@@@@@ @   @ @@@@@    @     @ @@@@@@@   @       @  @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@
         @   @   @ @        @ @ @ @    @       @     @   @   @   @   @  @
         @   @@@@@ @@@@     @  @  @    @        @   @    @   @   @   @   @
         @   @   @ @        @     @    @         @ @     @   @   @   @  @
         @   @   @ @@@@@    @     @    @          @      @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@

                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 09/26/97 -- Vol. 16, No. 13

       MT Chair/Librarian:
                     Mark Leeper   MT 3E-433  732-957-5619 mleeper@lucent.com
       HO Chair:     John Jetzt    MT 2E-530  732-957-5087 jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian: Nick Sauer    HO 4F-427  732-949-7076 njs@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist:
                     Rob Mitchell  MT 2D-536  732-957-6330 rlmitchell1@lucent.com
       Factotum:     Evelyn Leeper MT 3E-433  732-957-2070 eleeper@lucent.com
       Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/Athens/4824
       All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

       The Science Fiction Association of Bergen County meets on the
       second Saturday of every month in Upper Saddle River; call
       201-933-2724 for details.  The New Jersey Science Fiction Society
       meets on the third Saturday of every month in Belleville; call
       201-432-5965 for details.  The Denver Area Science Fiction
       Association meets 7:30 PM on the third Saturday of every month at
       Southwest State Bank, 1380 S. Federal Blvd.

       1. URLs of the week:
       http://www.npr.org/news/tech/970812.seti.html and
       http://www.bigscience.com/setiathome.html.     NPR's    story    on
       SETI@home,  the  plan  to  use surplus cycles on volunteers' PCs to
       analyze  data   for   the   SETI   (Search   for   ExtraTeresstrial
       Intelligence) project.  [-ecl]

       ===================================================================

       2. Suggestion to members in Lucent.  Go to a Barnes and  Noble  and
       show  them  that  you have a Lucent badge.  Ask them if they give a
       discount for Lucent employees.  Rumor has it that  the  Barnes  and
       Noble  right  near Middletown gives you a 20% discount.  Hot stuff,
       particularly for big book fans such as we.  Does it extend to other
       branches?   I dunno.  Does it work for AT&T?  I dunno.  But it pays
       to ask the question.  [-mrl]

       ===================================================================

       3. This year's Hugo winners:

          - Best Novel: BLUE MARS by Kim Stanley  Robinson  (HarperCollins
            Voyager; Bantam Spectra)

          - Best Novella: "Blood of The Dragon" by  George  R.  R.  Martin
            (ASIMOV'S 7/96)

          - Best  Novelette:  "Bicycle  Repairman"   by   Bruce   Sterling
            (INTERSECTIONS; ASIMOV'S 10/96)

          - Best Short Story: "The Soul  Selects  Her  Own  Society ... by
            Connie  Willis  (ASIMOV'S  4/96;  WAR  OF  THE  WORLDS: GLOBAL
            DISPATCHES)

          - Best Non-Fiction Book: TIME & CHANCE  by  L. Sprague  de  Camp
            (Grant)

          - Best Dramatic Presentation: BABYLON 5 "Severed Dreams" (Warner
            Bros.)   Directed  by  David  J. Eagle,  Written by J. Michael
            Straczynski, Produced by John Copeland

          - Best Editor: Gardner Dozois (ASIMOV'S)

          - Best Professional Artist: Bob Eggleton

          - Best Semiprozine: LOCUS edited by Charles N. Brown

          - Best Fanzine: MIMOSA edited by Dick & Nicki Lynch

          - Best Fan Writer: Dave Langford

          - Best Fan Artist: William Rotsler

          - John W. Campbell Award: Michael A. Burstein

       Button seen on the way in: "If Windows  95  is  Y2K-compliant,  why
       isn't it called Windows 1995?"

