ARTS_ I Tonight CINEMA GUILD Presents Gregory Peck, Jean Parker, Karl Maiden, in THE GUNFIGHTER The Michigan Daily Wednesday, September 24, 1980 Page 5 7:00 & 4:04 Films so bad they re... bad? Johnny Ringer is a gunslinger who wants to retire but a young upstart thinks he's faster and wants to be able to say, "Yeah, I'm the guy who killed Johnny Ringo," so he can get respect. There's always someone messing things up! Johnny has to take care of it and keep his dignity and new way of life without getting himself croaked. A great scene when the bad guy threatens a little pardner. Shown at LORCHl HALL (Old A&D) By DENNIA HARVEY Camp has its undeniable pleasures, along with a slew of limitations-and if sitting through (nearly) all of last weekend's World's Worst Films Festival at the Michigan Theatre ten- ded to emphasize the limitations after a while, it was certainly time for someone to stage the thing. Plan 9 Productions, a group of young Canadians in search of media attention and presumably a few higher ideals, has-been taking this best-of-the-N.Y.C. "torrid passion in the icy north" with Kay Francis) through all those gaudy- awful Jacqueline Susann adaptions? How about some samples of rabid pretentiousness? (There must be a goldmine in bad, old experimental works of the I-saw-a-black-rider-in-my- toast school waiting to be rediscovered.) What about classic kultur kitsch, like the giddy Busby Berkeley Technicolor riot of The Gang's All Here-Carmen Miranda adrift in a sea of dancing girls carrying fiascos was The Terror of Tiny Town, the first and hopefully the last midget musical western. Is was like Bugsy Malone (1976, adorable children dressed up as gangsters for a WHOLE FILM) without the benefit of expensive settings. How long can anyone watch short people ride around the prairies on Shetland ponies, anyway? Stunning one-sentence ideas don't make great camp-they make great hit-and-run jokes in Monty Python movies. STUNNING TITLES don't clinch the and allows our hero, Glen, to wear the cute cashmier sweater he's been dying to take off her and put on himself for months. ALSO SHOWN at the Michigan was the formidable Robot Monster (pic- tured here), and the memorable 1963 The Creeping Terror, in which a shag carpet with a Mr. Potatohead face (adorned with leaves and a vacuum- cleaner nozzle) lands from Out There to waddle around (manipulated by high school students hired to crawl for the occasion) and devour all the extras too numbed with terror to move at a speed beyond one foot per hour. The organizers of the Worst Films Festival deserve thanks for allowing us all to finally get a look at the movies behind those promisingly ludicrous titles. But they haven't done nearly enough, or- taken their ideas (99 per cent of which have been swiped, ver- batim, from the Medved brothers' depressingly juvenile volumes The Golden Turkey Awards and The 50 Worst Films) far enough. Intentional camp hardly ever works-it takes a James Whale, Brian De Palma, Russ Meyer,, or a Ken Russell, an insane original, to manage that trick-and it certainly doesn't in Attack of the Killer Tomatoes, which stretches its single- snicker joke to mousy, amateur-night tedium. The choices of short subjects was also distressing. There was the priceless Dating Do's and Don'ts, a vin- tage Coronet instructional film instruc- ting Woody and Ann upon their outing to the Hi-Teen Carnival, with full info on How To Say Good-bye and other such things ("The important thing about a date is to have a good time"). Aside from that, no one had to contend with the mildly funny, overextended. spoofery of Hardware Wars, a pixillated uncooked turkey dragging it- self across a kitchen floor in Thanksgiving, and the ultimate pseudo- experimental mish-mash of Bitter Grapes, which featured in-your-face shots of regurgitation and flabby flesh. Funny, huh? It's some kind of worst, to be sure. The Festival's definite worst, however, was its admission fee-camp does indeed have its charms, but even the most dedicated among us squirm a little at the thought of spending $3.50 on a movie we fully expect (even fervently hope) to be bad. Even if-it's I Changed My Sex. Cinema II presents Dr. Strangelove, or How I Learned z To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb (Stanley Kubrick, 1964)* Dr. Strangelove, ex-Nazi and now a high-level American military 0 Z advisor, counsels President Merton Muffley on how to avoid the impending destruction of the world. A wonderful Cold War black O comedy of sexual insecurity, nuclear deterrance, and the holocaust. With PETER SELLERS (in multiple roles), GEORGE C. SCOTT, STER- LING HAYDEN, KEENAN WYNN, and SLIM PICKENS. (93 min.) 7:00 and 9:00 - NORMA RAE (Martin Ritt, 1979) Q Based on a true story of one woman's fight against worker exploitation by