ARTS The Michigan Daily Thursday, January 15, 1981 Page 7 DialMfor Murder' in 3-D doesn't help Redbone headlines A2 Folk Fest By OWEN GLEIBERMAN 3-D movies are animated optical illusions; you don't watch them as much as sit back and let them play tricks with your eyes. At a screening of the "blood-chilling" 3-D print of The Creature From the Black Lagoon, I peered out from behind those white- cardboard-framed, blue-and-red tinted ,glasses (which tend to make everyone in the audience look like members of some New Wave ensemble called the Visual Aids) while a galactic explosion sent a shower of cardboard shrapnel to the back of the auditorium. Later in the same picture, the Creature himself (scaly, rubber-reptile mask in place) made his entrance by taking a swipe at the first eight rows, while little round, white marble-ish bubbles drifted out of his gaping, thick-lipped jaw. And they say that 3-D ain't art. Actually, 3-D was always a cheesy wonder that never really delivered the goods it promised. The process was in- troduiced as the technical innovation that would finally liberate movies from their straitjacket of plain old art- gallery flatness. Just don some funny- looking glasses and images would be popping out at you like cannonballs, more realistic, more "alive" than ever. It didn't work out that way. Like Cinemascope, the wide-screen process that was supposed to convert the modestly square screen surface into a mammoth rectangular canvas worthy of Biblical epics at the very least, 3-D was an extended publicity stunt, a visual gimmick whose novelty was quickly worn off. The nifty sen- sationalism of 3-D epics like The Creature and House of Wax was generally limited to a few strategically- spaced moments; visually,,most of the movies tended to look like normal old 2- .D and the dialogue ("You're insane,, 'Doctor, leading us all into these waters!") was drearily routine- stuff. "3-D movies were like candy corn: tasty for only a little while, and not- quite-real. q Occasionally, though, directors with some scientific curiosity exploited the ~process to more "serious"~ ends, in- stead of simply punctuating grade-C :horror thrillers wit. ;eatchy-, svisual tricks. So it only madesense that Alfred 'Hitchcock, visual trickster that he was, wpuld take a stab at it. In 1954,' Hitch- cock took Dial M For Murder, a popular English stage-play, and filmed it with a sophisticated polaroid 3-D process, using two simultaneously-running cameras to produce a doulgle-image in glorious Technicolor, instead of the usual grade-B-surreal red and blue tint. The movie was rarely screened in its original form. This Friday , Saturday, and Sunday, though, at 7:00 and 9:30, the Detroit Film Theatre willfbe presenting the 3-. Dial M as the first feature in a four-month series of 3-D films at the Institute of Arts, including Kiss Me Kate, House of Wax, and Andy Warhol's Frankenstein among others. It's a rare chance to see what happened whenrthe supreme visual innovator of the first half century of movie-making got his hands on the ultimate gimmick. The movie itself is a fairly stodgy, stage-bound affair, and even Hitchcock buffs tend to look down their noses at it. It's a not-quite-suave, English-game- playing melodrama that hops from blackmail to murder to an attempted. frame-up, but the whole thing is con- fined to a single claustrophobic living- room set and a chamber-cast of four ac- tors, headed by Grace Kelly and an. unusually prissy Ray Milland. When the 3-D version played a limited engagement at a New York arthouse last Spring, Village Voice critic Andrew Sarris called it the "avant-garde" cinematic event of the season. I caught it at a preview this week and couldn't wax quite as enthusiastic. The 3-D process doesnt actually spread out ob- jects over a uniform space. Instead, it divides the screen into three flat visual planes, one on top of the other, highlighting foreground objects like lamps and vases and turning background scenery into a sort of detailed backdrop. The effect is like deep-deep-focus, and even though the actors are a shade more well-rounded than usual, they hardly look like they'rer about to walk off the screen. Still, the movie is worth seeing. When Grace Kelly is being strangled and her outstretched hand reaches right into the auditorium for help, you know the meaning of audience involvement. Hit- chcock uses the process with such elegant restraint it's almost pleasure- denying; he never reaches for gratuitous effects, but the movie is too unvaried to allow for much inventive use of three-dimensional space. One wishes Hitchcock had made Psycho in 3-7; what with knife-slashing and all, it could, have done some per- manent emotional damage. Perhaps it says something, though, that Hitchcock never used the 3-D process again; Dial M For Murder is a visually charming eccentricity, a clipped-English Colum- bo episode