â€"conservationists, it is a lowly little Citroen 2CV which gets the better of two large Mercedes in an early, highly enjoyable crossâ€" country chase. (An even more er a vital predictable perils, chases and romantic diversions before the inevitable successful outcome and finalâ€"scene byâ€"theâ€"sea ‘"bondâ€" ing‘‘ of the hero and his latest lady. For a picture that is so rooted in formula â€" going right back to the first in the Bond series, 1962‘s Dr. No â€" For Your Eyes Only is surprisingly successfy! in genâ€" erating fresh excitement, thrills As in most James Bond movâ€" ies, it takes but a single sentencge to summarize the plot of Fer Your Eyes Only: Agent 007 is assigned to recovâ€" British spy ship This is, of c Certainly, it‘s the best of the five films (starting with 1973‘s Live And Let Die) starring exâ€" Saint Roger Moore as Bond. This time around, Moore actually, seems to be having fun with the role and not merely looking suavely out of place trying to fill Sean Connery‘s shoes. In fact, as if to once and for all lay the memory of past Bonds to rest, For Your Eyes Only begins with 007 beigg mysteriously sumâ€" moned from the grave of his wife (who was murdered in On Her Majesty‘s Secret Service in which George Lazenby played Bond) and finding himself in a lifeâ€"andâ€"death struggle with old enemy Blofeld. With sadistic deliberateness, Bond finally (or so it seems) destroys his catâ€" stroking nemesis who had eluded such punitive justice in three successive films â€" You Only Live Twice (Connery), On Her Majesty‘s Secret Service (Laâ€" zenby) and Diamonds Are Forevâ€" er , (Connery, makin, appearance as Bond). Ailthough there is the traditionâ€" al appearance of Q â€" the British Secret Service master inventor played for the 10th time by Desmond Liewelyn â€" there is also minimal emphasis on exotic gadgetry. And, perhaps as a torcycles and skis.) Although there is the usual quota of violence, it too seems to humeor is present on a much more dominant leve! â€" without in the least diminishing the excitement of the underiying adventure. implausible, but equally enterâ€" taining, later chase invoives moâ€" previous Bond films, while The result is that accomplices, villains and surrounding beauties Tried but true plot works in a far more of of his newâ€" By VICTOR STANTON his last of grandmother, the poor girl‘s faâ€" ther, Arthur‘s chauffeur, a a tavern drunk â€" who in some very diverse and ment one another beautifully, and in a totally different way so do Moore and Minnelli. Gielgud and Minnelli also play off each other extremely well in a couple of scenes. just feeling good inside. Moore of course plays the poor rich boy, Minnelli his penniless love and Gieligud his fatherâ€" figure and properiy British manâ€" servant. Gielgud‘s is the kind of performance that should receive an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actor. The perfect foil for Moore‘s offâ€"theâ€" wall antics, this character â€" through Gielgud‘s brilliant sense of timing and delivery â€" turns funny scenes into hilarious ones with a glance, a movement or a single line of dialogue. And, then, with no loss of bélieveablility; he can turn a potentially maudlin scene into an extraordinarily moving one. It‘s a movie to go to with an open mind and you‘re likely to come away smiling broadly and Arthur is set in contemporary New York City, but with Moore and Gielgud‘s preeminence much of it has a distinctly British flaâ€" ‘The movie mixes erratic, alâ€" most Goonâ€"like comedy with both sentimentality and cynicism in a fairyâ€"taile story of righ boy falling in love with poor girl, while being threatered with losing all his millions unless he marries rich girl. Moore carries it, with superb assistance from Sir John Gielgud and some delightful interplay with Liza Minnelli, almost purely on the strength of his personality and highly individualistic brand of humor. Arthur is definitely not a movie that can stand up to any kind of serious ‘"critical‘‘ analysis. That it works as generally satisfying entertainment seems at times more a fluke than by any deâ€" sign. one of the most enjoyable screen comedies of the year. Moore â€" comedian Dudley Moore, whose likeable, if deâ€" cidedly off beat, title characterâ€" ization provides the movie Arâ€" thur with a solid basis for being even spiritedly portrayed, seem somehow at the end iess memoâ€" rable than their counterparts in previous pictures. With this movie, the Bond Age seems solidly entrenched into the There areâ€"other minor characâ€" More credit to another British Melina (Carole Bouquet) and James Bond (Roger Moore) get to know each other aboard the ship owned by Melina‘s slain parents in ‘For Your Eyes Only‘. a Three new exhibits come to the gallery On Thursday of next week, three new exhiâ€" bitions go on view ai the Kitchenerâ€"Waterioo Art Gallery. This sketch by Roland Strasser is one of the new works on display at the art gallery beginning next Thureday. Roland Strasser, E{- ‘ w9 } " * i d P hx Be" t s (Ijj)/ « C . * G) L ~ *Â¥ uL lXA * 1895â€"1974, which has Though Austrian by been organized by the birth, Strasser has Kitchenerâ€"Waterioo been calied The Paintâ€" Art Gallery, will comâ€" er of the Far East, for prise some 50 paintings more than a quarter of and drawings. a century he lived and tinue through until Aug. 30, with the Gwilâ€" lim work staying after that until Sept. 6. Joseph Highmore, and artist Maurice Levis. clude some of the largâ€" est in the Old World avifauna. The third new show, European Paintings from the Colleqgtion, presents a littleâ€"known Sir Godfrey Kneller, American artist James but important aspect of nent collection. It will include works by Britâ€" ish artists Charles With one or two exâ€" ceptions, the drawings Organized by The Robert McLaughlin Gallery, Oshawa, the exhibition documents the work of a British amateur artist active in India. worked in Tibet, China, Outer Mongolia, Japan, and indonesia. His works effectively illustrate the people encountered on his wideâ€"ranging travels. Elizabeth Gwillim (1763â€"1807) Artist & Naturalist, an exhibiâ€" tion of 60 bird studies on loan from the Blackerâ€"Wood Library of Zoology and Orniâ€" thology, McGill Uniâ€" versity, will also be held. â€"Waterioo