TV screen cinema sc( " Nf ' s;:<{x" ra'. ..,/if f I! 4A i A guide for orthicon -tube I t "' ' ^ iw ty:,., xft ri r~r H~y r "'S:Ar". ' r 't t s .A f r .? *' '}* '"i rv Y '' 4, m{ S : ,.ti 5j .rvt * . . "f f '3 47 1* '.I":S, ,r l '( . Sr ". . P.ft . -s .' ~ .* 'Y ;. : i ., Yi' 1 P ''A " i . r .'S," ., S ' r: t..: ** . .{ 4f. 1 h . . , .: :*.f+ .l . ,, r%. .+:.4.* sb. . . 1 k 1.'~r ' ^ '~u? f''o 1't ! . r }"* f.* y&'f f ~ jK /w!t.. A t 'r+iF..'K' M 1 .4 r .._ r. : 144"t;V ' ." rra .f., :..yyt.~ t~a + G+. a.'r '} , i1 . :}ry~r . .+ i .j}."ff" C" ! [ .Circ~ta , '. , a' f .Yj L.. .* . !- r- -K;' ." ;. C s~ }} dll fil:"fA ' .' l . rl .. sr~~y +!'7 M + A ' ' s+ .A y, ll4 t -. i ) '+ .r..: + :f ~f >K4 ~ f~t f <' ",y ,+" .. "n"i±'#r-.'..,'i.,M-.ic . " ~Z~it ttr~i + e .wa'"S1 A?. ,: r"r.. ,1 . si . a~rE u , v , t t«:t ,.:a1ta rV 1 + "s. 4~y,i x4 rii)*** «.* a},J4Yj , p :1jP +.I . , irA"a , , jr NgCr r M.«f4 1,.b. ~. Y''' i , t" v "tfr .,Fi ' ' .' f.. "1.+1#i i ,j/j^"M , yi f," Yil.a'* ' ! +.,..,.,, ,'y. wr.l~ti ..".c~z ' t+ir r! . .,r4 *L ''i ~ " t y Nt' '-w'4 :.s... , r 7 vAa''.lwilk} .ti4 .w # w+*v,.w ^ " t ,j , " . > siht'Y :>! }M" 7 + ~i. '~trY i,. f'r .rr.., aw6A. af "3aa; 7 t'' : ,k , ( r. .'_ acC I+" tM,'[ v>'' . 2" a ( .,j .rt M "* f . w r i 1t rt -"r ..+Mry ~dg, ' t , Ij4~ l ' /; :* M4M .T ..f . r9fM '.' V w.9 e14 By Owen+ Gleiberman I LOVE WATCHING movies on television. That's the sort 'of con- fession at which film buffs cringe with disbelieving awe, especially when one considers the particulars: Is there anything to like,let alone love, about watching films on an ugly little box that reduces a picture to the size of an LP jacket, zaps the visual quality of any beauty, trims away the edges of the frame like so much fat, off a round- steak, and arbitrarily cuts the whole deformed fiasco into choppy, 11-minute segments, interspersed with ads for products you wouldn't wish on your worst enemy? The answer, my dear buffs, is that there is, but first-'to quote Alvy Singer-we must "establish a set of aesthetic guidelines." The rest will be easy. Consider a literary analogy: You're seated in the waiting room at the den- tist's office, about to be shot up with laughing gas so that you'll just giggle your blues away when the good doctor extracts your impacted wisdom teeth, which, should they continue growing in the direction they're now pointed, would soon be sticking out the top and back of your head, giving you the ap- pearance of a huge, blobby-faced voodoo doll. To take your mind off the impending operation you pick up the most palatable reading material available-the current issue of Cosmopolitan. You thumb through the tampon ads and articles on What to Wear.This Fall until the title of one of those She-Lost-Her-Honor-And-Lived short stories blares out at you like a police siren and says, "Read me!" So you read. You read your heart out, right through to the cathartic finale, and follow Sally or Gayle or Quinn as she makes her way through the confusing, wonderful, painful world of men. And you love what you're reading, because never did you imagine it could be this much fun to be a Cosmo Girl. The key here is context. When you're about to go under the dentist's drill and Rolling Stone, The Nation, Paris Match or whatever aren't in sight, who com- plains about the choice of reading mat- ter? (The Chief: "Max, are you reading Cosmo?" Smart : "And loving it!") T he same- aesthetic is even more powerfully effective when applied to television. We all grew up slogging away the hours in front of Mr. Tube Owen Gleiberman writes a regular film column for the. Sunday Maga- zine. (apologies to the few of you who curled up nightly with Dickens and Thackeray and cried yourselves to sleep every night), a medium whose pleasures are nothing if not reductive. There's always been more stimulating entertainment available than The Brady Bunch or Gomer Pyle, but we watched them, because nothing, not even comic books, could quite match their lowest- common-denominator accessibility. Johnny Carson monologues, sitcoms, afternoon talk shows, sleazo dramas like Dallas, even television news-what else can we effectively watch at the same time we bury ourselves in our hdmework or our crossword puzzles or chat with friends about the latest blow to world freedom? Television can virtually be ap- prehended with your eyes closed. It's the great peripheral medium, as soothingly undemanding as a warm bubble bath. That, of course, is exactly what's so Godawful