ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, March 25, 1982 Page 5 A selection of campus film highlights pletely control the individual. With White Heat the help of Donald Plaesence, DuvallA rebels, becoming aware of the in- aou Ws 149)sidiousness of those in control. The The greatest James Cagney plot doesn't depend on dialogue, but gangster film. For years Cagney rather on a sophisticated balance of had been refining his hard-nosed, the elements of the film. (Friday, crime-ridden image. Here he was March 26 and Sunday, March 28; able to give the complete perfor- Michigan Theatre, 5:30,9:3;) 1-tal:i Reggae, American style mance of psychosis and violence. In scene after scene Walsh and Cagney piece together the definitive portrait of the American gangster. (Friday, March 26; Nat. Sci. 7:00) Close Encounters The Third Kind (Steve Spielberg, 1977) Of Spielberg took his phenomenally successful science-fiction symphony of sight and sound and recut it for its "re-release. He excised some of the good parts, and some of the bad par- ts, and ten added an inconclusive -conclusion. His film, as it stands now, is more of a hodgepodge than the original. But what the heck, he didn't touch the really important scene: the landing at Devil's Tower. You've still got John William's ex- .travagent score, Douglas Trum- ball's luminous space ships, and the crazed acting of Richard Dreyfuss. A treat for all the family. (Friday, March 26 and Sunday, March 28; Michigan Theatre 3:00, 7:00) THX-1138 (George Lucas, 1971) For all those people who think Star Wars was directed by an empty- headed fool. Lucas' first movie (based upon a film he made at college) is a brilliant combination of visual effects and sound editing. Robert Duvall is a dissatisfied worker at a robot production center. This' society of the not-so-distant future promotes drug use and prohibits sex in its attempts to com- The 400 Blows (Francis Truffaut, 1959) An impressive first film, by one of the most revered of film-makers. Telling a somewhat autobiographical story, Truffaut shows a young boy as he struggles through school, hangs out in the streets of Paris, and is finally sent to reform school. This is a movie that started the life of Antoine Doinel, later seen in Truffaut's Love At 20, Stolen Kisses, Bed and Board, and Love On The Run. (Friday, March 26; Lorch Hall7:00,9:00) r Dawn of the Dead (George Romero, 1979) One of the most blatant, violent movies ever made. However, Romero has such a sense of style and tempo that the film is quite able to stand on his own without the violence. A much better film than its predecessor, Night of the Living Dead, Dawn takes us, not only on an examination of our own fears and nightmares, but into a satire of America. (Saturday, March 27; Lorch Hall 7:00) Prince of the City (Sidney Lumet, 1981) The most overlooked film of last year, and one that should have been nominated for several Oscars-Best Picture, Director, Actor, and Sup- porting Actor. Treat Williams plays a New York Detective who is torn between his devotion to his colleagues and his own slightly criminal efforts to rid the city of crime. All right, so the movie is three hours long; big deal. It has more intelligence and emotion in one scene than Golden Pond musters up in two hours. (Saturday, March 27; Aud. A,'6:30,9:20) By Mark Fischer THE BEATLES showed us in the '60s and early '70s that popular music can serve as an effective medium for strong ideological messages. Reggae, it seems, has picked up where the Beatles left off. Social, political, and religious themes dominate reggae lyrics-many urge the overthrow of the world's ruling classes, others expound the virtues of the Rastafarian religion and its founder, Rastafari Haile Sellassie, and the related call for unity of all of Africa's peoples; still others, like Peter "Legalize It" Tosh, praise and call for the widespread acceptance of ganja. But while many of reggae's traditional ideological stances may have validity, the fact remains that most reggae fans in American don't listen to the music of Ja because it's the music of Ja. We listen to it simply because it sounds good and it's fun to dance to. Perhaps that's why it took a reggae band from America-from Cleveland, the self-professed rock capital of the nation, no less-to put ideological crusading on the back bur- ner in the name of fun. I-Tal is a group of reggae-ers which, above all, wants people to enjoy them- selves. "Our philosophy, basically, is to get people having