THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
03/31/06 -- Vol. 24, No. 40, Whole Number 1328

El Presidente: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
The Power Behind El Pres: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.
All comments sent will be assumed authorized for inclusion
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Topics:
	Three to be Read (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	Why I Didn't Link to the Cartoons (comments
	        by Mark R. Leeper)
	V FOR VENDETTA (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
	THE DEVIL AND DANIEL JOHNSTON (film review
	        by Mark R. Leeper)
	This Week's Reading (THINGS FALL APART, SCREEN SIRENS
	        SCREAM!) (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: Three to be Read (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

I was at a book sale and saw a collection of three stories by
Philip Wylie called "Three to be Read."  I thought to myself
"Duh-oh."  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Why I Didn't Link to the Cartoons (comments by Mark
R. Leeper)

You are walking alone in woods and you come upon a bear.  The
bear immediately sees your presence and stands up on his hind
legs in a threatening posture.  You can take one of two
approaches.  You can try to retreat and amicably end the
situation.  That may or may not work to defuse the situation.
The bear can follow you.  Or you can try to treat the bear as an
equal.  You can affirm that you have just as much right to be in
the woods as the bear does.  You can tell yourself that if you
give in to the bear than the bear has won.  It is true that by
being belligerent the bear has in some ways won.  You do not
enflame the bear because you do not trust the bear enough to be a
reasoning creature.  If instead you ran into Henry David Thoreau
in the wood, you might have a different reaction.  And you
yourself have to make a quick judgment, is it a bear or is it
Thoreau?  Essentially, what you ask is, is this something like me
that I can reason with and do I have faith that reasoning will
help in the situation?  The decision to reason is a mark of
respect.

I am discussing my editorials with a reader.  I mentioned that at
one point in writing an editorial I considered the option of
providing a link to the cartoons that appeared in Denmark's
Jyllands-Posten newspaper.  This was a situation that had already
claimed lives and I was a little concerned about in some small
way enflaming that situation, even to the tiny degree that it
would doing that.  I had to make a bear vs. Thoreau sort of
decision.  Do I believe that militant Islam has the sort of
intransigent power that the bear has?  Well, in a word, yes.  I
think that is undeniable.  We have to come to realize that we are
dealing with people very different from ourselves and they are
going to think of things very differently.

The media figures strongly into our attitudes in dealing with
other cultures.  This whole situation is informedin the West by a
generation or more brought up Walt Disney's jingle "It's a Small
World After All."  It suggests that we all have things in common
and are very much alike.  For years I have been pointing to that
song and saying that it is true, but only so far.  We all are
oxygen-breathers and most of us drink water.  If you go much
beyond that you find there are very great differences in people.
The same message that Disney was giving the younger viewers "Star
Trek" was giving the ones a little older.  Throughout all the
"Star Trek" series we saw a lot of conflict of a lot of different
cultures.  Sometimes it was direct conflict with the Federation,
and sometimes it was that the Federation came upon a pre-existing
conflict between two alien races.  But I don't think they ever
once came upon anything in the universe so alien that differences
could not be negotiated, perhaps with a little bit of force.

Most alien races in "Star Trek" were just humans with funny stuff
stuck to their faces.  Inside they were humans.  And I am not
just talking about makeup.  Inside they all could eventually be
reasoned with.  The message is that there always is a compromise
and it can be reached so that both sides can get what they want.
In the fairy tale all cultures can be reasoned with.  There may
have been individuals who would not compromise, but they were
criminals and could be overcome.  When you are dealing with an
entire race, they can be negotiated with and harmony restored
with the populations of both sides getting to remain as they are.
The only difficult thing was finding that compromise.

In "Star Trek" compromise could eventually be reached with the
advocates of each side made happy.  There were no no-win
situations.  Eventually even the Borg could beseen to be decent
folk.  That philosophy was engrained in generations.  INDEPENDENCE
DAY did have one great moment by playing off of this assumption.
The humans and the aliens apparently finally get a chance to
negotiate.  The President gets a chance to talk to an alien and
asks a very Star-Trek question.  "What do you want us to do?"
And the alien says with all the vitriol its alien anatomy allowed
it to express, "Die.  Die."  In other words, "There is nothing to
negotiate.  Our goal is to eliminate you entirely."  Here at last
was an alien who left no room for Star Trek compromises and
amicable solutions.  I am not saying for sure that anyone we
currently face is that implacable, but you have to keep your mind
open in spite of "Star Trek" that that is a very real
possibility.

