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

                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 02/13/98 -- Vol. 16, No. 33

       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 irregularly; call 201-652-0534 for details, or check
       http://www.interactive.net/~kat/njsfs.html.  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:  I don't mean to be an alarmist about  the  Y2K
       problem.   I  don't know if I am over-rating it or under-rating it.
       But if you would like to read a really believable scenario  of  the
       future history of the next three years (with particular emphasis on
       electric utilities, which will be a  central  dependency),  take  a
       look at

       http://www.euy2k.com/history.htm

       It is still science fiction but  it  is  very  possible.   In  fact
       projections  of this sort of thing may be one of the most important
       functions of science fiction. [-mrl]

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

       2. There is a new game where I work.  It  seems  we  have  built  a
       crooked  house.   I  don't  know if you have read Robert Heinlein's
       classic story "And He Built a Crooked House."  Heinlein had seen  a
       mathematical  curiosity.  Somewhere he had seen a discussion of how
       we make models  of  higher-dimensional  cubes  to  understand  what
       things look like in those dimensions.  If you take a piece of graph
       paper and draw a cross that has  a  vertical  staff  that  is  four
       squares  and  a  horizontal bar that is three squares wide, you can
       cut it out and fold it into a cube so that each  square  becomes  a
       face.   Actually  there are a lot of different ways you can draw an
       unfolded cube, but I am sure some Christian scientist--literally in
       this case--preferred the cross.

       The cross was a three-dimensional figure unfolded, but it could  be
       laid  flat  in  two-dimensions.  Well, similarly you can take eight
       cubes and make an unfolded four-dimensional cube.  You  stack  four
       of the cubes int a vertical pile four cubes high, then you glue the
       four remaining cubes on each of  the  four  exposed  faces  of  the
       second  cube  from  the  top.  That is an unfolded four-dimensional
       cube.  Some of you may remember seeing a Salvador Dali paining of a
       Christ on this sort of a cross.

       In the Heinlein story somebody builds  a  house  like  an  unfolded
       four-dimensional  cube  and  in  a  disastrous  earthquake it folds
       itself into a four-dimensional cube.  (The name given  to  a  four-
       dimensional  cube  is  a "tesseract.")  In any case the inhabitants
       find themselves in a house where nothing makes sense.  It has  just
       eight  cubical rooms, but here is no way out and the rules of logic
       no longer apply in the ways one expects.  You  basically  could  do
       little  to use logic to plot a path through the house, you just had
       to memorize a sequence of rooms to get around.

       But the point is that you really do not have to invoke  the  fourth
       dimension  to build a building where the rules of logic as you have
       known them break down.  You can do it in  three  dimensions.   What
       Heinlein had forgotten is that the lay-out of most houses is not in
       three dimensions  but  is  a  sequence  of  floors  that  are  two-
       dimensional.   You  have  minor  concessions to the fact you are in
       three dimensions, namely stairs and elevators.  But you can build a
       building  that  breaks those rules.  And we at Middletown have done
       that.  We have built a parking  garage.   Normally  this  would  be
       really  good news because of all the winter days you have to go out
       and scrape ice off of your car.  Of course, this is the  year  that
       the  Woolly  Bear  caterpillars grew little sunglasses and Hawaiian
       shirts.

       In the new garage there  are  not  flat  floors  but  mostly  ramps
       between floors.  And halfway up there is a covered walkway into the
       building.  People want to park near to the covered walkway so  they
       have less walking to do.  So now you have a maze and a destination.
       You even have a reward if you can get to the destination.

       But the normal rules don't apply. If you go around in a circle, you
       are  on  a  different  level.   And  if you are not careful how you
       choose your circle, you could be two levels up and have missed your
       target  point.   So  here  we  have  all these Bell Labs scientists
       trying to figure out the shortest path to get to the walkway.  And,
       of  course,  being  Bell  Labs scientists, many have great theories
       with just a minor flaw.  You see them  wandering  down  the  garage
       stairwell  with these bewildered expressions on their faces and you
       know they are saying to themselves "if  I  had  just  turned  right
       instead of left at the second level ..."

