The Michigan Daily-Friday, March 14, 1980-Page 7 ANN ARBOR FILM FESTIVAL New era a difficult transition. " By CHRISTOPHER POTTER The Ann Arbor 16mm Film Festival launched a new era this week, and as with most transitions, the new clothes fit a bit uncomfortably. Gone forever are the cramped confines of the Old A&D Auditorium, expansively replaced by the vast recesses of the Michigan Theater. Though the reasons for the geographical switch are obvious and ,justifiable (the Michigan provides a more suitable and comfortable screening forum to judge the many en- ,trants, and has a seating capacity to 1meet the perennial overflow of Festival Ipatroris), the mad carnival atmosphere almost through his runners, leading the viewer on an astonishing journey through a primeval wilderness Valhalla so magical one almost expects gnomes and elves to emerge from behind the forest trees or out of the often om- niscient mountain mist. Survival Run proves an exhilarating tribute not only to the spiritual determination of the in- dividual, but also to the epic grandeur of nature which inspired it. Mary Bellis' TV 33 is a far more problematical film, as witnessed by the ample chorus of boos which followed its screening. Seizing the shopworn theme of television as our age's Frankenstein monster, Bellis breathes new life into images. Bellis' accompanying soun- dtrack hurtles together fragments -of TV words and sounds, then twists and warps them into a tumultuous, cacophonic symphony of dementia. THERE'S nothing satirical or cutesy about TV 33; it's an uncompromising, all-out raging assault on the media it despises, a howl of paranoic despair over an institution which invades, shackles and mutates us. (The words "It won't happen to n,.!. repeat again and again amidst the aural tumult.) Bellis' movie is an absolutely daz- zling piece of technical virtuosity - an amazingly textured, sophisticated work which blends its visual and sonic elements into a breathing, menacing serpent. The director extends herself a bit too much toward the end, begins to repeat without ever reaching a resolution either for good or evil. Yet the scope of TV 33's cinematic mastery ought to be enough to make more than a few big-time filmmakers purple with envy. TWO WORKS also vied for the evening's pitsville honors. Magdalena Rangel's Four Times/Four Times of- fered us four fluctuating rectangles, whose perpetual transmutations of color and texture might have become interesting had they not been accom- panied beat for beat by a near-blinding strobe effect. plus a pointless, jackhammer sound track which seemed malevolently; designed to send the average viewer home in the perfect mood to smack around his wife and kids. Tim Bruce's A Cup of Tea presented a series of long, strangling shots of assorted household furnishing and utensils, occasionally interspaced by equally vapid domestic sound effects and a few brief monologues treading tritely and gratuitously across the in- tellectual dustbowl of alienation. Bruce seems passionately committed to the ancient underground principle that the longer you hold your cameraonan ob- ject, the more likely it is to acquire the auspices of metaphysical truth. Thank- fully, this time-honored con job's' heyday appears definitely on the way out. THE REST of the program was at least mostly enjoyable if not too memorable. Pat Olezsko's Kneel and Dimples was an entertaining urban fable featuring her own knees in the roles of a tiny, dressed up couple touring the sidewalks of New York. Though Olezsko is one of the free-flung geniuses of our time, Kneel and Dim- ples is not really one of her better illusions; too often the audience is aware that her miniature protagonists are merely extensions of her own ap- pendages, and thus the hoped-for visual spell is often disrupted and its accom- panying humor de-fused. More successful was Paul Glabicki's Five Improvisations, a diminutive but mad little universe of assorted sym- bols, words and squiggles pulsating and mutating in accordance to strict musical harmony. It rather resembled a computer screen of a spaceship gone haywire, yet maintained a charmingly delightful order within the boundaries of its own insanity. NOW AND THEN even an unsuc- cessful film would contain some -momentary element that rendered it briefly memorable. Included in the midst of Richard Balkowski's Punk/Deaf - an otherwise very or- dinary film about a punk rock hangout in LA - was a modified slow-motion shot of the club's jumping, dancing clientele. The effect of the slowdown was to transform the revelers into grotesque, shambling ghouls straight out of George Romero. The image seemed to symbolically rip away the masks of the dancers toreveal some hideous sub-spiritual underlayer; this perhaps accidental effect provided an insightful interlude that was genuinely terrifying. Speaking of magic moments, I'm especially grateful to Tom Brenner's Tri-Color-Last for giving us a several- times-repeated shot of multi-imaged, multi-filtered swans cavorting in a pond to the strains of the Poulenc. It was a sequence so pastorally perfect that I found myself gladly willing to forgive the total. irrelevance of the remaining 97 per cent of Brener's otherwise interminable opus. " o"Im - BRIGH1 KO -V1"S .....