@@@@@ @   @ @@@@@    @     @ @@@@@@@   @       @  @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@
         @   @   @ @        @ @ @ @    @       @     @   @   @   @   @  @
         @   @@@@@ @@@@     @  @  @    @        @   @    @   @   @   @   @
         @   @   @ @        @     @    @         @ @     @   @   @   @  @
         @   @   @ @@@@@    @     @    @          @      @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@

                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 10/31/97 -- Vol. 16, No. 18

       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.  URL  of  the   week:   http://www.magg.net/~dkeyes/!dkeyes.htm.
       Daniel Keyes (FLOWERS FOR ALGERNON) home page.  [-psrc]

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

       2. I suppose this subject is going to be just slightly unsavory.  I
       am  going  to  say  a little bit about sex.  But I will try to keep
       this on a higher plane and talk not so much about sex itself as the
       scientific  study  of  sex.  In fact, there are a lot of scientists
       out studying sex these days.  It is a lot  like  tropical  islands.
       Garrison  Keillor points out that scientifically we know a lot more
       about tropical islands than about the Arctic.  The reason  is  that
       it  is  really easy to find scientists who are willing to go and do
       research on warm, inviting tropical islands.  Not a  whole  lot  of
       scientists  think  that  it  would be a really great idea to go and
       study the Arctic tundra.  As a  result  tropical  islands  are  far
       better  understood.   Perhaps  the  same sort of thing is true with
       people studying sex.

       The topic itself is somehow fascinating and people really  want  to
       study it.  What got me thinking about this was a listing in SCIENCE
       NEWS about a new book on the subject of sex  in  human  and  animal
       behavior.   The  book  is  WHY  IS SEX FUN?: THE EVOLUTION OF HUMAN
       SEXUALITY by Jared Diamond, $20.

       Now, the description of this book starts out, "Humans are virtually
       unique  in  their  habit  of  engaging  in  sexual  intercourse for
       pleasure, not just procreation."  Right  there  I  was  saved  from
       reading  this  book  and  saved  $20.  The author clearly wanted to
       study the subject  without  having  much  understanding  before  or
       gaining much along the way.

       Mr. Jared Diamond is clearly no gem of a  thinker.   What  does  he
       think, there is some sort of a conversation like:

       Mrs. Timber Wolf: Uh, Lobo, Let's fool around a little.  I think we
       ought to start thinking about having pups.

       Mr. Timber Wolf: Whoa!  What, are you kidding?  Don't you think  we
       are a little young to be talking about cubs?

       Mrs. Timber Wolf: Not at all.  The time is just about right.

       Mr. Timber Wolf: How do you figure that?  We are still pretty  much
       puppies ourselves.

       Mrs. Timber Wolf: We are not.  The Fangs have  pups  and  White  is
       younger than you are.

       Mr. Timber Wolf: Look, I really really think that it is  too  soon.
       I was planning to go out and bay at the moon with the guys tonight.

       Mrs. Timber Wolf: Lobo, we got to start soon.

       Mr. Timber Wolf: What do you mean?  I'm still a  growing  wolf.   I
       need my food.  I don't want to start coughing it up for cubs.

       Mrs. Timber Wolf: Lobo, my biological clock is ticking.   Now  come
       on.  I want to have a litter of pups in the spring.

       Mr. Timber Wolf: So soon?

       Mrs. Timber Wolf: Soon?  Spring's still two dog years away!  That's
       plenty of time to howl.

       Well, you get the idea.  This is not what happens in nature.   This
       is not how an animal thinks about sex.  There is no evidence that a
       timber wolf even knows that there is a connection between  sex  and
       puppies.   It  is  far  more  likely  that  Lobo feels attracted to
       Caprice and things just take their course.  Animals are thinking of
       the  pleasure  when they engage in sex.  It is just a quick roll in
       the hay (or dead bird or whatever).  Mr. Diamond would have to go a
       long  way  to  prove  to me that any animal but humans uses sex for
       procreation  or  even  associates  the  two.   But  he  makes  this
       statement  and  builds  a  whole  book on it and there is nobody to
       point out it is starting flawed.  I tell you there is a lot of  bad
       science out there.  [-mrl]

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

       3. GATTACA (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: GATTACA is a cold film that frequently
                 stretches  credibility,  but still it stands as
                 one of the  more  intelligent  science  fiction
                 films  of the 90s.  Anatomy truly is destiny in
                 a world where almost everything about  you  can
                 be  determined  quickly from a DNA sample.  One
                 man with a dream of traveling in space  carries
                 out  a long identity deception in a world where
                 it should be impossible, by using another man's
                 DNA  to fool all the detectors.  This is also a
                 philosophical  detective  story  a  well  as  a
                 science  fiction  film that looks deeply at the
                 implications of  too  much  genetic  knowledge.
                 Rating: +2 (-4 to +4), 8 (0 to 10)