        ... but I am  a  trained  mathematician  and  I  figured  out  the
       shortest path the first ... okay, the second day.  And I am willing
       to tell the secret right in these pages.  But, uh, I think  I  will
       wait  until  I  am moved to the new building.  Even with my secret,
       there are too many people solving the problem and I  have  to  park
       further  and  further  from  the  walkway.  But rest assured I will
       reveal all once I am not turning  readers  into  competitors.   Uh,
       somebody remind me.  [-mrl]

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

       3. THE MOON MAID AND OTHER FANTASTIC  ADVENTURES  by  R.  Garcia  y
       Robertson   (Golden   Gryphon,  ISBN  0-9655901-8-6,  1998,  275pp,
       US$22.95) (a book review by Evelyn C. Leeper):

       Garcia y Robertson writes novelettes rather than short stories,  so
       this collection (the second publication of Golden Gryphon) contains
       eight stories rather than the usual eleven to  fourteen.   Most  of
       his  stories  can  best be described as science fantasy rather than
       science fiction, which does point to a narrower target audience.

       The first story, "Gypsy Trade," used  a  standard  science  fiction
       device,  time  travel,  but overlays it with gypsy curses and tarot
       cards and "Four Kings and an Ace," set in  Nineteenth  Century  San
       Francisco, also uses forms of magic.  On the other hand, "Cast on a
       Distant Shore" is strictly science fiction, with humans on an alien
       world hired by other aliens to collect zoological specimens.

       The remaining stories ("The Moon Maid," "Gone to Glory," "The Wagon
       God's  Wife," "The Other Magpie," and "The Werewolves of Luna") are
       fantasy in varying degrees: prehistoric fantasy,  science  fantasy,
       and so on.

       On  the  plus  side,  Garcia  y  Robertson  has  a  good  grasp  of
       characters.    He   seems   particularly   able   to  write  female
       characters--reading his stories, I kept  thinking  that  they  were
       written by a woman.  (I have no idea precisely what I mean by that.
       But if Robert Silverberg could say that he found Tiptree's  writing
       "ineluctably masculine," I figure I can get away with this.)

       This collection suffers from the fact that  all  its  stories  have
       appeared  in  either  ASIMOV'S  SCIENCE  FICTION or THE MAGAZINE OF
       FANTASY & SCIENCE FICTION.  Readers who like this type of  fiction,
       or  Garcia  y Robertson in particular may well have all the stories
       in magazine form.   On  the  other  hand,  for  readers  who  don't
       subscribe  to  one  or  both of those, but who enjoy this subgenre,
       this would be an excellent collection.  And both  this  and  Golden
       Gryphon's previous volume, TO THINK LIKE A DINOSAUR by John Kessel,
       would make good gifts to your friends who read novels  but  haven't
       discovered the joys of short fiction.  [-ecl]

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

       4. MAKING HISTORY by Stephen Fry (Arrow, ISBN 0-09-946481-0,  1997,
       553pp, A$14.95) (a book review by Evelyn C. Leeper):

       This book will be printed in the United States, but I was  ordering
       something else from Australia anyway, so I figured I wouldn't wait.
       I'm glad I didn't.

       At first it seemed fairly standard stuff--hero  uses  time  machine
       (of  sorts)  to  eliminate  Hitler.   It's  been  done before, with
       varying results, but all pretty much  of  the  "no-World-War-II-or-
       the-Holocaust"  sort,  and  whether  or  not  paradise results, the
       result is usually  arguably  better  than  our  timeline  in  which
       54,000,000 people died as a result of World War II.

