ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, October 12, 1983 Page 6 Ballot boxes 'Stuffed'? ,<. ' WASHINGTON (AP) - Superman I-1 got a presidential reception. All the President's Men drew everybody but the bad guys. Now The Right Stuff is opening to an intriguing mixture of Hollywood hype and Washington anxiety. The Right Stuff opens locally October 21. The hoopla: a Potomac River air show, movie celebrities rubbing elbows with political celebrities, a thousand people dining on medaillon de veau. All to peddle a movie about pilots and astronauts. Enter anxiety, stage left. Politicians, with no precedent to go by, wonder what effect the movie's flat- tering portrait of John Glenn will have on his presidential chances. The astronaut-turned-senator-turned-candi- date may be wondering himself. He hasn't discussed the film and won't at- Major Events Presents: mfangione Oct.13 Hill Auditorium 8pm Meet Chuck at Schoolkids' Records 4 p.m., Day of Show Michigan Union Ticket Office, CTC Outlets 763-2071 tend this premier - but he has paid $50,000 to televise his first national campaign ad during the prime time the night before the premiere. His campaign office said the timing is just a coincidence. The American Film Institute, a non- profit organization that exists to preserve film and television heritage and to advance the art, hopes to clear more than $200,000 from premieres of the Ladd Company's $2 million ren- dition of Tom Wolf's paean to test pilots and astronauts. The movie will have its Washington premiere Sunday, an Atlanta premiere Monday and a Chicago premiere Wednesday. The Washington kickoff is the big one. All 1,142 seats in Kennedy Center have been sold, with ticket prices ranging from $15 to $25. There have been a dozen $10,000 contributions. The Right Stuff tells the story of America's entry into the space age, from the sound barrier-busting flights, of Chuck Yeager through the six flights of the Mercury astronauts Including Glenn's historic three orbits. Glenn comes off on the big screen as an All- American hero, a bit moralistic, but a family man concerned about the astronauts' image. In one of the most effective scenes, Glenn's wife Annie, a stutterer, wants to keep Vice President Lyndon Johnson out of her house while Glenn is on his history-making flight. Johnson, fuming outside the house, applies pressure through NASA; Glenn backs up Annie. Actor Ed Harris plays Glenn as a' God-fearing, steel-willed patriot given to saying things like, "I just thank God I live in a country where the best and finest in a man can be brought out." He knows he's a gung-ho type and once asks Annie, "You think I'm a Dudley Do-right?" Mrs. Glenn nods her head; yes. In the large cast, only Yeager comes ': F nSF V ( x ' : . 5 r F I . I The new movie 'The Right Stuff' concerns the pioneering space venture of the Mercury astronauts (left to right) Deke Slayton (Scott Paulin), Gordon Cooper (Dennis Quaid), Scott Carpenter (Charles Frank), Wally Schirra (Lance Henriksen), and John Glenn (Ed Harris). Inset: Ed Harris as John Glenn. off looking better than Glenn. Yeager, who plays a barfly in the movie, and four of the Mercury astronauts will be guests - along with their actor doubles - at a dinner Satur- day for the companies that contributed $10,000 or more to AFL. That $10,000 buys, for 10 people, din- ner, a seat at the movie in the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, and en- trance to a gala to be held in a hangar at National Airport, where the Air Force band will play and there will be a buffet featuring the veal. For $5,000, con- tributors will get six theater tickets, six tickets to the gala and a brunch in the plush executive offices of USA 'Today across the Potomac River from Washington. That brunch ought to afford a tremendous view of a 2-plane aerial parade down the Potomac. The military aircraft, dating back to World War II, will fly at 1,500 feet. In the lead, flying a P-51 Mustang, will be retired Air Force Brig. gen. Yeager - the first and arguably the best hero in the movie. Walter Cronkite, the television newsman most identified with the space program, is the master of ceremonies at the Kennedy Center showing. Mercury astronauts Scott Carpenter, Gordon Cooper, Wally Schirra and Deke Slayton will be there. While this is going on at the Kennedy Center, two theaters in midtown Washington will show the film for free in what is called "a people's premiere." The Boy Scouts, the Girl Scouts.and organizations that help underprivileged people have been given free tickets, in- cluding some for the gala. All this to promote a movie that is three hours 10 minutes long, starring some spectacular flying machinery and people whose lives involve pudknockers beginners, hanging their hides over the edge going beyond the bounds of safety, and climbing the pyramid moving up after meeting a challenge. Wolfe said the right stuff was quality that "was never named. .. nor was it4 talked about in any way." And yet, he said, the world was divided into those who had it and those who didn't. Glenn, one of those who did, will be fulfilling previous engagements in San Diego and San Francisco on Washington's Right Stuff weekend. But members of his staff have bought seats. EMBLEM :" 4" " "0 " " " "0 :" :" " " " " " AS- O"&J 1 r ff -me I 1 ! 