Ar ts Wednesday, May 22., 1982 The Michigan Daily Page 7 Prescription for entertainment humor, wait until the lights come up. guitarists Guy Ray and Cleveland St. Arbor bar scene. By Buddy Moorehouse There they are, wearing suits that are James, lead singer Ferae DeMon- Dr. Bop and the Headliners, who just ADLES AND gentlemen - a hand wild, colorful, and loud (screaming tecristo, female vocalist Ina Anka, and completed a Thursday-through-Sunday L tatilne elemtoe-aobdan might be a better word). The band's Yuqui Benapore, the bartender. Not stay at the Second Chance, are one of that will never live to be as old a leader, drummer Dr. Bop, is wearing your run-of-the-mill bar band, by any the area's most popular attractions they look - Dr. Bop and the John Lennon-style sunglasses and has means. when they're in town - and with good Headliners!'' his pants rolled up. There is a bar on the The band then starts belting out vin- reason. They have a great time on Right from the start, you can tell it's stage, complete with bartender, and it's tage 50's and 60's songs - everything stage, and as a result, the audience has going to be a fun night. Hut if the intro covered with an umbrella. from "Stagger Lee" to "Surfin' USA." a great time. doesn't clue you in that Dr.Bop and the Then you hear the names they've What it all adds up to is the most enter- What makes them fun to watch is not Headliners are a band with a sense of made up for themselves: Dr. Bop, taining group currently playing the Ann See DOCTOR, Page8 Catching up on a couple of bland films By Richard Campbell F OR A FILM that supposedly breaks the story of American in- volvement in the overthrowing of cer- tain South American governments, Missing is pretty tame fare. Recognizing that it is directed by Costa-Garvas, whose other films in- clude Z, should be more of a shock, for Missing has none of the taut, gritty realism that marked his earlier work. Sissy Spacek stars as the wife of an artist living in So uth America and Jack Lemmon also stars as the father. When this artist mysteriously disappears, days after a military coup, both Spacek and Lemmon follow leads and prod em- bassy officials to learn what has hap- pened. In spite of the interesting plot and the constant innuendoes about American involvement in the coup, the film never raises its tempo above a crawl. Photographed in a mushy, fuzzy style, Missing seems determined to resolve nothing, to remain politically blurred. If Costa-Garvas wanted to indict America for covert operations, he should have adopted a style that screamed for justice as in Z. Whether or not he was whittled down from that kind of stand by American financial backers is impossible to say. But Missing ends up as politically dull as it is dramatically maudlin. Speaking of dull productions, A Little Sex, except for the title is another film that fails to cover up a lack of drama with style. Ostensibly the aged-old story of a husband cheating on his wife, A Little Sex tries hardest to say absolutely nothing about the current state of the art in love. Tim Mattheson stars as the wayward husband and Edward Herr- mann as his brother. Most of the movie's trite conversations occur as Herrmann lectures Mattheson on why men stray, although there are many other trite conversations throughout the film. A Little Sex is a movie that is worth very, very little. I I m n o ff '%W Wlw IMWAM I 7rll 1,1- W ,I 55U-I -6 elI U J,*11 14 F t t A . I xwNO lp p. R GT Th wan eet. beinlg Y0 tte { ' '<; N A GEORGE ROY HILL Film ROBIN WILLIAMS "THE WORLD ACCORDING TO GARP" MARY BETH HURT GLENN CLOSE - JOHN LITHGOW Executive Producer PATRICK KELLEY Screenplay by STEVE TESICH Based on the novel by JOHN IRVING Produced by GEORGE ROY HILL and ROBERT L.CRAWFORD Directed by GEORGE ROY HILL FR OM WRNER BROS A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY R RESE " Read the Novel from POCKET BOOKS LOCATION: Angel Hall Univ. of Michigan/Ann Arbor DATE: May 27 TIME: 7:30 PM SPONSOR: Department of Communications Admission is free tothe college community, but seating is limited. Admittance is on a first-come, first-served basis.