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

                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 10/01/99 -- Vol. 18, No. 14

       Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-817-5619, mleeper@lucent.com
       Factotum: Evelyn Leeper, 732-332-6218, eleeper@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist: Rob Mitchell, robmitchell@lucent.com
       HO Chair Emeritus: John Jetzt, jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian Emeritus: Nick Sauer, njs@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 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. This is just a reminder that we will be showing  GATTACA  in  HO
       1J-672 Wednesday and Thursday (October 5 and 6) at noon.  [-ecl]

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

       2. This last weekend we got the news story I have  been  expecting.
       The President has had his annual check-up and he is healthy, but he
       is gaining weight.  What did they expect?  We  are  hearing  a  lot
       about  declining  moral  values in the Presidency.  Some Presidents
       have this tendency to become decadent.  But is it any wonder?  Here
       the  President  has a whole staff of something like eighteen people
       on call to make his meals.  Probably graduates of the  Cordon  Bleu
       or  some  other  cooking  academy.   What  do you eat when you have
       eighteen highly trained chefs on your kitchen staff?

       Three meals a day he probably gets all outlined on little  embossed
       cards  telling him what he is going to get in six terrific courses.
       Or maybe the chef tells him directly.  When you are  the  President
       of  the  most  powerful  country  in the world you don't get a cold
       meatloaf sandwich and a bottle of beer for dinner, as much  as  you
       might  want  it.  You might start out your term in office trying to
       be like Jefferson, but by the end you probably just look like Taft.

       I can just picture it.  The  President  trudges  out  of  the  Oval
       Office  at six in the evening.  Now he is tired.  He has had a hard
       day of being Presidential or covering something  up  or  something.
       He  trudges  to  the  Presidential Dining Room.  There is the First
       Lady, in earrings no less, sitting at the far end of  a  candle-lit
       table.   Standing next to his chair is Pierre, the White House head
       chef.  His term as White House Chef has taken its toll  on  Pierre,
       his weight and his arteries.

       "Good evening Mr. President.  At your request we have a light  meal
       for you this evening."

       "Light is good.  I really am still full from lunch."

       "We hope you enjoy what we have prepared for you.   We  will  start
       this  evening  with  a  very  nice  asparagus  salad  on  a  bed of
       raddicchio and tiny filigree mushrooms."

       "Uh, thanks Pierre, but I'm really not hungry."

       "Then  we  will  have  an  appetizer  of  cold  Smoked   Whitewater
       Salmon,..."

       "Now, I've asked you to refrain from using that word.  And  I  just
       told..."

       "A Viennese Beef Pastry..."

       "I had lunch with the Iowa Potato Queen.  I had two baked potatoes.
       I  am  still  full.   Tell  you  what.   Do  you have something for
       heartburn?"

       "Then we will have German Sauerbraten with red cabbage  and  potato
       pancakes."

       "Oh God.  No, no more potatoes today."

       "Then to top it off vanilla ice cream shells with fresh raspberries
       en eau-de-vie de framboise."

       "How about just a hot dog and a Coke?"

       "What is this...hot...dog?"

       "Just a hot dog, Pierre.  C'mon Pierre, you know  what  a  hot  dog
       is."

       "We do not learn about hot dog at Cordon Bleu.  But I will make you
       a very special...hot...dog.  I will make you Hot...Dog...Pierre."

       "And what is that like?"

       "It is like German Sauerbraten and Potato Pancake."

       (The foregoing play is purely a work of fiction.  Any  similarities
       to real persons living or dead or real dishes, previously served or
       in preparation, is purely coincidental.  In specific, Pierre is NOT
       intended to represent Pierre Chambin, the obese French chef who was
       downsized from the White House kitchen staff in 1994 for  preparing
       too  many high-fat, continental-style dishes to a first family that
       was trying to be weight-conscious.)  [-mrl]

