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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 10/6/00 -- Vol. 19, No. 14

       Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-817-5619, mleeper@avaya.com
       Factotum: Evelyn Leeper, 732-332-6218, eleeper@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist: Rob Mitchell, robmitchell@avaya.com
       HO Chair Emeritus: John Jetzt, jetzt@avaya.com
       HO Librarian Emeritus: Nick Sauer, njs@lucent.com
       Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
       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.  My editorial on romance and selfish genes drew a response  from
       Dirk  Ruiz.  I thought his response and mine counter-response might
       be of interest.  (It also means there will be one less editorial  I
       have to write.)  The following will be entirely his comments except
       for my responses in square brackets.

       Having spent four years in psych grad school having to put up  with
       evolutionary  psychologists,  I developed a strong aversion to this
       brand of "theorizing".  And so, I would like to present a  rebuttal
       to the evolutionary viewpoint, in bullet-list format:

       [Interesting.  I am willing to consider any brand of theorizing.  I
       probably  theorize  in  many  different  brands.  I don't even mind
       mixing brands.]

       ++ Drawing conclusions from animals is dangerous: they're  not  us,
       and  we're  not  them.   Pick  a behavior, and you can find lots of
       animals who do it that way, lots of animals who do it the  opposite
       way,  and  even  more  animals  who  never do it at all.  Chimps or
       Bonobos, which do we most resemble?

       [What is the difference between psychology and  introspection?   In
       introspection  you  look  inward  and  find  your own answers about
       yourself.   In  psychology  you  draw  conclusions   from   others,
       conclusions  that are dangerous because as you say "they're not us,
       and we're not them."  Everything you say about animals is  true  of
       humans  also.   Animals raised in human society may have minds more
       alien to us than any human mind, though I am not sure even that  is
       true.   Humans  can  be  very  different.   But  in addition humans
       probably are more likely to be intentionally deceptive.  If you ask
       "Chimps  or  Bonobos,  which do we most resemble" I can return with
       Arabs or Indians, whom do we most resemble?]

       ++ How in the hell do you objectively measure a dog's *happiness*??
       Or  any  other  animal  behavior  that  supposedly supports a given
       evolutionary  viewpoint.   These  measurements  rely  on  so   much
       interpretation that they are all but meaningless.

       [I would say that if you really are having trouble telling  when  a
       dog is happy or not you are not trying very hard.  Dogs communicate
       when they are happy or sad very well.  Usually it is easier to tell
       happiness  with  a  dog  than  it is with humans.  And yes, in both
       cases there is a certain amount of interpretation.  But  I  do  not
       accept  an  argument  that  our  interpretation  of  dog emotion is
       invalid just because it is a different species.  That seems  to  me
       to  be  on  the  same  level  as  an  argument that dogs don't have
       emotions at all because they don't have souls.]

       ++ Evolution is a very blunt instrument.  All  these  factors  that
       evolutionary  theorists claim are important for the survival of the
       species come together in one final decision:  live  or  die.   That
       does  *not*  lend itself to selecting out subtle little traits here
       and there.  Evolutionary pressures impinge on the few  traits  that
       really  make a live-or-die difference in the environment.  The rest
       of the traits just kind of muddle along.

       [Even there we disagree.  First it is not a live or  die  decision;
       it  is  a  spectrum of fertility with high fertility at one end and
       death at the other.  And I would say that the Heike crabs, the ones
       with  the  samurai  faces on their backs, show how subtle evolution
       can be.  (In one area of Japan  where  a  sea  battle  was  fought,
       fishermen  throw back crabs that have what look like human faces on
       their shells.  Over the years in order to survive  the  crabs  have
       acquired  very  human  looking  faces  on  their  shells.  The more
       human-looking the face, the more likely the crab to survive.)]

       ++ Evolution is not  necessarily  a  gradual  shaper,  as  so  many
       evolutionary theories seem to claim.  Consider the bird's wing.  Of
       what use is 1/4 of a wing?  1/2 of a wing?  Wouldn't  the  quarter-
       winged  bird  have  died  out,  the appendage being useless (if not
       fatal) for flight?

