The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, March 18, 1980-Page 5; R UFUS SEDER LEADS FILMMAKERS 16mm Film Festival ends at Mich. By CHRISTOPHER POTTER I must shamefully eat my aesthetic intonations- The Michigan Theater turns out to be a grand place to watch a film festival. By the time Ann Arbor's, 18th drew to a close Sunday night the Wuge old ,oviehouse had magically transformed itself from a hulking, austere stranget into a stout, friendly old uncle. The transformation was remarkanly painless, eventually rev- ving up the Festival into the roaring; whooping happening that epitomized the Old A&D Auditorium days-which now seem destined to swiftly slip into nostalgic obscurity. Another pleasant surprise: Against all prevailing odds, the Festival film I enjoyed the most actually ended ups winning the grand prize, or at least a fourth of it. Rufus Butler Seder's City, Slickers was the best of his group of four films which copped the prestigious Tom Berman Award. City Slickers runs a mere eight minutes, yet is so rich in visual wonderments that one is scar- cely able to describe it; Seder combines a romantic's heart with a surrealist's eye to fly the viewer into an urban, nighttime Land of Oz. The film has the stylized look of a continuous string of 1940's magazine ads: It opens in a stark, surreal bar, then takes off from there-a hipster, Tom Waits-like pianist calls the tune as all the myriad symbols of swank and seedy nightlife surge upward in a wild, bubbly dance on and on through the neon-lit night skyline of the city. Seder shoots in the starkest tones of glittering black and white; there are no walls to hos struc- tures, no boundaries whatsoever to his dionysian revelers, who cavort till the inexorible wee morning hours and send all things mournfully but liltingly back to earth. City Slickers is artistically reminiscent of Arthur Penn's mid-60's experimental Mickey One, yet in its short, concentrated form it captures the darkside fairyland mania Penn's overblown, full-length work largely missed. SEDER'S TRIUMPH by no means implies the Festival has adequately kicked its traditional habit of adulation of irrelevancies. Major awards to lengthy non-entertainments like Oxford Hotel, A Cup of Tea, and Tri-Color-Last illustrated onve again the judges' predilection for the principle that if a film is both boring and incomprehen- sible, then it must be great art. Ran- dall Detloff's Untitled, though substan- tially superor to these other three, still seemed hardly deserving of the new Marvin Felheim Award. Detloff's film, a delicate black and white interplay of light, flora and hand-held mirrors was interesting more for its errily-mixed sound track, though it's doubtful that was the director's intended point of focus. While Untitled succeeds as a legitimate experimental effort, it remains infuriating to see far more deserving films passsed over for honors entirely. Notable omissions were Joaquin Pardo's Survival Run, an en- thralling documentary about a blind man competing in an arduous marathon race and Stan Van BDer Beck's Euclidean Illusions, a magical depiction df animated cubes floating, shimmering and mutating through a haunting deep-space background. One can of course debate the com- parative merits of winners vs. losers in- terminably; yet when you consider that some 50-odd Festival awards were See POTTER, Page 7 9 & lshows By OWEN GLEIBERMAN "Oh, I've got a gal in Kalamazoo." sang Steve Cole, initiating the first two shows of the Ann Arbor Film Festival winners' night with some classy, Bill Murrayish Las Vegas sleaze. Draped in a flowing gold-speckled bathrobe, Cole sang "Boogie-Woogie Piggie" (or something) and a few others in such a seamlessly melliflous croon, he soun- ded like he'd swallowed a jar of coconut honey backstage. Ready for anything, the audience warmed to Cole's gangly presence and quit wondering exactly what the guy had to do with the festival. Besides, he obviously had everything to do with it. He and Pat Oleszko and George Manupelli (whose mumbly, Chris Stein-ish intros each night were always good for an uneasy titter) and all those folks at Cinema Guild with the pink-tinted sunglasses-they're the ones with the 20-20 extreterrestrial vision who line the Michigan Theater with Sacco and Vanzetti posters and eep this most consumately Ann Ar- bor-ish of Ann Arbor's cultural events the wildly eclectic extravaganza it's come to be recognized as around the country. There are plenty of other festivals. But nobody does it quite like we do. THIS YEAR gave us not just a Grand Prize winner but a bona fide festival star: Rufus B. Seder, whose four