OQliU Wind, Gold Tho?.'B of you attending the -.hov.'hg of Gonp r) f7?e tV7r this weekend at Henzlik shouid see more of the film than you ever have before. The prints of the film circulated to theaters in the past have had their tops and bottoms chopped off to fit 'vidf screen dimensions. The 16mm print used this weekend ciou i hove- the vvMo picture (proJJmu Hertz! ik can got it on i r screen) and thjs ir; added attraction. A time change has been made in 13 7 jVt',r:H" Charlie Chaplin in Gor ?ivs? , , T-- -rri iff jf i I . rr:i ? rxrz i IS iioth 111 music and the picture is a con Li im inj; delmhl? ARCHER WINS! EN, N Y. Pest CfIm possibly bcaulilul to the eye. Visually exquisite. U f?A 11.. m vihuaiiv exquisite film... an unusual and welcome experience." WILLIAM WOLF, Cue COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS A FILM BY CONRAD Ztii etDDMATMA STARRING SHASHI KAPOOR SIMIGAHEWAL PRODUCED, DIRECTED AND WRITTEN FOR THE SCREEN BY CONRAD ROOKS .-TS Rush to be the Seven Lively Arts Fiim Series at Sheldon this Sunday. Another showing has been added at 3:45 p.m., immediately following the regular showing at 3. A new film group has cropped up in Lincoln. It is called the Lincoln Old Movie Soceity, and its first showing was last night. I wish them luck because knowing the fate of similar ventures in the area, they will need it. Here is a bit of suggested reading for those wanting a good laugh at the current film scene. In a time i-f v.. , 1" STARTS TODAY! 'At 1:30 - 3:10 - 5:10 - 7:00 - 9:00 fA special film for special aiHliences, lor nevqiees of Hesse's Hovels, IVr admirers of llie exotic and for everyone who wants adventurous in film iioinir. GENE SHALIT, WNBC-TV ROOKS HERMANN HESSE S R IISllKtIO I Wl.t,,..,. ,.111111, J I. MmhMHitmmmjf j0Mif 11 III daily nebraskan s ho A7n " th i swe e ke n d when many movies are becoming so predictable, Newsweek's film reviewer, Paul Zimmerman, has written four hilarious reviews of movies not made yet. He lampoons sports films, black films, westerns and the dirty cop movies, but one realizes that the way things are going, some of his ridiculous stories might pop up on the screen someday. This is the third weekend of Sheldon Art Gallery's Chaplin Film Series, and th offerings should be among the best of the entire series. The program features The Gold Rush (1925), which most critics consider to be Chaplin's greatest film. This is next to calling it the greatest comedy ever put on film. Showing with it is Pay Day, (1922), the last short that Chaplin ever made and a film seldom seen anywheie since its original release. Pay Day continues in the mold of the Series' last five films, all made while Chaplin was under contract at First National between 1918 and 1923. In it, Chaplin plays a construction worker who always is getting into trouble with his work or his wife. The familial faces of Edna Purviance, Mack Swain and Chaplin's brother Syd (all seen in the previous Chaplin films) appear again. 055 REX REED, Syndicated Columnist to In v) i r J in 1Q93 Chaolin directed, but. did not star in A Woman In Pans. Completely different from anything he had ever done before, it was his first successful attempt to make a purely dramatic film. (It is a shame that this brilliant film does not appear in the Sheldon Series.) Two years later, with The Gold Rush, he was back into his familiar tramp costume while making his largest production up to that time. Charlie plays a lone prospector searching for gold amid the harsh elements of the Alaskan Klondike. greg lukow key grip All the best of Chaplin's art is found in this movie, especially in the scenes where Charlie methodically eats his boot and shoelaces like a three-course meal, performs the famous "dance of the rolls" at his New Year's Eve dinner and hangs on for dear life while his cabin totters precariously on the edge of a cliff. The films will be shown Friday at 7 and 9 p.m. and Saturday at 3, 7 and 9 p.m. at Sheldon. NWU to present tragedy Antigone Antigone, the story of a girl who loses her life in defiance of a tyrant, is being prqsented by the Nebraska Wesleyan Lab Theater this weekend. The script is Jean Anouilh's 1941 version of Sophocles' classic. "Anouilh's play is a plea tor individual freedom and rights," said David Clark, lab theater director. Clark said enactment and reading will be combined onstage. The players will read their parts as both actors and oral interpreters. Physical action in the play will be shown in slide projections above and around the stage. The free performances will be at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Loft Bldg. on the Wesleyan campus. Ill Person Tonight ill llie VIA Y-MOR llAIAMOOM LES ELGART and his Oruestra 4 Miles West of Lincoln on V St. MIXED DRINKS-BEER 2710 Vine Antiques - Books Collectables Sat. - Sun. 10 am 6 pm fnday, September 21, 1973 ti ,M '3 VI m 4 1 t Nook !