       Fry takes a different approach.  His main character, Michael Young,
       meets  Leo  Zuckermann,  whose  father  was  at Auschwitz, and as a
       result Zuckermann wants to eliminate Hitler.  Because the only time
       travel  capability  Zuckermann  can  invent  is the ability to send
       small packages back in time, they come up with a fairly interesting
       (though  very  heavily  telegraphed)  method of accomplishing that.
       After Michael Young sends his parcel back through time, he suddenly
       finds  himself  somewhere  else.   He's  not  in Cambridge, he's in
       Princeton.   And  though  he's  the  same  person,   somehow   he's
       different--or at least the person he is in this world is different.
       And this world is *not* better.  How Fry manages to do all this and
       make this a humorous novel as well is a feat in itself.

       Fry does a good job of showing Young trying to cope in a world with
       which   he  is  unfamiliar.   Unlike  the  all-too-usual  hero  who
       immediately figures everything out, Young makes mistakes.  In fact,
       he  makes  a mistake practically every time he opens his mouth.  He
       does eventually resort to  that  tried-and-true  approach,  finding
       history  books  in the library to explain everything to him, and of
       course to us as a side- effect.

       One of the things that Fry does is to make it clear that he  thinks
       our  world  is  pretty  good.   At  one  point  Young tells another
       character, "I haven't told you about Microsoft and  Rupert  Murdoch
       and  fundamentalists and infant crack addicts with Uzis.  I haven't
       told you about lottery scratchcards and mad cow disease  and  LARRY
       KING  LIVE,"  to  which  the  other character replies, "You told me
       about political correctness and gay quarters in towns and rock  and
       roll  and Clinton Eastwood movies and kids not having to call their
       dads "sir"  but  saying  "motherfucker"  and  "no  way,  dude"  and
       chilling  off in Ecstasy dance clubs.  I want some of that.  I want
       to be cool.  ...  I want to wear weird clothes  and  grow  my  hair
       long  without  being fined by the college or having a fight with my
       parents.  If you want to do that here, you live in a ghetto and the
       police round you up and harassle you.  ...  Give me a chance to use
       these words and live this life."  How you feel about the  book  may
       depend on how you feel about this philosophy.

       MAKING HISTORY is a good blend of  alternate  history  and  British
       humor that I would recommend to fans of either.  [-ecl]

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

       5. GREAT EXPECTATIONS (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: GREAT EXPECTATIONS is an  updating  of
                 the    Charles   Dickens   classic   novel   of
                 vindictiveness and gratitude and of  pride  and
                 shame.  This adaptation is much telescoped down
                 from the original novel, though perhaps that is
                 not   such   a  bad  thing.   Director  Alfonso
                 Cuaron's version offers us a very stylish  look
                 and  a  bravura performance from Anne Bancroft.
                 Rating: 7 (0 to 10), low +2 (-4 to +4)
                 New York Critics: 4  positive,  9  negative,  7
                 mixed

       In  1948  when  David  Lean  made  his  classic  version  of  GREAT
       EXPECTATIONS, films were different.  While one cannot say that even
       he was able to get most of the book on the screen, his  version  of
       GREAT  EXPECTATIONS  was  certainly  more complete than the current
       one.  However,  priorities  are  different  these  days.   The  new
       version  of  the  Dickens  story has more style and less substance.
       Not that the  Lean  version  did  not  have  some  pretty  terrific
       photography,  particularly  in the early, frightening scenes of the
       film.   But  the  new  version  probably  still  wins  for   style.
       Unfortunately,  the  story is also a great deal simplified for this
       updating.

       Finn Bell (Jeremy James Kissner as a boy and Ethan Hawk as  a  man)
       is  ten  years old and living on the Florida Gulf Coast.  His hobby
       is drawing, for which he seems to have a great talent.   He  is  an
       orphan  in the care of his sister and her live-in boy friend (Chris
       Cooper).  Two strange events happen to him in a short space of time
       that  will  greatly affect him in later life.  First Finn saves the
       life of an escaped convict, Lustig (Robert  De  Niro).  And  he  is
       invited  for a weekly visit to a decaying old mansion (the Ca d'Zan
       on Sarasota Bay) of a mad old woman Nora Dinsmoor  (Anne  Bancroft)
       and  her  beautiful  niece  Estella  (Raquel  Beaudene  as a child,
       Gwyneth Paltrow as a woman).  For years the weekly visits continue.
       Then  just  when  a  romance  seems ready to bloom between Finn and
       Estella they find themselves torn  apart  and  Finn  does  not  see
       Estella  for seven more years.  When he does he finds he was almost
       better off not finding her.