5UUt COBBL ESTONE BACK PACK! while supplies last 0 COLORFUL, LIGHTWEIGHT, DURABLE, NYLON, PADDED STRAPS ! reg. price $14.95 SALE PRICE: $9.95 ! GROUND FLOOR, MICHIGAN UNION UION Records The Moody Blues - 'The Present' (Threshold) Remember the 70's? Ah, that in- nocent age, when only groups like Tangerine Dream used synthesizers and music was something you listened to, instead of watched on TV. Well, now the Moody Blues come along with yet another LP, The Present which, not surprisingly, strongly evokes the '70s. This is not surprising because since their landmark 1967 album Days of Future Passed, their style has hardly changed at all. In playing the same stuff for fifteen years, they've become remarkably good at it. Side one of The Present is surely some of the Moodies' best work in recent memory, and made me feel like I was in seventh grade again. The one indisputable gem is "Sitting at the Wheel", which has already seen plenty of air time, and, like 1981's "The Voice," deserves to become a smash hit. John Lodge's vocals are boosted by Graeme Edge's furiously pounding drums, and everything is swept along by Patrick Moraz' swirling keyboards. The lyrics are simple but effective, and the song has enough hooks in it to stay interesting for five and a half minutes. This one tune alone might be worth the album's price. The rest of side one works effectively in the same vein. Justin Hayward's "Blue World" opens the album in a good way, with Lodge's riffing bass and some nice keyboard ripples from Moraz providing a good setting for the mystical, if dumb, lyrics. (Remember when everyone used to write songs with dumb, mystical lyrics?) "Meet my Halfway" continues in the same style, though with less rock and more ethereal whooshes from Moraz. The dreamlike chorus sounds like ELO around Out of the Blue - 1977. Closing the side is Edge's "Going Nowhere," a truly fine ballad which is utterly ruined by Ray Thomas' dverdramatic, Neil Diamond-ish vocal. The lyrics, simple, intelligent, and a little on the sugary side('ve got a heart full of giving/ Going nowhere, going nowhere) would have been far better served by the more delicate voices of Lodge or Hayward, not Thomas' quasi- psychedelic drone. I The Moody Blues have a slightly new look and definitely a new album, 'The Present.' Despite these minor flaws, side one offers a lot of promise. Unfortunately, the Moodies only chose to make half an album. Put bluntly, side two sucks. It gets off to an OK start with the brief in- strumental "Hole in the World," which leads into the awful "Under My Feet," a plodding, stupid, overdone ballad, GREAT NEWS"! NOW IN EFFECT: PRO-RATED SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN TOWN: OUT OF TOWN: $5. 00/semester $12.50/year $7.00/semester s AND Proudly Presents CAMPUS "MEET THE PRESS" Guest Speaker of the Week HENRY JOHNSON Vice President for Student Services fAv. l A... .. .J ... . "..&.L.a-114 91 fl1 courtesy of Lodge. "It's Cold Outside of Your Heart" is even worse - it sounds more suited to Chicago. Hayward's pretty vocal can't even come close to saving this one. Yet another ballad, "Running Water," is next; and it isn't nearly so terrible. Again, Hayward shines, and the string arrangements are well done. The worst is saved for last. Thomas' "I Am" is a bit of shitty poetry that would have embarrassed the Doors, and it's only ruined further by his lousy singing and hideous orchestration. "Sorry," also by Thomas, is more of the same garbage, enlivened only by a nice flute/keyboard instrumental break. Pip Williams deserves notice for his near-flawless production here, although, his orchestrations are often clumsy.' Still, with all the textures and in- struments the Moodies use, he's kept the sounds distinct and clear. The Present would have been far more satisfying, however, if the Moodies had 'been able to keep that seventies spirit alive through two sides, instead of just one. -Jeff Segal J.J. Cale -J.J.# (PolyGram) Old J.J. churns out another one, and it sounds...consistent. For me, Cale is a mix of Randy Bachman, Eric Clap- ton, Willie Nelson, and Lou Reed; not necessarily an appealing combo, but I could listen to these slide/acoustic/electric guitars till *25. And who else has the audacity (blind, stubbprn, purposeful) to moan in his best gruffness, "I've got teardrops in my Tequila/Got Colorado, got en chiladas on my mind." True imm irnv Bflfett might eo so far. $16.50/year SUBSCRIBE NOW TO gbe £trbhIgan f l g