6DThe Daily Tar HeelMonday, August 23, 1982 Cinema fare Union offers diverse films for 8 By TODD DAVIS Starr Writer Union Free Flicks are back this fall with a very diverse movie line-up that has something for everyone. Far better than the vast TV wasteland, Free Flicks are shown in the Carolina Union Auditorium. Admission for most films is free with a valid UNC student ID or Union Privilege Card, with one guest allowed per ID. However, there are a number of shows for which admission is charged films shown on Fridays cost $1.00, and Satur day matinees cost 50C. Tickets for these films are available at the Union Informa tion Desk on the Monday prior to each show. Fall film schedules are available at the Union Information Desk while they last. This fall the film schedule features many special programs, including two film festivals, Lecture and Film Night, UNC Student Film Night, and 3-D Film Night. The first film festival starts August 31 and for four consecutive Tuesdays focuses on Academy-A ward-winning actor Dustin Hoffman. The Dustin Hoffman Festival exhibits Hoffman acting in a wide range of offbeat roles. In Lenny, Hoffman por trays the tragic life of comedian Lenny Bruce, who was a comedian before his time with no last laughs. In Straight Time, Hoffman is a working class ex-con who can't seem to adjust to a world without prison bars. Perhaps Hoffman's strongest performance is in Straw Dogs, where he portrays a quiet, civilized mathematician working on his thesis until something happens that drives him to the breaking point in the Sam Peckinpah School of Violence. The Dustin Hoffman Festival ends on September 21 with Little Big Man in which Hoffman ages from a teen ager to a 1 10-year-bld man who saw how history was really made in the West. Attention: Meeting for all advertising representatives Mon day, Aug. 23 at 4:30 p.m. in The Daily Tar Heel office. --- The second film festival's theme is Classic Black Musicals from the 20s to the 50s beginning on October 14 and running , for four consecutive Thursdays. Unfor tunately, the festival doesn't feature the most classic black musical of all George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess. Still, the Classic Black Musical Festival gives an interesting perspecive on the develop ment of black themes in movies from the cotton-picking family spirituals of Halle lujah in 1929, when talkies first came out, to the 1954 entry Carmen Jones, which adapts Bizet's Carmen to southern black folklore. Overall, the greatest attraction of the festival is the treasure of musical giants with such greats as Louis Arm strong, Duke Ellington, Lena Home, Cab Calloway and the Big Man himself Fats Waller. On Thursday, September 16 the film schedule presents a Lecture and Film Night with creative writing professor Doris Betts who will discuss the adapta tion of her short story "The Ugliest Pil grim" into Violet, which won the Acade my Award for Best Short Feature. The film tells the story of a physically disfig ured girl who journeys to meet a TV evan gelist so she can be healed. Growing in popularity each time it is held, the third UNC Student Film Night is planned for November 3 and provides a showcase of films made by students en rolled at UNC. Are there any low-budget Spielbergs, Capras, or Brakhages on this campus? Find out in living 8mm, Super 8 mm or 16 mm and decide if a film is a blockbuster, a masterpiece or some smart aleck college kid's demented home movie. If you are interested in having your film shown, waich for details in the DTH later this fall. A terrifying new dimension in supsense is offered this Saturday with the 3-D ver it . . . J : , i sion of Alfred Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder. Guns aim right at you! Hands reach out of the screen to grab you! Thrill to the drama as a greedy husband attempts f to kill his wife so he can inherit her for tune. It's scary stuff. Many different topics are explored in " the Free Flicks this fall. Political struggle is documented in Andrzej Wajda's Man of Iron, which allows an insider's view beyond TV news and behind the Iron Curtain of the Polish protest for freedom. Also political in nature are two films by Costa Gravas, State of Siege and Missing, which reveal controversial U.S. involve ment in Latin and South America. Social realism,' another movement "in film presented this fall, uses authentic lo cation's and examines the plight of people victimized by society. Two Italian found- ers of social realism, Rossellini and De Sica, are highlighted with with their early works Open City and Shoeshine, respec tively. Also, the transition of the social realism movement from Italy to the United States is shown in On the Waterfront with Marlon Brando. The film won eight Acad emy Awards. . - V