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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 08/14/98 -- Vol. 17, No. 7

       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 2E-537  732-957-6330 robmitchell@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
       201-447-3652 for details.  The New Jersey Science Fiction Society
       meets irregularly; call 201-652-0534 for details, or check
       http://www.interactive.net/~kat/njsfs.html.  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. URL of the week:
       http://www.lib.virginia.edu/exhibits/ase/.  For  all  the  old-time
       book  collectors  among  us,  the  story  of  the  "Armed  Services
       Editions," including pictures.  [-ecl]

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

       2. Diets go and come, but the girth abides.  [-mrl]

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

       3. This year's Hugo winners are:
                 Best Novel: FOREVER PEACE by Joe Haldeman
                 Best Novella: "Where Angels Fear To Tread" by Allen
                      Steele (ASIMOV'S, October-November 1997)
                 Best Novelette: "We Will Drink A Fish Together"
                      by Bill Johnson (ASIMOV'S May 1997)
                 Best Short Story: "The 43 Antarean Dynasties"
                      by Mike Resnick (ASIMOV'S December 1997)
                 Best Related Book: THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FANTASY,
                      edited by John Clute & John Grant
                 Best Dramatic Presentation: CONTACT
                 Best Professional Editor: Gardner Dozois
                 Best Professional Artist: Bob Eggleton
                 Best Semiprozine: LOCUS, edited by Charles N. Brown
                 Best Fanzine: MIMOSA, edited by Nicki & Richard Lynch
                 Best Fan Writer: Dave Langford
                 Best Fan Artist: Joe Mayhew
                 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Science Fiction
                      Writer of 1996-1997: Mary Doria Russell

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

       4. This year  the  film  trailers  at  the  World  Science  Fiction
       Convention  were  about  as lackluster as I can remember.  There is
       not even one film that I can say holds a strong attraction for  me.
       This  does  not  mean that all the films I saw trailers for will be
       bad.  Last year I saw little in the trailer for GATTACA  that  made
       me  want  to see the film.  The film could have been intelligent or
       just a shrill dystopic film based on what I  could  tell  from  the
       trailer.  The film proved to be downbeat in style but undeniably it
       was an intelligent piece of science fiction.  But  the  films  this
       year are big on violence and really look weak on ideas.  It is hard
       to be very enthusiastic about  these  films.   Nothing  looks  very
       original.  The films that seem the most promising are PLEASANTVILLE
       and FREE ENTERPRISE.

       FARSCAPE is one of two TV projects planned by  Jim  Henson  Studios
       for Saturday mornings.  It is a science fiction series taking place
       in space.  The visuals look fairly nice, but it  is  hard  to  tell
       much  beyond  that.   There  seem  to  be a lot of spacecraft being
       designed and a lot of different alien puppets.  The sort  of  alien
       faces  I  was  seeing  reminded me a lot of Lou Gossett's makeup in
       ENEMY MINE, though  they  were  mostly  activated  by  animatronics
       rather  than  mask.  Most seem to be being done full-scale.  What I
       saw was not a trailer but a short production film done to the music
       from DARK CRYSTAL.

       BRATS  OF  THE  LOST  NEBULA,  the  other  Henson,  looked   almost
       identical.   It  would  have been hard to tell the two apart except
       the figures looked a little cuter and more doll-like.   This  could
       be a children's program where FARSCAPE looked more adult.

       SINBAD AND THE WELL OF MISTS  is  a  computer-animated  film  using
       techniques  like  we  saw  in  TOY  STORY, except that it does have
       animated humans.  Pixar does not want to do humans just yet, trying
       to improve the quality of the portrayal.  So this is not from Pixar
       and actually is being made by an (Asian) Indian company.  We cannot
       tell  much  of the plot, but we do see a scene of Sinbad fighting a
       giant spider.  Voices will be done by people  like  Leonard  Nimoy,
       Mark Hamill, John Rhys-Davis, and Brendan Fraser.

       A VERY BAD THING is not a fantasy film at all but  a  black  comedy
       about  some young people who it looks like are arranging a bachelor
       party.  They arrange for a prostitute.  Something goes  wrong,  the
       prostitute  is  killed  and  her body is left in a desert.  Hard to
       tell what the plot is, but it involves trying to  hide  the  crime,
       making  matters  much  worse.   Starring  is  Christian  Slater and
       Cameron Diaz.

