w w w w w w w w w IMF- ,qwr, -4w T -W T -W lqr T TS DR4 s C I N E M F R I R S T N I U BICYCLE JIM'S (1301S. University;665-2650) Every night after eight lower prices, food that's great. You'll be glad, 'Biycl it's here you ate.- PIZZERIA UNO, (1321 S. University; 769-1744) Open daily 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Beer specials nightly. 2-FOR-1 mixed drinks 11-6 p.m. Voted Ann Arbor's Best Pizza and Best Pizza Value 2nd year in a row-1 large pizza serves 4 for under $7. Thanks Ann Arbor, you've said a mouthful! " Q 0 Qp oA 0 0 0pa 00 0 o- o a A ° a a o oo ° °o a o oO.o . o"o o ", " oo. " " o 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 /Vy/ O o o PARTHENON GYROS DOMINICK'S (226 S. Main; 994-1012) (812 Monroe; 662-5414) Open 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon.-Sat.; 12-10 p.m. Sun. and Holidays. Fine Greek food: gyros, Open 7:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon.-Sat.; 4-8 p.m. shish kabob sand., mousaka, pastitio, dol- Sun. Delicious Italian dinners-pasta, lasagna, mades spinach pie, Greek salads and pastry. etc. Also pizza, subs, beer & wine. Classes and Now serving liquor, imported Greek wines meetings welcome. Ample seating inside. and imported beers. Try our famous Sagan- aka "OPA." Table service after 5. CASA DeVARTIS OLD GERMAN (Above Dominick's, 812 Monroe; 662-5414) (120 W. Washington; 662-0737) Open 5:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. Fine Italian "The Award-Winning" Old German res- cuisine with dining both indoors and on the taurant of Ann Arbor offers fine German- open air terrace. Cocktails always at Happy American dining at moderate prices. Imported H rbeer and wine, cocktails. FORBIDDEN CITY STEVE'S ICE CREAM (3535 Plymouth Rd.;665-3591; (342 S. State; 662-2663) 4905 Washtenaw A ve.; 434-7978) A gourmet ice cream shop with a homemade Excellence in the ancient tradition of Man- darin, Sze Chuan, and Hunan specialties. touch. We specialize in mix-ins. Choose from Attentive service, a ful service bar with a Reeses, Heath Bar, chocolate covered raisins, Attetveeriemenulandsexicbarkith as.and a whole lot more! complete wine menu and exotic cocktails. Open 12-12 daily. Open 7 days a week. LOVIN' SPOONFUL STEVE'S LUNCH (330 S. Main; 662-2626) (1313 S. University; 769-2288) Open Daily. Homemade ice cream - 40 fla- Open 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Mon., 8 a.m.-8 p.m. vors, 25 toppings. Shakes, floats, etc. with Tues.-Fri.; 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Sat.-Sun. Steak & everything from Ambrosia Chocolate to Oreo Eggs, omelettes. Also serving Korean food. cookie and Bailey's Irish Cream. Breakfast special and served all day. MAUDE'S RESTAURANT (314S. Fourth; 662-8485), Open 11 a.m.-I1 p.m. Mon.-Sat., bar till 12 p.m.; 11 a.m.-12 p.m. Fri., bar till 1 a.m.; 4- OLVERINE DEN PIZZERIA 10 p.m. Sun. Specialize in Bar-B-Que baby (1201 S. University; 769-8364) back ribs; large selection of chicken entrees, We serve Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner. We dinner salads, hot and cold sandwiches, ham- specialize in Pizza Reular and Sicilian Now burgers, beer/wine.s we serve GYROS. METZGER'S GERMAN RESTAURANT1 (203 E. Washington at 4th A ve.; 668-8987) PIZZA Ann Arbor's oldest restaurant. Serves lunch DINE IN AND CARRY-OUT and dinner daily except Monday. Prime Rib FREE DELIVERY - Ater 5pm S5.00 -,mreuf - Prime Steaks - Seafood - German Cui- We reserve fe rht to mloeharea sine. Full service bar and a delightful Bavar- 707 Packard at State ian atmosphere. Dinners from $5.95 to $8.75. *p"ni'"" o ac""° We will validate city parking lot tickets for 994-4900 994-GYRO car port adjacent- -- O b OU ALL OF ME Lily Tomlin and Steve Martin find their souls sharing the same- body in still another Martin collaboration with writer/director Carl Reiner that has been getting surprisingly good reviews (con- sidering their track