a southern textile firm, this moving film tells Norma Rae's story. SALLY FIELD gives an Academy Award winning per- formance as the young divorced mother who teams up with a Jewish New York union organizer to rally the community behind them in their fight for justice. With RON LEIBMAN and BEAU BRIDGES. (114 min.) 7:00 and 9:00 All shows $2.00-Series tickets 10 shows $15.00 This weekend: DESTINATION MOON DEATH RACE 2000 SHOWBOAT A thrilling moment from 'Robot Monster,' one of the ten films screened last weekend at the Michigan Theatre as part of the World's Worst Films Festival. Here, the evil Ro-Man (in the gorilla suit and deep-sea diving helmet, with antennae) attempts to abduct our heroine, despite her fiancee's objections. The Ro-Man has just finished destroying the rest of humanity with his "calcinator death ray," and communicates with his otherworldly leader via a dresser with a mirror- screen and a mysterious bubble-blowing machine. 'Robot Monster' was released in 1953, which doesn't excuse it. festival (27 films, as opposed to ten at the Michigan) around the country. The edition that stopped in Ann Arbor was disappointing in its slapdash choices and lack of real eccentricity, but at least they went out and did it. WHAT CAN BE said about this festival that hasn't already been stated with maximum cuteness in People and Us? The ideal setting for watching movies of an enjoyably terrible nature is in your own living room, slouched in front of that infernal box. Surrounded by Home, you don't have to watch or think about the damned things unflin- chingly, and their inanity seems all the more blissful for being ignorable as well. The Michigan Theatre, cavernous and ornate, is halfway to being a camp object in itself, though with the lights out and nothing in front of you but They Saved Hitler's Brain, the comfortable take-it-or-leave-it distance of TV is removed and it's easier to get bored or impatient. The festival ,schedule was a somewhat unimaginative selection of monstrosities: seven of them science- fiction/horror mellers, all poverty- program productions, with one possible exception. Where were all the fluffily overproduced sob stories that have been jerking tears from jerks and eliciting hoots from the rest of us for decades, from The Virtuous Sin (1930 ten-foot bananas-or Frank Sinatra as The Kissing Bandit? THE FILMS screened did their limited subgenre-that flying-hubcap- against-black-canvas brand of fantasy epic-fair justice. The major exception was High School Confidential!, a jaunty 1958 M-G-M F Cinemascope tale of reckless, feckless teens; first-rate studio gloss lavished on a tenth-rate script. Santa Bello High is invaded by the new kid in town, cocky Tony (Russ Tamblyn of Tom Thumb fame), who is entering his seventh year as a high school "student" and makes his rude intentions clear with lines like "Take it from the stud, eh?" While some fellow students go through intermittent "marijuana withdrawal" ("Please blast me, Tony! Turn me on!"), this fast-paced melodrama amusingly kills time with verbal ciphers like "She don't bake, she don't get dusted;" an unforgettable beatnik poetry recitation ("Tomorrow is Dragsville, kids" intones a stunning brunette); and the acting efforts of a bizarre cast including Michael Landon, Jerry Lee Lewis, and the sons of Charles Chaplin, William Wellman, and John Barrymore. High School Con- fidential! had something else, too-Mamie Van Doren, arguably the most lewd actress ever to precede her- self onto the screen. A minor exception from the S-F dilemma either, though Dennis Ray Stecker's The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Crazy Mixed-Up Zombies (retitled, as if that wasn't enough, Teenage Psycho Meets Bloody Mary) tried hard enough in other areas as well. Nothing else at the Festival could quite equal, for sheer gaudiness, Strange Creatures' horrendous musical numbers at the "Hungry Mouth Night Club," or its-help me-"ballet" nightmare-fantasy sequence. This gem was filmed in Hallucinogenic Hypovision (a spinning on-screen disc designed to cue frighteningly-masked ushers to run up and down the aisles-alas, no one at the Michigan played along), Terrorama (?) and glorious Eastmancolor. The celebrated, oblivious and late camp maestro Edward D. Wood, Jr. was represented with no less than three pasteboard epics: the accepted mater- piece Plan Nine from Outer Space, the lesser-known 1953 Bride op the Monster (featuring Bela Lugosi's eyebrows and a large, limp plastic octopus), and the extraordinary I Changed My Sex, also known as Glen or Glenda? This remarkable, and remarkably wrong- headed, plea for understanding for the transexual (punctuated by wildly disruptive horror-movie narration by Lugosi) reaches its emotional climax when girlfriend Barbara finally relents I I