       VIRUS, directed by John Bruno, was covered last year and  is  still
       in  production  by  Gale  Anne  Hurd,  who produces James Cameron's
       action films.  The main characters are on a tugboat  lost  after  a
       typhoon.   They  find  a  Russian boat that is empty like the Marie
       Celeste.  What  happened  to  the  crew?   They  had  downloaded  a
       transmission  from  the  Mir  Space  Station  and  with  it came an
       electronic lifeform.  The alien makes the computer create  monsters
       out  of metal and out of people (somewhat Borg-like) or insect-like
       fusions of metal and people.  Jamie Lee Curtis stars  (as  well  as
       Donald  Sutherland).   Curtis  calls this a "sci- fi summer movie."
       That sounds pretty accurate to me.  The action  looks  a  lot  like
       that  of  ALIEN  and  is based on a comic book.  The alien lifeform
       considers human to be a virus that  needs  to  be  destroying  with
       razor-edged  robots.  Having the aliens so misunderstand and misuse
       the concept of what a  virus  is  is  a  bit  like  having  Dracula
       haunting  the night with his pants unzipped.  I would like to think
       a human is a little more complex than  a  virus.   The  aliens  are
       really blowing the air of awe and mystery.

       Blade, from the film BLADE, is a half-human,  half-vampire,  and  a
       nasty guy to meet in the dark.  (These action hero guys always have
       names like Blade or Shaft that reek of violence.  Why do  we  never
       get  an  action  hero with a name like Tubbs or Applebaum?  Doesn't
       anything exciting ever happen to an Applebaum?)  In any case  Blade
       is what results when a vampire hits on a pregnant woman.  You get a
       vampire with martial arts skills who has no problem  with  daylight
       (and  who  has  a  cornball  name like Blade).  The story has Blade
       facing a Mafia-like cadre of vampires who claim to own  the  world.
       The  publicity is full of blood, swords, guns, and special effects.
       Not surprisingly this story is also based on comic book.   In  fact
       it  is  a  Stan Lee comic.  The film has Wesley Snipes in the title
       role and features Kris Kristofferson.  Just from the ad  I  learned
       vampires  are  killed by hollow point garlic filled silver bullets.
       Now there are a lot  of  different  vampire  legends  if  you  read
       Montague  Summers,  but  in  the generally accepted cinematic canon
       garlic is only an irritant for vampires, like  citron  candles  for
       mosquitoes.   And silver is for werewolves.  In any case this looks
       like a big bloody comic book for the screen  with  far  more  style
       than  substance.  The film has a big, and I am sure unacknowledged,
       debt to the Richard Matheson novel I AM LEGEND.

       Earlier we talked about the SINBAD movie  that  looked  like  Pixar
       animation.   The  genuine  Pixar  film coming out is called A BUG'S
       LIFE.  This is somewhat like another  upcoming  film,  ANTS,  whose
       trailer is currently running in theaters.  The A BUG'S LIFE trailer
       did not give much plot, but smaller bugs are  endangered  and  will
       get  larger  bugs to defend them.  It is hardly an exciting trailer
       without more information.   This  film  seems  to  owe  a  debt  to
       commercials for Raid.

       The Wachowski Brothers made BOUND, a very nice modest little  film,
       almost  a  stage-play  on  film.   It  really  stood  out  for  its
       simplicity and its good script.  The film was  unusual  and  caught
       the  public  attention.  So what kind of unique film are they going
       to follow it with?  Of course, a violent action sci-fi  movie,  THE
       MATRIX.   The film is set in Australia and has lots of martial arts
       and gunplay. The Wachowski Brothers are very proud  of  their  Hong
       Kong  style  action.  As the producers proudly announce, the second
       biggest expense on the film is medical, that is how good the action
       is.  The story is about something taking place in the film's future
       as told in the film's present.  Got that?  It has something  to  do
       with everybody in the world in a computer-generated virtual reality
       called The Matrix.  THE  MATRIX  stars  Laurence  Fishburne,  Keanu
       Reeves,  and  Karen  Anne  Moss.  The  film  seems  to  be a lot of
       violence, martial arts, and special effects.  But it is the  degree
       of  intelligence  of  the  script  that  for  me  will  be the real
       determinant of THE MATRIX.

