ARTS Tuesday, August 14, 1984 Page 7 The Michigan Daily The Russians are coming By Byron L. Bull JOHN MILIUS remains one of the more interesting oddities in the film community today. From his notoriously guiltless first screenplay for Apocalyp- se Now (extensively rewritten by Cop- pola when he filmed it) through the mindless and musclebound Conan The Barbarian (believe it or not, a twisted allegory of the '60s complete with flower children) through his overseeing of the utterly deplorable Uncommon Valor (Vietnam vets go back into the jungles with a vengeance), Milius' hawkish and machismo infatuations remain inseparable from his work. In his latest project, Red Dawn, a movie that details a Soviet invasion of this country, he's at his patriotic, jingoistic pinacle with this hard-core action ad- venture, adolescent minded mini-epic. Milius works around the insurmoun- table barriers of logic and common sense by simply ignoring them. In a brief prologue he very neatly stacks his hand by telling us that first NATO collapses (making the U.S. pull all its missiles out of Europe) then Central America is overrun by communist regimes, and finally that the Soviet Union has faced a devastating crop failure, and is on the brink of star- vation. Those convenient facts in hand, we fade in on Calumet, Colorado, a small rural town in the heartland of the coun- try, shimmering in its Autumn hues and Coplandesque soundtrack. Suddenly hundreds of Soviet, Cuban, and Nicaraguan paratroopers rain down from the sky. After slaughtering half the town, they herd the rest of the sur- vivors into the local drive-in turned A selection of campus film highlights. This special edition of campus films runs until the beginning of the school year. High Anxiety (Mel Brooks, 1977) An uneven but often hilarious parody/homage of Hitchcock suspen- se films, with plenty of succulent jabs at Psycho, Vertigo, and The Birds among many others. (Wednesday and Thursday, August 14 and 16, 9:15 p.m. at the Michigan Theater.) C. Thomas Howell and Patrick Swayze, fresh off their tandem success in 'Grandville U.S.A.' with Jamie Lee Curtis (pictured above), also star in 'Red Dawn', John Milius' new film about a Russian invasion of the U.S. concentration camp. Within a few days main street is flanked by wall sized murals of Lenin, and the local Bijou is screening Alexander Nevsky as its permanent feature. Only a handful of teenage boys, all varsity jacket types, manage to escape. They load up their four wheeler with plenty of Coke, Wheaties, and of course hunting rifles, and flee into the nearby, mountains. Under the leadership of former high school star quarterback, Jed, (played with ample leaderly brooding by Patrick Swayze) they learn the basics of hunting and camouflage. Eventually they develop a tribal campus films Gone With The Wind (Victor Fleming, 1939) Frankly not intellectually stimulating film fare, but grand and colorful fun in its extravagant, big screen self-glorification. In 35mm as it should only be seen in. (Friday, August 17, 8 p.m. at the Michigan Theater.) Here Comes Mr. Jordan (Alexander Hall, 1941) Far superior to Warren Beatty's almost depressing remake, Heaven Can Wait. A prizefighter dies when he isn't supposed to, with mayhem resulting both in Heaven andmon Ear- th. (Friday, August 17, 9:30 p.m., at Lorch Hall.) The Wrong Box (Bryan Forbes, 1966) Peter Sellers, Michael Caine, and Dudley Moore in an agreeable bit of British black humor. Based very loosely on a story by Robert Louis Stevenson. (Saturday, August 18, 7 p.m. at MLB 3.) The Bank Dick (Eddie Cline, 1940) Most W. C. Fields films just haven't held up so well over the years. But for those who are curious to see what they were like, this is one of the better ones. (Saturday, August 18, 9 p.m., at. Lorch Hall.) Mad Max (George Miller, 1979) Cheap, atrociously acted, at,d crudely slapped together, far inferior to the sequel The Raod Warrior. The. first ten minutes and the last are great, but the 73 in between are an un- bearably bad B-western. (Sunday and Monday, August 19 and 20, 7:30 p.m. at the Michigan Theater.) Allegro Non Troppo (Bruno Bozzetto, 1976) Everything Fantasia (the film it sometimes parodies) wasn't a thoughtful animated festival of music and color, rich in both ideas and images, as witty as it is touching. A thoroughly rewarding experience even for those who wouldn't be in- clined to go see an animated film. With a soundtrack that includes Ravel, Debussy, and Sibelius. (Wed- nesday and Thursday, August 22 and 23, 7:30 p.m. and 9:50 p.m. at the Michigan Theater.) Topper (Norman Z. Mcleod, 1937) Forget the feeble television series you might have seen on early morning reruns. The original is much better, though more out of Cary Grant's magnetic presence than the only average script. (Friday, August 24, 7:30 p.m. atLorch Hall.) La Cage Aux Folles (Edouard Molinaro, 1979) Good fluffy French film about the gay owner of a transvestite nightclub who discovers his straight son is bringing his fiancee's ultraconser- vative parents home for dinner. Once a campus perennial as popular as Harold and Maude. (Saturday, August 25, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.) at Lorch Hall.) Lawrence of Arabia (David Lean, 1962) Peter O'Toole gives one of his most charismatic performances as a British officer who becomes a virtual demogague among the Arab tribes he leads into battle during WW I. An in- vigorating, sprawling epic by the existance, making themselves up as Indian warriors, and indulging in a manhood rite of drinking the warm blood of a freshly slaughtered deer. Although they are not, understandably, beyond breaking the daily routine of See 'RED', Page 10 master of the genre. (Sunday and Monday, August 26 and 27, 8 p.m. at the Michigan Theater.) Dragonslayer (Matthew Robbins, 1980) A sadly neglected gem. Although it's hindered by a witless, linear script, Dragonslayer is so rich in its dark and moody tone it remains one of the most enchanting of film fairy tales. Alex North's score is one of the most stunning soundtracks of the last 10 years, and the dragon (courtesy George Lucas's effects shop) will take your breath away. (Wednesday and Thursday, August 29 and 30, 7:30 p.m. at the Michigan Theater.) King of Hearts (Phillippe de Broca, 1967) Alan Bates plays a young Scottish soldier in WW II who stumbles into a small French town where the inhabitants of the local asylum have escaped and now roam freely. A little unbearable when it begins to pon- tificate on the fine line between sanity and insanity, but with a heart of gold. (Friday, August 31, 7:40 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. at the Michigan Theater.) Thunderball (Ternence Young, 1965) Sean Connery is Bond, James Bon- .d, in one of the more sluggish but still adequate amusing adventures of Her Majesty's finest secret agent. (Satur- day and Sunday, September 1 and 2 at 7:30 p.m., at the Michigan Theater.) -compiled by Byron L. Bull