with cut-out figures and jut- ting objects. It's too bad that Hitchcock makes his cameo in a still photograph. You'd think he'd have rigged it so he could roll right off the screen. By STEVE HOOK Thanks to Dave and Linda Siglin, who manage the Ark, we'll be able to see both the Fourth Annual Ann Ar- bor Folk Festival and the Super- Bowl this month. The Ark benefit was originally scheduled for Super Sunday, before the frantic Siglins-and Major Events-realized the goof and bum- ped it up a week. (At least one of the scheduled performers, so the story goes, a lifelong and impassioned Eagles fan, had indicated that on the 25th there would be no leaving Philadelphia, period.) As usual, there will be two shows for the festival, one in the afternoon and one at night and three acts in addition to the headliner for 'each show. But unlike the past two years, the headliner this year will not be David Bromberg (who is busy for now learning the art of violin- making in Chicago)-this year it will be Leon Redbone, also known as "The walking 78 album." Redbone's presence at Power Cen- ter will probably keep both audien- ces amused, if not slightly disorien- ted, with his anachronistic, boozy (and not a little bit tongue-in-cheek) personality, his eccentric appearaq- ce, and his subtle interpretations of antique songs like "Shine on Harvest Moon" and "Meloncholy Baby." On stage, his bizzare manner tends to obscure his vocal skills and his ver- satile guitar playing (Redbone jum- ps from generation to generation reviving not only the lyricists, but the trailblazing guitarists from the past, e.g. Blind Boy Fuller, Lonnie Johnson, Eddie Lang, and Bill Broonzy). He has become a most, respectable artist, seemingly in. spite of himself. But is this folk music? Probably not, but the label "folk music" is steadily being eroded anyway, and Redbone comes as close to the Blues, Jazz, "Melancholy Baby," you name it and Leon Redbone plays it. Redbone will appear with Michael Cooney, Andy Breckman and other Ark favorites at the Ann Arbor Folk Festival this Sunday. a two week concert without repeating a song; he is, in fact, a modern day Woodie Guthrie, having spent much of his life hitch-hiking around North America, and at times, when he was younger, stowing away on freight trains. Michael Cooney is perhaps the most talented unknown folk singer in the country. In the 8 p.m. show, an equally balanced line-up will be featured: Comedian Andy Breckman, sea songwriter and balladeer Stan Rogers, and instrumentalists Mick Moloney and Eugene O'Donnell. Breckman is best known for his contributions to NBC's "Hot Hero Sandwich," from which he won an Emmy Award. He is a regular on the American coffeehouse circuit, and has been known to open for Robert Klein when he tours. His performan- ces tend to be unorthodox, his songs irreverent. Rogers represents the conventional, McBride-Lou Killen- Gamble Rogers strain of folk music; he stands six foot four and his voice is deep and powerful, yet his songs are composed and, performed delicately, thoughtfully. His works have been picked up by dozens of professional musicians touring today. Moloney and O'Donnell are long time performers of Irish dance music. Formerly of the popular group The Johnstons, Moloney is known for his skills as a performer, and for his depth as a folklorist. O'Donnell has excelled in Irish dan- cing, and is. a six-time winner of the All-Ireland Step Dancing Champion- ship. They've been playing together on-and-off since 1973, and tend to deliver an intense set. It appears to be another satisfying festival, one that is, once again, marked by its diversity. And you can even see the Super Bowl. I traditional concept as many of the country-western, blues, or pop ar- tists touring folk music coffeehouses today. "Why the hell even try to define it?" screeched last year's folk festival master of ceremonies Owen McBride. "What's the point in giving it a little number, or placing it in some category?" Nonetheless, compared to Red- bone, the other performers ap- pearing Sunday are more f traditional, and the festival in general appears quite well balan- ced. In the first show the Canadian singer Margaret Christl will appear, along with the Henrie Brothers string band, and American humorist and folk song collector Michael Cooney. Christl is a native of Wales, and as a regular performer= at Canadian festivals throughoutrthe seventies, she has gained much respect for her interpretations of traditional folk songs from all of the British Isles and Canada. The Henrie Brothers are considered by many string music aficionados as the best in the business-but watch out, they may want to compete with Redbone for the looney award; they have been known to appear in tuxedoes or bathing suits, and offer an equally unpredictable reportoire. Michael Cooney (who I believe should be headlining this festival) will also