ARTS The Michigan Daily Sunday, April 1, 1984 Page 5 'Dragonslayer' returns to prove its worth By Bryon L. Bull D RAGONSLAYER is an overlooked gem of a movie. One unjustly ignored by the public and grossly misunder- stood by the bulk of critics, buried in the summer of '81 by production-line blockbusters like Raiders of the Lost Ark and Superman II. Yet it was a far superior film in many ways in its moody fairy tale that was well-crafted and at time is quite engrossing. It takes place in the twilight of the dark ages, as the residents of a village in the mythical land of Urland seek out the did of one of the few remaining wizards against a dragon that has been terrorizing them for years. But the wizard, played with a soiled, offbeat wit that would have pleased T.H. White by the late Ralph Richardson, dies under mysterious circumstances before the journey even begins. The only one left to take up his task is, his untrained ap- prentice, Galen, whose bag of parlor tricks is no match for the dragon's ferocious omnipotence. On top of that, it seems the king has established something of a pact with the dragon, sacrificing virgins to it and receiving some restraint on its part in return. A rather frail, weak-spirited sort, he has no desire to risk the possibility of unsuccessful attack on the dragon. Galen's initial battle with the dragon is a failure, and proves nearly fatal for him. All he accomplishes is provoking ts rage, and the destruction of the village. Only at the height of his desperation, as he prepares to flee the village, does he discover the secret power, in his possession to battle the dragon on its own level. Directed by Spielberg-protege Matthew Robbins, from a script by Robbins and collaborator Hal Barwood, the story is ' rather thin on the surface. The aged wizard and youthful warrior storyline has been firmly run into the ground the last few years. The story unfolds rather straightforwardly, with only one plot twist that is in itself predictable to anyone who's seen a couple of these genre films. A romance between Galen and a village girl only slows -down the story, and wastes valuable time. Arid as for the young virgins who are sacrifical candidates, it's hard to believe none of them have arrived at the obviously easiest way out of their predicament. Where Dragonslayer does succeed is in its rich stylizing. Robbins has a sense of aesthetics that lie somewhere bet- ween Ridley Scott and Terry Gilliam, with a strong eye for atmosphere and minute detail. The film has a grainy coar- seness that suits it well, the dark ages are oppresively dark and dingy. The setting is both surreal and naturalistic - cold barron landscapes of dark broken rocks in an etheral mist. Cinematographer Derek Vanlint, who also shot Alien, gives the film an uncomfortably otherworldly look, where a dragon would not seem out of place. Alex North's score is one of his finest, a stark, stirring piece that combines both classical and contemporary elements. It is one of those very rare scores that doesn't add to the movie, but becomes an inseperable part of it. As for the dragon, called Vermithrax Pejorative (Latin for The Terrible Worm), it is stunning. Robbins keeps it out of camera range for most of the picture, much as Spielberg did the shark in Jaws, letting us glimpse only a giant talon descending over the camera, or viewing it from behind its darkly-lit, horned skull as it leers down on its victims. He lets expectation build to the point when we think we'll never see the damn thing, and then he unvails it. In the midst of a beautifully Danteesque subterrainian lake of fire, it rises up from the water, a majestic serpentine thing with glittering scales and leathery bat wings with a vile-beaked countenan- ce. Earlier in the film a priest refers to it as the devil incar- nate, and it's easy to imagine why. Constructed and filmed by George Lucas's ILM effects.st- udio, the dragon is a technical wonder. Computer-articulated miniature that looks unsettlingly real on screen, far removed from Raym Harrhausen's primitive stop-motion work. The final confrontation atop a mountain precipice during a spell induced eclipse, is a