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Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
Club Notice - 12/10/99 -- Vol. 18, No. 24
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. We went to the Picasso Museum on our recent trip to Paris.
These random observations are based on the section of my travel
log. The first thing I saw when I arrived was a line of school
kids from first or second grade collected in the courtyard.
Culture shock. They take little schoolchildren to see Picasso
artwork in France. What about all the nudes he paints? I know in
the US, this would not go. Back when I was growing up the attitude
in the US was "You aren't going to take my kid to see someone's
painting of naked people. It's un-Christian." Of course those
attitudes were of the liberated feel-good 60s. In the 90s it does
not come to that. The attitude is "You aren't gonna take my tax
dollar to enrich some kid's life. Particularly if it is not my
kid. You do that I will find someone who can run the schools
cheaper without so much costly --enrichment.' Appreciation of art
is a luxury and these are hard times." (In my opinion these being
hard times is a self-fulfilling prophecy.) And of course if you
just scan up and down the radio dial you can tell that appreciation
of real art is a thing of the past. Aesthetics is a lost art in
the US. Bad art has almost totally driven out the good.
I get inside and a first grade class is sitting right in front of a
Picasso nude and the teacher is discussing it. I don't think we
are in Kansas any more, Toto. My third grade teacher got all
flustered once. In the Weekly Reader kid's newspaper there was a
Peanut and Jocko cartoon in which Peanut the Elephant takes off his
shirt to use as a sail on a boat. One of the kids pointed out that
Peanut was now naked. The teacher was really angry that someone
had made that observation. Here kids two years younger were being
specifically shown nudes. Not in the US.
Back at Burroughs in Detroit I used to work with a guy named Doug
Burger. In the way of most successful people at Burroughs this guy
was a political back-stabber. I was told that in addition to his
working at Burroughs his major income was as a slum landlord. He
was just the sort of person whom the management liked to get at
Burroughs because they understood him. Also when it came to giving
him an incentive, he was really simple to understand. All they had
to do was offer him money. Money seemed the only thing that
mattered. One day at lunch out of the blue he said that if there
was anybody in the world he would have liked to have been, it would
have been Pablo Picasso. Pulling my jaw out of my mashed potatoes
I asked, "Wh-Wh-Wh-Why?" I was in total astonishment. "There is a
man with a license to print money. When they bring him a bill in a
restaurant if he just doodles on it, it is worth more than if he
simply pays it." Oh, of course. Doug, you may want to be Picasso,
but I don't think you are ever going to make it.
It is remarkable, however, to see just how many media Picasso
worked in and how close to being correct Berger was. In one place
there are some masks that look like Picasso just spent two minutes
tearing them out of newspaper. There was a cult of Picasso and
everything he did was considered great art. Yet he did not really
seem to grow wealthy or live in wealth. The reason there is a
Picasso museum is that he died owing big chunks of tax money. The
government just took the paintings after he died and it paid the
tax. Then they created the museum. Actually that probably was very
cagey of him. The government could get what he owned them only by
creating a monument to him.
The museum traces the evolution of Picasso's art as he moved from
realism to surrealism to becoming a master of surrealism. I would
be lying if I said I didn't think at the beginning any of it was
put-on. Toward the end there must have been a bit of self
delusion. Picasso worked in many different media and in each
achieved what all artists seek: unquestioning acceptance and
sympathetic interpretation. Rarely is this achieved by any but
clergy and police states.
We could take Picasso at face value. Then I would say that it would
be a mistake to say that Picasso's mind distorted reality to look
like his paintings. Instead we would have to say that his mind
distorted what he saw some mysterious third way so that what he
painted and what he saw looked the same to him.
Just some thoughts. [-mrl]
===================================================================
2. TOY STORY 2 (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):
Capsule: It is difficult to imagine anyone not
having a good time with TOY STORY 2. The kids
will love seeing the familiar toys in an
adventure and adults may well appreciate that
at the heart of this film is a difficult moral
dilemma. There is a lot of humor and there is
also some genuine intelligent consideration of
the premise. This is Pixar's best film to date
and a considerable improvement even over the
original. Rating: 8 (0 to 10), high +2 (-4 to
+4)
Woody, Buzz Lightyear, and the whole gang of TOY STORY are back in
a sequel that has all the sophisticated special effects and a more
complex story. The adventure is a little more extravagant. But
even more important the toys face concerns that will be even more
resonant with the adults in the audience than with the children who
would appear to be the target audience.