       URBAN LEGEND is a dead-teenager film about a killer who makes Urban
       Legends  come  true.   Flash  your lights at him and he follows you
       home and kills you.  Or he harasses you by putting your cat in  the
       microwave.   Ask him for his cookie recipe and he charges you $500.
       You know, that sort of thing.  Richard Englund plays a professor of
       urban  legends.  Is that really an academic field these days, or do
       you also need a Masters Degree in Frisbee-throwing?  This  film  is
       from  the  same  people  who  brought  you I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST
       SUMMER which won the hearts of American by introducing their latest
       fun- villain "the Man with the Hook."

       The presentation also had a trailer for I STILL KNOW WHAT  YOU  DID
       LAST  SUMMER  (but somehow I've misplaced your address).  In the ad
       the Man with the Hook is still called the "Man with  the  Hook"  so
       evidently you never find out who he was in the first film, removing
       the only possible reason I might subject myself to the first  film.
       What  is  more  since  they  have given the man a sort of permanent
       sounding name, I am sure his identity will never be revealed in any
       of  the  films.   That  could  be  wrong,  but if they don't have a
       satisfying conclusion in the first film, why should I expect any of
       their films will come to a satisfying conclusion?

       From Warner Brothers comes WRONGFULLY ACCUSED.  This  stars  Leslie
       Nielsen  in  a  satire of the film THE FUGITIVE in the style of THE
       NAKED GUN.  Richard Crenna plays the  policeman  stalking  Nielsen.
       The gags in the trailer were not particularly funny to me, but that
       is all very subjective.

       HOME FRIES has possibilities, but it is hard  to  tell.   It  is  a
       romantic  film about young people who work at a fast food hamburger
       restaurant.  It stars Drew Barrymore and Jake Busey, who  played  a
       dangerous fanatic in CONTACT.

       From Bryan Singer, the director of THE  USUAL  SUSPECTS  comes  APT
       PUPIL,  based on a story by Stephen King.  This is the same trailer
       that has  been  in  theaters  for  a  while.   Apparently  a  young
       teenager,  played  by Brad Renfro, discovers that an elderly man in
       his neighborhood is a  Nazi  war  criminal.   What  is  more  as  a
       reminder  of  the  good  old  days  the  Nazi  has something really
       n*a*s*t*y in the basement.  That is the bad news.  The good news is
       that  Ian McKellan plays the Nazi.  The rest of the film may or may
       not be trash, but I can tell you right now that Ian  McKellan  will
       be a joy to watch.  You may remember McKellan from his really great
       adaptation of RICHARD III.

       Next comes a film that looks entirely too much  like  BLADE.   John
       Carpenter  has  made  his  own  vampire film, VAMPIRES based on the
       novel VAMPIRE$ by John Steakley.  Now we all know that the  monarch
       of  all vampires is usually Dracula.  Steakley has chosen to invent
       his own  alpha  vampire.   (Nothing  wrong  with  that.)   This  is
       supposed  to  be the most adept vampire and the source of all other
       vampires.  He is sort of the vampires' zero case.  Apparently he is
       a  former  priest and his vampirism was an invention of the Vatican
       in sort of religious plot.  (There is a problem here since  vampire
       legends  go  back  to  ancient Greece and predate the Vatican.  But
       historically the Church really did exploit  the  fear  of  vampires
       claiming  that  Catholic  symbols  like  the cross and the host was
       protection against vampires.  All is fair  in  the  battle  to  win
       souls,  I  guess.)   The best feature of the film seems to be James
       Woods as a famous  vampire  hunter.   Woods  is  a  lot  like  Jack
       Nicholson.   He may not have much range as an actor, but he has one
       screen persona that he plays superbly well.  This film may be worth
       seeing  just  for  his  performance.   So  we  an extremely violent
       vampire film with James Woods as a legendary vampire hunter and  he
       is  trying  to  destroy  the  alpha  vampire while looking for some
       mysterious McGuffin called the "Black Cross."  The king of vampires
       knows  what  the Black Cross is and wants to get it first. The race
       isn't pleasant.  These vampires are not just allergic to  sunlight,
       they  explode  in flames.  I don't expect JOHN CARPENTER'S VAMPIRES
       to be great, but it has a really good shot  at  being  better  than
       BLADE.