       GREAT EXPECTATIONS offers a memorable male and a  memorable  female
       performance,  but  it is a pity they did not come from the two lead
       actors.  Anne  Bancroft  as  the  updated  Miss  Havisham,  perhaps
       exaggerated  by  in  Finn's  memories is enjoyably over-ripe as she
       tries to relive over and over her few  happy  moments.   Robert  De
       Niro is the soul of ferocity as Lustig, certainly when we first see
       him.  He carries over a bit of  his  performance  from  CAPE  FEAR.
       Unfortunately,  Hawke  and  Paltrow  are  inexperienced  and convey
       little emotion.  Undeniably Paltrow is enjoyable to look at on  the
       screen  but  she  has no chemistry with anybody.  Perhaps it can be
       forgiven since her character is intended to be a little  more  than
       mechanical  and  less  emotional.   And  Hawke  too  could use some
       passion in his role as he has some big surprises come his way.  His
       manner  is  almost  as  indifferent  to  Paltrow as hers is to him.
       Direction is by Mexican Alfonso Cuaron who previously did A  LITTLE
       PRINCESS.   Either  he  has  a marvelous visual sense or Production
       Designer Tony Burrough does.  In any case  the  film  looks  better
       than  it  plays with a marvelous use of dark sets or scenes of high
       contrast between dark and light.  And  usually  the  camera  angle.
       And  setting  the  tone  for  the film throughout is the artwork of
       Francesco Clemente.  While he might not have been a touch of  which
       Charles  Dickens  would  have  approved, his main character Pip was
       involved with business and not art, the film is a veritable gallery
       of  Clemente's  style.  Even the end-titles are punctuated with his
       paintings.

       The plot is somewhat stripped down from the Dickens novel, but what
       is left is complex compared to most modern films.  For what is left
       of the plot and the marvelous look I rate GREAT EXPECTATIONS a 7 on
       the 0 to 10 scale and a low +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.

       One side comment: Robert De Niro seems to  be  making  a  habit  of
       sneaking  up  on  people  in  the  most  difficult  ways.   In MARY
       SHELLEY'S FRANKENSTEIN we have Victor Frankenstein standing in  the
       middle  of  a snowy field and somehow De Niro's Creature manages to
       sneak up on him.  In this  film  Finn  walks  down  a  beach,  sees
       something  orange  in  the water, investigates and it De Niro under
       water holding his breath who springs out  to  grab  him.   The  man
       would  have  to  have  cast  iron  lungs.   Now  I suppose there is
       something of an out from the screenwriter in that he says that this
       is  the way Finn remembered events, not the way they happened.  But
       one has to trust what is on the screen as being at  least  possible
       or  there  is nor reason to be interested in Finn's account.  It is
       scenes like these that ruin the internal logic of films.  [-mrl]

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

       6. BOOGIE NIGHTS (a film review by Mark R. Leeper)

                 Capsule: The ups and downs of the  pornographic
                 film  industry in the 70s and early 80s come to
                 the screen as we follow  one  porno  super-star
                 and   his   director.    The   film  is  witty,
                 intelligent, and occasionally a little raunchy,
                 but  always  fun to watch.  This is a film with
                 several eccentric characterizations  and  is  a
                 sort  of HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD for the porno film
                 industry.  Rating: 8 (0 to 10), high +2 (-4  to
                 +4)  There  are  some  light  spoilers  in this
                 review.
                 New York Critics: 14 positive,  3  negative,  5
                 mixed

       There certainly is nothing unusual in a film about a rise  to  fame
       and  a  fall  of  some  entertainment  sensation.   In the field of
       popular music there is THE ROSE,  IDOLMAKER,  THE  COMMITMENTS  and
       THAT   THING   YOU  DO.   Another  rise  and  fall  film  might  be
       KNIGHTRIDERS, a personal favorite.  If you want to stretch a  point
       CITIZEN  KANE is about the same theme.  What is unusual is to see a
       good film set in the world of pornographic films.