       While some pairs  of  identical  twins  lead  surprisingly  similar
       lives,  frequently  they  do not and frequently they show different
       interests  and  potential.   So  there  are  limitations   on   the
       information   about  the  adult  that  can  be  augured  by  a  DNA
       examination.  That makes it seem to be unlikely that we would  ever
       get  to the world as it is shown in GATTACA where everything anyone
       wants to know about you is encoded into your DNA.  However, GATTACA
       assumes  that  the  world has decided that DNA is the most reliable
       way of judging a person in spite of counter-examples  like  Vincent
       (played  by Ethan Hawke) the main character of this story.  Vincent
       has been delegated to the labor class based on his DNA.   He  looks
       wistfully  at the rockets blasting off from the Gattaca Corporation
       and dreams of going off into space.  He is  highly  motivated,  but
       nobody  notices because his DNA says that he just does not have the
       potential to be much more than a floor sweeper, permanently a  part
       of  the under-class.  One wonders how so inaccurate a test could be
       accepted without question by a society, particularly after  age  of
       civil rights and civil liberties advances.

       Vincent knows he does not have a chance  of  being  chosen  by  the
       Gattaca  Corporation  for  one  of  their  probes into space, so he
       decides to literally reinvent himself.  There is a criminal element
       who are willing to match him up with a human with a much better DNA
       structure who can supply  him  with  hairs,  urine  samples,  blood
       samples  and  any other kind of sample so that all the samples that
       Gattaca takes from him will  really  be  from  Jerome  (Jude  Law).
       Jerome  agrees  to live with Vincent, providing him with sufficient
       biological specimens to give to the  company  and  letting  Vincent
       take  on  Jerome's name.  This is a tricky process involving things
       like false finger tips filled  with  Jerome's  blood  form  the  ID
       machine  that  takes  a sample.  We see how Vincent is occasionally
       able to substitute Jerome's specimens for his own, but it is  never
       really  convincing  that he could do that whenever the need arises.
       Vincent romances a fellow employee Irene Cassini (Uma Thurman)  who
       gets pulled into this web of deception.

       The story moves at a languorous pace  showing  how  the  world  has
       changed since the conversion to the DNA standard.  Andrew M. Niccol
       who wrote and directed has given us a "not too distant future" that
       is  not entirely convincing, but is still worth seeing.  Loose ends
       abound, but that may be part of the point.   For  example,  Vincent
       has  taken  over for Jerome and is telling the world that he is the
       same person, but Jerome has a "toffee-nosed" British accent and  so
       presumably  comes  from  an  environment that would produce such an
       accent.  Vincent does not have a British accent at all.  Yet nobody
       seems to even care to compare Vincent to his claimed background. It
       is hard to place how far this world is in the  future.   Women  and
       men  at  Gattaca  dress in almost identical uniforms and women wear
       their hair in almost masculine styles.  Cars make the whining sound
       of turbines, but still look a lot like the cars of today.

       The photography by Slawomir Idziak is just  a  bit  showy,  bathing
       some  scenes  in  yellow  or blue light.  Particularly in the first
       half of the film it is often his camerawork that creates  the  mood
       in  scenes  devoid  of any music.  It gives the world a repressive,
       sterile, dry feel.  Michael Nyman's score when it does kick  in  is
       repetitive almost to the point of being minimalist.

       GATTACA has a few places where it could have had the details better
       developed,  but it is a complex story, perhaps of the complexity of
       a novel.  It is told without the too  common  problems  of  science
       fiction  of too much special effects replacing careful thought.  If
       anything, GATTACA is  a  film  that  substitutes  intelligence  for
       explosions.  This is about people caught up in a sort of cautionary
       dystopic world.  It may not be a likely world,  but  it  has  well-
       developed  character in this world.  Overall I would rate GATTACA a
       +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       4. FAIRYTALE: A TRUE STORY (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: This fanciful retelling of a  historic
                 incident  is  too  slow and dour and offers too
                 little for the eye of a younger child and it is
                 a bit patronizing for adults.  Still, its study
                 of why people believe what they  do  will  play
                 better  on  an adult audience than a children's
                 matinee.  Two school-girls create  a  sensation
                 by  apparently  photographing  fairies in their
                 garden.  The film does a nice job  of  creating
                 little people with dragonfly wings to come down
                 on the side of claiming that the  fairies  were
                 real.  Rating: +1 (-4 to +4), 6 (0 to 10)