       [Your point is correct though your example is bad.   Evolution  can
       be  fast.   Though  even  the gradualists do not say that there was
       ever one-quarter or one-half a wing.  It would  have  been  a  more
       arm-like  appendage  that  gradually  became  more wing-like.  Hops
       became glides and glides became flights as this was happening.]

       ++ Evolution does not preserve the  BEST  genes,  but  rather  only
       those  genes  that  a)  happen  to  be  there  at  the time, and b)
       satisfice the goal of letting the species as a whole exist in  this
       particular  environment.   ("Satisfice"  here  means that the genes
       make do; they do not optimize.)  If  the  environment  changes,  it
       might well be bye-bye species!  So much for "best".

       [When you are a gene, having the characteristics that  improve  the
       odds you get into the next generation is its own reward.  If you do
       not like the value judgement "best," fine, do not use it.  Just say
       "best suited to the environment."]

       ++ The "environment" in which we evolve is largely a social one, in
       which  we  can  help  "weak"  individuals survive long beyond their
       "natural"  lifetimes.   Since  social  environments   are   complex
       *changeable*  responses  to  physical environments, existing social
       circumstances, history, ideas, etc., I would claim the  concept  of
       evolution  becomes  almost  meaningless  as  a  simple  explanatory
       principle.

       [You are right that to a large extent  we  can  compensate  for  an
       individual's  weakness.   And  it  helps  level the playing fields.
       This comes down to the "nature and nurture"  question.   But  there
       are families in which genius runs.  The Bachs and the Bernoulis are
       examples from history.  It seems very  likely  there  is  a  strong
       genetic component to the success of so many members of the family.]

       ++   This   current   style   of   pseudo-evolutionary   theorizing
       (evolutionary psychology, evolutionary sociology, what have you) is
       not science; it is storytelling.  You observe some phenomenon,  and
       then  conclude  that it's there because evolution somehow helped it
       get there.  So, off you go, looking for some kind  of  evolutionary
       process  (preferably  one that is shrouded in the mists of time, so
       that it cannot be verified) that will explain it.  Since you cannot
       verify the process, it's just a convincing-sounding story.  I could
       just as easily come up  with  another  story,  equally  convincing.
       E.g.,  people who respond to romantic stimuli are more likely to go
       home and have sex, which means they produce more  offspring,  which
       leads   to  their  genes  being  propagated.   The  unromantic,  by
       contrast, fail to reproduce.

       [Well, admittedly my theory is speculation.  That is frequently the
       point  of  this  column,  to  look  at different possibilities.  To
       create seed hypotheses.  I had never heard of romanticism as  being
       a  possible  manifestation  of  genetic principles.  To me just the
       sheer glut of romantic stories in our literature begs a  scientific
       explanation.   I  suppose  the  kind of science fiction that I like
       takes  some  phenomenon  around  us  that  has  never  really  been
       considered   in   scientific  terms  and  looks  for  a  scientific
       explanation.  This is the kind of thing that Nigel Kneale does.  If
       you  look  at  how powerful evolution is in molding life.  It takes
       only a few years for moths  to  change  color  to  adapt  to  their
       environment.   Then  there are the Heike crabs that in a relatively
       short period of time have obliged the locals by displaying  samurai
       faces  on  their  shells.  A force that powerful could have created
       our romantic sensibility.]

       [-dr and mrl]

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

       2. BICENTENNIAL MAN (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: Isaac  Asimov's  story  comes  to  the
                 screen  with  the best of intentions, but there
                 is just a little too much warmth and  sweetness
                 for  most  adult  audiences to fully appreciate
                 it.  A robot  who  is  already  nearly  perfect
                 struggles  to become human.  Robin Williams and
                 Embeth Davidtz star.   Pleasant  without  being
                 satisfying.   Rating:  6  (0  to 10), +1 (-4 to
                 +4).

