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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 08/21/98 -- Vol. 17, No. 8

       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. "...  And don't forget that at Lucert Technologies  no  sale  is
       ever  final.   If  we  find out you are buying from our competitors
       we'll come right in and rip that sucker out."  [-mrl]

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

       3. This is going to be some stream of consciousness thoughts  about
       art.   That  is  probably appropriate, I figure.  You know we see a
       lot of art that is  called  avant-garde.   That  means  it  is  the
       advanced  guard of a new movement.  It is something that is new and
       different.  And people are anxious to see it because it is new  and
       different.   I,  however,  am  going  on strike.  I am not going to
       believe a piece of art is avant-garde without the artist telling me
       when  the  rest  of  the  movement  is coming and from whom besides
       her/himself.  I mean, you cannot be the avant-garde of  a  movement
       if you are all there is.

       It is like these films that came  out  in  the  50s  and  60s  that
       proudly  proclaimed "This is the first film shot in the new miracle
       of the screen, Hypno-Vista."  You seen any other Hypno-Vista  films
       recently?   Did  you  ever see even the second film shot in the new
       miracle of the screen, Hypno-Vista?  No.  And there were never  any
       plans  for  one.   And look how often the new miracle of the screen
       was something like William Castle putting a joy  buzzer  in  random
       seats  or  flying  a  plastic skeleton over the audience on a wire.
       These films all claimed to be the first that had done it and  forty
       years  later  they  remain  the only films to ever having used this
       miracle of the screen.  Well, I guess it is true that there are not
       a lot of Julia Roberts comedies that really have an obvious need to
       have a glowing plastic skeleton flown over the audience.  I suppose
       that  there  are some that might be improved with the skeleton, but
       none that really have as much as something we would  call  a  need.
       But  that  is  the  problem  with  avant-garde art.  You are really
       taking the artist's word that in being the avant-garde, the work is
       not  also  the ensuite-garde, the pendant-garde, and the suelement-
       garde.  So often a work of art is all these things.  So  frequently
       in  art the real issue of whether there will be more similar is the
       issue of whether a work of art makes, well, let's use  the  word...
       money.   While  it does not get said a great deal, movements in art
       are heavily governed by the issue of what  sells  to  an  audience.
       You  can  pretty  much track what is selling to audiences in art by
       what the artists are doing.

       Incidentally, this has  an  interesting  corollary.   It  has  been
       discovered  that many of Vincent Van Gogh's contemporaries imitated
       his style.  They would not have  done  this  if  it  had  not  been
       profitable  for  them to do so.  This has led modern art historians
       to doubt the old legend that Van Gogh never sold a painting in  his
       life.   He  must  have  had at least some limited financial success
       that other artists wanted to cash in on.

       Of course, when we talk about money and the arts in  this  country,
       there  is the controversy over the National Endowment for the Arts.
       You have wars between representationalists  and  abstract  artists.
       You  have  artists  unpopular  in some quarters and the question of
       whether they should be funded or not.  Then you have  questions  of
       censorship.    I believe that everybody has a First Amendment right
       to create any sort of art they want.  I  think  that  the  National
       Endowment  for  the  Arts has no right to act as a censor.  I think
       they should confine themselves to deciding what art gets funded and
       what  does not.  And I think that on the National Endowment for the
       Arts and I are in perfect agreement. The First Amendment guarantees
       free   expression,   not   free  greenbacks.   Should  the  NEA  be
       accountable to public taste?  Well, turn on the major networks  and
       watch  a  comedy.   The  networks  really are accountable to public
       tastes, not by principle but by something much stronger.   That  is
       how  they  make their money.  Pick a comedy show at random (not one
       top-rated, but pick one totally at random).  Or better yet, pick  a
       show  like BAYWATCH or MELROSE PLACE.  There.  That is public taste
       for you.  Now you decide if the National  Endowment  for  the  Arts
       should be accountable to it.  [-mrl]

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

       4. THE AVENGERS (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: The  screen  version  of  the  60s  TV
                 classic  will  probably  do well only with real
                 fans of the series.   Non-fans  of  the  series
                 should  give  this  one a miss.  Still, this is
                 just about  the  best  and  most  accurate  re-
                 creation  we  could have expected at the end of
                 the 90s.  Uma Thurman and Ralph Fiennes star in
                 a film drenched in the 60s atmosphere of series
                 THE AVENGERS. Those were not great stories  and
                 neither  is  this, but both are fun.  Rating: 6
                 (0 to 10), high +1 (-4 to +4)

