ARTS The Michigan Daily. Saturday, March 14, 1981 Page 5 Collins rewrites hies- %b/F-1-OF - - _ __i. IJ i W V VTT ALA- w W %N - Festival favorite Sally Cruikshank returns with her inimitable creation Quasi (right) in 'Quasi's Cabaret Trailer,' Saturday night at the Michigan Theatre as part of the Ann Arbor 16mm Film Festival. Festival gathers steam By FRED SCHILL It wasn't your everyday run-of-the- mill blues. Couldn't be. Normal old blues songs don't take ten minutes to play and, my God, what happened to the vocals? What Albert Collins and the Icebreakers did to the blues Wednesday, night at Rick's American Cafe was a phenomenon unto itself. What they have created can only be called dance blues. Highlighted by long, thunderous Collins guitar solos, the songs scorched and sizzled upon creation, and the resultant fervor spread through the steamy, cramped club like wildfire. It was a challenge to dance, a call few could resist. The siren was the Master of the Telecaster, so called because Collins has subdued that brand of guitar to his will. It has given up the fight. They are one. Collins reeled off monumental, eter- nal guitar solos in sporadic and enigmatic bursts. Dimpled cheeks grimacing, lips singing along with the guitar, Collins impulsively twitched and twisted about the stage, teasing the audience with abbreviated blasts that he would repeat and pause, repeat and pause, before they suddenly exploded like shrapnel, sending needles up the spine and shredding jangled nerve en- dings. Collins' style is fraught with such sudden changes in tempo and intensity that he leaves the listener in a state of ecstatic confusion as to just what might happen next. He is a singularly talented guitarist, one of the few capable of producing lengthy and titanic ren- ditions of blues songs without making the extended solos seem gratuitous and tiresome. TALENTED AS he is, some of his appeal is just plain charisma. Collins is an impetuous man, jubilantly indulgent to each mood that seizes him, perfectly willing to try and translate it into sound and action. This is his own brand of magnetism, this boyish impetuosity. When he plunged right through the crowd and up the stairs, then stood in the doorway playing his guitar, it wasn't just a stage, act. Hell, it was cooler up there. The playfulness was also evidenced in the songs themselves. Collins has a supple voice capable of varying gradations of inflection, but used mostly for granular treatments of songs See DANCEBLUES, Page 8 Needless to say, the Film Festival is the cinematic event of the year in Ann Arbor ... if not the entire Midwest. Covering all the 16mm territory from animation and visual experimentation to documentaries and straight narratives, the Festival (now in its 19th year) has in the past been a springboard for professionals and a valuable outlet for hopeful amateurs. Here are some highlights from Wednesday's and Thursday's showings. Wedn esday By CHRISTOPHER POTTER Wednesday night's showing was highlighted by Richard Barber's Com- plicated Fun, which begins with an un- promising collage of cliched anti-war, anti-military newsreel clips. Suddenly the film shifts metaphoric gears, of- fering us as a central character an American Everyman skidding his way like a modern-day Harold Lloyd through the lsurrealistic pitfalls of college, then of the post-grad work for- ce. Our hero eventually chucks the rat race to the looney tune and lyrics of the "Uncomplicated Fyn". theme song. Barber's irreverence contrasts Linda Nathanson's A-T-E-Z, a heavy- handed, end-of-the-world absurdist piece whose intermittent flair for scary apocalypse is undermined by the banality of many of its individual images. Accounts from the Life of George Wilkins is a merciless study of a black derelict in Boston's Roxbury district. Directors Steven Ascher and Claude Chelli employ the no-narrative, non- judgmental style of Frederick Wiseman, letting their subjects speak for themselves. We watch George as he reels from one living quarter to the text, his life an endless series of raging, acrimonious confrontations intersper- sed with moments of anomolous, wren- ching tenderness . The underbelly of society is alive and flourishing, and this film is about as close to the inside looking out as any of us privileged types are likely to experience. Th ursday , By STEVE KURTZ Every time I go to the Ann Arbor 16mm Film Festival, I enter the theatre with the hope that I'm about to see the rwildly inventive films that the wildly inventive titles promise.And I've never " been totally disappointed, although at times I might have been a bit dismayed. Even though some of the films fail,the ones thatsucceed recoup all losses. With Return of the Zo-oids!, 12-year- old Aaron Bass makes his triumphant return to the festival. Produced by 20th Century Lizard, this simply drawn car- toon moves quickly, every second features something eatiig, shooting, or grabbing something else. It ends with the promise "comeing (sic) soon, Zo- oids ." Love is the Drug visualizes the Roxy Music song through the movement of many rectangular forms. Sexual imagery is handledrin right angles in this film. Lotsa fun, with wit, looking like a good, slick, professional promo job. Moon Redefined was a circle (the moon, I assume) spinning around un- derneath video distortions. I enjoyed it except I kept feeling like reaching for the vertical hold. Bottle Up and Go is a good look at an old, black couple of the South going through daily routines - hoeing gar- dens, catching fish, canning fruit, visiting town, watching TV, and so on. The man plays the harmonica, a wire attached to their wooden house, and an empty bottle - which gives the movie its title. However, the narration by the two subjects is almost impossible to understand. The dreaded event of the night, a 60- minute movie entitled Word, Sound and Power was, surprisingly, the best thing shown all night. It's a documentary about reggae in Jamaica, its essence conveyed through the words and music of the Soul Syndicate band. Many topics are discussed - ska, Haille Selassie, the Nyabangi beat, humanity's future and, of course, marijuana. What's more, the film is chockful of great reggae tunes. All is handled clearly and intelligently, with helpful subtitles. A short, Street Scenes, delivered the evening's best laugh. This piece ingeniously converts stock footage of people walking in the street near a building which will soop be blown up in- to hilarity when an unseen director shouts commandsaand threats to his alleged cast and crew and eventually has the building destroyed (sup- posedly) on his whim. This movie comes from Zoetrope Studios, and I hope to see more from them. Washing Walls with Mrs. G has a white-haired grandmother talking to her grandson while he washes the kit- chen walls. She's a sweet Italian lady whose speech, due to her accent, is in- terpreted in subtitles. A humorous, thoroughly enjoyable slice of life. The most popular film of the night, due to the fact that it was made around here by local people - many of whom must have been in the theatre - was Nuclear Beach Party. A soldier sear- ches for survivors of nuclear holocaust, finding a group of very young adults living a constant beach party in a shelter-basement. They dance to beach music, hang ten surfing, listen to beat- -nik poetry, and can't understand why they should follow a soldier to safety. A Film About My Home has the film maker showing us around his neigh- borhood and home. It starts with whimsy and ends with pathos when he tells about his mother's death. The switch is slightly jarring. Altogether it was an interesting, if a bit overly long, evening. I can't guaran- tee that the viewer will like every film, but one is bound to find something to one's liking. There's nothing quite like the festival; I recommend it to everyone. Join The Daily Arts Staff meat sauce or wnite clam sauce anu pthe ann arbor . garlic bread until you say "Enough Already!" TONIGHT presentsTONIGHT WIN DRESSED__ __ _ _ f/ASS 7:00, 8:45 & 10:30kANNARBOR ANN ARBOR MLB 3 3600 Plymouth Rd." 769-9400 Admission: $2 ^A CBS Theatrical Films Presentation A MARTIN RITTRONALD SHEDLO Production 1000