remarkable films-City Slickers, Star Crazy, The Laughing Cop, and Miami-all ma'de it to Sunday night and earned him the proverbial and well- deserved Big Bucks ($1,000). The 7:00 audience caught the best of the four, the, sleek, haunting City Slickers, while the other three were spread over the rest of the evening, giving anyone who sat it out the pleasure of observing Seder's stylistic development and his subtle but hardly negligible thematic consistency. Seder's most creative stylistic flourish is his use of the lengthy lap dissolve. City Slickers and Miami are really a series of elaborately mapped- out, intertwining super-impositions, somewhat reminiscent of Coppola's electro-video image-melting in the opening sequence of Apocalpyse Now. Seder also fuses technical imagination with some tacky black humor in Star Crazy, a tale of a long-lashed would-be starlet who decides to live out her fazine fantasies by hopping in the car and taking a zingy car trip to Hollywood. Her zealousness takes her reeling over the Hollywood sign and crashing below, her star-struck saga turned to a tangue-in-cheek, Kenneth Anger-style nightmare. Seder's The Laughing Cop employed a cruder range of technical know-how-relying on a rapid-fire, Eisenteinian editing style-but unfolded with the same preverse wit. In this dark slapstick folly, a good-natured policeman manages to have a big, grinning bellylaugh at everything around him-including, eventually, a speeding truck that flattens him with Keystone Kops precision. OF COURSE, black humor has been standard fare among independent fimmakers since pre-Iambi Meets Godzilla days, and something like David S. Ewing's The Trouble With Fred, a two-minute, one-take quickie with a dead, rotting frog as punchline, was as lamely predictable as one of Carson's Tommy Newsome jokes. Treating death and decay and other disgusting things with sheeky tom- foolery isn't automatically shocking; one must have imagination. And the most imaginative funs ny films of the night were very much in the "tame" tradition. Pat Oleszko's Footsi, with two strutting yellow-pages fingers doing thewalking, was full of charming ideas (and physically more convincing than her Kneel and Dimples, though I wish the judges has canned both of . them in favor of her comparitively epic Cinderella parody, Ash Patrol. It was gratifying, though, to see Backabout and This is the Title of My Film make winning reappearances, both eminently [heatre enjoyable send-ups of conventiohal narrative filmmaking. OTHER COMIC GEMS included the delightful pop!existential animation Labyrinth, and Legacy, a tour de foi e of clay pixillation by Will Vinton,, he master of play-dough responsible-Tor such past festival classics as Cloed Mondays and the incomparable Mou- tain Music. Legacy is a lickety-splft. story-book history of the evolutioh,'bf See GLEIBERMAN. Page 7 U-M Women In Communications, Inc. presents their ANNUAL, MATRIX DINNER WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26 -6 P.M. BATES ROOM--'U CLUB MICHIGAN UNION--$7.50 per person -ALL INVITED- R.S.V.P. needed by Friday, March 21 Further information available at: Communications Department, 2040 L.S.A. Bldg. or Call 663-8243 or 663-8133 ____THE YEATS THIEATRE FESTIVAL presents Brubeck: It's a family affair By JULIE SELBST Although ordinarily one tries to avoid the use of the word "charismatic" and all of its cliche ramifications, in the in- stance of Peter "Madcat" Ruth's per- 'formance as a prelude to the Dave Brubeck Quartet Sunday night at Hill, it -f its - He opened with a traditional blues number, singing in his sort of half shout that he alternates with his harmonica. Ruth also did a haunting piece, simultaneously playing the harmonica *a nd an African thumb piano, (more formally called a calimba), called "Watching the World Go By." But the 'number that the audience really 'responded to was one he played with a -Mexican water whistle and a penny whistle simultaneously, entitled, "The Bird and the Whistle." He was only adequately accompanied by bassist Jason Boekeloo, on all songs. Ruth, though he hails from Chicago, 's almost custom-fit to Ann Arbor. In- ian-shirted and barefoot, with his mix- ture of blues/jazz/folk, he doesn't reach out to the audience, he seems to come from it. That he is having a good time while performing is obvious; the feeling produced is infectious. Rarely does a so-called "warm-up" act receive a standing ovation; in Madcat's case, it seemed the least he deserved. And if ever there were an appropriate choice for an opening act, Ruth was it; he used to play in the Brubeck Quartet himself n the early seventies. Not