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

       3. THE SIXTH SENSE (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule:  This  is  a   slow   and   deliberate
                 psychological  horror film about a boy who sees
                 visions  that  terrify  him.  They  are  slowly
                 eating  away  at his mind and soul.  The script
                 is itself a trap to tantalize  the  viewer  and
                 snap  shut  only  in  the  final moments of the
                 film.  And it has one of the best  performances
                 of   the  year  from  any  actor.   But  it  is
                 particularly amazing that the  actor  is  young
                 Haley Joel Osmet.  Rating: 8 (0 to 10), high +2
                 (-4 to +4).  Spoiler warning: The  trailer  for
                 this  film  tells  the main premise of the plot
                 which would not otherwise be obvious until well
                 into the film.  This review will reveal no more
                 than the trailer does.  I  have  not  seen  any
                 reviews that do not reveal the premise.

       Thematically similar to the current STIR OF ECHOES, THE SIXTH SENSE
       is  a  horror story told so subtly that it is a psychological study
       that is told against a backdrop that is almost magical realism.  It
       is a mystery told so subtly that the viewer does not even recognize
       it as a mystery until at the end the solution is  presented.   Then
       the viewer may want to see the film a second time just to verify if
       the script is consistent and  to  see  how  well  the  mystery  was
       hidden.

       Malcolm Crowe (played by Bruce  Willis)  is  a  South  Philadelphia
       child  psychologist.   He  is  so  good at what he does he has been
       given a citation from the mayor.  Currently he is  dealing  with  a
       severely  disturbed  child,  Cole Sear (Haley Joel Osmet).  Malcolm
       knows that  the  classic  treatment  and  assumptions  of  treating
       children with this syndrome can be wrong.  The last similar patient
       grew up highly disturbed and blaming Malcolm.  In revenge he  broke
       into   Malcolm's   house,   shooting   the  psychologist.   Malcolm
       desperately wants to avoid the same mistakes in treating Cole.  But
       from  the  beginning  he  is having serious trouble connecting with
       Cole or in truth with anyone.  His bad experience with the previous
       patient  has  left  him  almost  without the emotions to reach out.
       What he slowly begins to discover is that Cole is trying to  adjust
       in  any  way  he can to something beyond an emotional problem.  His
       problem is that he sees the dead.  It is not just that believes  he
       sees the dead--they really are there and they talk to him.  He will
       see a dead child, start to talk to him, and then see  the  back  of
       the child's head is blown off.  He lives with a thousand unpleasant
       jolts like this every day.  The resulting shock is just  more  than
       he can handle much of the time.

       Bruce Willis obviously gets top  billing  for  this  film  being  a
       veteran of so many high-grossing films.  In fact he turns in one of
       his most subdued and best performances here.   But  he  is  playing
       opposite  an  even  better  actor.   Haley Joel Osmet has some very
       difficult  scenes  to  deliver  as  the  haunted--figuratively  and
       literally--child.   Too  young  to  have  gone through the years of
       training most of today's actors have, he  seems  to  be  a  natural
       actor  capable  instinctively  of  giving  a  layered  performance.
       Whether he is remembered at Academy Award time or not he has  given
       just  about  the  best  performance  of  the year and he has made a
       difficult film work.  Certainly some credit must go to  writer  and
       director  M.  Night  Shyamalan  who  must  have  known exactly what
       haunted feel he wanted from Osmet.  Shyamalan keeps the pacing slow
       and  ominous  throughout.  The James Newton Howard score is not one
       of his best but adds to the tension.

       This  is  a  film  with  some  clever  twists  and  a  really  good
       performance by a child actor.  This may be the surprise film of the
       season.  I give it an 8 on the 0 to 10 scale and a high +2  on  the
       -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       4. AN UNUSUAL ANGLE by Greg Egan (Norstrilia Press, ISBN  0-909106-
       12-6, 1983, 200pp, A$14.95) (a book review by Evelyn C. Leeper):

       No, this is not a new Greg Egan novel;  it  is  an  old  Greg  Egan
       novel.   Actually,  it  is  a *very* old Greg Egan novel--his first
       novel.  Someone discovered a case of them in a  basement  somewhere
       and  they showed up at Aussiecon Three, where I immediately grabbed
       one.  (See last paragraph for availability information.)

