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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 10/24/97 -- Vol. 16, No. 17

       MT Chair/Librarian:
                     Mark Leeper   MT 3E-433  732-957-5619 mleeper@lucent.com
       HO Chair:     John Jetzt    MT 2E-530  732-957-5087 jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian: Nick Sauer    HO 4F-427  732-949-7076 njs@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist:
                     Rob Mitchell  MT 2D-536  732-957-6330 rlmitchell1@lucent.com
       Factotum:     Evelyn Leeper MT 3E-433  732-957-2070 eleeper@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
       201-933-2724 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. We will have a club gettogether to see STARSHIP TROOPERS at  the
       Hazlett  Multiplex on Saturday November 8 and a dinner afterward at
       the local diner to  discuss  the  film.   Details  in  next  week's
       notice.
         [-mrl]

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

       2. URL of the week: http://www.erols.com/vansickl/scifi.htm.   Some
       of  the  funniest  lists  I've  seen  in ages; the "Evil Henchman's
       Guide" is especially recommended..  [-ecl]

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

       3. Stephen Hawking started out  the  PBS  show  "Stephen  Hawking's
       Universe"  by  saying  that  he has sold more books on physics than
       Madonna has sold on sex.  I think that is  because  his  books  are
       more believable.  [-mrl]

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

       4. There are a whole bunch of conspiracy  theories  out  there  and
       there  seem  to  be more each year.  You know what I mean--theories
       that the Mafia and Fidel Castro did not  act  alone  together  when
       they hired Lee Harvey Oswald to kill Kennedy and Jack Ruby to clean
       up; Marilyn Monroe must have had  a  hand  in  it  somewhere.   But
       conspiracy  theories  are addictive because the mind likes to dwell
       on possibilities that cannot be disproved.   It  gives  a  sort  of
       authenticity  to  them  that  there  cannot  be  any  proof  to the
       contrary.  I mean, we could start one right now that it was  really
       John Wayne, in secret conspiracy with the generals at the Pentagon,
       who was determining America's strategy in the Vietnam  war.   Prove
       it isn't true.

       One conspiracy theory is that an evil mastermind, someone  as  wiry
       and  dastardly  and  devious as Moriarity and Fu Manchu in one man,
       has taken  control  of  our  government  and  is  now--curses!--the
       American   President.   For  years  now,  Bill  Clinton's  severest
       critics, under the influence of a certain radio personality whom we
       shall  call  RL, have been trying to find a smoking gun to prove at
       last the evil in man who is--as much  as  anyone  is--running  this
       country.  It has been one dang charge after another in the hopes of
       making Clinton the central figure in a new  set  of  Watergate-like
       hearings.   And you want to talk about a Teflon President?  Clinton
       has either got to be relatively innocent or the  greatest  criminal
       and legal mind this country has ever seen.

       However, while it has been repeatedly denied by  the  White  House,
       the latest batch of recordings proves what we all have feared.  Not
       that there was any criminal wrong-doing on Clinton's part, but that
       the  man  is  incredibly humdrum.  Clinton won the last election in
       large part as a personality issue.  It appeared that Gentleman  Bob
       Dole  was not so much the Man of Steel we wanted in the Presidency,
       but more the Man of Cream of Wheat.  It seemed that  Clinton  could
       tell  a  joke,  and  maybe play a saxophone.  That was about all it
       took to beat Mr. Bland.  But now we have hundreds of hours of  tape
       that  seem  to  prove  that  watching Clinton is less like watching
       paint dry than it is like watching dry paint.

       There is probably a conspiracy, all right, but it seems to  be  one
       to  hide  the  fact  that  Bill  Clinton  is really pretty much Joe
       Average, perhaps not perfect but no worse than  most  of  us.   But
       it's  not  clear  if  it is Clinton's allies or his enemies who are
       conspiring to hide that scary fact.  [-mrl]

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

       5. THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: A never-losing Florida lawyer  (played
                 by  Keanu  Reeves) is brought to New York to be
                 the hired gun for the most prestigious law firm
                 in  New  York.   There  his  mentor (Al Pacino)
                 turns out to be the quintessence of  evil.   As
                 the  new job takes its toll on his marriage and
                 his very  soul,  the  young  lawyer  begins  to
                 suspect  that  there  is  more  to the job than
                 meets the eye.   This  is  glossy,  beautifully
                 staged  horror film with an intricate plot that
                 pays homage to several  classic  horror  films.
                 This  one will not stretch your mind, but there
                 is a lot to see.  Rating: +2 (-4 to +4),  7  (0
                 to  10).   (Anyone  who  has seen a trailer for
                 this film or seen another review probably knows
                 what  this  film is really about.  However, the
                 film itself does not confirm it until  late  in
                 the  story,  so  I will carefully not spoil the
                 premise in this review.)
                 New York Critics: 6  positive,  7  negative,  3
                 mixed