Almost a forgotten part of movies to day, many silent films are still as fresh and exciting as the day they were made even after 50 years of sound. Three superstars of the 20s who communicated through the universal screen language of body ex pression were Buster Keaton, Rudolph Valentino and Harold Lloyd i On Wed nesday, September 22 the first film of a silent double feature shows Keaton going to college not to get an education, not to get a job, but to get a girl in the comedy College. The other film is the classic Son of the Sheik, with Rudolph Valentino as a hynpotic sex symbol who makes today's beefcake look like pastry. Later in the se mester, mild-mannered and four-eyed arts "It's providing a place for entertainers to get an audience," Evans said of the Open Mike Nights. "I think it's one of the; best things we've ever done." . . . ; - Admission is $1.50 for members and $2 for non-members. And there's cold draft beer at 50t a round. Hot Summer Open Mike Night will move to three Wednesdays in September, October and November and will change its name to TNT! Tonight's New Talent after the September 30 finale. That night will feature the best of the summer's entertainment. Another co-sponsored program is the Chil dren's Film Festival, presented with the sup 2:15 4-40 7.05 9:30 BARGAIN MATlNEES-$2.00 MON. THRU FRI. TILL 6 PM SAT SUN. AND HOLIDAYS 1st MATINEE ONLY 2:15 4:40 7:10 9:35 DMTVJMOTD T MGMUA EL r9?nMnjA Entf,btainmfnt co r BARGAIN MATINEES $Z00 MON. THRU FRI. TILL 6 PM SAT, SUN. AND HOLIDAYS 1st MATINEE ONLY JjOJSif jy 7nn jNCNBPLA. ROSEMARY on.-Fri. 7: 9:S) & s 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 J XxSoflST (TIV i 1 l!llHH ? , NCNB PLA. ROSEMARY I WOODY ALLEN 8i MIA FARROW 1 A 11llD SUMMER NIGHT'S V jMva 82B4JJ l5 T- '. A UNIVEESAl Picture : ' r-m'ut'ci.''t.L. ' ' Mon.-Fri. 7:15 9:15 S & S 3:15 5:15 7:15 9:15 - so 4 4 S .-...-....-........ ft 'A Dustin Hoffman Harold Lloyd stars as a rich kid brat who is reformed by a mission girl in For -Heaven's Sake. Notable foreign films at the Free Flicks include Gallipoli by Peter Weir, about the : ; historic amphibious failure of World War II as seen through the eyes of Australian soldiers; Dersu Uzala, by Akira Kurosawa from Japan, which won the Best Foreign Film Oscar in 1975; and from Germany the late Rainer Werner Fassbinder's haunting, lyrical Lili Marleen, which ' shows the devastation and irony of war. Free Flick comedies include Richard Pryor Live on the Sunset Strip, Tom Jones, the Marx Brothers Animal Crack ers, and Woody Allen's Annie Hall. Sat urday matinees feature the Disney ani-' mated classics Dumbo and Lady and the Tramp. From page 1 port of Wendy's of Carrboro and Chapel Hill. The Spectator magazine is also co-sponsoring a. , film festival with the Art School, the Cinema ; 80s series. . ; Since its simple beginnings, the Art School has flourished. Now it offers an open door to the arts for just about anyone in the commu nity. But with expansion come expanded mon ey problems. "Money available for the arts is pretty un stable," Evans said. "In the future, I see us becoming a much more financially stable orga nization. It will happen with a greater commu nity commitment. We have a good one now, but we need a greater one." . i . . RICHARD GERE "It'B lift vou ud DEBRA WINGER where you belong. AJV OFFICER AND A GENTLET.IAN A PARAMOUNT PICTURE 2:30 4:45 7:00 9:15 ' it DOLBY STEREO . Production ! w f J IT KNOWS WHAT j Y SCARES YOU. r-V 2:30 4:45 Mark Hamill Harrison Ford 17:00 Jhrim 9:15 LL.J& 2Qth CENTURY- 1 DFrl FOX FILMS E2i Chapel Hill movie goers have many alternatives to current film releases By LEAH TALLEY Arts Editor O.K. So you've got to get your weekly' movie fix. It's been a while since you've sat in the dark, unconsciously munching pop corn while being absorbed into the screen. Ether you have seen all the current releases or nothing grabs your attention. The Chapel Hill area offers other film fare to cure the shakes of a dehydrated movie bug. Back again for another nostalgic semester are the Carolina Classics. Presented as afternoon matinees at the Carolina Theater, these films pro vide an alternative to the red-eyed late movie monger. You know the type the person who stays up till 5 a.m. to watch an all-night Katharine Hepburn film festival. ' Two of Hepburn's films will be shown this fall, Long Day's Journey Into Night . (Oct. 15-21) and Holiday (Now. 19-25). - James Dean's classic Rebel Without a Cause (Aug. 27-Sept. 2) begins the classic film series. How Green Was My Valley (Sept. 3-9), Top Hat and Judgment at Nuremburg follow. All About Eve (Oct. 1-7) showcases Bette Davis, and Yul Bryn ' ner learns how to dance in The King and I (Sept. 24-30). Slash a Z on your calendar the week of Oct. 22-28 for