powerfully rendered, riveting bit of magic. One that couldn't have been achieved until recent technical advances in film. Yet most critics failed to notice the film as anything other You may have missed Paramount's 'Dragonslayer' the first time around due to the excitement of 'Raiders' and 'Superman I,' but don't worry, it comes back today to the Michigan Theater in hopes of receiving proper attention. than another Star Wars-inspired bit of excapism. Janet Maslin, while noting its weak narrative, praised it as a "movie that makes you believe what you see is real." Pauline Kael vigorously championed it in her New Yorker review, citing its strong sense of mood and atmosphere, calling it appropriately enough a "night bloom." Despite its obscurity, Dragonslayer remains one of the few vividly imagined, truly well-crafted works of .high-tech filmmaking. It shows today at 2:15 and tonight at 7 in the Michigan Theater; the only hall on campus to do it justice. Records New literary mag. hits campus By Bob King Wednesday Week - 'Betsy's X House' (Warfrat Records) I don't like to come down on new ban- ds and first records because initial ef- forts are not usually a good indicator of potential. But there's nothing to recommend in this five-song EP by this all-woman LA trio. While they sound tlike they'd be tolerable in a small bar, they've no business demanding space ion someone's turntable. Ann Arbor's own Trees have far much more to offer. Compo'sed of Kelly -and Kristie Callan, with Heidi Rodewald, the trio simply has very little to say that hasn't been said elsewhere much more eloquently. Their material is adolescent romance/relationship stuff like I have to admit that it's true/But I'm infatuated with you/I tried to School budget up in 1985 (Continued from Page 1) million eFerris State College, $27.4 million -Grand Valley State College, $16.5 million SLake Superior State College, $7.2 million -Michigan State University, $180.2 million eMichigan Technological University, $26.6 million $Northern Michigan University, $26.6 million *Oakland University, $24.5 million eSaginaw Valley State College, $8.7 million -University of Michigan, $180.3 million -U-M Dearborn, $11.7 million *U-M Flint, $10.5 million eWayne State University, $123.55 million -Western Michigan University, $57.1 million. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ,Y MEN'S i~iCLEE CLUB Patrick Gardner, Director act like I really don't care/I always look away when I'd rather stare ... While some of the sentiment is recognizable, it's not stated with any poignancy or charm. Looking at the lyrics is like reading the bad poetry on the inside cover of a highschool girl's notebook. I'll pass. Nor does the unvarying tempo of the music help. Kristi whines with an an- noying monotonousness against the same simple chords and constant drumming. There are occassional keyboard and flute punctuations to color things up a bit, but they're buried in the amateurish production. I'll stick with my Kate and Anna McCarrigle albums if it's all the same. - Bryon L. Bull A LITERARY magazine. You didn't even have to ask. Barbaric Yawp is, in fact, the University's newest literary magazine, and Friday was the reception for its inaugural issue. What has been the initial reaction to this incipient artistry? Initial commen- ts were mainly in the form of "What does it mean?" Briefly, the title is a" phrase from Whitman's--"Leaves of Grass," I too am not a bit tamed/I too am untranslatable/I sound my Barbaric Yawp over the roofs of the world. As you can see- by browsing through a copy of the Yawp, the title is appropriate. The new lit mag is pretty wild, it's available only in English, and if not the world, Barbaric Yawp should get a good sounding in A2. Yes, the title is bizarre, but what's in a name, Romeo? At the reception Friday in the Keun- zel Room of the Union, before several of the Yawp's contributors read their works, editor-in-chief Denise Franklin gave a little Yawp history. The idea seems to have germinated last fall, with a group of students getting together to form a creative off-shoot of the Undergraduate English Society. By January, the group had formed