fun, not to concentrate on violence, which a lot of bands do," said guitarist and vocalist Dave Smeltz, I- Tal's leader and stage captain. "When we're playing, we try to project people having fun, and hope it carries over." If showing people a good time is I- Tal's goal, the group is scoring quite well with Ann Arbor crowds, and has been doing so every time it's played here. The three-year-old band first came to town in the middle of last year to warm up for Steel Pulse at Second Chance, and has developed quite an area following during the half dozen or so times they have returned since then. Both the Michigan Union's University Club (Friday night) and Rick's (Saturday) were filled to their- 300-odd capacities for I-Tal shows last weekend, and lines were so long for both shows that people had to be turned away. Those who did make it inside were treated to a danceable mixture of a heavy bass, various types of light per- cussion, a mostly background, rhythm- based guitar section, and the sound of a trumpet-like flugle horn which in this group is musically almost equivalento to a typical rock group's lead guitar. Steve Mauer, the horn player, har- moniously dominates with his high- pitched brass melodies when he is playing. I-Tal's song list combines reggae classics like Bob Marley's "Get Up, Stand Up" and "Jammin' " (perhaps the audience's No. 1 favorite), and Dillinger's "Cocaine" (another crowd pleaser), with songs of their first and only album, I-Tal. One of I-Tal's original songs, "Dub It Inna U.S.A.," essentially tells the group's story: I-Tal is a bunch of Americans who are playing reggae. Yet critics have chastised the group for just this fact. If you're not truly Rastafarian, or at least Jamaican, the critics say, you have no business playing reggae-you're a farce. Well, it is true that only one of the group's members, George "Gibro" Gordon, is actually from Jamaica, and that half of the I-Tals are white; that only three members of the group have Rasata dreadlocks (Gibro doesn't even have them); and that the I-tal stage accents sound a lot more Jamaican than they do "in real life." But so what? A major reason for I- Tal's great ability to turn on its Ann Ar- bor and Cleveland audiences is the fact that the group is American and can relate to their fans. In fact, the group's lone female, vocalist and keyboard player Ellie Nore (if that's not her real name it should be), is a 1978 grad of Cleveland's Orange High, the alma mater of several members of the audience 'in Rick's Saturday night. One of the Doug Neary (OrangeC '78), who has seen the band "an easy 15C times" in either Ann Arbor or Cleveland, compared the relativea crowd responses in the two towns.t "Just because Ann Arbor is a college, town, word gets around easier, and it's usually more crowded here. but I-Tal still gets it in Cleveland," said Neary.f "I've seen them every time there but once in this little bar that gets reallyt hot. There's only about 30 or 50 peoplef dancing, though. I-Tal's great popularity as a night- club band stems from its ability to re- late to its funloving crowd. The boppers on the usually packed dance floor spur the group on with cheers and smiles, and the group will respond with smiles and dancing on its own. What's" more, the band members are very approachable before and after sets-they exhibit none of the conceit or aloofness that some better known or even lesser known musicians tend to give off. Yet even though I-Tal is, in the words A E SARGAIN MATINEES DAILY $2.50 ,I Riveting... ' Enthralling... 1:15 CHARIOTS 4 00 QF RE 7:00 _ No $1 pj 930 ©TOES ® g3 of its bassist Ron Jarris, "a band that likes to have fun and not bum out, a por- table party," the group is not without more far reaching ideals. According to Smeltz, one of those ideals is "definitely, down with black and white oppressors," and another is "the unity of all people." But while other reggae groups try achieving similar goals merely through their lyrics, I-Tal illuminates their ideals by example. "It doesn't matter what color people are out there," said Smeltz. "'Everybody can get together no matter what-put them on a dance floor and it's one person. As you see on the stage, we're a whole bunch of dif- ferent people up there-black and white, male and female, and if we can get together everyone else can." m - "A great love story..." 1:15 WARREN BEATTY W 445 DIANE KEATON NEW!! s~so NEW! 8307RES.NT L:3 ~APAMOUNT DONT YOU WISH tYOU WERE ARTHUR? . 