appear in the afternoon show. He is a frequent visitor to the Ark-a dedicated collector-singer, and a vivacious storyteller- humorist. It is said that he could sing i 7the ann arbor film cooperative Specials American-style Tonight presents Tonight Hospital coma unit .. B BRADFORD PARKS' The pr1em with most bad music groups is that they don't challenge themselves enough. They find a com- fortable, popular groove and then they just dig their feet in the sand until it buries them. But more modern groups know all about built-in obsolescense, and keep growing all the time. Com- pare Elvis Costello's constant per- mutations and look what's happened to Roxy Music and Devo when they stood still. Yuch! Now look at the Specials. They've changed a lot from their Costello produced debut LP last year. They've visited America, and found out all about us. Elevator music,. DC-10 crashes, James Bond movies, meeting people who don't realize the inevitability of nuclear warfare and just stand around and laugh. Real Americana. THIS CULTURE shock is what . makes, the Specials new LP a giant step forward. Like Elvis Costello's Ar- med Forces, More Specials takes hold of the modern nightmare and tries to see its way to the end of the tunnel. This could be a concept album. Start. with traditional rock-ska y"Enjoy Yourself", look at the working class and rich girls who end up in blue movies and then take a look at yourself. Swam- ped in modern ideals, everyone you criticize comes out a stereotype. And if stereotypes don't really exist, then where are you? The answers are hf the last three songs. Our narrator is on the verge of insanity, he can't eat, drink, or sleep. "I Can't Stand it", it's too much. He takes the "International Jet Set" on a DC-10, ruminating about life, love, etc. "It all seems so absurd to me," he says, "Will the muzak never end?" It does swiftly, because the plane starts--to crash and the terrified screams mingle with tape recorded emergency instructions. En- ter a funeral muzak reprise of "Enjoy Yourself". Confused, weary, but still alive and not beaten, like the final track of Armed Forces: "I will return, I will not burn. " The Specials More Specials has tran- scended most rock music product and made it all very danceable and intense. This is the kind of music that wants to tell you something. Are you smart enough to listen? LAST TANGO IN PARIS 7:008 9:30 Admission: $2 Aud. A, Angell Hall 'last mle' for WESTFIELD, Mass (AP)-They st-aid t hover in a shadow world somewhere people w between life and death. They cannot ago, Dav. speak or move, and doctors don't know Most if the 17 patients in the Western automo Massachusetts Hospital coma unit can Massac see, hear, or even think. the olde "They're like soldiers . .. missing in been in a action," says a nurse at Unit Three, the Each only coma unit in the state and one of decorate the few such facilities in the country. cards. G "When a patient is sent here, it's involved almost like the last mile, because crash, h. nothing else worked," said nursing hanging director Eleanor Davio. "Many can live heroics a full life span-70 years or more-in a player. coma." TO THE PATIENTS' families, a ANOT coma can be more painful to deal with her 20s, than death. photo of Victoria Blake's 31-year-old husband, went int .John, has been in a coma for more than the child two years, since he fell from a tree The un while pruning branches and landed because ,headfirst on a concrete patio. victims "It's harder than death because the are on lif ,grief goes on continuously," Ms. Blake has a wa said. "If John had died I would have few hosp taken a year to get over it and then Nurse gone. But John's not dead. I'm predic- Every f ting another 35 years of this." in bed to THERE ARE A growing number of day the coma patients across the country today mchairs because paramedics and improved fir- culation patients echniques are keeping alive who would have died 20 years vio said. coma patients are victims of bile accidents. At Western husetts, the youngest is 19 and st 47, and the longest any has, a coma is 4 years. has a private room, usually ed with pictures and greeting )ne patient, a 20-year-old man [in a 1978 Christmas Eve car as an old newspaper clipping on his- wall, recounting his as a star high school baseball HER PATIENT, a woman in lies motionless beside a framed her baby daughter. The woman o a coma while giving birth to d. nit here was started a year ago it was easier to care for coma in one place, Davio said. None fe support systems, and the unit aiting list of 50 to 75 because so pitals provide the needed care. s are on duty around the clock. ew hours they turn the patients o prevent bedsores, and every patients are lifted into ar- and moved around, to aid cir- ,. N The University of Michigan Women's 9 Glee Ci48r AUDITIONS Donc Theare 'Studio 01 F \ for THIS TERM Information 995-4242 I ,