ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, March 11, 1986 Page 5. IV Film Festival returns to Ann Arbor By John Shea T he Ann Arbor Film Festival commands attention. Now in its twenty-fourth year, it is the oldest and perhaps most prestigious festival in North America. Filmmakers from all around get the respect of their peers and the attention of the major studios in Hollywood. Ruth Bradley is the director of the festival for the ninth consecutive year. She is part of a five member commit- tee who will prescreen over 200 en- tries before the festival gets under way Tuesday night. They will watch these films for three straight weeks, six hours a night. "After the first eighty to ninety films," Bradley jokes, "you move into a new realm of consciousness.' " From these entries, ap- proximately eighty of them will be chosen for public screening. The en- tire spectrum of film styles will be represented, from documentaries to narratives, and animation to abstract works. Among the films which will be shown are: Voices, Joanna Priestley's autobiographical account about her life and her work. Voices is a four- minute animation film which is both amusing and bizarre. Priestly por- trays herself going through many metamophoses in the film changing form with each new emotion and feeling. Troubled Waters, Brooklyn's Dean Wertherha1l's fourteen-minute documentary of an independent clam digger's struggle to maintain his family's economic security. Everywhere at Once, is Alan Berliner's slick ten-minute montage. The New York filmmaker mixes fast- moving images and pictures with or- chestral music. The editing is excep- tional, Berliner's film is a roller coaster ride from start to finish. Violent, Sal Giamonna's nine minute black and white film centers upon a man who openly admits to using violence to get his way. Giamonna focuses on the man and then cuts to a demolition derby, where one car is piled up on top of another. It is a powerful film that hammers across its message. This is not the first time Giamonna has entered a film in the festival. Last year he won the top prize, the Tom Berman Award, for the most promising filmmaker; this is the brass ring that over 200 entrants are hoping to grab. "Even the money ($1000) doesn't mean that much," Bradley said. 'It is just to enhance their reputation and prestige with other filmmakers. It's very encouraging to win (the Berman Award). It gets one noticed." For those who don't win the Ber- man, there is still an additional $2500 in prize money to be awarded. Films will be shown at the Michigan Theatre Tuesday through Friday at 7, 9 and 11 p.m., and Saturday at 1, 7, and 9 p.m., to conclude the festival. All of the programs will be diffferent and each will be of equal quality. Among the highlights of the festival will be two feature-length films. German artist Werner Nekes' "Ulyssess" is a narrative based on James Joyce, Homer and "The Warp", by Neil Oram. Also entered from Germany is Dore O's "En- zyklop." Both are experimental films and both are entered with the help of Ann Arbor's Goethe House, which promotes the best of recent German culture and arts. There will be special performances as well. Men Working will present a conceptual performance piece on Thursday, and an experimental rock and roll band, GKW, will perform on Friday. Saturday, the J. Parker Copley Dance Company will be on nand. Heres More The Thread of Life Richard Wollheim "Richard Wollheim has written a highly original book... one of those rare works that extend the limits of philosophical analysis.' $8.95 -New York Review of Books Object Conversation, a ten-minute color film, is described as a kinetic animation which combines elements of words, objects, drawings, and sounds to form a fast-paced cinematic conversation. Object is one of the many films that will be shown during the festival. Art Museum fetes fortieth By Arona Pearlstein " Adevice for the furtherance of £L7teaching" is how Jean-Paul Slusser described the fuction of a university art museum. Slusser, who wrote those words in 1909 when he was Acting Director of the University Musuem of Art, described a univer- sity art museum's chief merit as "...the aptness with which it is able to supply concrete illustrations for the processes and developments discussed in studio and lecture hall." These thoughts and a collection of photos, memorabilia, posters, and other nostalgic material fill the University Museum of Art's 40th An- niversary Exhibition. The exhibition. follows the museum's history from the time the building itself was simply the Alumni Memorial Hall to its even- tual establishment as a museum of art. The Alumni Memorial Hall was built between 1907 and 1910. It housed sculpture on the first floor, paintings on the second floor, a faculty club in the basement, and classrooms and of- fices for the Department of Fine Arts. Several photos from this period show the first floor as a mini- Pantheon where classical sculpture virtually dominates. Professor Henry Frieze, a classical scholar, had brought many replicas of classical sculpture to the museum from his travels. A poster designed by William Cald- well Titcomb for the opening of the building in May 1910 shows an elegant Art Deco rendering of a peacock. The poster, an advertisement for an exhibition of American and Oriental art, typifies the drawing style of the time at its most charming. In 1946 the University Museum of Art and Archeology was split as an administrative unit, and the Univer- sity Museum of Archeology was moved to Newberry Hall. The Univer- sity Museum of Art occupied only por- tions of the Alumni Hall and lacked basic equipment such as standard size frames and secure display cases The University Museum of Art did not fully occupy the building until 1967-68. The exhibition itself is small and pleasant. It details photographs of in- teresting events such as the in- stallation of Charles Ginnever 's "Daedalus", the large black sculp- ture in front of the museum. The sculpture was a 30th birthday present from the Friends of the Museum and it raised much controversy as to its aesthetic value. Possibly the best way to celebrate the museum's 40th birthday is simply to wander among the different works of art. Look at the small collection of medieval art on the first floor or climb up the lovely staircase to the second floor where modern works await curious eyes. The exhibition runs through Mar- ch 29. Contemplating Music Challenges to Musicology Joseph Kerman "Nothing less than a Who's Who of musicology, and a What's What of theory, analysis, and musical philosoph" Hills sets to warm A $7.95 - Brich Leinsdore, New York Times Book Review By Joseph Kraus There's something to be said for the middle. Anne Hills has worked for the last several years with two of folk music's old guard: Tom Paxton and Bob Gib- son. At the same time, though, she has ties to a host of up and coming young songwriters like Jon Ims, Andrew Calhoun, and Mike Smith. Meanwhile, she is a woman in the midst of the strong Chicago folk scene which seems, however uninten- tionally, to be dominated by men. Cashing in on her in-betweeness, Hills has carved a distinct niche by performing contemporary folk songs in a stunning voice with intelligent back-up musicians. Experimenting with country, blues, and jazz techniques, she brings a fresh vision to many of the finest folk songs being written today. In particular, her version of Jon Ims' "Two of a Kind" on her last album, Don't Explain is one of the finest single folk cuts of last year. The song, a beautiful ode. to travelling late at night, seems tailor made for Hills who gives it a double-edged treatment of loneliness and consolation. Her version of Paxton's "Johnson" is a powerful updating of the song about a coal miner's widow. For all his past success, Paxton sometimes seems on the verge of irrelevance, but a spirited interpretation of his material, such as Hill's, is exactly what his career needs. Hills plays at The Ark tonight at 8 p.m. Tickets are $6, $5 for members or students and are available at the door. 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