I LAST YEAR'S (BELA TED) BEST. From Allen to The Michigan Daily-Thursday, February 7, 1980-Page 5 Apocalypse' . Among last year's best movies: Peter Yates' summer hit "Breaking Away" (left), with Dennis Christopher, Jackie Earle Haley, Daniel Stern and Dennis Quaid in a moment of triumph after the climactic bike race; Philip Kaufman's neglected gang movie, "The Wanderers"(center), in which Ken Wahl,John Friedrich, Tony Ganios and Jim Youngs are seen looking over some passing merchandise; and (far right) Jerzy Skolimowski's eerie supernatural thriller "The Shout," with Alan Bates and Susanah York. By CHRISTOPHER POTTER These films (in no particular order of preference) strike me as the cream of what amounted to a rather strange and bizarre crop last year: 0 Manhattan (Woody Allen). A. film predicatably flawed by the director's cloying self-absorption, which per- meates all his recent work like a hedonistic virus. Yet Manhattan's exquisite use of sights and sounds, its abiding though melancholy good humor, and especially the director's all-forgiving gentleness toward his bit- tersweet characters" make this film a poignant, unforgettable study of the hazards of being a card-carrying mem- er of the Beautiful People. Dawn of the Dead (George Romero). Zombies once again terrorize the earth in Part II of Romero's highly unconven- tional horror trilogy-in-progress. Myopic filmgoers may rant against Dawn's violence and cheap thrills; 'yet lurking beneath Romero's stock-in-trade blood and gore is one of the most sophisticated black comedies to tickle the jugular in many a full moon. The great god Consumerism takes a bath as a quartets of protagonists hole up in a giant shopping mall to do endless battle with ghouls and motorcyle maniacs in protecting their vinyl-coated turf. No one celebrates degeneration into chaos with quite the diabolcal joy of Romero; now that he has mastered the technical virtuosity to accompany his mad visions, his potential for celluloid anar- chy seems to have no limit. My jaded soul can hardly wait for his next un- natural outing. The China Syndrome (James Bridges). The tumultuous post-relesae topicality of Syndrome's theme may ironically have obscured and cheapened the film's dazzling cinematic mastery of the thriller genre. Few motion pictures have ever managed to milk more sheer, gut- wrenching terror out of watching their characters standing motion- less - waiting, watching, with breathless helplessness, a disaster they can do little or nothing to avert. At the same time Syndrome is the most in- tuitive, merciless satire ever made on the shallowness of TV newscasting, with Jane Fonda turning in the perfor- mance of her life as a "happy-news" commentator hurtled face to face with the dangers that lurk in a large, un- smiling world. Kramer vs. Kramer (Robert Benton). Inconsistent and often in- furiatingly one-sided, Kramer is still one of the few unfrilled, uncom- promising intelligent studies of human :interaction ever to come out of the Hollywood system. The film is a thoughtful feast for audiences of all races, incomes and age levels, wren- chingly acted by Dustin Hoffman, Meryl Streep and Justin Henry "as a family unravelled at the seams. The Shout(Jerzy Skolimowski). A cryptic, terrifying little masterpiece about an English drifter (Alan Bates) who claims to have perfected an Aborigine secret of the "terror shout"-a human shriek so sonically resonant that it can kill any living being within its range. The film demands that you take it entirely on its own terms; if you can accept the offbeat in general, you're likely to be blown away by this diminutive, arcane wonderment. The film is hypnotically directed by Skolomowski, and incisively acted by Bates, Susannah York and John Hurt as combatants in a three-way psycho- sexual power struggle. Breaking Away (Peter Yates). An exultant, euphoric howl of joy to the triumph' of Middle America. Yates' film about teenagers and bycicle racing in Bloomington, I. treads rarely- tested cinematic ground by involving the frustrations of the American class sytem. Yet, Breaking Away is all too consumingly good-natured to render its protagonists in a state of proletarian grimness. I can'tremember a film which makes such exquisite use of sunlight; it sweetly bathes you, lifting your psyche just as it does Yates' cast of brilliant unknowns. Breaking Away is a film for all seasons, to be savored and cherished as long as people love to go to the movies. Alien (Ridley Scott). A film coldly calculated to scare the daylights out of you, and succeeding traumatically. Director Scott and macabre artist H. R. Giger have tapped the darkest corners