       Kevin Lomax is one terrific lawyer.   He  has  an  uncanny  way  of
       sizing  up  prospective  jury  members  and  knowing  who  will  be
       sympathetic.  Sixty-four cases in Florida and he  has  not  lost  a
       case.   It  does not matter if the defendant is guilty or innocent,
       good guy or scumbag--if Kevin prosecutes  the  defendant  is  found
       guilty;  if  he  defends, the verdict is innocent.  People start to
       notice.  Someone who has noticed is John  Milton,  the  head  of  a
       prestigious  and extremely powerful New York law firm.  Milton is a
       slick and charismatic lawyer.  He is in bed figuratively  with  the
       rich and powerful.  He is in bed literally with sleek and the sexy.
       And his gifts to those he likes  are  nearly  everything  that  are
       really  worth  having.   Impressed with Lomax and his wife Mary Ann
       (Charlize Theron), Milton is anxious to bring Kevin into the  firm,
       to  use his genius, to pay him in money, with a palatial apartment,
       to see Kevin's every sexual fantasy  fulfilled.   Mary  Ann  is  at
       first overjoyed at the success her husband is having and is willing
       to give up some of his time and his intimacy for the  success  that
       is  everything she could not get back in Gainesville.  But a bit at
       a time she discovers that her husband is making too many sacrifices
       of what she shared with him and giving it to the firm.  Kevin never
       worried about being a scrupulous lawyer in the past, but  this  job
       is taking too much of a toll on his soul.  As he gets pulled deeper
       and  deeper  into  defending  the  guilty,  Mary  Ann   is   slowly
       disintegrating  and  Kevin  is  powerless  to stop it.  THE DEVIL'S
       ADVOCATE is a good old- fashioned, well-plotted horror film in  the
       style  of the horror films of the 60s and 70s.  No geysers of blood
       or crazed stalkers.  The first half  hour  could  be  from  a  John
       Grisham  novel.   Then  weird things start happening.  The law firm
       seems to have its hands in evil, not just  figuratively,  but  also
       literally.

       In the past I have not been fond of Keanu Reeves's acting  which  I
       generally  find  wooden.   Here  perhaps  that quality works to his
       advantage, both to contrast to Al Pacino and to present the feeling
       that  there  is  something  mysterious going on in his mind that we
       cannot quite fathom.  And if there is not quite enough going on the
       screen  with  Reeves's  performance,  there  is  more  than  enough
       supplied by Pacino.  Pacino is far more expressive in part  because
       his character can afford to be.  He gives a high-energy performance
       that would steal a scene from a puppy.   There  are,  however,  two
       scenes in the film when he turns the performance up too high and he
       goes into overload mode.  One is  a  pivotal  scene  involving  the
       character  played  by  Jeffrey Jones; the other time is an extended
       scene very near the end of the film.  Both  times  his  performance
       gets  to be just a bit overripe.  Charlize Theron is rather nice as
       the incredible dissolving wife.  Also nice to see is an  uncredited
       part  by  the  always  watchable  Delroy  Lindo.  The acting is all
       brought together by Taylor Hackford, who previously did the  under-
       rated  THE  IDOLMAKER,  as  well  as AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN and
       DOLORES CLAIBORNE.  The set design by Roberta  J. Holinko  is  very
       nice  with  some  really  memorable artwork.  Other effects by Rick
       Baker are perhaps not up to some of his finest, but are still  very
       worth seeing.

       This may not be the most intelligent film of the autumn season, but
       it stands among the best horror films we have seen on the screen in
       the last few years.  I rate it a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       6. SHALL WE DANCE?  (a film review by Mark R. Leeper)

                 Capsule: A Japanese Salaryman  leads  a  double
                 life,  first  learning ballroom dancing then in
                 competition dancing.  The story is simple  with
                 few  unexpected  plot  twists  and while it has
                 some bittersweet moments there is  insufficient
                 material here to sustain a feature film.  For a
                 Japanese audience there may be more  here  than
                 meets  an  American eye.  Rating: low +1 (-4 to
                 +4), 5 (0 to 10)
                 New York Critics: 17 positive,  2  negative,  1
                 mixed

       In the strict rules of Japanese society, public signs of  affection
       are  considered  to  be  in bad taste.  Things that Americans would
       find innocuous, like a husband putting his arm around his wife, are
       considered to be breaches of decency.  And while there are Japanese
       who get involved with ballroom dancing, we learn in this film  that
       it  is considered as tawdry in Japan, as going to strip clubs would
       be in the United States.  Paradoxically, the society that shuns the
       touching  of  a  partner  on the ballroom floor is the same society
       that jams so many people into a subway car  that  literally  nobody
       else  can  be  shoved  through  the  doorway.  But that touching is
       considered non-voluntary.  Ballroom  dancing  has  connotations  of
       rebellion in Japan that we just do not see in our country.

