v Vv wv w w w w ders from playing the gangster melodrama straight ingeniously funny and charming comic gem since to unexpectantly parodying it like a raving Woody Allen's early features. Pure, undiluted schizophrenic. Richard Gere and Diane Lane are the laughs, a very rare and special treat whose growing two single least electric screen presences to ever cult popularity is easily understandable. 7:10 and lead a film. 7:00 and 9:20, at the State Theater, 231 S. 9:30, at the Movies at Briarwood, Briarwood Mall. State. AMADEUS Director Milos Forman's idea of depicting Mozart as a pop star is a clever premise, but the screenplay never pans out and what is meant to be irreverance is merely irrelevance. In the end the film ends up totemizing Mozart with all the same excessive and pompous empty praise it originally sets out to super- sede. You can, if you want, just close your eyes and enjoy the score. 8:45 at the Movies as Briarwood, Briarwood mall. BEVERLY HILLS COP Eddie Murphy goes through his usual fast jiving, smart ass routines (albeit a little more whitewashed) in a comedy/thriller about a Detroit police detective who goes to California in search of his friend's murderer. This is clearly Murphy's vehicle, an open forum for him to improvise in front of the camera while the rest of the cast just stands there and plays it straight. Murphy's antics are lowbrow but his naturally likable presence and fast timing make for some easy, lightweight giggles, though you're always very conscious how shabbily slapped together the whole movie is. 7:00 and 9:30 at the Movies at Briarwood, Briarwood Mall. CITY HEAT Burt Reynolds and Clint Eastwod team up for a gangster comedy set in the thirties. Even Eastwod fans, who must have the lowest imaginable stan- dards, are staying away. 7:30 and 10:00, the Movies at Briarwood, Briarwood Mall. THE COTTON CLUB Francis Ford Coppola's take of Harlem's famed prohibition era nightclub is far better than his recent work, but that doesn't say much. Cotton Club wan- CAMPUS F I ILD The Shining (Stanley Kubrick,1980) February might be the shortest month, but it is long on films if its opening week is any indication. The month's first film is, I think, its best. The movie is different than the Stephen King novel, but it is close to perfect in its own way. Jack Nicholson is hired to look after the Overlook and gets to stay there forever, and ever, and ever. Yes, I recommend it. (Cinema 2; MLB 4,7 p.m., 9:30 p.m.) Koyaanlsqatsi (Geoffrey Reggigo, 1983) A very weird movie that got a very good reception is also nlaying. No words. No plot. No actors. Just an intriguing series of images of modern America put to the music of Philip Glass. (Cinema Guild; Aud. A, 7 p.m., 8:40 p.m.) To Have and Have Not (Howard Hawks, 1944) A loose adaptation of the Hemingway novel. Hum- phrey Bogart is a fisherman who does a little spying on the side, trying to reel in Nazis. One day,.he casts his line and ends up with Lauren Bacall, making her film debut. (Alternative Action; Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 p.m.) The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (John Huston, 1948) Gold lurks under the volcanoes of the Sierra Madres in this tale that was also scripted by Huston. He won an Academy Award for that and one for his direction. The prospectors are played by Humphrey Bogart, Oscar winner Walter Huston, and Tim Holt. (Alternative Action; Nat. Sci. Aud., 9:15 p.m.) The Big Chill (Lawrence Kasdan, 1983) A UM physics graduate commits suicide, and eight of his fellow classmates reunite for the funeral. They gossip and remember back to the glory days of the sixties and get upset while watching a Michigan football game on TV. Kasdan, a Michigan gradute, also scripted. The performances he gets are quite good, and the comedy is funny. But the film is a bit too slick to realize its full potential. (Michigan Theater Foundation; Michigan Theater, 7 p.m., 11 p.m.) The Return of the Secaucus Seven (John Sayles, 1960) The director of The Brother From Another Planet did this superior version of The Big Chill before Kasdan's. It lacks the Hollywood budget and the Hollywood stars, but it has the genuine emotion. Sayles has a real feel for the characters in his movie, and the wood-chopping scene at the end is a potent one. See the double feature for this and think of The Big Chill as dessert or an appetizer. (Michigan Theater Foundation; Michigan Theater, 9 p.m.) The Man Who Knew Too Much (Alfred Hitchcock, 1956) This is the second, better version. James Stewart and Doris Day go to Morocco and meet a very nice couple and a very interesting man. The man is killed. The nice couple kidnaps James and Doris' son. Throw in an assassination attempt and you end up with a top-notch film. Let us not forget that Doris sings 'Que Sera, Sera." (Ann Arbor Film Coop; MLB 