only was the audience warm, if anything, it was perhaps too excited for the somewhat understated appearance of Brubeck and the rest of his quartet. Aside from the characteristic sound of Brubeck's rhythm section, that of reverberating cymbals arranged in slinky rhythms, what is most distin- ctive about the group is their complete synchronization with each other. Only Soccasionally did the senior Brubeck seem to give any direction to the other musicians, nevertheless they work per- fectly as a group. Each knows when to step back and let another instrument' dominate for a while. Not only is the group balanced, but there is very little piggishness or undue flashiness in their solos, a distressingly common flaw among jazz artists. This does not imply by any means that they are not highly capable nusicians. Far from it. Butch Miles' drum solo captures the essence of the group's sound, especially the sultry, high-tension rhythms .that had the audience squirming. Jerry Bergonzi, the group's saxaphonist, had left the stage earlier; about halfway through, the bassist and trombonist Chris Brubeck put down his bass guitar and joined him in the rear; so did Mr. - - ~ mice, then each returns to his instrument even more enthusiastically. If there is a single note to be made about the Brubeck quartet, they are serious about their music. It wasn't yet the second number before Dave Brubeck doffed his blazer, as if to dispense with frivolity and move on to- serious playing. The feeling one gets from watching them play is that this. is what they do every night, the only dif- ference being that occasionally they do it on stage. Yet to call them uninspiring would be a gross offense. Dave Brubeck is an energetic performer, with the ability to motivate his quartet. iO The Dave Brubeck Quartet deserves its acclaim. The music itself ranges from moments of spirited interplay as in the classic "Take Five," for which they called back "Madcat" Ruth, to an upbeat, jazz rendition of "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?" to even more con- temporary experiments. Across this wide range of music, Brubeck and his band function like a family. Each player can sense what the others are feeling and reflect it in their music. And that is what gives Dave Brubeck much of his overwhelming audience appeal. "YEATS AND MODERN DRA MA" A COLLOQUIUM I. t i.. MARCH 19-22, 1980 With Guests from Ireland open to the public without charge Please cal l the Center for Western European Studies,'.' 764.4311, for the complete festival schedule Dave Brubeck concentrates fiercely over his piano. He and his young quartet appeared before an appreciative crowd Sunday night at Hill Auditorium. The concert was sponsored by Eclipse Jazz. r The Yeats Theatre Festival is made possible by a grant from The Michigan, Councilfor the Humanities & is sponsored by The University of Michigan Center for Western European Studies Brubeck senior. The solo continued un- til the rest of the ensemble picked up their instruments and returned to the original theme at just the right moment. Both Brubecks seemed elated by the drummer's efforts, an excitement that shows up in their music. Both of them, especially the younger, seem to take a certain pride in watching the other's solos. Chris bobs his head and shoulders, while Dava beams happily, '4 LISTEN TO CLASSICAl MUSIC Performed By: "MUSIQUE UNIQUE' A Four Piece String Ensemble Every Sunday Night At: THE SPAGHETTI BENDER 23 North Washington 485-27 Downtown Ypsilanti HOUSING DIVISION WEST QUADRANGLE RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATIONS FOR SPRING/SUMMER 1980 Available Starting March 11, 1980 In 1500 SAB POSITIONS INCLUDE: RESIDENT DIRECTOR AND RESIDENT ADVISOR Resident Advisor positions require a minimum of 55 credit hours. Graduate status preferred for the resident directors positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be-a registered U of M student on the Ann Arbor campus. (2) Undergraduates must have completed a minimum of 55 credit hours and have a 2.5 cumulative grade point average in the school or college in which they are enrolled. (3) Grad- uate students must be in good academic standing in the school or college in ,which they are enrolled. (4) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in residence halls at University level for at least one year. (5) Proof of these qualifications will be required. Current staff and other applicants who have an application on file must come to this office to update their application form. Staff selection and placement shall be determined in the following order: 50 CAMP TAMARACK INTERVIEWS Monday, March 24