I think that most of the people who believe the idea that we are
all alike have taken the lazy way out.  They have not gone to the
real countries of this world, but they have visited the plastic
pavilions at the Epcot Center where many countries come together
and everyone turns out to be alike.  Multi-culturalism should
teach people to understand and respect the differences in
cultures but instead is teaching us to ignore them.

I think that we really do need to have a double standard when
dealing with radical Islam just as when you are dealing with the
bear.  They live in a different world where the first priority is
eliminating non-Muslims--that is what historically conversion by
the sword meant.  One way or another you will eventually not be
both an infidel and alive.  That is what God wants.  And what is
important to remember, and few people do, is that what is behind
this is really a breed of idealism.  These are idealists fighting
for an idealist cause.  They are not going to be impressed by the
fact that we believe in free speech because to them it is not an
ideal.  That sort of situation was never one we saw in "Star
Trek".  What is important to take from this is the lesson that we
are dealing with something right here on Earth that is very "not
us".  We have to rethink our strategy constantly.

What it comes down to is this, I did not help to publish the
cartoons because I did not want to further enflame a situation
that was already killing people.  But even as I did that part of
me was saying it was the wrong decision.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: V FOR VENDETTA (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: Tyranny breeds groovy anarchy.  A future Britain is
ruled by a repressive right-wing totalitarian government.  But it
is about to be challenged by an anarchist swashbuckling hero in a
Guy Fawkes mask.  Alan Moore's graphic novel is adapted to the
screen in a brash adventure.  This film is a funhouse of
political ideas, some of them intentionally repugnant.  You may
not entirely agree with the politics, but the film is darkly
colorful and fun.  Rating:  +2 (-4 to +4) or 7/10

In London of the year 2020, the government is run by a repressive
fascist regime, corrupt to its very foundations.  The head of the
government is Big Brother-like Adam Sutler (played full-out by
John Hurt).  His party has turned Britain into a latter-day Nazi
Germany.  In this London, Evey (Natalie Portman with a variable
British accent) is a flunky at the equivalent of the BBC.
Walking across town after dark and after curfew she is discovered
by two government goons who intend to rape and likely murder her
as their evening's entertainment.  Evey is terrified.  But
suddenly there is a hero who has come to her aid.  He is V (Hugo
Weaving), a sort of Zorro behind a Guy Fawkes mask.  With superb
knife skill he saves the woman in distress.  He explains himself
in an irritating but impressive speech packed with nearly every
word from the V-section of the dictionary.  (Are we really
expected to believe he can rattle off this speech
extemporaneously?)

Evey is grateful, but then has mixed emotions when he asks her to
watch his next incredible feat.  It is to take her to a rooftop
and play Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture".  Rather than punctuating
it with cannon fire, he blows up the Old Bailey with flashy
pyrotechnics.  It is the first blow of a year in which he will
kill the more offensive members of the government and blow up
buildings.  His reign of terror is to run from one Guy Fawkes
Day, November 5, to the next.  V remains the entire film behind
his Guy Fawkes mask so that we never see his face.

If you don't know who Guy Fawkes was and what the Gunpowder Plot
was, go to
http://www.answers.com/main/ntquery?s=gunpowder+plot now.  It's
okay.  I'll wait.

You may have a poor memory for names and want to put a face with
the character V.  Perhaps a plastic Guy Fawkes mask is not
exactly what you were looking for.  So who is Hugo Weaving?  He
was Elrond in the "Lord of the Rings" films and was the evil
Agent Smith who kept popping up in the "Matrix" films.  Most
actors find it very hard to act through a mask, but here it works
in Weaving's favor that the mask makes him a cipher.  In addition
to the above-mentioned, the film also features Stephen Rea
playing a police inspector reminiscent of his role in CITIZEN X.