record together) and a lot of business (State Theater, 231 S. State; 662-6264). AMADEUS Milos Forman (One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, Ragtime) adapts the highly acclaimed Broadway play about life and mysterious death of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Choreography by Twila Tharp, music by...who else?" (Movies at Briarwood, Briar- wood Mall; 769-8780) ANOTHER COUNTRY Film adaptation of the celebrated British play about the limits of love and friendship between the young men of an English private school. (Ann Arbor Theater, 231 S. 5th; 761-9700). THE BOSTONIANS Adaptation of the James Henry novel starring Christopher Reeves sans the Superman tights. (Campus Theater, 1214 S. University; 668-4416). DREAMSCAPE Dennis Quaid plays a psychic with the ability to en- ter another person's dreams. A choppy, low budget Sci-Fi adventure that has its moments (if few). (Movies at Briarwood; 769-8780). THE EVIL THAT MEN DO Charles Bronson doing what herdoes best - blowing people away in an adventure yarn that once again casts him as a vigilante. (Fox Village, 375 N. Maple; 769-1300). GHOSTBUSTERS Bill Murray is the sole gem of this over budgeted, over popular comedy that has too many gimmicks and too few laughs. (Fox Village, 375 N. Maple; 769- 1300). IRRECONCILABLE DIFFERENCES Always precociously cute Drew Barrymore sues her parents, Ryan O'Neil and Shelly Long, for a child-parent divorce. (State Theater, 231 S. State; 6626264). THE KARATE KID Young Ralph Macchio learns philosophy, and more importantly how to kick ass, in a juvenile Rocky. (Movies at Briarwood, Briarwood Mall; 769-8780). THE NEVERENDING STORY Wolfgang Peterson's crudely slapped together fairy tale about a ten year old boy who enters another world through a book he's reading. (Fox Village, 375 N. Maple; 769-1300). PLACES IN THE HEART Director Robert Benton (Kramer vs. Kramer) takes a nostalgic look back at the rural Texas of the 1930's in a tale of simple people looking for personal redemption. With Sally Field and Scott Harris. (Movies at Briarwood, Briarwood Mall; 769-8780) THE PRODIGAL Christian family drama about "the problems facing the contemporary American family when emotional and spiritual values break down." Give me Davey and Goliath any day. (Wayside, 3020 Washtenaw; 434-1782)a PURPLE RAIN Those who find Prince's music endearing will likely find his first film venture equally so. Those who don't, won't. (State Theater, 231 S. State; 662- 6264). REVENGE OF NERDS/ BACHELOR PARTY A double feature of last summer's two worst ex- ploitation comedies about beer and big breasts. Truly an experience not to be missed. (Movies At Briarwood, Briarwood Mall; 769-8780) A SOLDIER'S STORY A tale of hatred and murder, set in the all black army barracks during the 1940's. By Norman Jewison, the director of In The Heat Of The Night, and starring Howard E. Rollins, Jr. (Movies at Briarwood, Briarw TEACHERS Jo Beth William dignities of being "soundtrack" that .38 Special. (Fox V TIGHTROPE Clint Eastwood outright sleaze somewhat differen the big city adv Briarwood Mall; 7( UNTIL SEPTEMI Karen Allen in a director of Return Maple; 769-1300) THE WILD LIFE Sean Penn's litt adolescent comed kids after gradua Cameron Crowe, Ridgemont High. 6264). WOMAN IN RED Gene Wilder di this adaptation of Ca Trompe Enorn translation. (State CAMPUS FTI L M [I I o0 o p ROMANCING THE STONE (Robert Zemeckis, 1984) A whole lot of people liked this film, making it one of the year's surprise hits. I thought it was a bit dull. Kathleen Turner goes adventuring through South America to save her sister, along with Michael Douglas. Your pick. (Cinema Guild; Lorch Hall, 7 p.m., 9 p.m.) WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS (Henry G. Saper- stein,1970) A Japanese disaster movie that sounds like a classic of the genre. Two gargantuas, each some 150 feet tall, decide to have a battle