of the human consciousness to create a work of almost unbelievable menace, wherein a strange, chamelon-like creature stalks one by one the panic- stricken crew of a ship traveling through deepest space. In Giger's universe, starships and planetoids become virtual living, breathing organisms, while his monsters assume the most terrifying trappings of one's most private nightmares. Alien is ad- mittedly not to everyone's taste; yet within the limits of what it sets out to Be an angel. * Read CA E tifg! 764-0558 do, it strikes me as an almost perfect film. Hard Core (Paul Schrader). A daring, grievously misunderstood film about a religious Midwestern businessman who plunges into the counter-universe of West Coast por- nography in search of his missing daughter. Schrader's episodes are oc- casionally hokey and a few characters fall flat; yet Hard Core remains a unique, endlessly fascinating study of a cataclysmic clash between unstable .cultures. The film is graced by George C. Scott's agonized performance, and is shiveringly photographed by master cinematographer Michael Chapman. The Wanderers (Philip Kaufman). The Artistic Thuggery Award of 1979 is hereby presented to Warner Bros. for effectively murdering this marvelously atmospheric film about teenage gang members growing up in the Bronx in the early ii's.Perhaps phobic about the bad ;publicity generated by the similarly-titled The Warriors, Warners arbitrarily pulled the plug on any chance Kaufman's film may have had for success-booking it at second-run theat~s, then yanking it entirely a week rso later. Few films have been less deserving of such shabby treat- ment: Kaufman's work never quite holds together, jumping wildly from arch realism to a Fellini-esque surrealism; yet it remains as imaginative and poetic a motion pic- ture as any in recent memory. More's the pity you'll probably never get a chance to see it. Apocalypse Now (Francis Ford Cop- pola). Perhaps if this film were locked away for about ten years, most of its accompanying mea culpa publicity would have faded and Apocalypse could be viewed for what it is: one of the very best films ever made, an overwhelming work whose day will surely come when all the extraneous hubbub has died away. Possibly by then the film's much- damned ending will be seen as the logical low-key counterbalance to the assault of phantasmic chaos that came before it; perhaps by then even Marlon Brando's performance will be accepted as a passionate, honorable climax to this definitive actor's career. We can only wait and hope. PITCHER' NIGHT at ti ~outi 1140 South University 668-8411 ST AR TING TOMOR ROW MON, TUE, THURS, FRI 7-9:15-SAT-SUN-WED 1-3-5-7-9:15 1MARIUED d5UPLE The comedy that fools around a lot! GEORGE SEGAL- NATALIE WOOD RICHARD BENJAMIN - VALERIE HARPER and DOM DeLUISE in "THE LAST MARRIED COUPLE IN AMERICA A CATES BROTHERS/EDWARD S. FELDMAN Production A GILBERT CATES FILM Also starring BOB DISHY written by JOHN HERMAN SHANER Music by CHARLES FOX Sat, Sun-12:40, 3:00, 5:30, 7:50, 10:10 Sat, Sun-$1.50 til 1:00 (or capacity) I- m - - ard U t t may be mid-winter but at the Tpueblood Theatre it's the . 1 DO YOU WANT TO: lose weight " quit smoking " improve study potential? RESERVE NOW! FOR 3 DAYS ONLY LIMITED SPACE Group Seminars in HYPNOSIS can change your life. Program 1 Program 2 8pm Trueblood Theatre. University Showcase PrOductions. Tickets $ 2 available at the PT.P ticket Office in the Michigan League. Call 33764-0450 Lose Weigft/Keep it off! Wed. Feb. 6, 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Thurs. Feb. 7, 9:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. 9:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. Fri. Feb. 8, 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Quit Smoking in One Day! Wed. Feb. 6, 9:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. 9:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. Thurs. Feb. 7, 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Fri. Feb. 8, 9:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. 9:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. Increase Study Potential/Improve Grades Wed. Feb. 6, 3:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Thurs. Feb. 7, 3:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Fri Fa A -nn n m . nnnm The Ann Arbor Film Coopetie Presents at Aud. A: $1.50 Thursday, February 7 THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT John Kolisch, instructor: 25 years in the field of hypnotism as a lecturer, hypno-technician, and a member of the American Institute of Hypnosis. Program 3 Viewpoint Lectures presents Kl i I IrC- "Phenomena nf the Mind" I . I I