       Jack Horner (played by Burt Reynolds) is a super-mellow director of
       pornographic films, but he has a dream.  He no longer wants to make
       just good pornographic films, he wants to make good films that also
       happen  to  be pornographic.  His dream is a continuing series with
       James Bond-like plots framing his  usual  show-everything  explicit
       sex scenes.  He wants his audiences to want to know how things come
       out, not just to see what things come out.  But it is tough  to  be
       experimental  in  a medium with such a high budget.  As Horner puts
       it, "Before you turn around, you've  spent  maybe  twenty,  twenty-
       five,  thirty  thousand  dollars on a movie."  And Horner has a new
       star for his series.  Eddie Adams (Mark Wahlberg) is a bus boy at a
       San Fernando Valley night club.  Eddie's home life is a mess and he
       is looking for an excuse to leave.  Horner sees something in  Eddie
       that could make him a sex-film star.  When things get bad enough at
       home Eddie agrees to make one film for Jack.

       At Jack's insistence he chooses a new name  for  himself  and  Dirk
       Diggler  sounds "sharp" to him.  But this is not just an invitation
       to a one-time job.  It is an  adoption  into  something  between  a
       repertory  company  and  a  family,  a  tightly knit group who make
       Horner's low budget films.  In fact, one of several running gags in
       the  film  is  that  it  is always the same faces showing up in the
       films, only in different parts.  Among the regulars are  Rollergirl
       (Heather  Graham)  who  never  removes her roller-skates, even when
       making love.  In spite of her silly-looking persona she demands  to
       be  taken on her own terms, especially by her lovers.  William Macy
       plays Little Bill whose wife's cheating on him is about  as  subtle
       as a billboard on Broadway.  Perhaps the most normal of the crew is
       Buck Swope (Don Cheadle) who is acting  in  pornography  only  long
       enough  to  earn  enough  to  open a hi-fi store and whose country-
       western persona seems out of place for an Afro- American.   If  the
       company  is  a  family,  the father is Horner and it has porno star
       Amber Waves (Julianne Moore) as the nurturing mother.  Then funding
       the  who operation is The Colonel (Robert Ridgely) who produces and
       likes what he produces.  The general format of the film is sort  of
       a  rise  and  fall  as Horner pulls his dream all together, but has
       problems keeping it all together in the face of monstrous egos, the
       changing  market, and the easy availability of cocaine.  The film's
       longest segment takes place in 1977, then has shorter  and  shorter
       pieces showing how the group fares as the years go by.

       The best performance is certainly the  super-mellow  Burt  Reynolds
       who  is  trying  hard to hold on to what pretensions his group has.
       Julianne Moore is certainly a scene stealer, sustaining  the  group
       in  a  motherly  way,  but  unable  to get custody of her own child
       because of her business.  Bill Macy, who  has  become  familiar  in
       mostly  unsavory  roles  manages to generate real pathos in what is
       basically a comic situation-a wife who  cares  so  little  for  her
       husband  that she is willing to have sex on a driveway with a crowd
       standing around and watching.

       BOOGIE NIGHTS creates a very plausible look  at  a  moment  in  the
       history  of  the pornographic film when it looked like it might get
       some respectability from the mainstream.  I give it an 8 on  the  0
       to 10 scale and a high +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

            You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and
            an airline - it helps if you have some kind of a
            football team, or some nuclear weapons, but at the very
            least you need a beer.
                                       -- Frank Zappa (1940 - Dec 4, 1993)