3, 7 p.m.) DUNE David Lynch's adaptation of frank Herbert's longwinded bit of pulp sci-fi is a stupefyingly bad film. Lynch is one of the most brilliant filmmakers working today, but there's no trace of his hand in this plotless, textureless, astonishingly crude space opera. Dune borrows a lot froin Star Wars and Alien, but in spirit and lack of intellect its much closer to a fifties bible epic. At the State Theater, 231 S. State. THE FALCON AND THE SNOWMAN Timothy Hutton and Sean Penn play two American teenagers involved in an intricate scheme to sell government secrets to the KGB. Based on a true story. At the Campus Theater, 1214 S. University. FALLING IN LOVE Robert De Niro and Meryl Streep fall in love, audiences fall asleep. It would take a sharp script and a sensitive director to make two adulterors into sympathetic characters, Falling in Love lacks both. 7:00 at the Movies at Briarwood, Briarwood Mall. THE FLAMINGO KID Matt Dillon gives a surprisingly well measured performance as a middle class kid coming of age in the sixties in this comedy by Gary Marshal. Though not as good as Diner or American Graffiti, it still carves a comfortable niche for itself just beside them. 7:25 and 9:40 at the State Theater, 231 S. State. THE GODS MUST BE CRAZY An African bushman sees an empty Coke bottle tossed out of a passing airplane fall to earth at his feet, and assuming it to be the lost property of the gods, decides to go about returning it. This African import is technically very crude, but is the most HEAVENLY BODIES No information available at presstime. Fox Village Theater, 375 N. Maple. JOHNNY DANGEROUSLY Michael Keaton plays a loveable mobster in this blunt witted parody. Hell must be a double feature of this with City Heat. 7:00 and 9:30, the Movies at Briarwood, Briarwood Mall. THE KILLING FIELDS Unfocused but at times very powerful film about a New York Times correspondent (played by Sam Waterson) and his Cambodian assistant Haing S. Ngor) who are trapped in Cambodia during the Kh- mer Rouge's genocidal revolution of 1975. For his fir- st feature, director Roland Joffe, keeps a clean, tight control over each individual secenes, but lacks a crucial overall sense for structure and the film flounders toward the end. Still, it's a very worth- while, important film. Ann Arbor Theater, 210S. Fif- th Ave. MICKI & MAUDE Only Blake Edwards could conceive of polygamy as suitable material for a feature comedy, and only Dudley Moore could be hustled into starring in it. 7:00 and 9:45 at the Fox Village Theater, 375 N. Maple. PROTOCOL Goldie Hawn plays (surprise) a flaky blonde who stumbles into a job as a goverment attache who turns Washington D.C. upside down. Written by Buck Henry and directed by Herbert Ross, who have both labored on far more worthy projects. 7:10 and 9:40 at the Movies at Briarwood. STARMAN Jeff Bridges gives an impressively delicate per. formance as on the form husband. Th counters, is : trivances, ye prisingly ger sense of war sweet fairy t 7:30 and 10:0 wood Mall. STRANGER Jim Jarm beats driftin in search of wave movie calculated jo film's sparse tered terrai pressive an strangely sl Fifth Ave. SUPERGIRL Silly fantas eveni worth tl Washtenaw A THAT'S DAI' Package o that include Duncan to M N. Maple. 2010 Peter Hya masterpiece cheaply p metaphysic crossbreedir naturally gr Scheider are the clutzy se 9:30 at the F Compil Rear Window (Alfred Hitchcock, 1954) Yet another great film for this first day of February. James Stewart is a photographer who breaks his leg and ends up in his apartment where all he can do is look out his rear window and wait for Grace Kelly to drop in and visit. When Jimmy per- suades Grace and his housekeeper that he saw a murder across the courtyard, the real fun begins. I do wish I could be in more place than one this evening ... (Ann Arbor Film Coop; MLB 3,9 p.m.) SUA Y Rear Window (Alfred Hitchcock, 1954) ... so it is a good thing that some of the excellent movies are on hand again tonight. See yesterday's listing for details. The time and place are different tonight. (Ann Arbor Film Coop; Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 p.m.) The Big Chill (Lawrence Kasdan, 1983) See Yesterday's listing. (Michigan Theater Foun- dation; Michigan Theater, 7 p.m., 11 p.m.) The Return of the Secaucus Seven (John Sayles, 1980) See yesterday's listing. (Michigan Theater Foun- dation; Michigan Theater, 9 p.m.) Listen to the City (Ron Mann, 1984) A man escapes from a mental hospital after a long confinement, which perhaps took place only because he was ahead of his time. The director will be on hand for discussion between showings of this Ann Arbor premiere. (Office of Ethics and Religion; MLB 3, 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m.) Deep End (Jerzy Skolimowsky, 1971) John Moulder-Brown plays a youth in