       Starting in January 1961, the British were treated  to  a  sort  of
       tongue-in-cheek  crime  and spy series on television.  THE AVENGERS
       was about secret agent John Steed  and  his  various  partners  who
       changed over the years.  The original concept for Steed was to have
       the personality of a George Sanders--sort of worldly and  a  little
       sarcastic.   I  cannot  help  believing part of the inspiration was
       also Ralph Richardson's  brawley-toting  and  bowler-hatted  secret
       agent  Major  Charles Hammond from the 1939 film Q PLANES (retitled
       in the U.S. CLOUDS OVER EUROPE).  Initially  the  partner  was  Dr.
       David  Keel  (played  by  Ian Hendry).  Later for four years it was
       Catherine Gale (Honor  Blackman).   When  she  left  the  producers
       looked  for  a replacement that would have the same "man-appeal" as
       Ms. Blackman did.  "Man appeal" was abbreviated "M-appeal" and when
       actress  Diana Rigg was hired "M-appeal" or rather Emma Peel became
       her character's name.  She was not with the series even as long  as
       Blackman  but  hers  were  the years that the series got its widest
       viewership.  She is the best remembered of Steed's partners, though
       there  were  others before and after her.  The episodes of the Emma
       Peel years were noted for a sort of 60s mod surrealism that  became
       the hallmark of the series.  That was a trademark and so was making
       the characters veddy, veddy sophisticated and stylish.  So when  in
       the  late  90s, the film industry is making a feature film based on
       the popular series, these are the years they choose to copy.

       And remake the series they really did.   The  recent  film  MISSION
       IMPOSSIBLE  took  place in the same world as the MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
       TV series and had some of the  same  characters,  but  the  writers
       clearly  did  not  know  or  did not care what a MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
       story was all about.  They  told  their  own  kind  of  story  with
       characters  from  the  series.  THE AVENGERS on the other hand have
       authentically told an AVENGERS sort of story and they have told  it
       in the style of THE AVENGERS.  For the most part, the faults of the
       film are actually cases where the  original  formula  did  not  age
       well.   As  Mike Myers shows us in AUSTIN POWERS: INTERNATIONAL MAN
       OF MYSTERY, much of the 60s mod style  looks  pretty  silly  today.
       The  story  of  THE AVENGERS is trivial and comic-bookish, but that
       was the series.  The 60s mod  surrealism  comes  through  loud  and
       clear.   Suffice  it to say that there are scenes in this film that
       are sufficiently visually weird and unexpected to bring a smile  to
       any  viewer's  face.   Toward the end of each episode there usually
       was a fight under outlandish circumstances and the circumstances in
       this film are about as outlandish as any.  The only place where the
       formula was not quite followed was that in the series any  romantic
       feelings  between Steed and Peel were strictly between the lines of
       the script.  There was a sexual tension, but the  characters  never
       acknowledged  it.   In  this version is not much romance, but it is
       much more clearly spelled out for the viewer.   The  Michael  Kamen
       and Joel McNeely musical score I think should have made more use of
       the original music. The opening  title  music  is  something  of  a
       letdown  only  because  I  had  hoped to hear a good version of the
       original theme.  This is one aspect where  MISSION  IMPOSSIBLE  was
       better.   In  fact,  the music could have done a lot more to create
       the feel of the film.  In the final  analysis  it  does  little  to
       enhance the atmosphere.  Even if it was not trying to re-create the
       60s feel, it should have been able to add to the excitement  better
       than  it  did.   There  is  one minor plot variation on the canon I
       would like to add.  In the film, Steed and Peel meet for the  first
       time,  yet the story also features Mother.  In the series, the very
       last episode with Peel introduced Mother for the first  time.   And
       to  the  best  of my knowledge the character of Father was invented
       for the film.

       Bon vivant and crack secret agent John  Steed  (Ralph  Fiennes)  is
       called  in  after  an  attack  on  the  British government's secret
       weather project Prospero.  Oddly enough the attacker  seems  to  be
       there  very  founder  of  the  project,  the  beautiful  and  leggy
       scientist Dr. Emma Peel (Uma Thurman).  In spite of actual film  of
       Peel  committing  the  crime,  Peel claims to be innocent.  Steed's
       suspicion falls on the aptly named August de Wynter (Sean Connery),
       a  flamboyant  Scotsman  who  is doing funny things to weather in a
       project that seems related to Peel's Prospero.

       How are Fiennes and Thurman at re-creating the characters  of  John
       Steed  and  Emma  Peel?  Not too shabby.  The real danger is that a
       well-cast Mrs. Peel will upstage the more quietly conservative John
       Steed.  However Steed holds his own and never becomes second banana
       to Mrs.  Peel.  Both seem physically up to the  challenges  of  the
       role.   Both  seem  to ooze charm and class.  Their interpretations
       are really fairly close to the  originals.   They  have  one  minor
       change in style, they seem to smile a lot less and are more serious
       about their work.  But they do seem  to  be  the  same  people  the
       originals  played.   And  they are helped along by Don MacPherson's
       script, which has a very AVENGERS feel.  I kept  picturing  Patrick
       Macnee  and  Diana Rigg delivering the same lines and in almost the
       same way.  Patrick Macnee does not appear in THE AVENGERS,  by  the
       way,  while  Diana Rigg is not in the film at all.  Sean Connery is
       Sean Connery is Sean Connery.

       A  little  fine-tuning  could  have  made  this   a   perfect   90s
       representation  of  the  60s TV series.  That might not have raised
       the rating, but it would not have hurt either.  I give this one a 6
       on the 0 to 10 scale and a high +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

            The infliction of cruelty with good conscience is
            a delight to moralists--that is why they invented hell.
                                          -- Bertrand Russell


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