w. -_ w w w T '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 R U N story. At the Campus Theater, 1214 S. University. 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. 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- ders from playing the gangster melodrama straight to unexpectantly parodying it like a raving schizophrenic. Richard Gere and Diane Lane are the two single least electric screen presences to ever lead a film. 7:00 and 9:20, at the State Theater, 231 S. State. FANTASIA Mistakenly regarded by some (notably Disney st- udios themselves) as a classic, this experiment at adapting classical music to short animated skits is for the most part a pretentious, unimaginative failure. Technically impressive, but devoid of any brilliance. this rerelease print has been slightly edited, dropping out some of the annoyingly inane narration, and features a newly recorded, but distractingly loud digital soundtrack. At the State Theater, 231S. State. 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 ingeniously funny and charming comic gem since Woody Allen's early features. Pure, undiluted laughs, a very rare and special treat whose growing cult popularity is easily understandable. 7:10 and 9:30, at the Movies at Briarwood, Briarwood Mall. 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, 210 S. 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. MRS. SOFFEL Victorian love affair between a prison warden's wife (Diane Keaton) and an inmate on Murderer's Row (Mel Gibson) that's inspired by a true story. Directed by Australian Gillian Armstrong (of By Brilliant Career fame) and though unviewed at press time, it's been garnering favorable reviews elsewhere. At the Movies at Briarwood, Briarwood Mall. SOLDIER'S STORY Moderately interesting though dramatically lame adaptation of Charles Fuller's play about an officer's murder in an all black army barracks during World War Two. Worth seeing just for Howard E. Rollins Jr.'s brilliant screen presence. At the Fox Vilage Theater, 375 N. Maple. STARMAN Jeff Bridges gives an impressively delicate per- formance on the fi husband, counters trivances prisingly sense of sweet fah 7:30 and wood Ma STRANG Jim Ja beats dri in search wave m calculate film's sp tered ter pressive strangel: Fifth Ave PLACES Sally I to the fa fused, bu Robert Wayside WITNES Austra subject spiritual man, tal with a th tive (H ganglan presstii record t Year Of1 good bet. Mall. CO MI CA! F I 8 MILLIMETER FIL An otherwise lean includes one of the year. All of these fi creativity, even if cellent. I highly rec show over the weeke will be unique. The a run the gambit from something a bit diff P U S NETWORK (Sidney Lumet,1976) Paddy Chayefsky wrote the script for this scathing L M Slook at television. Peter Finch won a posthumous L Oscar for his role as a newscaster who goes crazy on the air and asks his viewers to lean out the window and shout "I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take ___it anymore." The executives don't mind until his ratings go down. Then, well... Also in the excellent cast are Faye Dunaway and William Holden. Definitely recommended. (Alternative Action; Nat. LM FESTIVAL Sci. Aud., 7 p.m., 9:15 p.m.) THIS IS SPINAL TAP (Rob Reiner, 1984) week in terms of campus film On my ten best list for 1984. A spoof of the highlights of the campus film rockumentary genre (a real example of which was ilms have a certain spark and showing last night) the comedy can be enjoyed even they are not particularly ex- if you care not at all for the genre or for rock music. It ommend going to at least one is hilarious. Harry Shearer, Martin Short, and nd, and both of the shows tonight Christopher Guest are part of the band. Lots of ssortment of films at each show people show up for cameos. And find out why you animation to documentary. See want to change the dial on your stereo to go up to ferent. (Ann Arbor Film Coop; eleven. (Cinema Guild; MLB 4,7 p.m., 9p.m.) : ;,: , N : : .x+ ".y .w, V , ' .s iv.' ..., i ?F .y (: , ..a' Xt'._ Aud. A,7 p.m., 9 p.m.) THE KING OF HEARTS (Philippe de Broca, 1967) For those of you who would rather stick to something that is not different, this is downright familiar, having just played nine days ago. Alan Bates is a soldier in World War I who is sent to an abandoned French town. Abandoned except for the asylum, that is. When the inmates escape, odd things happen. Some Genevieve Bujold. Some English. Some French. And some subtitles. (Cinema Guild; MLB 4,7 p.m., 9 p.m.) THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT (Jeff Stein, 1979) A real, live genuine rockumentary about The Who centered around the last performance Keith Moon did with the band. (Alternative Action; Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 p.m., 9 p.m.) BODY HEAT (Lawrence Kasdan, 1981) They can turn off the heat in MLB 3 tonight because this film by Michigan alumnus Kasdan is as steamy as the title would indicate. William Hurt meets the alluring Kathleen Turner, and the two hat- ch a plot to kill her husband, get his money, and live the right kind of life someplace. But just who is plot- ting to get whom. A film noir in the classic tradition. (Cinema 2; MLB 3,7 p.m., 9:15 p.m.) S A T U R D A Y 8 MM FILM FESTIVAL More of the experimental. In addition to the films in competition, there is a free round of video entries in the Union's Kuenzel Room at noon, and a free workshop in the same location at 3 p.m. on Super-8 to Video Transfers. As to the regular shows, the 2 p.m. and 9 p.m. shows are identical to give the judges a chance to deliberate. Be sure to make it to at least one of the day's events. (Ann Arbor Film Coop; Aud. A, 2p.m., 7p.m., 9p.m.) PURPLE RAIN Prince leaves his little red Corvette behind and stars in a semi-autobiographical film about his unhappy home and the later happiness he is able to find with his band. Listen carefully and you might be able to hear the doves cry in the background. (Mediatrics; MLB 3,6 p.m., 7:45 p.n., 9:30 p.m.) a S, 8 MM FILM FESTIVAL The festival's fifteenth year comes to an end with Winner's Night at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m., featuring the best of the films shown in competition over the past three nights, and also at 9 p.m. the Nectarine Ballroom will be the sight of an unusual conclusion which will be free to those holding tickets to Winner's Night shows. And at 3 p.m., Aud. A will be the sight of a free program on British Super 8. (Ann Arbor Film Coop; AudA,7p.m.,9p.m.) HUCKLEBERRY FINN (J. Lee Thompson, 1974) The Mark Twain novel gets adapted to the silver screen, and turns into a musical. The cast includes Paul Winfield, Harvey Korman, David Wayne, and Jeff East, who played the young Clark Kent in Superman, the Movie, so I would assume he gets the role of Huck here. (Michigan Theater Foundation; Michigan Theater, 1:30 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m.) ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH (Casper Wrede, 1971) The Alexander Solzheitsyn novel about life in a- Soviet labor camp gets the adaptation treatment. Tom Courtenay plays Ivan, the title character. Filmed near the Arctic Circle. (Hill Street Cinema; 1429 Hill, 8p.m.) THREE STOOGES FOLLIES Larry, Curly, Moe slap sticks and visit Pratt Falls and eat custard pies the old fashioned way. They slurp them. At 5:10 p.m. you can partake of an Itlanian buffet. (University Club; U-Club, 7:10 p.m.) DAISIES (Vera Chytilova, 1966) A series on women in East European films reaches its end with this very different look at two women deciding to do things different. Czech with subtitles. (Alternative Action; MLB 4, 7p.m., FREE) Purple Rain: u should c it on Saturday! _ N I YEARNING LAURELS (Aizen Katsura, Kosho Nomura, 1938) Those frustrated by the end of the series on women in East European film can pick the Japanese film festival up on the rebound. Tonight's entry is a game of doctor played by two grownups. Japanese with sub- titles. (Cinema Guild; Aud. B, 7 p.m., FREE) WEDNESDAY THE MAGIC FLUTE (Ingmar Bergman, 1974) Something to appeal to the opera lovers and the Bergman lovers, and it will probably help if you're both. Bergman does a silver screen version of the Mozart opera, and a good deal of it is a live perfor- mance filmed. Swedish with subtitles. (Michigan Theater Foundation; Michigan Theater, 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m.) START THE REVOLUTION WITHOUT ME (Bud Yorkin,1970) Gene Wilder is good in moderation, and Donald Sutherland is quite good and versatile. But when they both play double roles as twins in the same comedy, the result is forunate to have the few good moments that it does. It will keep you reasonably entertained, and the competition is not that stiff, but missing it will not be the end of the world. (Hill Street Cinema; 1429 Hill, 7 p.m., 9 p.m.) A VERY The pent feminism by offeri French ' p.m., FR FASIER Violenc Film Coop BEYONE Meyer,11 Roger treatmei Jacquelir and irony TRIUMP An ever starts ou that pres Nazis se (Cinema THE GR The fin to presen humorou: as a start p.m. v 10 Weekend/Friday, February 8, 1985 Weekend/Fr