       ===================================================================

       4. Okay, wacky theory time again.  Some of this  I  have  expressed
       here before but I have some new pieces.

       Why do we all get into flying one way  or  another?   If  we  don't
       actually  fly  we  get  fascinated  with  birds  or  kites or paper
       airplanes.  Perhaps not everybody, but a  lot  of  people  feel  it
       would  be natural to glide on our own.  Most of our impulses are to
       stay away from snakes and spiders and  dangerous  things.   But  it
       somehow  would  seem  natural to us and not scary to fly.  We dream
       about flying.  Can it be that at one time in our evolution  we  did
       fly?  After a fashion.
       We are the only primate that does not have fur.  We  are  the  most
       intelligent  primate.   Mammals  without  fur  tend to be dolphins,
       whales, and other aquatic  beasties.   There  are  those,  I  think
       Desmond  Morris  is one, who think that we were aquatic apes at one
       time.  It would explain a lot about us.  But what does this have to
       do  with flying?  Ask a dolphin.  Dolphins don't walk around on the
       bottom of the sea.  A dolphin glides by line of sight. Could it  be
       that  dreams of flight are just dreams of living in a denser medium
       that supports out weight.  An aquatic ape might well find flight in
       its  own  medium  perfectly natural.  But that leaves a question of
       why would we still want to fly.  If we ever were  aquatic  apes  we
       surely  are  not now.  Well there are apparently behaviors that are
       linked to genes.  I recently saw a documentary on dog behavior that
       said that if you want to punish a Border Collie, you don't give him
       any sheep to herd.  Retrievers one and all think  that  it  is  the
       greatest  thing  in  the  world  to  run and get something that has
       fallen from the sky and bring it to the master.  Sled dogs have  an
       innate  urge to pull.  They will be frustrated and somehow not feel
       whole if they are not pulling something.  An aquatic ape will adapt
       to  land, but will still feel the urge to effortlessly glide.  Take
       away the opportunity to fly  from  an  aquatic  ape  and  you  will
       frustrate  him.   Perhaps  we  still  feel the need to glide like a
       dolphin does.  Hence our dreams of flight.  [-mrl]

       ===================================================================

       5.  MT VOID SUMMER MOVIE POLL from Tom Russell:

       Vote for the best science fiction movie  of  the  summer  of  1997.
       We've  done some initial screening of choices, and have altered the
       titles and plot lines a little to avoid bias or spoilers.
         (2) "Close Encounters of the Prime Kind"
              Computer geeks outsmart the US Army and federal agents when
              they decode a message using primary school arithmetic.
         (3) "Beach of Dreams"
              Odd family reunion on a beach in Florida, or maybe elsewhere.
         (5) "Search for Television Intelligence"
              Network of satellite dishes gets *billions and billions*
              of channels but only picks up one very, very old TV rerun.
         (7) "Dark Force Won"
              Threatening government research project is the target of a
              religious fanatic.
        (11) "Mir's Flashbacks"
              A rich capitalist boards Mir. He's in worse health; gets to
              wear a zip-loc spacesuit.
        (13) "Return of the Jodie"
              Cute tunnel traveller comes back to Earth at a time and place
              she may never have left.
        (17) "Sequel Opportunity"
              The government's investigation of a scientist's claim is closed
              but another woman may have withheld supporting evidence.
        (19) "The Silence of the Aliens"
               sC.adr.nleir.Sfaynag.marienhtdna.ssSredaeErDIT.OIVTMtsrep
              eaeLkra.lMeybdeyCojnoenebot.stihtaetorwcllessuRtmoT sC.adr

       Send response by the end of summer.  [-tlr]

       ===================================================================

       6. MIMIC (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

            Capsule: Guillermo del Toro needed a  better  story,
            but  his visual style and his offbeat direction make
            this a horror film that gets  the  viewer  where  he
            lives.   This is certainly the scariest giant insect
            film I remember ever seeing.  Mutated six-foot  (and
            six-footed)  insects  live  in the depths of the New
            York Subway System.  Rating: low +2 (-4 to +4) 7  (0
            to  10).    There  is  a small spoiler following the
            review as I discuss a premise point.

       Guillermo del Toro was an unknown new director  in  1994  when  his
       CRONOS  played  the  arthouse circuit.  It turned out to be a fresh
       and arresting take on the vampire film.   Mexican  horror  film  to
       that point had a reputation for shoddy production values.  Del Toro
       brought a fascinating no-holds-barred morbidity to  his  work  that
       made  the film rich and memorable.  He is back with his second film
       and he proves to be just about the only filmmaker in the world  who
       could  have  pulled off a giant insects in the subway plot and turn
       it into a film worth watching.

       Three years ago a deadly disease carried by cockroaches was killing
       and  crippling  children.  The approach to kill all the cockroaches
       was to create a sterile cross between a praying mantis, a  termite,
       and  a  cockroach  that would kill off cockroaches and then die off
       itself.  Dr. Susan Kyle (Mira Sorvino)  was  the  entomologist  who
       created the new insect.  The approach seemed to work perfectly, but
       now Kyle is seeing signs of a new insect in the subway tunnels that
       could  be  more  dangerous than the original disease.  But there is
       something else going on.  Strangers seem to be running  around  the
       city furthering the ends of the insects.  They are shady characters
       who seem to inhabit the dark corners of the city.  And they have  a
       special interest in Dr. Kyle.

