ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, March 24, 1982 Page 5 Finding fault with Academy Award nominations By Richard Campbell MHERE ARE only two occasions on * which a film reviewer should be forgiven for writing something that is cpmpletely off the wall. The first is 1i0 Best Lists, which contain the obligatory obscure, foreign, and bad movies of the previous year. The second is the annual scramble for picking the winners of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences Awards-the Oscars. After reading so many columns, by so many others, it is now my turn to list my personal favorites for each category as well as finding overlooked nominations and some nominations not worth mentioning. So here's redundancy with a twist, Dick's picks: PICTURE-How on earth On Golden Pond got nominated is completely beyond me. Don't get me wrong, I love Henry Fonda and Katherine Hepburn as much as the next cinemaniac, but the film is about as complex as Mel Brook's History of the World. In its, place should be Prince of the City, a movie about real people coping with relevant problems. But with the nominations the way they are, I hope Reds wins. DIRECTOR-Again, Mark Rydell did an admirable job waiting for the right sunsets in On Golden Pond, but I don't performance in a movie almost no one saw; William Hurt, Body Heat; James Caan, Thief; Harrison Ford, Raiders of the Lost Ark. The last three are the most underrated performances of the year. Next Monday night, even though they're going to give the award to Henry Fonda, I'll be rooting for Burt Lancaster for his nostalgic role in Atlantic City. ACTRESS-There are no real problems in this category, although it would havebeen nice to see Bernadette Peters, Pennies From Heaven, or Mary Steeenburgen, Ragtime in contention. When the envelope opens I hope it'll be Marsha Mason, in her role as an alcoholic in Only When I Laugh. SUPPORTING ACTOR-Mention shoule be made of Nicol Williamson, the bizarre wizard of Excaliber, and of Christopher Walken, the only bright spot of Heaven's Gate before telling you that Jack. Nicholson should get the Oscar for his brilliant portrayal of Eugene O'Neill. See Reds again just to listen to Nicholson. SUPPORTING ACTRESS-I give credit to Jane Fonda only for producing On Golden Pond - her acting was second rate. A couple of roles that could easily fill in this slot are Sandy Dennis, The Four Seasons, a nerve wracking performance in a so-so film; Kate Reid, Atlantic City, the querolous old women whom Lancaster takes care of; Tuesday Weld, Thief, a beautifully crafted performance in a beautifully crafted film. Anyway, Maureen Stapleton, as the bitchy Emma Gold- man in Reds, deserves the award. ORIGINAL SCORE-On Golden Pond somehow got its saccharine score nominated in this category, and John Williams gets the nod again for Raiders. Taking the place of these two can be any one of the following: the (underrated) Prince of the City soun- dtrack; Napoleon's great score by one of the best in the business, Carmine Coppola; the magnificent, tense music of Tangerine Dream from Thief; and the grand waltzes of Heaven's Gate. As none of my favorites are nominated, I'll have to go for Vangelis' eery, unforget- table Chariots of Fire score. EDITING-Napoleon, Body Heat, and Eye of the Needle are all as ex- cellently edited as the regular nominations, but none as good as Dede Allen's work on Reds. CINEMATOGRAPHY-Let's all remember the picturesque shots from Gordon Willis, Pennies From Heaven; relive the faded celluloid of Vilmos Zsigmond, Heaven's Gate; and ..ex- perience the taut film of Paul Lohman, Thief, as we award Vittorio Storaro for his sepia-toned rendition of Reds. Among the other nominations... FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM-None of these prestigious films have made it to Ann Arbor, so your guess is as good as mine? But why wasn't Gallipoli nominated? ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY-John Guare's Atlantic City. ADAPTED SCREENPLAY-Jay Preston Allen and Sidney Lumet, Prin- ce of the City. ORIGINAL SONG-"One More Hour" from Ragtime. ART DIRECTION-Heaven's Gate. COSTUME DESIGN-I have no idea. MAKEUP-I hate Heartbeeps so much, it has to be American Werewolf in London. SOUND-Pennies From Heaven. VISUAL EFFECTS-Raiders of the Lost Ark. Burt Lancaster and Marsha Mason: Oscar winners? think it was worth a nomination. Richard Pierce, who directed Heart- land with such quiet dignity or Sidney Lumet, of the complex Prince of the City, are more worthy candidates. As things stand (and remembering that the Directors Guild gave their award to Beatty), I hope Beatty wins for his careful, romantic epic. ACTOR-There is no way Dudley Moore should be in this category. His tactics as the drunk, rich playboy were funny, but his role was never par- ticularly interesting. It's nice to see Paul Newman nominated, but it should be for his role in Fort Apache, The Bronx, and not Absence of Malice. I've got a long list of substitutes for Moore and Newman: William Treat, Prince of the City,- who I really wanted to win-impossible though that is: Rip Torn, Heartland, a tightly controlled Getting Out by Marsha Norman March 24-27, April 1-3 8:00 p.m. Trueblood Theatre Tickets at PTP 764-0450 UN Department of Theatre and Drama Showcase Production The Dai Yes, the Daily is going to jump on the Oscar contest bandwagon. But we've added a little twist to the regular feature, 10 trivia questions all about movies released last year. The questions aren't hard-if you've seen the movies. After you answer the first part (and don't watch The Movie Channel to find the answers) go on to part two: write down who you think is going to win the major Oscars (and don't go by my picks, I put down who I want to win, not who's going to win). Prizes, you ask? Yes, we've got prizes. Passes good at the Ann Arbor Theatre and a. Daily T- shirt. Enter as often as you like, but make sure your entries are into the Daily by the time Johnny Carson gets to the Oscar podium on Monday, March 29. 