       By the time this  article  is  published  film  critics  will  have
       already reviewed THE AVENGERS.  The ad we saw was much like the one
       that has been playing in theaters for months.  The story does  look
       like  it  is the sort of thing might have been done on the Avengers
       during the Emma Peel period.  (The series always had Steed and some
       attractive female agent.  Honor Blackman as Cathy Gale was an early
       partner in Britain.  Later the series featured Diana Rigg  as  Emma
       Peel  who  is  probably  the  best  remembered  partner.)  Even the
       dialogue of the new film sounds like what Patrick McNee  and  Diana
       Rigg would have said.  Ralph Fiennes and Uma Thurman seem well cast
       to recreate these  characters.   Sean  Connery  will  make  a  good
       villain  as  a  mad Scotsman who controls the weather.  The trailer
       makes the film look like a promising revival, but I understand that
       there  are  serious  doubts  about  the final film.  I am told that
       critics are not being allowed to see the finished film before it is
       released.   That generally means that the distributor itself thinks
       the word-of- mouth is going to be bad.

       PLEASANTVILLE had possibilities to be a good.  In the story one  of
       the  most  popular  television programs is reruns of a 1950s comedy
       called "Pleasantville."  (They seem to have modeled it on different
       comedies,  perhaps  it  is part Andy Griffith but mostly on "Father
       Knows Best."  That  latter  series  also  provides  the  music  for
       Pleasantville  show.   Bill Macy and Nancy Allen are the parents on
       Pleasantville.)  I take it that one teenager just loves  the  banal
       show  and  his  sister  does not.  Fighting over the remote control
       they fall into the  TV  set,  and  into  the  monochrome  world  of
       Pleasantville.   They  have  to try to act natural in this world of
       the 50s.  (Didn't I see this in BACK TO THE FUTURE?)  Also there is
       something  about  their  presence  that  is  bringing  color to the
       town... literally.  Starting with one red rose in their  black  and
       white   yard,  the  liberating  effects  of  color  are  coming  to
       Pleasantville.  Jeff Daniels stars as one of the residents  of  the
       town  in  a  script that plays with visual entertainment media like
       his THE PURPLE ROSE OF CAIRO.

       In RUSH HOUR the daughter of an important Chinese-American  man  is
       kidnapped.   A  super-screw-up  cop,  played  by  black comic Chris
       Tucker, is assigned to the case.  After he makes  a  real  mess  of
       things  the  victim's father arranges for a special policeman to be
       brought to America from Hong Kong to be put on the case.  It  turns
       out  to  be  a  martial  arts  expert  played  by  Jackie Chan.  So
       basically we have a buddy picture with Chan and Tucker.

       ENEMY  OF  THE  STATE,  a  Tony  Scott  film  produced   by   Jerry
       "ARMAGEDDON"  Bruckheimer,  looks  like  a case history in what has
       gone wrong with the political thriller the past several years.   In
       ENEMY  OF  THE  STATE  Will  Smith  plays  an  ordinary man who has
       unknowingly been passed information the US  Government  wants  kept
       secret.  The trailer doesn't say it but the person who passed Smith
       the information apparently has been killed in some way that  proves
       to the audience how powerful and implacable the government is.  Now
       they have satellite cameras and super-scientific  gizmos  dedicated
       to  finding  Will Smith and killing him.  Government representative
       Gene Hackman follows Smith along and tells him  encouraging  things
       like  "If you live another day I'll be very impressed."  Will Smith
       plays Robert Redford and Gene Hackman plays Faye Dunaway.   Compare
       this  film  to  SEVEN DAYS IN MAY, which gets by with no explosions
       and one subdued chase.  In those days you could do that if you  had
       characters and plot.  And it worked in black and white.

       MIGHTY JOE YOUNG is obviously a remake of the 1949 film of the same
       title.  The original film showed off the special effects talents of
       both Willis O'Brien and  Ray  Harryhausen,  the  first  and  second
       generation  masters of stop-motion animation.  The story here is of
       a very large tame gorilla from Africa to Hollywood where he clearly
       is   out  of  place.   Through  obviously  mishandling  he  becomes
       dangerous, but proves to really be decent in much the way  a  human
       is  or  can  fail  to be decent.  The film generated some good will
       toward gorillas that two or three  years  later  was  destroyed  by
       GORILLA  AT  LARGE  and  similar  films.  The original film did not
       offer adults much besides an opportunity  of  appreciating  of  the
       special effects.  The remake looks to be much the same.  Curiously,
       the host said something about Rick Baker working on  the  film.   I
       assume that was a joke that nobody noticed.  I hope.  Rick Baker is
       a supremely good makeup man.  He also is an ape actor using his own
       makeup.   He played the title role in the remake of KING KONG.  But
       I doubt Baker worked on this film since the gorilla clearly is  not
       a man in a suit.