- d A rd NeWDreai4 Fr Wa$ U- M-A RClf SO- NERRY/EYREMLC CHARUE HADEN/ED BACKWELL Ticket s/$ in advance ON SALE NOW/MICLUH.NION 8.O. For-more information/ 763-2071 ml is q the DAEBRUDEICK QUARTET A scene from John Feldman's "Dry Yearnings", shown Tuesday evening at the Ann Arbor Film Festival. so endemic to Old A&D is thus far 'achingly absent from this year's festivities. Though the Michigan may eventually prove as livable and warmly manic as Zvas the Festival's former residence, there was an irrepressible, sweaty charisma to the old, dingy headquar- ters that may prove irreplaceable. The Michigan, of course, has loads of its own atmosphere and tradition, but it's a tradition of a different time and a dif- ferent public. For the moment, the Festival seems an orphaned tenant who has lost some cherished uniqueness; the once-madcap crowds seem for the moment more like any standard movie audience in a large moviehouse. A capacity A&D mob looks puny and lost jn the cavernous expanses of the Michigan, and thus much of the close, rah-rah unanimity of the old Festival audiences is now shattered. 4THIS SLIGHTLY lost, agrophobic sensation has doubtless contributed to the general subduedness of this week's Gerowds. Wednesday night's 7 and 9 o'clock shows certainly provided suf- ficient grist for vocalized consumption, though the programs were graced by only a few examples of either outstan- ding films or genuine stinkers Two works emerged as the cream of the bunch. Joaguin Pardo's Survival Run was an absolutely breathtaking account of a blind man who competes in an ex- cruciatingly rigorous marathon race in the Pacific northwest. Clinging throughout the run to a seeing partner, Pardo's protagonist navigates moun- tains, forest and open plains while his comrade shouts instructions all the while over the fiendishly difficult route. Survival Run's visuals and sound are so exquisitely applied that one can scarcely believe that one is watching a documentary. Pardo's camera sweeps and leaps over, around, and at times Brubeck .due at Hill Dave Brubeck, perhaps the most widely known jazz performer and com- poser of his generation is due foe an Ann Arbof appearance this Sunday, March 16, at Hill Auditorium. Contrary to popular opinion, there are plenty of tickets left to catch the man who took jazz to the top of the pop charts in the early sixties. SINCE THAT seminal work with saxophonist Paul Desmond, Brubeck has continued working in the main- stream, touring extensively with bands featuring his three sons. Bassist and trombonist Chris Brubeck will join his father in Ann Arbor, along with former Michigan Jazz Band drummer and Count Basie alumnus Buthc Miles. Rounding out the evening will be Ann Arbor's resident harmonica virtuoso Peter "Madcat" Ruth. A veteran of previous Brubeck and sons bands, Madcat is a versatile soloist and quite a crowd pleaser. Sunday's show looks to be a solid evening of music accessible to old and young alike. the notion by extending the standard motif of satirical madness (i.e., Being There) into absolute madness, period. While a group of silhouetted performers hover in a zombie \ballet around their TV sets, mutant images pulsate from the screens in a grotesque, non-stop malformation of familiar persons and special guest peter'maicat'ruth. sunday, march 16, 8pm hill auditorium Tickets 7.50, 6.50, 5.50 now appearing LIVE ! FOOTLOOSE ! Saturday Night - 9 pm 0 $1 cover charge 2324 DEXTER RD ANN ARBOR, M[x Warnh i! i" i" Watering hole Tickets on sale now at the Michigan Union Box Office. Also available at Schoolkids' and Dis- count Records in Ann Arbor. For more informa- tion call 763-2071. GOOD SEATS AVAILABL. presents R J a6 . eR' .,n E 4 EC 'Of FRIDAY SATURDAY U 9pm -l am - - NO COVER! t4 ipato 1140 South University AT THE MICHIGAN THEATRE ...e...... 0.,...... * * *.*.* .**S**. **. **. 00.'*** C *-'*-.**. *00000 . .. f . . ." . .*.*-*" '.*.* ASB@RS F [- -TA-R I C A \ITM AHiA M A T A ( P "1 % CRISLER ARENA Tickets on sale Monday, March 17 All seats reserved: $12.50, $10.00, $8.50. Tickets Available: Zr..af f .. ' . . - aI Ar an:n Dn s k-n. A... d.. I..r nA nA-..a. an fla ..eha * U. .ta.iaIa. a...n