1:30RIH D Dudley Moore Liza Minnetli 3:30 aI .530 R 7:40 M M 9:45 LIWEONTHE SUNSET STRIP -compiled by Richard Campbell Pigs With Win cgs fly tonight 1:15 3:15 5:15 7:20 9:40 By Elliot Jackson N THE BASEMENT of East Quad I there lives -a little cafe, known as the Half-Way Inn, which is by day the scene of much mellow hanging-out and leisurely study, and by night a spot for much. socializing and jukebox- and pin- ball-playing. Sometimes patrons gather with a purpose: to hear the bands that play on week-ends, to eat Sunday din- ner, to hold meetings, or . . . to lend their support and their ears to a Pigs With Wings-sponsored poetry reading. "The Pigs with Wings," said Jay Frost, self-styled PWW president, "is an arts organization that is only begin- ning to exist. The title exists because we liked it, and wanted to-do something with it, and the organization exists because, as variegated as Ann Arbor is, it has no real avenue for people to get high-quality entertainment from the fine arts. "There's this popular idea around that fine art isn't marketable; and whether it be because artists are con- sidered lunatics or out of the norm, or because their art only appeals to other artists, or because their art is difficult to understand or because it doesn't con- tribute much to society, or whatever the reason is, there is no real avenue in Ann Ar bor, no one showcase, for a /"y' w W W W W - - W W W W - W format of poetry, fiction, drama, oral interpretation, music-maybe even dance-all going on in one evening. There~s nothing geared for the person who wouldn't ordinarily pick up a poem or go to a poetry reading, or listen to rock if he likes classical-or vice ver- sa-to have a chance to hear things he wouldn't go to listen to any other way." As to how the Pigs with Wings was wedded to the Half-Way Inn, and gave birth to the Half-Way Inn Readings: "I have," said Frost, "a way of getting things if I really need them-if I smile enough, even though I'm not too pretty. I just walked down to the Half-Way at the beginning of this year and told the people there that I needed space for some readings-that they would be a little out of the norm, but that we could help each other-the readings would pull in more people, and the Half-Ass (term of affection for the Inn) would be providing a stage for the arts, "The first reading," Frost continued, "was successful in terms of num- bers-in fact, it was over-successful in the numbers of people we got to read; we had people reading for two and a half hours. "Which was great, especially as we managed to juxtapose different genres of material-but the audience was made up almost entirely of people who knew the readers, or people who had just wandered in, or the performers themselves; even though we had about 50-80 people there; which is not bad for an event like this, it was not quite the audience I'd wanted. "I think it's gotten a little better in this regard (at subsequent readings), but there's still an overabundance of people from the immediate East Quad vicinity. I want to appeal to a broader audience. "I really think we need support from all quarters of the University, especially because we don't have just undergrads performing." Looking ahead slightly, Frost cited some of his future plans, including an East Quad art gallery where students can display their work, an arts magazine, and a book of poetry written by two members of the organization to be printed by-what else?-Pigs with Wings Press. Gentle reader, are you intrigued? have you examined your soul and found there the glimmerings of an interest in poetry readings-or reading your poetry? Then come to the Half-Way Inn Readings, to be held at 9:30 p.m., Thur- sday, March 25, at the Half-Way Inn, which is located in the basement of East Quad (street entrance on Chur- ch); if interested in reading, contact Jay Frost at 764-0660 or 764-0637. NOON LUNCHEON Homemade Soup and Sandwich $1 FRIDAY, MARCH 26 Larry Hunter The anti-death penalty organizer, AFSC: "ARGUMENTS AGAINST CAPITAL PUNISHMENT" GUILD HOUSE -802 Monroe 1982 ' 7 J \ I I) ,, ' .ai1 ANN ARBOR ANTIQUARIAN BOOK FAIR AND SALE - MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM SATURDAY, MARCH 27 10AM - 5PM More than 30 Midwest dealers Admission free Ann Arbor Antiquarian Bookdealers Association Sunday Funnies March 26, 27 8pm Schorling Aud. Sch. of Ed 2.50 Dinner Theater March 28 5:30 University Club 5.50 Impact Dance April 1, 2,3 8pm Mendelssohn Theater 2.50 Pint-Size Prod. WILEY & THE HAIRY MAN A ....r: 1 f% A *f~f% Kcnn D m 1I Iwinn