Stephen Fry is an avuncular dissident with a room dedicated to
forbidden freedoms.  Other familiar faces include Tim Pigott-
Smith and Sinéad Cusack.

The story is based on the graphic novel by Alan Moore and adapted
to the screen by the Wachowski Brothers, Andy and Larry, who
wrote and directed the "Matrix" movies.  I cannot say that I
thought any of the "Matrix" films particularly appealed to me,
but this future swashbuckler with a hero that is part Edmund
Dantes, part Phantom of the Opera, part Harlan Ellison's
Harlequin (give them a break, Harlan--don't sue), and part Zorro
is a lot of fun.  As with TRIUMPH OF THE WILL, one can admire the
visual imagery of the film while detesting at least part of the
political message.  (People who get their politics from movies
based on comic books deserve what they get.)  But it still may be
fun to spend a couple of hours in this anarchistic fantasy.  If
the government ever gets this bad--and neither Britain's or the
United States's government is anywhere near this bad--there might
be a certain perverse pleasure in taking out one's frustration in
blowing the so-and-sos up.  On one hand one may be sad to see
these great London buildings blown up in a film.  But it must be
remembered that the government represented is very little like
either current government.  (No, don't write me to tell me how
bad the current governments are.)  Nor is it really like the one
presided over by Margaret Thatcher, who was in office when the
original story was published.  And V is less than likeable
himself.  By the end of the story the viewer should realize that
V is as mad and dangerous and evil as anyone he kills.  He just
looks fancier.  And one leaves the theater wondering what is next
for the Britain in the story.  It cannot be very good and is
probably worse than the Britain at the beginning of the film.
Perhaps Britain will go the way of Iraq when its tyrannical
government was removed.  In any case this is a film with a
multitude of political ideas, some of which may well be
offensive.

The script has several bad moments.  At one point V escapes a
hail of bullets with apparently only one or two wounds.  That is
just the wrong number.  If two bullets got through to him, one
wonders why not the rest.  Also unexplained is that V seems to
have unlimited financial resources.  Somewhere he has a source
producing large volumes of materials that would be highly
politically suspect.  It may be part of his mystery who is really
behind him and where he gets his means.  We find out his
background and that does not answer the question.

I don't agree V FOR VENDETTA has the politics right, but it is a
compelling production with more than just violence behind it.  It
has political ideas.  Even that is not so rare, but clearly some
of the ideas are joyful, some are painful, and many are both.  I
rate it a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale or 7/10.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: THE DEVIL AND DANIEL JOHNSTON (film review by Mark
R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: Singer-songwriter-artist Daniel Johnston is observed in
this documentary examining his history of mental problems and his
problems of dealing with his own success.  I viewed this as an
outsider to his subculture and the film offered me little.
Rating: +1 (-4 to +4) or 6/10

Daniel Johnston's art and music is an acquired taste.  I have not
acquired it.  His style of music and his artwork undeniably has
fans and they are the people for whom this film is intended.  I
had never heard of him on seeing the film and I have to say I
cannot judge him because the value of his accomplishments are
lost on me.  People who see this movie having some idea who
Johnston is and what his importance is will have different
attitudes.  Outside of that subculture the viewer may well be led
to assume, like I did, that this is a man who has wrecked his
life and who did not use his talents toward anything that
impresses me as an outsider.  The film covers his life as he
suffers great emotional pain and causes others even more pain.
Jeff Feuerzeig's documentary about Daniel Johnston is in some
ways reminiscent of Terry Zwigoff's CRUMB.  Daniel Johnston is
not really someone it is pleasant to be around.

The film traces Johnston's development as a boy in New
Cumberland, West Virginia, who made humorous amateur movies about
his life and his art and cartooning.  He meets and breaks up with
Laurie whom he considers the love of his life.  She ends up
married to an undertaker, a turn of fate that strongly influenced
his songs.