       Shohei Sugiyama (played  by  Koji  Yakusho)  is  a  successful  40-
       something  business  executive  with  a staff of people working for
       him.  He has a wife and daughter and has recently bought a house in
       suburbia.   In  Japanese  society,  this is not just success, it is
       affluence.   Yet  Shohei  is  dissatisfied  with  his  pat   little
       accounting  job  and his simple, programmed life-style.  One night,
       returning home, he  gazes  up  from  his  subway  car  and  sees  a
       beautiful  woman,  Mai  Kishikawa  (Tamiyo Kusakari) gazing out the
       window of a ballroom dance studio.  After seeing her there multiple
       times  he  decides  to  go  up and look in on the dance studio.  He
       enrolls as a student in secret.  As anxious as he is  to  meet  and
       even  dance  with  Mai,  he is unwilling to pay 6000 yen per lesson
       from her.  So, unable to afford private lessons from Mai he enrolls
       in  a  public  class  with  two  other men to be taught by an older
       woman.  There at least he can  see  Mai  and  perhaps  occasionally
       dance  with  her.  Shohei becomes friends with the two other men in
       his class as well as with a Japanese  dancer  with  his  own  fiery
       Latin  style.   Shohei's  wife Masako (Hideko Hara) recognizes that
       her husband is doing something without telling her and it is taking
       a  lot  of his time.  She suspects the worst and determines to find
       out what mischief her husband is up to.

       Masayuki Suo wrote and directed the film that tells its  story  and
       gives  us  a  few  chuckles and a few bittersweet moments along the
       way.  The real problem is that what happens  is  rarely  unexpected
       and  never  surprising.   Indeed  the dramatic last sequence of the
       film is not just cliched, it seems almost inevitable.  Mai's secret
       that  she  contemplates so wistfully at the window each night seems
       far too trivial to warrant so much attention, and as  the  core  of
       the  film  seems  too meager.  This almost might have made a decent
       hour- long story, but there really is not enough  here  to  make  a
       satisfying  feature film.  Perhaps some of the reason is that there
       are very likely cultural differences that make this story  resonate
       better in Japan than it does in the United States.  Certainly there
       is humor in this film that  requires  some  knowledge  of  Japanese
       culture  to appreciate.  In one scene one of the characters takes a
       strip of dried squid and dances it  on  the  top  of  a  restaurant
       table.   Some  of  the  humor  was lost on most of our audience who
       probably did not recognize what it was that was dancing.  Certainly
       the  Japanese would see the touching while dancing as being daring.
       While Tokyo may have rock and roll  dancers  in  the  park--dressed
       like  1950s  bikers from THE WILD ONE- -even they do not touch each
       other when they dance.  It is difficult  to  see  this  film  as  a
       Japanese  would  and that might make all the difference between the
       simple story we see and one that is considerably richer.  Similarly
       it is difficult to judge the quality of the acting.  While we might
       recognize the difference  between  really  bad  acting  and  decent
       acting, it is unlikely we would recognize really great acting if we
       saw it.

       What does come across is an innocuous and enjoyable comedy  with  a
       touch  of  human  drama  and  a bit of melodrama.  The story of the
       dancer with the secret past will remind some of STRICTLY  BALLROOM,
       but  this film is nowhere near as amusing as that film was.  I rate
       this one a low 1 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       7. TOWARD THE END OF TIME by John Updike (Alfred A. Knopf, ISBN  0-
       375-40006-0,  1997,  334pp,  US$25)  (a  book  review  by Evelyn C.
       Leeper):

       If the appeal of science fiction to you is to examine how  societal
       changes  will  affect people, then this book is not for you.  It is
       set in the year 2020, after the  Sino-American  War,  after  things
       fell  apart--although  not  enough to cause any problems with food,
       water, electricity, gasoline, etc.  The level of  change  seems  to
       be,  as  the  first person narrator says, "Once my species had been
       strong enough to put [a space station] up there, and now it is  out
       of our reach."

       But instead of any sort of examination of  how  this  might  affect
       society,  we get, "One advantage of the collapse of civilization is
       that the quality of young women who are becoming  whores  has  gone
       way  up,"  and  we  get  pages  and pages of descriptions of sexual
       activities in the sort of detail that used to be reserved for adult
       magazines.   So  one  doesn't  get  much  of a coherent view of the
       post-apocalyptic future except to learn that some  middle-aged  men
       prefer positions other than the missionary one.  Whoopee.

       Someone is sure to tell me I am reading this the wrong way, or  for
       the  wrong  reasons.   Perhaps,  but  at least I can serve as a bad
       example to others who might hear that John  Updike  has  written  a
       science  fiction  novel.   Unlike  another  well-known  "mainstream
       science fiction novel," Margaret  Atwood's  HANDMAID'S  TALE,  this
       novel  doesn't  examine  the  consequences  of  its  premise in any
       meaningful  way,  so  if  that's  what  you're  looking  for,  look
       elsewhere.  [-ecl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          MT 3E-433 732-957-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com