The Michigan Daily - Saturday, July 16, 1983 - Page 11 C -A selection of campus film Take the Money and Run (Woody Allen, 1969) Like a one-man version of Monty Python, Allen fills the barest of plots with the most inventive humor. This time Allen plays a small-time hood, trying to make it in the big-leagues of crime. Naturally he's a failure. (Saturday, July 16; Michigan Theatre, 7:25, 10:45). Books 1 r The Color Purple By Alice Walker Washington Square Press Celie is black, female, 14, and southern. Celie is in trouble. Her mother is dying, her father rapes her, and she is ugly and uneducated. Celie is in trouble. The opening scenario for Alice Walker's prize-winning narrative isn't a particularly happy one, and the first hundred pages or don't get any better. Repressed, frigid, obedient Celie tells her tale in letters to God, probably because no one else will listen. She tells of her joyless marriage to a husband who she refers to as Mister and whose highlights very provocative positions. (Satur- day, July 16; Auditorium A, 7:30, 9:45). The Wizard of Oz (Victor Fleming, 1939), Sure, you've seen it on TV. But seeing it on the big, big screen of the Michigan will be more than worth the price of admission. Judy Garland singing "Over the Rainbow," the Munchkins, the Wicked Witch of the West, colorful sets and- costumes...There's no film like this. (Sunday, July 17; Michigan Theatre, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00). -.Compiled by Richard Campbell INDIVIDUAL THEATRES $2.00 SHOWS TIL 6:00 PM 4 GREAT DIRECTORS John 'Animal House' Landis Steven 'ET' Spielberg Joe 'The Howling' Dante George 'Road Warrior' Miller Enter a new dimension. ?fUGMg9NE. THE MOVIE (PG) DAILY: 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 A MARRIED WOMAN COMING TO GRIPS WITH HER LATE BLOOMING LESBIANISM A - A Provocotive New Film From The Director Of "Return Of previous children she must raise. She tells of her troubles and her survival drive. She tells everything she can, and with Walker at the helm, that's a lot. All the hate and mistrust people can hoist on each other emerges through the pages and the years. But this fast-moving novel is one of redemption and liberation - probably one of the most inspiring modern books ever written in dialect. Also, while The Color Purple might initially seem a topical book - black feminism et al - the range of insight and feeling Walker covers is sometimes amazing. Celie's struggle to love and be loved reminds the reader of what's really im- portant - and how to appreciate it. --Ben Ticho \764-558 Body Heat (Lawrence Kadsan, 1981) This is the perfect weather in which to see Body Heat. A neo-film noir classic with intelligent women, a grisly crime of passion, and a small town lawyer in over his heaad. A marvelous first film by University graduate Kasdan. With William Hurt and Kathleen Turner in Bobby stays a bachelor (Continued from Page 10) McGowan as Peter are funny as the couple who divorce for the sake of just living together. Todd Hooly as David and Janis O'Connor Maier as Joanne are also good as the most conventional couple. Company is loaded with talent, as the singing voices attest, especially the harmony of the three girls who sing "you could drive a person mad, you could drive a person kook" during which they perform a marvelous dance routine rivalling the Supremes. The only thing lacking in Company is the script Sondheim left for the com- pany. The plot itself is banal and vapid. But the songs he provided are lyrically funny and the score is melodious. Technically, the play is superb and director and choreographer Gary Garrison, along with the cast and crew, have created a fine production. THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS r CALL 764-0557 A Film By John Sayles (R) DAILY: 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 ANN ARBOR LATE SHOWS SEATS $2.2S AT - 11:30 pm "LIANNA" (R) AT 11:30 pm "TWILIGHT ZONE" (PG)