       In the year 2005 a father (Sam Neill) surprises his family  with  a
       new  robot (Robin Williams) whom his family dubs Andrew.  But there
       is more to Andrew than just Asimov's famous Three Laws of Robotics.
       The  laws  make  certain  that  Andrew  is  benevolent,  but  he is
       considerably more.  He has a streak of creativity  and  independent
       thinking  that supposedly robots do not have.  Rather than being an
       appliance, he has the  rudiments  of  actually  being  human.   The
       family  has  two  daughters.   One who is simply called Little Miss
       (Hallie Kate Eisenberg as a child and Embeth Davidtz as  an  adult)
       immediately  takes to Andrew while older daughter Lloyd immediately
       wants to see Andrew discredited and destroyed.  The father comes to
       take  a fatherly interest in Andrew.  We see Andrew doing some very
       human things like showing compassion for a  spider  and  trying  to
       master the complexities of human humor.

       Racial themes enter the story as a human woman comes to love Andrew
       and  he  loves her in return, but Andrew is only a machine becoming
       human.  It is years before a real romantic relationship is possible
       between  him  and a human.  But robots are essentially immortal and
       as the title implies, we see Andrew over the course of two  hundred
       years.   This  means  even though it is a longer than average film,
       131 minutes, it still covers superficially  mostly  only  the  more
       important  events of Andrew's life.  It seems almost as soon as you
       meet characters they are old and dying.

       One thing the film does not handle very well is the view of society
       during  the  passage  of  so  much  time.   Change is coming to our
       society at an accelerated rate.  One need only look at the rate  at
       which  our  own  society  has changed in the last 40 years.  Forced
       with showing the changes in society  over  200  years  or  ignoring
       them,  the  producers  have almost entirely had to steer clear.  We
       see minor and superficial changes, but not  nearly  the  amount  we
       would  expect.  We are left with an uneasy feeling that society has
       stagnated, but for some relatively small advances in  the  sciences
       relevant to the story.

       Even when Isaac Asimov's story "The  Bicentennial  Man"  was  first
       published, it far from original.  Asimov had been writing for years
       about benevolent robots who were misunderstood.  Ray Bradbury wrote
       the  story  "I  Sing the Body Electric," produced on TWILIGHT ZONE,
       about a family getting a grandmotherly robot and learning  to  love
       her.   Asimov  combined  this and with some more complex themes for
       his novel.   However,  the  wish  to  become  human  and  the  slow
       transition to fulfilling that wish was plundered from the novel and
       used very publicly in STAR  TREK:  THE  NEXT  GENERATION  with  the
       character  Data.   The  viewer  has agonized over Data's attempt to
       learn to deliver humor and it seems unfair to make the viewer do it
       again.   That  and  much  more of Data's difficult road to becoming
       human is recapitulated in this film.  Like  STAR  TREK,  this  film
       never questions the smug assumption that being human is the highest
       state of being.  At its best BICENTENNIAL MAN holds up a mirror  to
       show  us  what  it means to be human.  But where it rings false the
       writers fall  back  on  Andrew  being  a  robot.   That  makes  its
       observations undependable.

       Some of the visuals  are  very  good,  but  some  are  surprisingly
       flawed.   In  particular  the futuristic skylines are unconvincing.
       If Andrew behaves too much like Data, he also looks  a  little  too
       much  like  C3PO.   Kudos  should, however, go to the design of the
       robot makeup and mechanism.  The faces maintain the look  of  metal
       and still are expressive to what is perhaps an unrealistic level.

       Not surprisingly, this  is  Robin  Williams's  film.   Somehow  his
       attempts to be a normal human are touching but never as powerful as
       Cliff Robertson is in the comparable film CHARLY.  Sam Neill, after
       this  film  and  THE  DISH,  seems to be vying for the title of the
       mellowest actor on the screen.  Embeth Davidtz has  a  harder  role
       than  Williams.  If Williams does not seem quite right, well, he is
       a robot.  Davidtz is quite good as a human, which is harder.  Young
       Hallie Kate Eisenberg, known for Pepsi and Independent Film Channel
       ads, is her usual sweet  self  falling  a  little  short  of  being
       cloying.    Oliver  Platt  is  always  watchable.   Chris  Columbus
       directed and previously directed Williams in MRS. DOUBTFIRE.  James
       Horner's score is unremarkable.

