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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 05/16/97 -- Vol. 15, No. 46

       MT Chair/Librarian:
                     Mark Leeper   MT 3E-433  908-957-5619 mleeper@lucent.com
       HO Chair:     John Jetzt    MT 2E-530  908-957-5087 jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian: Nick Sauer    HO 4F-427  908-949-7076 njs@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist:
                     Rob Mitchell  MT 2D-536  908-957-6330 rlmitchell1@lucent.com
       Factotum:     Evelyn Leeper MT 3E-433  908-957-2070 eleeper@lucent.com
       Backissues at http://www.geocities.com/~ecl.
       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
       201-933-2724 for details.  The New Jersey Science Fiction Society
       meets on the third Saturday of every month in Belleville; call
       201-432-5965 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.             URL             of             the             week:
       http://www.dnaco.net/~jimpen/darwin/darwin.html.    The   *correct*
       Darwin Awards Home Page.  Note that the "Lawn Chair Pilot" was  not
       a  Darwin  winner,  and  the JATO/Impala story was an urban legend.
       [-ecl]

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

       2. As of this writing the match between Garry  Kasparov,  the  best
       chess  player in the world and Big Blue, the chess-playing computer
       from IBM, has just finished its six games.  Each player had  one  a
       game  and  then  there were three draws.  Going into the sixth game
       Kasparov was said to be tense.  That says  something  right  there.
       It  is  a  bad  sign  for a chess player to go into a game in a bad
       mental state.  Big Blue on the other hand went into the sixth  game
       with complete abandon, what the French call "sang froid. "  For all
       Big Blue cared, it was just another day.  Big Blue was just playing
       for  the  electrical current he needed.  There certainly were a lot
       of people who were hoping Kasparov would win  the  tournament.   He
       was sort of the protoplasmic equivalent of "the Great White Hope."

       In a way, Kasparov was--the phrase that comes to mind is  from  the
       famous   WAR   OF   THE   WORLDS   broadcast--"consecrated  to  the
       preservation of human supremacy on this earth."  I think there were
       few  of  us  who  were actually rooting for the computer.  I know I
       was, however.  I dont have  my  pride  all  wrapped  around  having
       humans  remain  superior  to  machines.   In a lot of physical ways
       machines have been superior to humans for a long time,  and  nobody
       resents  a  bulldozer.   I  would  like  to see machines surpass us
       intellectually also.  I would like to see  a  computer  program  be
       better  than  the best doctor in the world.  Because then you could
       make multiple copies of a doctor better than the best.   Of  course
       that would be risky in some ways also.  There might be fewer people
       trying to become doctors and  with  machines  doing  medicine,  the
       field  might  stagnate.   But  I  would  like to see the capability
       there.  The thing is that computers are natural slaves of humanity.
       It  would  be really stupid of us to start giving them rights.  But
       the more intelligent the slave, the better, as  long  as  computers
       have to will to rebel.

       What happened with the sixth and final game was fairly interesting.
       Kasparov  lost.   The  way these things are scored, that means that
       Kasparov won 2.5 games out of 6, Big Blue won 3.5 out  of  6.   But
       then  Kasparov  said that this last game meant nothing and that Big
       Blue cheated.  Now this may be the most public chess match ever  to
       feature  an  accusation of cheating.  Cheating is possible in poker
       where there is a strong element of luck in the shuffle of the deck.
       It  is  much harder to cheat in chess with a lot of people watching
       since what is on the board  is  really  all  there  is.   What  was
       Kasparov  thinking--that  Big  Blue  said,  "when he isn't looking,
       steal his rook"?  Did he think that the IBM  people  brought  in  a
       ringer,  THE  CHESS HUSTLER FROM ANOTHER WORLD?  Well, no, actually
       what he said was that Big Blue changed its strategy  mid-game.   As
       if Kasparov had never changed his strategy in the middle of a chess
       game.  Somehow I wonder how much  sympathy  he  expects--being  the
       best  human  chess player in the world the IBM team could not bring
       in somebody better.  To  complain  "It  was  an  ambush;  Big  Blue
       changed  its  strategy"  will  probably  not  get  a  whole  lot of
       sympathy.  The people running Big Blue for  some  reason  dignified
       this  complaint with a vehement denial.  Since the accusation is at
       worst that with a small human assist a computer  can  be  the  best
       chess  player  in  the  world.  More likely the computer can be the
       best all on its lonesome.