His style is to write songs inspired by his life's misfortunes
and to hand-draw his label, lettering the song titles and drawing
little cartoons to illustrate.  His most famous is a frog with
long eyestalks.  His musical style is as raw as his cassette
covers.  The film covers chapters in his life when he worked at a
carnival and at a McDonalds, gravitating toward the lowest skill
tasks.

Finally his music gets featured on MTV.  He has attained a sort
of success, but he also falls deeply into mental illness.  The
film covers his honors, the excesses of his illness.  His manager
muses that hr always wondered how Vincent Van Gogh's family could
institutionalize a man of Van Gogh's genius and now the manager
found himself having to do something very similar.  Johnston took
LSD and became obsessed with the Devil and was convinced he is
fighting against betrayal and Satanic influences all around him.
At times he came near to killing people.

He was institutionalized on more than one occasion and record
company officials would have negotiating sessions with him in
mental institutions.  Today his visual art has become as popular
as his music.  Both seem primitive in style.  His music and art
are of selective appeal.  (That is a polite way of saying I did
not know his art, and it does nothing for me.)  I rate this
documentary a +1 on the -4 to +4 scale or 6/10.  It gets the job
done, but fails to ignite for me.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

Our general discussion group chose THINGS FALL APART by Chinua
Achebe (ISBN 0-385-47454-7) for this month's discussion.  I had
intended reading this ever since college--almost forty years ago.
(Well, some books stay on the queue longer than others.)  I can
remember seeing it in the college bookstore in 1968 and thinking
that here was something unlike what we had been reading in school
or seeing in the library.  (The library I frequented was an Air
Force base library that emphasized more bestsellers and genre--
science fiction, mysteries, and so on--than literary fiction.)
Nowadays, of course, with the emphasis on diversity and book
superstores dotting the country, finding literary novels by
African authors is not a big surprise.  (In fact, one reason the
group chose it was that it was a book on the high school summer
reading list, so the library had a lot of copies of it.)

So after forty years, what about the book?  Frankly, I do not
know what the fuss is about.  The main character is described by
critics as being made sympathetic, but I did not find him so.
Critics do seem to agree that Achebe's portrayal of Ibo tribal
society is unsentimental, but I would go further and say that I
found it hard to work up a lot of distress that someone was
trying to end such traditional practices as killing twins at
birth, or beating one's wives.  [How appropriate.  See my
editorial this issue. -mrl]  And the writing is very spare
(someone compared him to Hemingway), which is a very tricky style
to carry off.

Tom Weaver has spent his time interviewing mostly people who had
substantial careers in science fiction, fantasy, or horror (in
such books as "Attack of the Monster Movie Makers", "They Fought
in the Creature Features", "Interview with B Science Fiction and
Horror Moviemakers", and "Science Fiction Stars and Horror
Heroes").  In SCREEN SIRENS SCREAM! (ISBN 0-7864-0701-8), Paul
Parla and Charles P. Mitchell have focused on a much narrower
field--women who have appeared in one or two science fiction
films, often as young girls, and then been for the most part
forgotten as having a connection with that genre.  They do
include a few well-known actresses (such as Faith Domergue), but
who remembers Ramsay Ames, Sandy Descher, Mimi Gibson, or Marilyn
Harris (*).  Many of these actresses have never been interviewed
before, and their stories of being contract players or free-lance
minor actresses provide an interesting balance to stories of
grand careers and stardom.

Note: McFarland used to produce all their books in staid monotone
cloth library bindings.  Lately, they've taken to trying to
appeal to the individual film fan by using illustrated board
covers and re-issuing some of their works in trade paperback.
This book has an eye-catching purple and green cover with a
screaming woman whose face is covered in a regular pattern of
pink dots.  It is supposed to look like Pop Art, but it makes her
look as though she has a case of measles.

(*) Amina Mansouri in THE MUMMY'S GHOST, catatonic girl in THEM!,
Sandy in THE MONSTER THAT CHALLENGED THE WORLD, Maria in
FRANKENSTEIN.  [-ecl]

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

	                                   Mark Leeper
	                                   mleeper@optonline.net


	    Give me six lines written by the most honorable
	    of men, and I will find an excuse in them to
	    hang him.
	                                   -- Cardinal Richelieu