       The plot of this book is not like Egan's later work, but the wealth
       of  ideas--and  many of the same ideas--that characterize his later
       work is.  There is a section on how quantum mechanics restored  the
       concept  of  free  will.   The protagonist sends out "viewpoints"--
       essentially non-material  copies  of  himself--to  perform  various
       tasks.   The  protagonist  is (literally) making films in his head,
       which conjures up a vision of universes within an individual  mind,
       which  in  turn conjures up the image of layers of universes.  (And
       yes, I mean literally--the protagonist claims  to  have  an  actual
       little film lab in there!)

       The protagonist--first-person narrator, in this case--is a  student
       at   what  appears  to  be  (in  United  States  terms)  a  private
       preparatory school.  Though it many ways it seems to be run by  the
       same  sort  of  people  as  the  upper management in "Dilbert," the
       narrator actually finds some method in  their  madness.   That  is,
       their  insane methods are actually logical to achieve their goals--
       it's just that their goals are insane also.

       I find it interesting that both Greg Egan and Neal Stephenson  both
       have   their  first  novel  out  of  print,  somewhat  disowned  by
       themselves, and set in an academic environment.  I suppose this may
       be  a  function  of  "write  what  you  know."   The  value of this
       suggestion can be judged by comparing the quality of these authors'
       later   works--arguably   about   things  they  have  no  firsthand
       experience or knowledge of--to their first novels.  (And  how  much
       did Shakespeare really know about early Scottish politics?)

       This book is out of print (and unlikely to come  back  into  print,
       from  what  I've  heard),  but  Slow  Glass  Books,  GPO Box 2708X,
       Melbourne, Victoria 3001 AUSTRALIA may still  have  a  few  copies.
       They  take  credit  cards,  so  a  letter  with  your  credit  card
       information and a statement authorizing them to charge it  for  the
       price  plus  shipping  and  handling  would probably be easiest for
       those not in Melbourne.  [-ecl]

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

       5. AMERICAN BEAUTY (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: A razor-sharp, merciless look at human
                 relationships  in  suburbia  goes  from a light
                 satirical  comedy  to  a  drama   of   piercing
                 intensity.   One  man's  midlife  crisis  tears
                 apart   a   neighborhood.    This   provocative
                 theatrical  film  is  the  debut  of former TV-
                 writer Alan Ball and it is as perceptive and as
                 it is unforgiving.  Ball keeps no less than six
                 characters center stage  and  defines  each  of
                 them  with brisk and telling dialog.  Rating: 8
                 (0 to 10), low +3 (-4 to +4)

       Few films have the power to take American suburban life and  really
       pin  it  down  for examination like you would pin down a butterfly.
       Michael Ritchie's SMILE did a very good job.  Still a good job Bill
       Persky's  SERIAL  is  just  a  bit  wider of the mark with somewhat
       broader humor.  Reminiscent of each at times, AMERICAN BEAUTY  does
       it even better.

       The story is narrated by Lester Burnam (Kevin Spacey).   Lester  is
       fast  approaching  middle age and life is just not working for him.
       The advertising magazine where Lester works is  probably  going  to
       fire  him  any  day,  but  he  holds tightly to his job putting off
       facing of the obvious failure of the current career.  But his  wife
       Carolyn  (Annette  Bening) is ever-ready to remind him.  Dinnertime
       with Carolyn has become a constant series of barbs that he  parries
       as  well  as he can manage.  Carolyn is also failing, but as a real
       estate agent who is even more success-oriented than Lester is.  She
       is  constantly on the lookout for the key self-help therapy to make
       her a selling genius.  Once passionate she has lost interest in any
       relationship  with  Lester  beyond the dubious pleasure of grinding
       him down.  Caught in between is their daughter Jane  (Thora  Birch)
       who hates her parents and feels no connection with them.