       While this film does not have all the resonance that a  film  aimed
       at  an  adult  audience  should have, it should be good for a young
       adult audience.  I give it a 6 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +1 on the
       -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       3. SADE (a film review in bullet list form by Mark R.  Leeper  from
       the Toronto International Film Festival):

                 Capsule: This is  by  no  means  the  gore  and
                 sadism  festival  that  viewers  may  at  first
                 expect.  The Marquis de Sade is arrested and in
                 the  hands  of the Jacobins in the Terror after
                 the French Revolution  who  daily  commit  more
                 atrocities  than  in  his  fiction.  De Sade is
                 presented  as  the  one  great  romantic  in  a
                 festering world of evil.  Rating: high +1

       French language

          - Film sets the tone at opening showing maggots feasting on dead
            bodies
          - The Marquis de Sade had been imprisoned for his writings,  but
            is  being  transferred  to  better  surroundings at Convent at
            Picpus.
          - On way he sees a teenage  girl  in  his  coach  and  takes  an
            interest in her.  Her parents have warned her to say away from
            him.  This piques her interest.
          - Sade treated as special case among aristocrats.  Arranged  for
            by  his  mistress  sleeping  with Fornier, a deputy of the new
            government.
          - Fornier is more of a sadist than Sade was.
          - Sade tries to improve things at convent putting on a play.
          - Slowly gets girl to want sexual  fulfillment  and  ignore  her
            likely coming execution.
          - Images of the terror mirror those of the  Holocaust.   Several
            scenes of disturbing gore.
          - Nudity and a little bit of sex, but the point of the  film  is
            the brutality of Robespierre's government.
          - Underscored  with  classical  music  of   Poulenc,   Fierenza,
            harpsichord music
          - Sound of fly used when viewer expects Sade to be working evil.
          - Sade loves son, loves life
          - Romanticist in brutal society
          - Basically old ideas
          - Daniel Auteuil (Sade) formerly of JEANNE DE FLORETTE, MANON OF
            THE SPRING, UN COEUR EN HIVER (all films I love)
          - Other libertines have been made heroes  before  in  books  and
            film: Don Juan, Casanova, and Francis Dashwood
          - Reduces Sade's philosophy to platitudes

       [-mrl]

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

       4. URBANIA (a film review in bullet list form  by  Mark  R.  Leeper
       from the Toronto International Film Festival):

                 Capsule: This is a film that tries  to  do  too
                 much  and  is  ham-handed  in  most  of what it
                 tries.  In a sort of irritating bait and switch
                 it  takes a poorly wrought revenge story set in
                 the gay community of some big city and  dresses
                 it up comedy about urban myths.  The main story
                 might   have   some   power   if   told    more
                 comprehensively  but  the  mod-film editing and
                 serious  pacing  problems  get  in   the   way.
                 Rating: -1

          - "Heard any good stories lately?" Question that begins URBANIA.
            Don't expect it to raise your average.
          - Most annoying film I have seen in  a  while.   Murder  in  gay
            community  and  jokes  about  urban  myths  poorly edited into
            uneasy combination.
          - Goes back and forth over same scene differently to show  going
            on  in main character's mind, but leaves viewer confused about
            what did happen
          - Ridiculous that character who had been through such a  violent
            time would keep mixing in comic urban myths
          - Fractured scenes from jerky MTV-style editing
          - Telling is muddled
          - Pacing way off with some  scenes  too  fast,  others  dragging
            interminably
          - Off-putting look at gay community
          - Jazz score and source music
          - Homosexual kissing used for shock value.  Regardless of sexual
            orientation this much kissing is just dull and artless.
          - Slow build to strong violence
          - Gays leading seemingly pointless lives, shown only living  for
            sex, revenge, and little more
          - Well meaning, but  surely  gays  deserve  a  better  cinematic
            representation than this
          - Central character Charley disintegrates
          - Alan Cummins is only familiar actor
          - Least convincing homeless man I can remember seeing in film

       [-mrl]

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

       5. THE GRIFTERS (a film review in  bullet  list  form  by  Mark  R.
       Leeper from the Toronto International Film Festival):

                 Capsule: A particularly  gruesome  triangle  of
                 two  women  fighting  over  the possession of a
                 young promising con man.  One of the  women  is
                 his mother, an expert con on her own, who wants
                 her son out of the business.  The  other  is  a
                 young  gifted  con artist who wants him for her
                 partner.  Rating: +2