       Christopher Lloyd is MY FAVORITE MARTIAN based on the TV  situation
       comedy.   There  is  no  plot  obvious.  There are a lot of special
       effects in the trailer reminiscent of THE MASK and FLUBBER.   Don't
       expect any awards to go to this one.

       No trailer, just an announcement.  THE 13TH WARRIOR will  be  based
       on  Michael  Crichton's  novel  EATERS OF THE DEAD.  THE WILD, WILD
       WEST will have Will Smith as James West,  Kevin  Kline  as  Artemus
       Gordon, and Kenneth Brannah as Dr. Arliss  Loveless.

       In PRACTICAL MAGIC Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman are sisters and
       modern  day  descendants  of  a  witch.   Bullock wants to keep her
       talents a secret.  Kidman  wants  to  make  the  most  of  all  her
       talents,  magical  and  sexual.   Somehow  this  involves them in a
       killing and someone gets buried in the  yard.   Aidan  Quinn  is  a
       policemen  who  investigates.   Eventually  the  Bullock  character
       decides not to hide what she is.

       FREE ENTERPRISE looks to be one more film expanded from a  SATURDAY
       NIGHT  LIVE  skit.  Two friends, one approaching 30, are absolutely
       life-long fanatic STAR  TREK  fans  and  not  much  else.   One  is
       depressed  to  be turning 30, seeing it in images from LOGAN'S RUN.
       Then  they  run  into  their  hero  William  Shatner.   Shatner  is
       depressed  to  see  that they are letting life pass them by as they
       worship the TV series and its icons.  He decides to counsel them on
       how  to  get a life and somehow he becomes their mentor, a lot like
       Bogart's ghost or whatever does for Woody Allan in PLAY  IT  AGAIN,
       SAM.   The  hitch is that not all of his advice is good.  There are
       some possibilities but I suspect there will not be a lot good  done
       with  the  concept.   The  fact  that  it seems to be inspired by a
       Saturday Night Live skit gives me an uneasy feeling.

       Richard Matheson is a fine writer and the  word  that  a  new  film
       coming  out  is  an  adaptation of one of his novels should be good
       news.  However, the new film is WHAT  DREAMS  MAY  COME,  the  only
       piece of writing from Matheson I have ever hated.  It is absolutely
       the most maudlin treacle.  A man dies and goes to heaven  where  he
       discovers  it  is  a  wonderful,  spiffy, beautiful place.  The one
       problem is that he pines for his  wife  who  pines  for  him.   His
       spirit  returns  to Earth to be near enough to touch his loved one.
       How do you think it all ends?  At the  time  I  read  the  novel  I
       assumed  it  was  just  something Matheson needed to get out of his
       system, perhaps this was how a consummate  writer  dealt  with  the
       loss of a loved one.  A good director might be able to do something
       marvelous with this, like making it watchable.  In  this  case  the
       director  is  Vincent Ward, who previously did NAVIGATOR and MAP OF
       THE HUMAN HEART.  The film has a lot of special effects and  a  lot
       of  super-saturated color.  Robin Williams stars and I will have to
       be convinced that this film can rise above the  bunch  of  perfumed
       posies  that  the  book  is.   The publicist, who frequently can be
       depended upon says that this was the best film  he  has  seen  this
       year,  but bring handkerchiefs because you will cry.  The last film
       the publicists at the convention really praised like that (I am not
       sure  it  was  the  same publicist) was L.A. CONFIDENTIAL.  I loved
       L.A. CONFIDENTIAL.  So I will keep an open  mind.   The  film  also
       features Annabella Sciorra, Cuba Gooding Jr., and Max von Sydow.

       Of the films represented here, I am picking PLEASANTVILLE as  being
       the  one most worth seeing.  Talking to people they seem to think I
       should add FREE ENTERPRISE to my list, but I  am  unconvinced.   [-
       mrl]

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

            Bourgeois morality is largely a system of making
            cheap virtues a cloak for expensice vices.
                                          -- George Bernard Shaw