       This is an odd role for Academy Award  winning  Sorvino.   At  base
       this  is  an  overly familiar story.  Science has created a monster
       and now a few people have to fight  it.   Sorvino  could  certainly
       have  chosen  a  film with a more original and less cable-fare-like
       plot had she wanted.  But in this second film  del  Toro  shows  us
       exactly  what  his strengths and weaknesses as a filmmaker will be.
       He does not have really original plot ideas.  Here he takes a short
       story  by  classic  science  fiction writer Donald A. Wollheim, but
       still turns it into a familiar plot.  But  the  only  film  with  a
       comparable  style is his CRONOS.  He has a marvelous way of keeping
       secret that this will be a story that has been  done  before.   His
       telling  is  atmospheric  and not quite linear.  He creates perhaps
       too many characters, certainly at  the  beginning,  but  the  major
       characters  are fairly unique.  Most interesting is a small boy who
       may be a genius and who may be retarded,  but  we  are  never  sure
       which.   Del  Toro  has  carefully  distorted color to heighten the
       ominous atmosphere.  He plays with light  and  darkness  preferring
       the  latter.  If the obvious is inevitable, at least del Toro keeps
       it at bay for a good long time.

       If del Toro's work is to be compared  to  any  other  filmmaker,  I
       would   choose   film  producer  Val  Lewton.   He  makes  terrific
       atmospheric B-pictures that are better than most of the  A-pictures
       around.   Both  take the familiar and imbue it with a sense of real
       dread.  I would give this second effort a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.

       SPOILER WARNING:

       The whole premise behind the title sounds like one that would  come
       from Donald A. Wollheim, but it is faulty.  It is true that insects
       and other creatures  with  a  short  generation  time  mimic  their
       predators.   But  this  is  only  with  frequent  contact  with the
       predators.  It is not a mystical process, but natural selection,  a
       form  of evolution.  We would have had to been killing off a lot of
       six-foot insects in the subways before by chance  some  would  look
       like humans and that would render them some protection.  There is a
       lake in Japan where the crabs have backs that look  like  masks  of
       humans.   After a great battle was fought on the lake fishermen who
       pulled crabs from the lake would throw back  the  ones  whose  back
       look  vaguely  like human faces, thinking them to contain the souls
       of those killed in the battle.  Over hundreds  of  years  the  only
       crabs  that were safe were those that had really good renderings of
       masks.  A species whose predator  did  not  constantly  select  for
       resembling itself would not come to resemble its predator.  [-mrl]

       ===================================================================

       7. EVENT HORIZON (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: A good cast, good special effects, and
                 an  intriguing  title  all  go to make a really
                 exciting-looking coming attraction.   The  film
                 itself has nearly nothing of value that was not
                 in the trailer.  This is not so much set in the
                 universe of modern physics as in Clive Barker's
                 horror  universe.   This  film  is   a   loser.
                 Rating: -1 (-4 to +4), 3 (0 to 10)

       I have heard it observed that any film  that  starts  out  with  an
       aerial  view  of  a  city  is not a film worth seeing.  That may be
       helpful on cable, but not for films in a movie theater.  I guess  I
       would claim that any film whose publicity uses the word "terror" is
       a film well worth avoiding. I saw a  coming  attraction  for  EVENT
       HORIZON  and thought that it looked pretty good.  At the time I did
       not realize that I knew the rule about the word "terror."   I  knew
       but  knew  not  that  I  knew.   I only realized that I knew when I
       looked up some information about this interesting looking  film  on
       the web and saw the word "terror" in the ad, that I realized it had
       to be a bad film and I knew that only on the basis of  seeing  that
       one word.  PSYCHO is one film that could be said to produce terror,
       but the ads did not use the word.  Hitchcock never claimed to be  a
       master  of  terror;  William  Castle made that claim.  As a rule of
       thumb, if you are terrified by a William  Castle  film  you  should
       wait five or six years until you hit puberty and try it again.

       EVENT HORIZON is essentially a haunted house  film  in  space  that
       rather  artfully  uses  scenes  and touches from a lot of different
       films to tell a new story.  There is a lot of ALIEN and  a  lot  of
       HELLRAISER  with bits of THE HAUNTING, FORBIDDEN PLANET, 2001, STAR
       TREK VI,  MARY  SHELLEY'S  FRANKENSTEIN,  THIS  ISLAND  EARTH,  and
       probably others I missed.

       These days too many films tend to have a great look  but  not  very
       much  content.   It  is  the music video aesthetic.  This is a film
       with great visual images, but the  plot  is  really  basically  the
       haunted house film in space.  The film shovels images at the viewer
       so fast that it is difficult to interpret just what has been  seen,
       and  really  it  may  not matter.  When you find out what is really
       going on, it is a real letdown.  This has to be one  of  the  least
       intriguing  concepts possible for a film.  I will not give it away,
       but this is more a Clive Barker sort of horror film  in  a  science
       fiction  setting  than  it is a science fiction film.  The title is
       the most intriguing thing about the film, but  "Event  Horizon"  is
       just  the  name  of a spacecraft, and there is no internal evidence
       that anyone involved in the production  knew  even  what  the  term
       meant.