          - Three dishonest people, each pulling a scam
          - Roy (John Cusack) is a promising grifter
          - Myra (Annette Benning) is young and pretty and  wants  Roy  as
            partner
          - Lily (Angelica Huston) is Roy's mother, 14 years older
          - Lily gets away with it
          - Younger two failing in small scams
          - Lily and Myra hate each other from start
          - Lily screws up badly
          - Roy wants to stick to the short con, Lily and Myra prefer  the
            long con (more involved)
          - Dark photography
          - Torture scene
          - Heavy use of filters
          - Elmer Bernstein score now familiar
          - Screenplay by Donald Westlake
          - Story by Jim Thompson, crime novelist
          - Unusual love triangle, two dangerous women love Roy
          - Humorous hatred scenes between Myra and Lily
          - Lily never says anything but to get some advantage
          - Huston does not look young enough for role
          - Pat Hingle in role, liking but having to discipline Lily
          - John Cusack's best role, quite probably
          - Benning not yet in her prime in 1990

       [-mrl]

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

       6. THE LEGEND OF RITA (DIE STILLE NACH DEM SCHUSS) (a  film  review
       in   bullet   list   form  by  Mark  R.  Leeper  from  the  Toronto
       International Film Festival):

                 Capsule:   A   Baader-Meinhof   style    German
                 terrorist  flees West Germany and finds herself
                 hidden in East Germany where she  must  live  a
                 like  a  normal  East German.  In this unstable
                 environment she tries to build a life.  Rating:
                 +2

       German language

          - Baader-Meinhof style terrorist, West Germany in the 1970s
          - Remembers exciting days of robbing banks, springing prisoners
          - Wants to end government and end injustice
          - Caught in East Germany but released as long as they  can  keep
            track of her
          - Agrees to tell officials when to go through East Germany
          - Forms ties with government agent
          - East German communists also against terror, do not really  see
            terrorists as allies
          - Gang chased to East Germany, they want  to  go  to  Angola  or
            Mozambique, not knowing how they would stand out
          - East Germany gives them  new  normal  lives  separately  under
            cover, like Terrorist Protection Program
          - Working, see the society they idolized warts and all
          - Forms deep friendship, Tatjana
          - Was a terrorist more for excitement than belief
          - East German life ambivalently shown
          - Rita shown to be something of a fool
          - Eventually wants common life she abhorred
          - Pays tribute to her idealism, but wrong-headed
          - Bibiana Beglau is very good as Rita
          - Director Volker Schlondorff of THE TIN DRUM,  SWANN  IN  LOVE,
            THE HANDMAID'S TALE, PALMETTO

       [-mrl]

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

       7. TO DIE (OR NOT) (a film review in bullet list form  by  Mark  R.
       Leeper from the Toronto International Film Festival):

                 Capsule: A  TV  writer  tells  six  stories  of
                 untimely  deaths.  Then circumstances cause him
                 to reconsider his  morbidity  and  the  stories
                 change  accordingly.   This  is  a gimmick film
                 that is supposedly telling us  something  about
                 death.   The  message,  however, is mostly lost
                 and  the  gimmick  is  not  very   interesting.
                 Rating: 0

       Catalan language

          - Writer with very talkative wife  tells  stories  planned,  all
            ending in death
          - Drug addict and overdoes
          - Mother and choking child
          - Man in hospital with nurse
          - Woman on phone
          - Police hitting motorcyclist
          - Assassin
          - After  discussing  with  wife  stories  seen  differently  and
            revises to end in life
          - Monochrome death stories, color for life stories
          - Camera jerky and always at odd angles in death stories, normal
            in life stories
          - Alternate futures
          - Life stories in reverse order
          - Individual stories thin
          - Gimmick
          - Does not really develop characters
          - Director thought saying something special about death but does
            not convey
          - Ending seems rushed, though that makes sense in context
          - Tough film to review without giving too much away
          - Point is not made until late in film
          - Writer/Director Ventura Pons actually shot and thought dead in
            Mexico, film from that experience

       [-mrl]

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

           Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey 	   cage.
                                          -- H. L. Mencken