com- mittees for Editorial Policy and Visuals, chaired by Michael Silverman and Lisa Farris (respectfully). Jumping from the aristic and organizational efforts to the finished product (and just making it), the Yawp contains 40 pages of verse, prose, and micro-drama. Farris admits that the actual publication of the Yawp was not as smooth as the finished product implies. Due to the normal difficulties of funding a first-year project, the 3000 copies were printed by hand, which anonymous sources insist was a less than religious experience. The publicity department also had its problems, as its "Chaulk Mason Hall" campaign (judged most effective in their Barbaric Yawp ... premiers this week marketing analysis) almost resulted in footing Mason's entire spring-cleaning bill. Primo Incipio Difficule Est, eh? The magazine, however, isn't the end of their aspirations. "We would like to turn the magazine into an Un- dergraduate literary association," Farris explains. "We could organize trips to Stratford, and get more (even- ts) going so that you actually feel like an English student," she continues, "kind of like the art school." If an undergraduate - lit~tary association sounds good to you;. the Yawp will be holding an organizational mass meeting for next fall on April 12th at 8 p.m. in the lounge on 7th Floor Haven Hall. If youre interested, or think you might be, drop in and see what Yawpism is all about. You'll meet some creative and very motivated in- dividuals. APRIL 7, 1984 --8:30 P.M. BETH ISRAEL 2000 WASHTENAW For information call 668-6770 or 663-4713 Tickets available at' HERB DAVID Regular price $10.00 Students Half Price * : B ' 3 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ave of Lberty 761-9704 $2 00 SHOWS BEFORE 6:00 P.M. DAILY 1:00 P.M. SHOWS -U -14PPENINGS Continued from Page 3 Today," Tribute Rm., education school. Labor Studies Center - "Grievance Preparation & Arbitration," Larry Carlstrom, UAW Local 735, 7 p.m., for location call 764-0492. Minority Engineering - "Time Ownership for the Crunch," Evelyn Gauthier, 7 p.m., 311 W. Engineering. Meetings Society for Creative Anachronism -8 p.m., for location call 996-4290. LSA - Faculty meeting, 4:10 p.m., Aud. A Angell Hall. Union Arts - Botticelli game players, noon, Dominick's. Asian American Association - 6:30 p.m., 1443 Washtenaw. Hospice of Washtenaw - 7:30 p.m., 2530 S. Main Street. Miscellaneous Eclipse - Jazz workshop, 7 p.m., Assembly Hall, Union. Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 6 p.m., CCRB Martial Arts Rm. Continuing Medical Education - Courses on "Ophthalmology," & "Head & Neck Oncology," to register call 763-1400. Common Ground Theater - Workshop on creative writing, John Lusk, 7 p.m., Firestation Conf. Rm. Extension Service - conference of the Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health, 7:30 p.m., League. Tae Beta Pi - Tutoring in lower level science, math, engineering, 7-11 p.m., Rm. 307 UGLi, and 8-10 p.m., Rm. 2332 Bursley. Guild House - Poetry Readings, Edward Hirsch, & Laurence Goldstein, 8 p.m., 802 Monroe. Continuing Education for Women- Classes on refreshing student skills, 350 S. Thayer, to register call 763-1353. HRD - Course, "Employee Relations," 1 p.m., Rm. 130 LSA Bldg. Campus Zen Society - Silent Zen Buddhist meditation, 7-8:30 p.m(i., basement of St. Mary's Newman Center, 331 Thompson. Matthaei Botanical Gardens - Garden Lobby display, 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m., 1800 N. Dixboro Rd. Human Growth Center - Eating Disorders Self-Help Group, 7:30-9:30 p.m., 2002 Hogback Rd., Suite 13. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 e I -I A Musical I Vaudevil Ilie P.m. "VIBRANT EROTICISM' -Molly Haskell, Vogue Magazine A FILM BY CARLO5 SAURA ..CARMEN (R) SUN. 1:10, 3:10, 5:10, 7:10, 9:10 MON. 1:00, 7:10, 9:10 ANN ARBOR LATE SHOWS FRI. & SAT. NIGHT - ALL SEATS 225 AT 11:00 P.M. "CARMEN" (R) AT 11:20 P.M. "LIQUID SKY" (R) _ MARCH 29, 30, 31 at 8:00 APRIL 1 at 2:00 p.m.r "GENUINELY STARTLING! The right audiences are bound to appreciate the originality the color, rage, nonchalance, sly humor, and ferocious fashion sense." --Janet Muslin, N.Y. Times IN i