The second TOY STORY opus opens with a space-opera fantasy
featuring that commander of the limitless ether, Buzz Lightyear
(voiced by Tim Allen). It seems at first out of context but serves
stretch the capabilities of Pixar and to introduce Buzz Lightyear's
video game enemy, the Emperor Zurg. This sequence soon leads us to
a familiar bedroom where toy owner Andy is headed for Cowboy Camp
and planning to take with him Woody (Tom Hanks). But it is not to
be. A last minute injury leaves Woody sidelined on the shelf with
an arm nearly coming off. Andy's mother makes matters even worse
for Woody by reminding Andy that toys don't last forever. This
stokes Woody's fears of abandonment. In fact, a yard sale that
very day is planned to remove a friend from the toys' midst, a
penguin squeeze toy. Woody saves the penguin only by venturing
into the yard sale. There he is recognized by a local sleazy toy
collector and toy store owner as a valuable collector's item.
Woody it seems was modeled on a popular cowboy TV marionette from
the 1950s. Woody in stolen in order to complete a set for the
collector. Woody it seems has a family he has never known about--a
girlfriend, sidekick, and horse. They are now a complete set and
can come out of storage and make people happy. But to do that,
Woody can never return to Andy. Somebody has to lose. Children's
films often have characters choose between good and bad, but rarely
between one good cause and another one.
There are certainly films made with scripts a lot worse than the
first TOY STORY film, but TOY STORY 2 is a much more satisfying
script. This is actually surprising since seven different people
worked on the story and script. That generally is a very bad sign.
But the script manages to have some resonance without losing a good
sense of humor including several laugh-out-loud jokes. There are
multiple film allusions including a very funny one to JURASSIC
PARK. The makers have recognized that Bo-Peep, the only female toy
of the first film, left a lot to be desired in character
complexity. Jessie (Joan Cusack) as the toy based on Woody's TV
girlfriend has her own agenda.
Pixar's main stock and trade is, of course, computer animation. So
an important question is how does this film look? Much of the
animation technique will be familiar from the original TOY STORY.
That does not break new ground. Andy looks no more real than he
did in the last film. That could be attributed to continuity. But
this film adds two new human characters: Bad guy Al McWhiggin and
the Cleaner. The Cleaner has just a cameo and looks to be the
title character from Pixar's Academy Award winning short "Geri's
Game." McWhiggin is overweight, middle-aged, and balding. He
appears to be their most realistic looking human figure to date.
They also have a nice dachshund puppy. Generally Pixar keeps the
number of characters with physically soft surfaces to a minimum as
they are probably much harder to animate. (Notice that their early
character Luxo is make of rigid pieces. The bugs of A BUG'S LIFE
had shells.) Attention to detail is particularly nice. Apparently
their layout artist is usually good and often excellent. Note
touches abound like that after McWhiggin has eaten cheese puffs his
fingers appear yellow orange.
Just as the classic BLACK BEAUTY has at its heart the tragic and
cruel ways that insensitive humanity treats horses, TOY STORY 2
shows that a toy's life is a bleak affair. While the first TOY
STORY saw a toy's life as being played with or being boringly left
on the shelf, the new film hits at some fairly disturbing material
having toy society echo some of the worst of human society. Old
friendships can be broken up at the whim of the owner or the
owner's parents. A moment of careless play leaves Woody without
the use of one of his arms. This leaves Woody haunted by the fear
of what will happen when he is broken or Andy gets too old to play
with him. There is ahead for him the oblivion of being dropped
into the wastebasket. But some toys have even worse things to
fear. Jessie and Stinky Pete have recent memories of the living
oblivion of being in storage in a dark closet. Stinky Pete has
never even been out of the tight confines of his original wrapping.
Hiding within the charming children's film is a very dark and bleak
look at the life of toys and disturbing shadows of the human
condition.
If there is a problem with the new story it is flaws in its logic.
If there is a Prime Directive for living toys it has to be this:
Leave no physical evidence that living toys have been present.
Without giving details, let me say that the script blatantly
violates that directive. The humans would realize at the end of
this film that something is going on that is more than meets the
eye. Also this episode creates questions that it needed to answer.
If Woody were a character from a 1950s TV show, that would mean
that the toy must have been made in the 1950s. Woody would have a
great deal of previous life, probably with another owner. Does he
remember this previous life? How did a 45 year old toy get into
Andy's collection? The ending of the film is telegraphed by the
logic of what Pixar would and would not be likely to do with the
series.
TOY STORY 2 is an excellent example of a sequel that is more worth
seeing than the original film. It most certainly is not a
disguised remake as sequels too often are. I rate it an 8 on the 0
to 10 scale and a high +2 on the -4 to +4 scale. [-mrl]
Mark Leeper
HO 1K-644 732-817-5619
mleeper@lucent.com
I've seen a look in dogs' eyes, a quickly vanishing look of amazed contempt, and I am convinced that
basically dogs think humans are nuts.
-- John Steinbeck
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