       But Kasparov's complaints notwithstanding it would appear that  the
       greatest  chess  player  in  the  world  is  one  made of metal and
       silicon.  This capability, while a test of intelligence is not  the
       same  thing  as  the  Turing  Test.   That  is  the classic test of
       computer intelligence, the ability to carry on a human conversation
       and  not be distinguishable from a human.  (I think an intermediate
       test should be can a computer bark like a dog  well  enough  to  be
       able  to  fool  a dog into thinking it is of the same species.)  On
       first consideration the Turing Test is certainly a  more  difficult
       task than playing chess for a computer.  I mean chess is a somewhat
       limited game, always with a very small set of possible next  moves.
       Conversations  on  the  other hand can go in a very large number of
       directions.  It certainly  would  be  a  lot  tougher  to  train  a
       computer  for  casual  conversation.   On the other hand it must be
       more than 98% of humanity that is capable of chit-chat.   At  least
       in  theory  there  are no humans capable of doing what Big Blue has
       done--beating the world chess champion.  [-mrl]

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

       3. THE FIFTH ELEMENT (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: Luc Besson's  manic  sci-fi  adventure
                 will  likely  accrue  a following, but its fans
                 will not include me.  The film  has  great  art
                 direction  but  a farce of a plot that devolves
                 into a lot of familiar elements rather  than  a
                 few  new  ones.   Besson  has  a good eye for a
                 scene but a very forced sense of humor.   There
                 were  a  lot  of good people who worked on this
                 film and it is a pity their efforts came to  so
                 little.  Rating: low 0 (-4 to +4)
                 New York Critics:  3 positive,  9  negative,  7
                 mixed

       I wonder if this is a postmodern science fiction movie?  If so I am
       willing  to  go  back to the Modern and start over from there.  THE
       FIFTH ELEMENT is what you would get if you  combined  a  plot  from
       HEAVY  METAL  comic  magazine, the pacing of a Japanese anime film,
       and Terry Gilliam visualizations.  It is a film that will  probably
       have a cult following while others will find it, as my wife put it,
       appallingly bad.   France  is  known  for  modest  art  films,  and
       director  Luc  Besson  is French, but he is a renegade with a style
       generally out of empty Hollywood action films.  His previous  films
       include  LA  FEMME NIKITA and LEON (U.S.  title: THE PROFESSIONAL).
       Here he has made a film with perhaps the best art  direction  since
       BLADERUNNER  and  uses  it  to  tell a dim-witted pop-sci-fi story.
       Besson, who also co-authored the screenplay, realized that  a  good
       plot  might  be  hard  to  follow  for some.  He simulates the same
       effect by having a bad plot that just has a lot  of  stupid  things
       happening very, very fast.

       The Ultimate Evil comes visiting our solar system every 5000  years
       in  the  form  of  a  huge glowing sphere that for some unexplained
       reason is trying to destroy the Earth.  I guess that is  just  what
       huge  glowing spheres do.  With the help of some strange aliens and
       with four mystic stones we Earth people have been able to fend  off
       the  evil in the past.  In 1914 the friendly aliens took the stones
       away for safekeeping.  Previously they had been guarded by  a  long
       line  of  priests.   The  priests  still  know what do to about the
       coming evil, but no longer have the stones  they  need.   Our  main
       story  is  set  early  in the 23rd Century.  The Evil is returning.
       There are forces of Good trying to stop the end of  the  world  and
       forces  of Evil trying to steal the stones.  The leader of the evil
       forces is an industrialist named Zorg, played by Gary Oldman.  Just
       what  Zorg  hopes to gain by letting his planet be destroyed, if it
       is his planet, is left as a loose end.   I  guess  stealing  mystic
       symbols  is  just  what  evil  industrialists  do.  One of the good
       aliens is killed and cloned, but in  cloned  form  seems  to  be  a
       beautiful  woman,  Milla  Jovovich as Le-Eluu.  She is terrified of
       the humans who have cloned her and she takes  a  swan  dive  off  a
       skyscraper  (all  buildings  seem  to  be  skyscrapers  in the 23rd
       Century) and  lands  in  the  floating  taxicab  of  Korben  (Bruce
       Willis).   This  pulls Korben into the action and starts him on the
       quest for the four elemental stones.

       Bruce Willis is in the lead and--as he seems to have wanted to show
       people  with  IN  COUNTRY--he can act.  He just chooses not to push
       himself much beyond the limited roles  he  has  been  playing.   Of
       somewhat  more interest is Milla Jovovich.  Though much of the film
       she must speak a nonsense language--actually it sounds a  lot  like
       Italian--and  makes  it  sound very natural.  This is not generally
       considered an important acting skill, but here it was what was what
       was  required and she does a very credible job.  Gary Oldman at one
       time seemed to be the Robert Duvall of his generation.  He would do
       well  to  stay  away from Luc Besson films since this is the second
       film in which Besson has been able to coax  from  Oldman  his  very
       worst  and  most exaggerated performances.  His performance here is
       at best just not  notable,  and  that  is  really  unusual  for  an
       otherwise  very  good  actor.   Ian Holm plays a priest of the line
       entrusted with alien secrets.  Like  Oldman,  he  has  done  better
       acting jobs and perhaps their efforts are exaggerated intentionally
       by Besson so nobody misses the point that this film is not intended
       to be taken entirely seriously.

       This film had the budget, the art direction, the  special  effects,
       and  the cast to make a much better film.  One has the feeling that
       Besson is really talking down to his audiences and laughing up  his
       sleeve.   There  are  moments  in this film that show what it could
       have been, but unfortunately it was no more than it was.  This is a
       film that might be better to watch with the sound off.  I rate it a
       low 0 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          MT 3E-433 908-957-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com

            The chief obstacle to the progress of
            the human race is the human race.