the throes of his first love. The fact that the object of his atten- tions, a bathhouse attendant, already has a fiance and a lover fails to daunt him in the least. Ah, to be young again. (Cinema 2; Aud. A, 7 p.m.) Sundays and Cybele (Serge Bourguignon, 1962) Another unusual romance. An insane veteran and a very young girl romance each other, in a way, every Sunday in the park. An Oscar winner for best Foreign Film. French with subtitles. (Cinema 2; Aud. A, 9 p.m.) Romancing the Stone (Robert Zameckis, 1984) A surprise hit of last year, this is a more romantic Indiana Jones. I found both the romance between Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner and the clif- fhangers to be a bit blase, but that is a minority viewpoint. The sequel is on the way. (Mediatrics; MLB 4,7:30, 9:30 p.m.) A Clockwork Orange (Stanley Kubrick,1971) Two Kubrick masterpieces in one week! Here, Malcolm McDowell is a man married to Beethoven and the old ultraviolence. Society sets out to cure him of his addiction to the latter and overdoes it a bit. Los of violence, but all is integral to the movie. From the Anthony Burgess novel. Recommended. (Hill Street Cinema; 1429 Hill, 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m.) The Champ (Franco Zeffirelli, 1979) The second version of a story about boxer Jon Voight and son Ricky Schroeder and the ex-wife who wants custody, Faye Dunaway. Hankies not included. in the price of admission, so bring your own. (Michigan theater Foundation; Michigan Theater, 1:30 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m.) Love Affair or The Case of the Missing Switchboard Operator (Dusan Makavejev,1967) The two titles really do have a connection but you have to see the movie to find out what. Part of a series on women in East European cinema. Serbo- croation with subtitles. (Alternative Action and Free University; MLB 4,7 p.m., FREE) Secret Squirrel An assortment of cartoons with the Secret Squirrel. (Alternative Action, Aud. A, 7 p.m.) A Man Called Flintstone (Joseph Barbara and William Hanna, 1966) Fred, Wilma, Barney, Betty, Dino, and the whole crew in a globe-spanning animated spy movie. Rome will never look the same again after you've seen this. (Alternative Action; Aud. A, 8:40 p.m.) Exodus (Otto Preminger, 1960) The historical novel by Leon Uris about the har- dships in reaching Palestine shortly before the creation of Israel comes to the big screen. Paul Newman, Eva Marie Saint, and Sal Mineo are in the cast. (Hill Street Cinema; 1429 Hill, 8 p.m.) Alien (Ridley Scott, 1979) Sigourney Weaver, Ian Holm, Yaphet Kotto and others are together on a space ship and find them- selves joined by something that likes to eat humans. You can eat an Italian buffet before seeing this horror movie transplanted into outer space. (University Club; U-Club, 7:10 p.m.) The Lion in Winter (Anthony Harvey, 1968) Two excellent performances by Peter O'Toole and Katherine Hepburn highlight this historical drama about Eleanor of Aquitane and Henry V. Sit back and watch the sparks. Recommended. (Mediatrics; Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 p.m.) A Man For All Seasons (Fred Zinnemann, 1966) This second historical drama is a movie for all Academy Awards. It won Best Picture, Best Direc- tor, Best Screenplay, Best Color Costume Design, and Best Color Cinematography. Robert Shaw and Orson Welles are part of the cast. Sir Thomas More and Henry VIII are the subjects. (Mediatrics; Nat. Sci. Aud., 9:15 p.m.) Nicholsc Fahrenheit 45 No books a They get burs Julie Christie ptress of a fir Street Cinem Psycho II (R An enterta piece has No getting there While not as than enjoyal Foundation; The Sting (G Paul News a scam on a with some w when having 3, 7p.m., 9:1 8 MFl Baba (Father) (Yilmaz Guney, 1974) Something like Turkey in the Near Ea African Film Series. A poor boatman a jailed for murder if his family will get fi port. Turkish with subtitles. (Cinema Gu 7 p.m. FREE) 8 Millimeter Film Festival A real event, and a highlight of the year film shot in 8 millimeter and independen is game in the seven different shows l Winner's Night on Sunday. The result i teresting group of movies from animat with a lot of experiments in between. Th all be good, but they are all worth seeing get to at least one of the shows. The firsts ever celebrates its 15th year. (Ann Arbo Aud. A, 9 p.m.) 8 MM Film FE If you negl stern/North one of the two grees to get see all of th nancial sup- (Ann Arbor ild; Aud. B. To The Ends Shanghai, as a governs smugglers vw Dick Powell Guild; Nat. Susan Lent Leonard, 193 r. Any kind of Garbo and ntly produced an engineer eading up to story.(Cinen s an ever in- Psycho II (Fi ion to drama See yester ey might not ends a wee . Be sure you could becom such festival dtion; Michi r Film Cool; -1 8 Weekend/Friday, Rbriuary 1, 1985° Weekend/Frid