ARTS The Michigan Daily Friday, September 5, 1980 Page 7-A campy triue o error By DENNIS HARVEY Over the years, as this increasingly gets to be a nation of cineastes, we've gotten used to the idea of one director quoting the work of another. But are we ready for a director who quotes him- splf? I don't think anyone is quite ready fir Brian de Palma's Dressed to Kill, a delirious crossword puzzle of movie project to soften the blow of de Palma's being fired from a more ambitious en- deavor, to be replaced by the stolidly reliable Sidney Lumet. Dotty and madly stylish, with even more grand set-pieces than a Bertolucci film (though they're more like pop ditties than operatic arias here), it's a giddy thriller pushed well over the edge of baroque ways that one is at once ap- palled and insanely amused watching it. It's even more of a crumbly-centered exercise in florid nonsense than The Fury, and those who found The Fury brilliant (presumably because it had the nerve to risk, and finally achieve, ridiculousness for the sake of direc- torial wizardry) may call this a masterpiece-every sequence is, after all, labelled "classic." De Palma's funhouse flashiness is, at least, alive in a way that most of the more intelligen- tly controlled directors will never achieve. They wouldn't dare. You may not be sure whether the joke is on you, on the characters, or whether it's back- fired on de Palma, but he does get you laughing-often in disbelief. Dressed to Kill is a really terrible movie in just about every conceivalbe way, but how many films keep you rooted to your seat, deathly afraid of missing some new insane flourish? THE STORY centers-for a while-on a typical Hitchcocian neurotic blond, Kate Miller (Angie Dickinson), who lives in a chic Manhat- tan apartment with her boorish husband and junior-scientist, whiz-kid teenage son. She spills her dissatisfac- tions-most of them'sexual, due to the hit-and-run bedroom polish of her husband-to psychiatrist Dr. Elliot (Michael Caine), and after an after- noon session goes to a modern art museum to meet her mother, who fails to show up. In one of the most elaborately constructed much-ado- about-nothing set pieces ever filmed, she follows a handsome stranger about the museum forever, inadvertantly drops her glove, and finally emerges from the building to see her missing glove dangling in come-hither fashion from a cab window. She offers fumbling thanks, is yanked into the car, and relieved of all that nasty repression by being practically ravished by the stranger as the cab driver gawks and repeatedly adjusts his rear-view mirror for a better look. After an afternoon of illicit bliss at the man's apartment, she leaves him-zonked out, just like her husband-and departs. But during the elevator ride on the way. out, she remembers leaving her wedding ring on the dresser, and returns to the seventh floor. The elevator door opens, a somewhat less pretty tall blonde looms in, and if you haven't seen or heard about Psycho, maybe you're one of the estimated ten people in the U.S. who might be genuinely surprised by what happens next. The rest of the film is a maze of chases as Dr. Elliot, the son, an obnoxious police detective and a high- class prostitute named Elizabeth Blake (Nancy Allen), who had a glim- pse at the murderer and must work both to clear herself and elude the killer, all struggle to locate the mysterious "lady" in sunglasses with a very large razor blade. AS WAS HITCHCOCK'S scheme in Psycho, de Palma derives his schock value from withholding the violence for as long as possible-and when it finally arrives, it's always much, much worse See CLSSIC, Page 8 After an afternoon business tryst, Manhattan strumpet Nancy Allen discovers something of a mess in an apartment building elevator, and fails to notice the blonde on the side, who has not been using that razor to keep herself neat and pretty. One of the many hyperactive cresendoes in Brian de Palma's latest thriller, 'Dressed to Kill.' references and jokery. It begins with a barely altered remake of the opening- credit sequence from de Palma's own Carrie, ends with a climax-the very lase one in a film that's practically all climaxes-idential to the same movie's pinchline, and as if that weren't en9ugh, what's in-between has been lif- ted (as in shoplifted,. bodily) from Hit- chcock's Psycho. Dressed to Kill may have been quickly tossed together from those predecessors' remains as an easy camp. It takes the director's trademarks, and a truckload of Hitch- cock's, to such ludicrous, half-serious extremes that it seems like a parody of a de Palma film-just as Robert Alt- man's A Wedding seemed a mockery of his own techniques, but where Altman grew sour, de Palma gets wilder and sillier. Dressed to Kill isn't embalmed, like his last real failure, the 1976 Obsession (which swiped its story from Vertigo); it jumps around in such frantically I -- - - - -- -- i MEDIAOTRICS presents: Sept. 5th: "BREAKING AWAY" at MLB 3-7:30 and 9:30 Sept. 6th: "AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT'' at Angell Hall, Aud A-7:30 and 9:30 MALCOLM Mc DOV E~l -NO COUPONS- FRI, MON--7:00, 9:45 SAT, SUN-1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:45 Iyou must be 1S yrs and prove it with a driver's license. FRI, SAT, SUN and HOLIDAYS all seats $4.50 MON thru THURS all seats $4.00 All seats $2.50 til 2:00 (or cap.) CALILA Mediatrics has a full and exciting schedule lined up for this season. Keep a lookout for a schedule avail- able all over campus. For more information, please call UAC at 763-1107. - U*^Nann Subscribe to The Daily--Call 7640558 CIEMAlII '~ Presents THIS WEEKEND GRAND HOTEL 0 Liver Pills? No, back-to-school supplies. a EU S- Lu U- aU (Edmund Goulding, 1932) GRETA GARBO stars as a fading ballerina who "wants to be alone" with impoverished gentleman thief JOHN BARRYMORE. "If you want to see what screen glamour used to be and what originally, 'stars' were, this is perhaps the best example of all time. GRAND HOTEL survives because of the same factors that made it a huge hit in 1932 (it even won the Academy Award as Best Picture-the force to the personalities involved in the Omnibus story.'-Pouline Koel. With JOAN CRAWFORD, LIONEL BARRYMORE, LEWIS STONE, and WALLACE BEERY. (115 min.) 7:00 ONLY. RED DUST (Victor Fleming, 1932) JEAN HARLOW is at her sexiest as a loose woman on a rubber plantation in Indochina. CLARK GABLE co-stars as the planta- tion foreman and Harlow's lover. Into this den of iniquity walks Mary Astor, cool as an aristocratic Cucumber and schem- ing for Gable. This classic confrontation represents MGM adven- ture/melodrama at its best. (83 min.) 9:00 ONly. Remind yourself with Carter's Hi-Liter. Express yourself clearly with Carter's X-Pert typewriter ribbon. im a H- " znE LA CAGE AUX FOLLES (Birds of a Feather) (Edouard Molinaro, 1979) Variation on a theme from GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER. A gay nightclub owner in Saint Tropez and his live-in lover of 25 years, the tempestuous female impersonator Zaza, are shocked to discover that the nightclub owner's son is planning to marry the daughter of the highest national morality official. When her parents decide to pay a visit to their future son- in-law's home, the results are both poignant and hilarious. A. surprisingly warm film, it portrays both the trials and joys of gay life. French with subtitles. (99 min.) 7:00, 8:40, and 10:20. I I ~iinL~UI~LdEbij MEbLUL I~~ hfauI EZYZ1F~'3W~ I Ad . =gym i m _r' 0 ' 1 i 'I U