using Japan as the battleground. To add to the excitement, you can see how bad the English dubbing is. (Ann Arbor Film Coop; Nat. Sci. Aud., 7p.m.) DESTROY ALL MONSTERS (Ishiro Honda, 1968) Poor, poor Tokyo. In this movie, it not only has to contend with Godzilla but also Mothra, Rodan, Ghidrah, and a big turtle with an atomic reactor in- side. (Ann Arbor Film Coop; Nat. Sci. Aud., 8:45 p.m.) GODZILLA VS. THE SMOG MONSTER (Yo-Shimitu Banno, 1972) The'Japanese monster twin-bill concludes with another mashing of Tokyo, which should probably just give up because that Godzilla creature seems really determined to turn the Ginza into his playpen. (Ann Arbor Film Coop; Nat. Sci. Aud., 10:15 p.m.) THE SIMPLE-MINDED MURDERER (Alfred- sen,1982) The Swedish Film Festival nears its conclusion with the story of a village idiot who decides to take revenge upon his persecutors. Swedish with sub- titles. (Detroit-Swedish Council, Scandinavian Languages Dept., Ann Arbor Film Coop; Cinema 2, and Cinema Guild; MLB 3,8p.m.) CAT BALLOU (Elliot Silverstein, 1965) Lee Marvin won an Oscar for his double role in this Western comedy. Jane Fonda is also on hand to lead a band of outlaws which James Watt could probably have fun describing. (Alternative Action; MLB 4, 7:30 p.m.) KLUTE (Alan Pakula, 1971) A Jane Fonda twin-bill finishes off with a fine thriller and social study of a man who doesn't want the world to know he uses prostitutes. So he kills them. Also starring Donald Sutherland, everything about the movie makes it crackle. (Alternative Ac- tion; MLB 4,9:15 p.m.) A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM (Richard Lester, 1966) If you felt sorry for Tokyo last night, tonight you can feel sorry for ancient Rome. Phil Silvers, Zero Mostel, Jack Gilford and a host of others abuse the city in a musical comedy. (Cinema 2; Aud. A, 8:45 p.m.) THE PRODUCERS (Mel Brooks, 1968) More comedy with Zero Mostel, and it is a funny ,one. He and Gene Wilder decide to produce an awful Broadway show to swindle the producers. Things don't work out. Do see this, if you haven't already. (Cinema 2; Aud. A, 8:45p.m.) SA A FANNY AND ALEXANDER (Ingmar Bergman, 1983) The conclusion of the Swedish Film Festival is also the conclusion to Bergman's cinematic career. Bergman fans will enjoy this one a lot. For the rest of us, it's pot luck. Swedish with subtitles. (See Friday's listing; MLB 3,4:30 p.m., 8p.m.)- THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD (Michael Curtiz and William Keighley, 1938) Matinee idol and noted swashbuckler Errol Flynn is the star, playing the Sherwood Forest denizen who takes from the rich and gives to the poor. Olivia de Havilland is Maid Marian. From the director of Casablanca. (Alternative Action; Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 p.m., 9:30 p.m.) WUTHERING HEIGHTS (William Wyler,1939) The Bronte novel becomes an Academy Award winning film. The cast includes Laurence Olivier and David Niven. The plot is a love story with all the trimmings. (Cinama 2; Aud. A, 7p.m.) PRIDE AND PREJUDICE (Robert Z. Leonard, 1940) Laurence Olivier once again, and a classic book translated to the screen, once again. This book is by Jane Austen. The plot is a funny look at upperclass manners. (Cinema 2; Aud. A, 9 p.m.) THE BLUES BROTHERS (John Landis, 1980) A very large-scale comedy, perhaps a little too large, about the bies singers played by John Belushi and Dan Ackroyd who got promoted from Saturday Night to silver screen. They plan to do a benefit con- cert and end up being chased by police. (Mediatrics; MLB4,7 p.m., 9p.m.) MY DINNER WITH ANDRE (Louis Malle, 1981) The title speaks the truth as we spend two hours listening to Andre Gregory and Wallace Shawn engage in meal-time conversation. (Cinema Guild; Lorch Hall, 7,9:05 p.m.) Gene Wilder plays a very rich chocolate maker who has a contest to let people go on a tour of the plant. More for the kids than