The Mark of Zorro, then catch The Sound of Music without com mercials. An American in Paris (Nov. 5-11), Spellbound (Nov. 12-18) and Citizen Kane (Nov. 26-Dec. 2) are all worth seeing one more time. For those interested in more cerebrally challenging films, The Chapel Hill Public Library is offering a fall film series, "The Modern Artist," Wednesdays at 7 p.m. Katharine Hepburn " I X. mMmm TH E Daily Crossword By J. & P. Barrick ACROSS 1 Chagall 5 Went snorkeling 9 Bones 13 As (usually) 15 Caronfilm 16 Aquatic bird 17 Foxier 18 Dyestuff 19 Period of quiet 20 Party fallout : 22 Role in opera 24 Bearing 25 doulour eux 26 Movie dog 30 Blackbird 34 "Waste Land' poet 35 Gladly, old style 36 Common contraction 38 Had a rest less night 42 Chinese export 43 Wavy, in heraldry 44 Free from . defects 45 Criticized harshly 48 Contentious 49 Green reporter Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: SNAGnTAlELr TTlOITIA J AM ID IDEA ,1A NTES AMllLH U.1 T 0 NFiiH REDPOLLSINESTSE Z "jIXIt 31 a II lTaTd lestcom stock A L.11NJ M1 R.1 jC.Hl I 6 0 IT f S A G A Njl.iA HOT II kZi 0 LAX rJ6U E S T DRESSLERjS Ujl RlElYj "-4-J""' T w a s" Hfp T Tit ri-Ji aTgTA R t C 1 C H A PJT A I N BiUIP E NiIilEii.II 111 JNETI L. L.11 ElJE S. yIeiaIsL. Jo 1 1 IoIrLIsiaimie 41782 i, 2 fl p r is 5 p t r 1 9 no in 112 i T3 7 " Tr rfis ' i IT" T ' T? " " Ti ! ?9 " 15 ' zT " 17" 23" "" "" "24 " jTS"""- Z&1 271 2a"T29" IT" IT" T" 321 33 35 3T" " 37" la" " " " " "isT" - " IdrTiT"" " " "" 43 , IT" 46 47 " 48" " "" " " 75 To" TP &2 I 531 54" " "" 55"" "" 5o5f j itT 53" - fc2 - - - -j- 5 jfi6 - - 1982 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Films on several artists will be shown at each presentation. For example, on Sept. 15, the featured artists will be Norman Rockwell, Paul Cezanne and Joseph M.W. Turner. Several authors will also be presented: Marcel Proust, Rudyard Kipling, Walt Whitman and Ernest Hemingway on Sept. 22. Architects Le Corbusier, Antonio Gaudi and Frank Lloyd Wright are featured Oct. 20. Other artists to look for in this fall film series are Gertrude Stein, Michaelangelo, Woody Allen, Edgar Allan Poe, Claude Monet and James Agee. . - ; ' The Art School in Carrboro offers several film festivals this fall. Beginning Aug. 27 and running four weeks, a Music Mania Festival showcases various rock performers. On the weekend of Aug. 27, Beatles fans will be treated to Magical Mystery Tour and The Beatles Concert in ; D.C. Jimi Hendrix will be featured Sept. 3-4 in Jimi Plays Berkely and Black Music in the 70's. The Band's farewell ap pearance was recorded for posterity in The Last Waltz, to be shown Sept. 10 and 11. The Blank Generation and The Last Pogo (Sept. 17 and 18) provide a vent for local punk rockers. A Cinema80s film festival highlights several films of the 60s. This event is co-. sponsored by the Art School and The Spectator magazine. Film critic Godfrey Cheshire has selected five films to run each Thursday in September: Petulia, Privilege, Masculine-Feminine, Wild in the Streets and Medium Cool. -v Wendy's of Carrboro and Chapel Hill and the Art School are sponsoring a children's film festival each Thursday at 4 p.m. beginning Sept. 16. Films shown at the Art School will be: A Gift for Heidi, Robin Hood, Hoppity Goes to Town, Hans Christian Andersen, The Haunted Cat, Who Killed Doc Robbin, Pinnochio and Little Red Riding Hood During the first weekends in October, the Art School will present a cult film festival. Eraserhead (Oct. 1 and 2), Mad Max (Oct. 8 and 9), and Outrageous (Oct. 15 and 16) provide alternatives to the stan dard Rocky Horror fare. - . Finally, the Art School will hold an In ternational Women's Film Festival, in cluding A Free Woman (Oct. 7), Dream Life (Oct. 14) and Women (Oct. 21). So quench your thirst for a film. The Chapel Hill area offers the solution for nearly any taste, whether you prefer to relive the 40s. 50s or 60s with a classic, relive your childhood with a children's film or release your inhibitions with a cult film. 50 Footnote 21 Four-ln- abbr. hand 52 Deaden 23 passim 55 Pain killer 26 Native of 60 Russian Latvia range 27 Bitter 61 Sister of tonic Ares 28 Twine 63 Soap plant fiber 64 Starr of 29 Call for football help 65 Fuzzy bits 31 Ferris 66 Drive back wheel 67 Devine 32 Pauling of 68 Theater chemistry section 33 Phenomenon 69 Adjacent 35 Temple 37 Circular DOWN current 1 Abbr. in 39 Weight grammar 40 Item in a 2 A Guthrie lot 3 Spoil 41 Louis XIV, 4 Musical e.g. symbol 46 Sharpness 5 Roofing 47 Not talking piece 48 Cone bearer 6 Entertain- 51 Moisten ing 52 Rum-soaked 7 Pasha cake 8 Combative 53 vital 9 Ten 54 Aromatic scholar plant 10 Spirit 56 Sign 11 Put on the 57 Drink to market excess 12 Tamarisk 58 Holm oak tree 59 Welshman 14 Recluse 62 River. Sp. 41782