       Things have been this way for years but are set in motion again  by
       two  events.   Lester meets his daughter's best friend Angela (Mena
       Suvari) and finds that after years of being sexually deprived he is
       attracted  to  her  almost  to the point of obsession.  When Angela
       flirts back it fires off a serious midlife crisis in Lester.  He as
       much  as  possible returns to the behavior patterns of the counter-
       culture years of his early twenties.  He resigns before he  can  be
       fired  and  takes  a  job  flipping hamburgers.  From there it is a
       short step to Pink Floyd and marijuana.  The other important  event
       is the arrival next door of the Fitts family.  Colonel Fitts (Chris
       Cooper) is recently retired from the Marine Corps.  His  son  Ricky
       (Wes  Bentley)  is  a  hyper-intense  boy  with a history of mental
       problems.  His hobby is voyeuristically videotaping his friends and
       family  to  keep as a huge archive of taped memories which he funds
       by selling drugs.  His tyrannical father deludes himself that Ricky
       is  getting  the  money through odd jobs.  Ricky comes between Jane
       and Angela when Jane is fascinated by him and  Angela  repulsed  by
       him.

       Spacey's transition  from  overly  tense  to  extremely  mellow  is
       handled  credibly.   Bening  manages  to  keep  her  character less
       complex than meets the eye.  She has embraced simplistic  self-help
       regimes  that  have  her repeat endlessly mantras like "I will sell
       this house today."  She is a cold, heartless woman with no core  at
       all.   It  is  ironic  that  Spacey's character while rejecting the
       adult world for one of a superannuated teen,  still  hopes  to  win
       back  his wife.  Bening claims that she refuses to be a victim, but
       it is  really  he  who  lives  that  philosophy.   It  is  Bening's
       character who outwardly wants to maintain the image of not changing
       but is doing the most to betray the relationship.  The Fitts family
       is  a  frightening  view  of  parental  oppression.   One parent is
       explosively violent, a sort of a mad dog apparently created by  the
       military.   Barbara  Fitts (Allison Janney) has retreated from life
       in a much less healthy way than Lester has.   One  feel  that  Jane
       should examine this family before judging her own.

       The script by Alan Ball (new to film but  with  TV  experience)  is
       able  to  cover  a  large  number  of characters making them all go
       through complex  degrees  of  changes.   It  manages  this  without
       turning  the  film  into a soap opera by subtly cheating a bit with
       the dialog, having characters being just a little more  candid  and
       self-revealing  than  they  would  probably really be in life.  For
       example, Ricky just happens to accuse Angela of being just what  it
       is  her  worst  secret fear that she is, and by her reaction all is
       revealed.  By using this technique Ball manages to observe and keep
       in  focus  six characters in the foreground of the story.  Directed
       by Sam Mendes  (a  veteran  of  Broadway  but  new  to  film),  the
       characters  are  well  displayed  to allow an appreciation of their
       complexity in a pace that never bores.  With cinematographer Conrad
       L.   Hall, he creates some interesting erotic fantasies for Lester.
       Almost all the fantasies have rich red imagery  of  roses.   It  is
       interesting to watch how often roses are included in shots.

       This is a perceptive film that flows from humorous to very serious.
       It is a quality of writing rarely seen in films these days.  I rate
       it an 8 on the 0 to 10 scale and a low +3 on the -4  to  +4  scale.
       [-mrl]

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

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

                 Capsule:  Pleasant  and  amiable  is   Lawrence
                 Kasdan's  style  in this story of two Mumfords.
                 One is a small town of that name;  one  is  the
                 name  of  the  town's successful but unorthodox
                 psychologist.   This  film  does  a   once-over
                 lightly  on  the  town  and  on  the  nature of
                 psychological help.  Rating: 6 (0 to 10),  high
                 +1 (-4 to +4)

       Films like  PLEASANTVILLE  have  questioned  time-honored  American
       small  town values.  But traditionally American films have given us
       idealized representations of American small town  life.   Generally
       in  American films small towns are where good people live and work.
       Films like SHADOW OF A DOUBT have intentionally  shown  small  town
       life  as  really being the American ideal.  Hitchcock intentionally
       played up the theme in SHADOW OF A DOUBT to show wartime  audiences
       that  small  town life was what Americans were fighting for.  Films
       like DOC HOLLYWOOD press the idea that  if  you  get  to  know  the
       American  small town you are bound to like it and the people in it.
       MUMFORD is a similar film extolling the virtues of the  small  town
       life.   DOC  HOLLYWOOD  was  about the outsider trying to leave the
       small town but falling in love with the town instead.  MUMFORD is a
       variation  in  which the outsider already loves the town and really
       wants to stay in the small town in spite  of  forces  to  make  him
       leave.