       This film is really a good cast wasted.   Sam  Neill  and  Laurence
       Fishburne  are,  of course, major actors.  I suspect they will take
       the money and run.  But what makes the casting particularly unusual
       is the inclusion of Kathleen Quinlin of I NEVER PROMISED YOU A ROSE
       GARDEN.  She is an actress who always added a certain fragility  to
       her roles.  She is sort of the anti-Bette-Davis.  Here that quality
       is not just ignored,  it  is  plastered  over  and  she  is  nearly
       unrecognizable.   She  is  cast  against  type  and  brings nothing
       special that is usable to her role.

       This is a film that needed a writer with vision,  but  instead  had
       one  with a high concept.  I would rate this letdown a -1 on the -4
       to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

       ===================================================================

       8. KULL THE CONQUEROR (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: King  Kull  comes  to  the  screen  as
                 Rafaella  Di  Laurentiis continues her father's
                 series of Robert E. Howard adaptations.   Badly
                 damaged   by   a  horrible  musical  score  and
                 unmemorable villains and a bit  too  much  sex,
                 the  film  is still manages to be an acceptable
                 adolescent adventure.   Rating: high 0  (-4  to
                 +4); 5 (0 to 10)

       Last year we had the film THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD tell  us  about  the
       personality  of Robert E. Howard who from rural Texas spun yarns of
       barbarians fighting sorcerers.  His chief character was  Conan  but
       some  of  his  stories  were  about  King Kull and took place in an
       earlier never-was.  Kevin Sorbo, who plays TV's Hercules-with-pants
       stars  as the title barbarian.  The chief problem with this film is
       that it tells its story without worry too much  what  its  audience
       is.  The plot is a little lightweight for an adult audience and has
       a little too much sex-play for a children's film.

       Kull (Kevin Sorbo) is a barbarian fighter come to join an army in a
       country with an old and unbalanced king.  The king has several sons
       fighting for the throne.  In a fit of anger the old king kills some
       of his sons and Kull fights the king to stop him.  Mortally wounded
       the old king names the angry barbarian newcomer as  his  successor.
       Suddenly  Kull  is  a  king  with  new  enemies trying to steal his
       kingdom.  And his enemies are willing to make bonds with the forces
       of  evil  including an old sorceress, Akivasha (Tia Carrere) who is
       revived from the dead to be an ally of the vengeful brothers.

       The film is written by Charles Pogue who gave us  DRAGONHEART  last
       summer.   While it is not a highly ambitious goal to capture Robert
       E.  Howard's style in a script, he  does  a  reasonable  job.   The
       villains  could  have  had  a  little more depth.  Of course one of
       Kull's better villains, Thulsa Doom, was  borrowed  for  CONAN  THE
       BARBARIAN.  Conan lived well after Doom in Howard's pseudo-history.
       Here the problem was the script had times when it was a little hard
       to  follow and there was perhaps a little too many "Shall I undress
       now, your highness?" scenes for a  film  essentially  intended  for
       adolescent audiences.

       Director John Nicoletta makes unfortunately makes little effort  to
       preserve  the  period  feel and it is here that the film falls down
       the most.  The horses are shoed and have bridals  that  would  look
       too modern in a Civil War film.  But Nicoletta's biggest mistake is
       in allowing Joel Goldsmith's totally misplaced main theme.   It  is
       difficult  to  evoke  so ancient a period with electric guitars and
       Joel's attempt is merely jarring and obnoxious.  The visual effects
       are  not  always  convincing, including some bad mattes, but for me
       that is a small fault.

       Sorbo is not the most  exciting  actor  in  the  world.   Charleton
       Heston  claimed  he  was  cast in a lot of historical films because
       people thought he had a historical sort of face.  I am told by  one
       of the women that Sorbo's great virtue is his pectorals.  But Sorbo
       does not really evoke a historical period.  Part of it may be  that
       he never dresses for the period.  As with the Conan films, there is
       an odd mix of cultures and races in the primeval  world.   Most  of
       the  sets are Egyptian-looking.  Sorbo's sidekicks include a priest
       of an unknown cult played by Litefoot, who played the title role of
       INDIAN  IN  THE  CUPBOARD.   Tia  Carrere  is of Chinese descent, I
       believe.  Then there is Harvey Fierstein as a  pirate  captain.   I
       cannot  honestly  say  he was badly cast since had I never seen him
       before he might have not seemed all that strange in this role.  For
       once his gravelly voice might have made him seem tough.

       Tone down the sex and this might have made a decent  matinee  film.
       As  it is there is a lot of sex but no nudity and a lot of violence
       with virtually no blood.  I rate this one a high 0 on the -4 to  +4
       scale.  [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          MT 3E-433 732-957-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com

            Politics, n. strife of interests masquerading
            as a contest of principles.
                                          -- Ambrose Bierce

            I thought that was most of the world's religions.
            Not yours of course.
                                          -- Mark Leeper