       When Richard Adams wrote WATERSHIP DOWN it was not really clear who
       his  audience  would be.  The story seemed too violent for children
       and a tale of rabbits looking for a safe  warren  seemed  a  little
       puerile  for  adults.   It was a difficult task for Adams to get it
       published, but once it was it  remained  a  bestseller  for  years.
       That  book  notwithstanding, it is a good idea to know when you are
       telling a story whom you expect to be your audience.  FAIRYTALE:  A
       TRUE  STORY  is a film that was made without too much thought as to
       who its audience would  be.   As  a  result  it  is  too  slow  and
       deliberate  to  be  a children's film and it is a bit too logically
       inconsistent to work well for adults.  The story tells of  how  two
       young  girls  during  World  War I produced what they claimed to be
       authentic photographs of fairies in an English country garden.   At
       the  time,  the story caused quite a sensation.  Notables including
       Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Harry Houdini  investigated  the  claims
       and   Doyle  became  convinced.   FAIRYTALE:  A  TRUE  STORY  is  a
       fictionalized account of what happened told from the point of  view
       that  the  fairies were real.  To claim this to be a true story and
       to have special effects fairies flitting  around  seems  less  than
       strictly  honest,  though  I  suppose the filmmakers are taking the
       viewpoint of believers.

       It is a miserable time in 1917 England, with men returning from the
       war  having  been  shot  to  pieces in battle.  Nine-year old South
       African Frances Griffiths  (played  by  Elizabeth  Earl)  lost  her
       father in the war and comes to England to stay with her twelve-year
       old cousin Elsie Wright (Florence Hoath).  [Historical  note:   the
       actual  children's ages were ten and sixteen respectively according
       to one source.  However, the "true" story plays better if they  are
       younger.]   Elsie is also mourning a recent loss, that of her older
       brother.  The two girls, shown here as almost being  too  storybook
       perfect,  build a bond of friendship.  Then one day when playing in
       the garden, Frances  sees  a  fairy.   The  fairies  will  not  let
       themselves  be  seen  by adults, but Frances and Elsie determine to
       prove the presence of the fairies  by  borrowing  Elsie's  father's
       camera  and  taking  a  picture.   That  is  just  what they do and
       resulting photographs cause a sensation.  Peter O'Toole  plays  Sir
       Arthur  Conan Doyle, the creator of the hard-nosed skeptic Sherlock
       Holmes, who nevertheless is ready  to  accept  the  photographs  as
       real.   He  calls  in master illusionist and debunker Harry Houdini
       (played very nicely by Harvey Keitel).

       If  one  looks  for  it  there  is  some  material  that  is  worth
       considering  in  the film.  The story offers us a variety of people
       in varying degrees of belief or skepticism and  we  can  see  their
       motivations for their degree of belief.  Generally it is the people
       who have been most injured by reality who are willing to turn  from
       that  reality and embrace the fanciful.  Faith also works better on
       children than  adults  in  the  film.   And  the  film  seems  very
       accepting  of  skepticism.  The most sympathetic adult character is
       Keitel's Harry Houdini.  O'Toole, on the other hand, is  not  well-
       cast  as  Doyle.   Physically  he  is  wrong  to play the short and
       plumpish writer.  His  character  seems  too  anxious  to  convince
       others  to believe in the supernatural, at one point even saying to
       be skeptical is to show disrespect to him.

       But where the film is unsettling is in the question of whether  the
       photographs  are  genuine  or  not.   Certainly  the film shows you
       fairies, so it really says that they are real.  But the photos  are
       the  historic originals or very good facsimiles and while we do not
       get much chance to look at them on the wide screen,  the  originals
       clearly  are  fakes.   (Sorry,  Sir Arthur.)  It does not take much
       examination of  the  original  photographs  to  conclude  that  the
       fairies shown are drawn by hand rather than photographed from life.
       The film suggests that may be the case also, but  never  ties  that
       end  up.   Of  course, there are many ends not tied up in this film
       and left for the viewer to decide.  The level  of  storytelling  is
       confusing  and  will  be  more so for children.  The telling of the
       story  is  a  little  muddled  and  not  helped  by  thick  accents
       occasionally  obscuring  the  dialog.   Often  parallel  action  is
       inter-cut and one time they add a chess game  that  seems  to  have
       nothing  to  do  with  the rest of the story, but they inter-cut it
       with two pieces of inter-cut action to create a third one.

       Some  script  problems  and  editing  problems  damage  this  well-
       photographed  and  acted  story of the Cottingly Fairies.  It could
       have been a lot better and rates a +1 on the -4 to  +4  scale.   [-
       mrl]

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

            It makes no difference who you vote for--the two
            parties are really one party representing 4% of
            the people.
                                          -- Gore Vidal