The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 11, 1975, Image 12

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    2—The Daily Collegian Friday, April 11, 1975
★★
AML
It's a I rfe style.
It's the beauty of love, the joy c/f freedom.'
It's the best-selling book. It's Neil Diamond.
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The Hall Bartlett Film
Jonathan Livingston
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finßjna
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Joseph E Levine Pretent*
/El l HI VILI
m Mel Brooks'
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A Sidney Glazier Production
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Sheila Levine is
By LEAH ROZEN
Collegian Staff Writer
“Sheila Levine is Dead and
Living .in New York,” now
playing at the Flick Theatre,
is the kind of film which
Impressions
reminds you of hundreds of
others and has no distinc
tiveness of its own. . I
Based on Gail Parent’s
highly successful,novel of the
same name, the film tells the
story of an ugly duckling who
turns beautiful and gets her
man. It smacks of • Bette
Davis’ “Now Voyaafer” and
every other film Hollywood
ever made in which the
heroine threw off the shackles
of her oppressive parents,
discovered herself and
i wholeheartedly pursued the
man she loved.
Unlike the novel, where
Sheila is a native New
Yorker, she hails ■ from
Harrisburg in the movie. Her
first night in the Big Apple
she meets Mr. Right and beds
down with him for a one-night
stand
*
*
*
*
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tPGQoKnrs mi
7emmm
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VouM FOP. ONL.T
AT UNCLE ELi’S
12.6 HUHES ALL.EV-
For those with more
urbane tastes, we also
have hundreds of other
delightful posters and
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3rd
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We spend the rest of the
film watching Sheila give him
mournful looks while he
cavorts with her roommate.
.And of course, when she has
cgrown up and becomes an
'independent and fulfilled
person with a job of her own,
he pops the question. She can
hardly turn him down.
Gail Parent and her writing
partner Kenny Solms, who
have written for “The Carol
Burnett Show," wrote the
script for the film. Some of
the o lines are downright
patlietic. For example, lying
the arms of Mr. Right that
first night, Sheila spouts,
>“For the first time in my
whole life I felt like a
woman.”
Later in the film, when they
seem to be at cross purposes.
Hearst
SCRANTON, Pa.
(API—U.S. Atty. John Cot
tone said yesterday his in
vestigation of illegal har
boring of fugitive newspaper
heiress Patricia Hearst and
her Symbionese Liberation
friends “could lead to
indictments,” possibly by the
hnd of this month. •
“God knows where that
could lead us,i’ Cottone ad
ded. L
“If sufficient evidence for
prosecution is uncovered to
show a conspiracy existed to
hide Miss Hearst, and that it
involved other people, then it
would have to be determined
where this conspiracy oc
curred. ” 1
\ Cottone said he expects te
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Except ISlr Ira.cb lieftts
'ead—period
she asks the haunting
Question, “Why do you sup
pose we pick the people we
pick to love?” Makes you
think, huh?
Jeannie Berline (“The
Heartbreak Kid”) plays
Sheila. She is called upon to
act jin all of these intense
scenes, shot in long, long
takes, most of whiclrare also
done in close-up. She radiates
'pathos and there’s a limit to
How much pathos one can
successfully radiate. The
script makes her almost
Marjorie Morningsfar-ish in
H|r pursuit of the man of her
dreams and this makes her
very one-dimensional.
Roy Scheider (“The French ■
'Connection” and r ‘‘The Seven
Ups”) plays Sheila’s love
object. Mostly he just has to
indictments expected
1 call the grand jury back later
this month to Harrisburg,
Pa., where it is investigating
the Hearst case. It heard one
witness in mid-March, Jay
Weiner, a 20-year-old Temple
University student from
Philadelphia, and he is ex
i pected to be recalled for more
testimonev.
Other witnesses are ex
pected to' be Jack Scott, and
his wife, Micki, who report
edly rented a farmhouse in
northeastern Pennsylvania
I last summer where Miss
r Hearst may have stayed as
I long as two months.
1 “Itis natural to think that
they (the Scotts) will be
C^VVVVM
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stand around looking sen
sitive and giving Sheila oc
casional glances which say,
“1 know I can’t say it now but
some day I’ll be able to tell
you how much I love you.”
Big deal. ,
Sidney J. Furie directed the
film and he was not overly
imaginative about doing it.
The film lacks pacing and
interest.
Gail Parent’s novel had
some funny scenes but you’ll
have to look hard to find them
in the film.
If you loved the book, I
doubt that you’ll love .the
movie. If you didn’t love the
book or didn’t read it, there’s
even less reason to see
“Sheila Levine is Dead and
Living in New York.”
their connection to the case in
Pennsylvania,” Cottonesaid.
The . Baltimore New*
American said the FBI
believes Scott, a radical
sports critic, may have
masterminded the conspiracy
to hide Miss Hearst; Emily
and William Harris, the two
SLA members, anjd Wendy
Yoshimura. accused' of
plotting to bomb the Navy
ROTC building on the
University of California
campus at Berkeley.
Miss = Hearst and the
Harrises , are wanted on
various federal and state
charges, including bank
robbery, in connection with
Salt