us college types. (University Club, U-Club, 7p.m. E ALEXANDRIA...WHY? (YusufShaheen, 1979) A semi-autobiographical entry in the North African Film Festival, set partially in Alexandria during World War II. (Cinema Guild; Lorch Hall, 7 p.m., FREE) OUR HITLER (Hans-Jurgen Syderberg, 1976-77) An abridged version of a film which attempts to give an identity to Germany during the Hitler years using a montage of music, biography, and action gets its Ann Arbor Premiere, to be followed by a discussion with a German film critic. German with subtitles. (Goethe Institute, Germanic Languages and Literatures Dept., Cinema Guild, Cinema 2, Ann Arbor Film Coop; Aud. A, 7:30 p.m.) r 3 DINING ONv THE TOWN POPEYE (Robert Altman, 1980) There are a lot of really nice things about this movie. It has a wonderful free-wheeling spirit to it. It's fun. But the songs are only so-so, and it is very difficult to understand some of the characters. Worth seeing once. (Michigan Theater Foundation;' Michigan Theater, 3, 5:30 p.m., 8p.m.) THE RED AND THE BLACK (Claude Autant-Lara, 1954) The colors refer to different roads to success. The red is through the military, the black through the clergy. Gerard Philippe plays a man who has to choose between the two, and then gets in trouble when love strikes. (Cinema Guild; Lorch Hall, 7 p.m., 9:20 p.m.) TOMMY (Ken Russell, 1975) The Who provide the music for a tale of a pinball wizard, who happens to be blind, dumb, and deaf. The cast includes Ann-Margret, Eric Clapton, and Jack Nicholson. (Mediatrics; MLB 4, 7:10 p.m., 9 p.m.) WILLY WONKA AND THE CHOCOLATE FAC- TORY (Mel Stuart, 1971) A film about candy accompanies an Italian buffet. BRIMSTONE AND TREACLE (Richard Loncraine, 1982) Sting, the lead singer of the Police, displays his ac- ting abilities. He plays a drifter who becomes the dominant member of a British family. The music is by the Police. (Michigan Theater Foundation; Michigan Theater, 9:10 p.m.) QUADROPHENIA (Franc Roddam, 1979) The music of The Who plays in the background while the Mods and Rockers, rebellious British teen- agers, do their thing in the foreground. (Michigan Theater Foundation; Michigan Theater, 7p.m.) DEUTSCHLAND BLEICHE-MUTTER (Helma San- ders-Brahms, 1979-80) A look at how war changes social attitudes. Eve Mattes is Lene, who has to fend for herself when her husband joins the fighting in WWII. Afterwards, she finds submission difficult. Ann Arbor Premiere. German with subtitles. A discussion with German film critic Wolf Donner follows. (See Monday's listing; Lorch Hall, 7:30 p.m.) W N I 8 (Federico Fellini,1963) Marcello Mastroianni plays Fellini in an ac- claimed and autobiographical work by the director about a director having artistic difficulties on a project. Italian with subtitles. (Michigan Theater Foundation; Michigan Theater, 7p.m.) - I VITELLONI (Federico Fellini, 1953) One of the first films to look at a group of younger people trying to figure out what they are doing with their lives. Italian with subtitles. (Michigan Theater Foundation; Michigan Theater, 9:30 p.m.) MODERN TIMES (Charles Chaplin, 1947) Chaplin's little tramp is the star of a film where. Chaplin does just about everything as he takes a look at industrialization and its effect on workers. (Michigan Theater Foundation; Michigan Theater,7 p.m.) Fe~ini: Doub THE GREAT DI( Chaplin takes a dictator and a Je tator. Mistaken i all-talkie. (Michij Theater, 9p.m.) HAMLET (Laure Olivier also a Shakespeare trag of Denmark, and procrastinates. ( p.m., 9:15 p.m.) BEAUTY AND TI Another entry it Series. This is at about the title ch with subtitles. (A p.m., 9 p.m.) THE EXTERMI 1962) A black comedy ties can indeed b ply unable to lea subtitles. (Cinem p.m.) THE LITTLE SH( 1960) A classic B-mo shoot. A worker it the plants gets UI spiration for an d Nat. Sci. Aud., 8:4 --co) lim S Weekend/Friday, October 5, 1984 Weekend/Friday, ---------------------------