1) What is Heaven's Gate? (Hint: It may be a $40 . I 4 - - /r"%k - - - y's uscaI million disaster but that's not the answer we're asking for.) 2) At the beginning of Raiders of the Lost Ark, a seaplane rescues Indiana Jones. What were its iden- tification numbers? 3) Jack Reed is not, as the publicity for Reds suggests, the only American buried in the Kremlin. Name the other. 4) Whose paintings are a featured attraction of Pennies From Heaven? 5) Where was Sean Connery stationed in Outland? 6) Lex Luthor agrees to help the bad guys destroy Superman, in Superman II. What does he ask for in exchange? 7) What is the title of the film being filmed within the film version of The French Lieutenant's Woman? 8) Name three movies, all released in 1981, in which Bob Balaban was a supporting actor. r Contest 9) Last year William Hurt woke up naked in a zoo. This year, who continued that questionable fad? 10) James Caan runs a used car dealership in Thief. Name it. Pick the winners of the major Oscar categories: Best Picture...... ...................... Best Director ........................... Best Actor....................... Best Actress. ............................ Best Supporting Actor ..................... Best Supporting Actress.................... Best Song .......................... Thanks to the F la ' Remember, have your entries (marked Oscar En- tries) into the Daily by March 29. Records Bush Tetras-'Rituals' (Stiff) This could well be The Bush Tetras' declaration of war. None of their previous singles have done as much to display their complete (if somewhat perverse) mastery of funk and rock. The first of the thi'ee tracks on Rituals covers the ground first claimed by The Tetras with "Too Many Creeps" and "Snakes Crawl"-funk stripped down for the attack. Like- its predecessor, there are no reassuring pleasantries on "Can't Be Funky." From The Tetras you should expect more of a command than an invitation to the dance. The two cuts on the second side do the same thing for rock and roll that the fir- st side did for funk; basically, both tunes strip down the basic rock format and then overload its basic components to produce a sound that might be con- sidered caricature if it weren't so effec- tively demonic. The only band that can explore the dark side of an echo cham- ber any more thoroughly is The Cram- ps, but even The Cramps can't quite match the acerbic pairing of Pat Place's guitar and Cynthis Sley's voice. Definitely not dance music for the squeamish. -Mark Dighton 37 N. MA PL E f~r769-1300 BARGAIN MATINEES DAILY $2.50 Riveting... Enthralling... 1:15 C ARIOTS 47:00 0 $ ® 9:30 TOES 'A Flock of Seagulls' EP (Jive- Arista) A Flock of Seagulls are soon going to have to learn (along with Our Daughter's Wedding) what The Vapors long ago learned the hard way-one chorus hook repeated nauseum does not much of a song make, and such a song makes a career not at all. The Seagulls' "Telecommunication" is every bit as lovably disposable as The Vapors' "Turning Japanese" was. They are both the kind of song that begged to be played over and over again. . . up until a certain point. After that, they only beg., to be broken over the head of anyone INDIVIDUAL THEATRES , ' 5th A e a sberty 7619700 WED " SAT o SUN $1.50 Shows Before 6:00 PM FILMED IN FRONT OF A LIVE AUDIENCE! ALL NEW RICHARD PRYOR LIM ON THE SUNSET STRIP DAILY-6:50, 8:30, 10:10 WED-1:50, 3:30, 5:10, 6:50, (R) 8:30, 10:10 A WICKEDLY FUNNY WHO'LL DO-IT! MICHAEL CAINE CHRISTOPHER REEVE DYAN CANNON who dares play them past their welcome. Even if this EP contained just one more song of such an irresistable sound, there might be some hope. Then at least you could give "Telecom- munication" a break now and then. But no such luck. Every other song exists solely as a heap of production and single utilitarian hook in order to justify calling it a song. The paint is painfully clear that A Flock of Seagulls are stronger on technological know-how than songwriting ability. Like The Vapors and Our Daughter's Wedding, you could keep an eye on them for an unexpected left-field hit, but expecting much more out of them would probably be asking too much. -M.D. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily Ii ii "Might very well be considered the best pianist in the world." - Washington Star MAUKIZIO .POLLINI Mozart: Fantasia in C minor, K. 475 Mozart: Sonata No. 14b in C minor, K. 457 Mozart: Adagio in B minor, K. 540 Mozart: Sonata No. 17 in D major, K. 576 Schubert: Three Pieces- E-flat minor, E-flat major, C major Schubert: "Wanderer" Fantasy, Op. 15 VLL UMARCH4A A8_17HILL AUDITORI J~UM T;,1,~r(.. (" ' -7 111 n '1 11 111 0111111 11111 "A great love story.." -NEWSWEEK WARREN BEATTY LIANE KEATON-m