       MUMFORD opens with a sequence that looks  like  it  was  from  some
       luscious,  steamy  1940s  James M. Cain film adaptation.  Are we in
       the right movie?  Yes.  We are in the fantasy life of  the  Mumford
       town  pharmacist.   The  strong,  handsome young man of the fantasy
       turns out to be plump, balding and nearly blind in real  life.   He
       is on the couch talking to bland, handsome psychologist Dr. Mumford
       (played by Lorn Dean).  Doc Mumford  is  disarmingly  pleasant  and
       affable.

       Through most of the first third of the film  we  get  to  know  the
       unorthodox doctor and about six of his cases.  We watch how he goes
       about  treating  them.   Among  them  are  Althea  Brockett   (Mary
       McDonnell)  who lives in luxury but is becoming a compulsive buyer.
       Young Skip Skipperton (Jason Lee) skateboards through  traffic  and
       runs  the  most successful modem company in the world.  Emotionally
       he is still a child just looking for a buddy with whom to talk  and
       play  catch.   Then there is Sofie Crisp (Hope Davis) an attractive
       divorcee who is living with  her  parents  and  developing  Chronic
       Fatigue  Syndrome.  Mumford's treatment in each case seems to be in
       equal parts pleasant conversation  and  intuitive  pop  psychology.
       Sooner  or  later he seems to get each of his patients up to a nice
       place in the hills he knows of that has an impressive  overlook  of
       the  town.   Kasdan's  approach  to  getting  to  the  story  is as
       unhurried and even as pleasant as life in the American  small  town
       of the title.

       Ernest Delbanco (David Paymer) and Phyllis Sheeler (Jane Adams),  a
       psychiatrist  and  a psychologist, do not mind that the newcomer is
       more successful than they are, but have some reservations about his
       style.   But  we  too start to notice something a little off in the
       psychologist's style.  In shooting the  breeze  with  his  patients
       Mumford  may  indiscreetly  talk  about his other cases.  Often his
       comments to his patients are a little more direct and frank than we
       might  expect.   He  bones up on the Internet for some surprisingly
       basic  psychological  information.   He  also  takes  an  immediate
       dislike  to town lawyer Lionel Dillard (Martin Short).  It may well
       be  that  Doc  Mumford  may  have  some  problems   of   his   own,
       psychological and otherwise.

       In telling his story, Kasdan uses some unorthodox approaches.   The
       primary  story  line  is  delayed  well into the film and then only
       half-heartedly visited now and again.  What drives the film is  not
       the  pace of the plot.  Instead, one wants to see each of the cases
       Dr.  Mumford is treating and how a simple intuitive approach  works
       to  solve  problems.   Nor  is the cast a particularly high-powered
       one.  Loren Dean, who played the title role in BILLY  BATHGATE  and
       was an investigator in GATTACA, is likeable and inoffensive, but he
       borders on being insipid and never generates much dramatic tension.
       Alfre  Woodard  is  under-used  as  a  friend  and  neighbor of Doc
       Mumford.  Woodard previously shared with Mary McDonnell  the  films
       BLUE  CHIPS,  PASSION  FISH,  and  GRAND  CANYON.   Martin Short is
       slightly  abrasive  as  the  town  lawyer.   Jason  Lee   as   town
       entrepreneur  may  be  familiar  as the clueless Banky from CHASING
       AMY.

       This will not be one of Kasdan's more memorable scripts, but it  is
       certainly a pleasant way to spend an hour or two.  I rate it a 6 on
       the 0 to 10 scale and a high +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          HO 1K-644 732-817-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com

            The amount of noise anyone can bear undisturbed stands 	    in inverse proportion to his mental capacity.
                                          -- Arthur Schopopenhauer


               THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT ALMOST BLANK