about it-or even what's "evil" about it, if you're one of those distraught zealots intent on saving what's left of our rotting brain tissue. But since the shows are so uniformly ghastly, TV is bound to ac- cent anything of quality. It made All in the Family and Mary Tyler Moore look like high drama, and for movies, it's a showcase, a place where diamonds-in- the-rough are made. M OST OF US turn off the PBS shows because they're blunt- witted and doggedly anti-television; the documentaries and discussion shows aren't conceived for a "television" audience, and there's something awk- ward and wrenchingly dull about their attempts to salvage the medium by pounding ideas at us. But most movies, while several cuts above the average network shows, are nevertheless a natural extension of the populist aesthetics we absorbed from television; they're like super-TV. And so otherwise unremarkable films like Coming Home, Papillon, Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, or some of the Mel Brooks comedies are suddenly class ac- ts crammed into a medium that just doesn't deserve them. This isn't a con- scious reaction on our part; we're sim- ply so attuned to the crude pleasures of watching junk that the movies on television don't feel exactly like movies, but like great junk. This is especially true of the older films. I couldn't imagine wanting to sit in a theater to watch Spellbound, A Pocketful of Miracles, a guilty-liberal warhorse like The Blackboard Jungle or most horror movies. On television, they're gleefully trashy, and the little nuances of feeling are liable to seem magnified to the smallness of, the medium. We can react to them honestly, without summoning up the reserves of fake emotion sometimes necessary to carry one through a lousy picture in a theater. Television and screwball comedy were made for each other. Something about hearing the snappy, cacophonous dialogue in a Bringing Up Baby on the tube at 1 a.m. multiplies the movie's natural in- sanity.Most films from that period are several large steps removed from real life anyway, and TV glorifies artifice like nobody's business. When Grant-and Hepburn have to quack at each other standing inside a 2' x 2' box, a movie can turn from a piece of stylized reality into a pure, flourescent comic book. But older films are generally lacking the visual complexity of the stuff that comes out today, and the loss of visual detail on television therefore isn't an essential one. With modern films, it is, especially if we've seen the movie before in a theater and loved it for its visual expanse and sensuality. Something like The Godfather is crip- pled on TV, because it loses as many of the elements that made it transcend the gangster genre in the first place-the calm, st cutting, Sicilian primal p 1 HE4 bur broadcas been su Massacr wasn't in done to blood-let eight sec out exac several guns) an chopped fused ji sometim Allen's 'd Up, Tige by far th in the ai Saturday shown o: pals sou baby-tal nasty ga K1 " a rW e ti J r Stp M4yCafrE CL)12APJ9 4M46/, oetr The Games (from a poem in progress) 1 OA' V i a 1.ps All day, they dreamed of the violence they could spread like flame shot from jets through the air. Of course, there are accidents moving between gladiators and blindness brings the lovers toward the kill. In autumn, birds divide before the games as an old general calls them good. I wonder, why do I stand beside myself, weeping and rattling the bones ip the sack I will always carry with me? My body tells me I am pregnant with this wrath of war cheered by fools in bright colors, drunk with a taste of blood they wallow in. I want to shout with my own horn, "Retreat, surrender." The stars say falling, "The devil returns to his own roost in the sixth jet above your games." Action speaks louder than thought. I am left in the hall with no music. The trees do not burn 4 in the pitch of desire. There will be no victory for the record, my wind pushing the door open as it also laments the field. How many dead- will the pther side of light count this time? -Carolyn Holmes Gregory Carolyn Gregory Holmes has been the coordinator of the' West Park Poetry Series and is current poetry coordinator for the Guild House. She has been published in numerous poetry and literary magazines and journals. Noon struggles with darkness. Horns play an auld lang syne, bewildering the sparrows. Foxfire brushes the stone fence keeping neighbors apart. _ - f x~ v,,,...c IJS 'la n- C _ w , _ _ i eA