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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 12/11/98 -- Vol. 17, No. 24

       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 2E-537  732-957-6330 robmitchell@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
       201-447-3652 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:   http://www.lewiscarroll.org/carroll.html.
       Lewis Carroll home page.  (No, he isn't personally maintaining it!)
       In celebration of the centenary of his death.  [-ecl]

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

       2. Did you know that CNN Headline News's reporter  at  the  Kennedy
       Space  Center  (and  space editor) is named Miles O'Brien?  Really!
       [-ecl]

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

       3. I had a very interesting dream last night.  I think it  told  me
       something  about  the  nature  of  how  the  senses work in dreams.
       Normally anything that happens in a dream is bizarre and cannot  be
       relied  upon  for  telling you anything about reality.  But that is
       because people are looking at the content of the  dream.   That  is
       not  exactly  what  happened  to me.  What happened was frustrating
       enough that it woke me up.  Now let me tell you about  it.   It  is
       sort of the brain's equivalent of a minor operating system error.

       I don't remember what I was doing in the dream, but I was  charging
       something  over  a  telephone.   And of course what I had to do was
       read off my credit card number over the telephone.   But  I  had  a
       problem.   I would read these groups of digits and then go back and
       double check them.  Well the problem was that I  really  could  not
       double check them.  I could remember what was said and I could look
       at the card, and they were not  the  same.   And  why  not?   Well,
       because  I  suspect  the  numbers  I was reading off did stay in my
       aural memory, I cannot be sure even  that  was  correct,  though  I
       think  that it was.  But as my eye drifted over the credit card, my
       visual center was creating what it needed to create as  I  saw  it.
       But  it  was  not the numbers it had put in that position the first
       time.  The frustration that  I  could  not  read  the  numbers  off
       consistently  woke  me  up.   In computer terms I essentially had a
       dream that terminated due to an  operating  system  error.   I  was
       getting  a  mismatching between a visual memory that was not better
       than it had to be and an aural memory that was somewhat better.   I
       just happened to have a dream that would compare the two.

       Now, what does this really tell us about dreams?   Well...  even  a
       dream  is  a complex production.  You have a lot of random sparking
       of neurons and your mind working to create  order  from  them.   At
       least  that is one model for dreams.  And it seems likely that your
       aural memory functions much like it would in  a  wake  state.   And
       while  this is happening the visual centers put up wallpaper so you
       don't end up looking at the backs of your eyelids.  They arrange it
       so that in whatever direction you look, they have a freshly created
       visual image.  And it is always freshly created.  That is  what  my
       dream  seems to indicate.  In my dream I could read the numbers off
       the card, look away, and look back.  But when  I  looked  back  the
       numbers  were  not  pulled  from memory, they were freshly painted.
       But not with the numbers that were originally in  those  positions.
       Ordinarily  as  long as I had visual continuity around the edges of
       the mental picture, that is enough so that my mind does  not  catch
       an  inconsistency.   There is nothing particularly jarring if there
       are subtle changes in the scene the second time the dreamer sees it
       in  most  dreams.   But  in this dream the soundtrack recorded what
       numbers I was seeing and it was different  values  from  subsequent
       viewings.   I  just had a particular dream that allowed me to match
       one form of memory against the other.

       At least that is my interpretation.

       The problem with dreams is  you  never  really  are  sure  of  your
       conclusions.   I mean perhaps I really did have an operating system
       error that terminated a dream.  But perhaps I just  dreamed  I  had
       problems reading some numbers off my credit card.  [-mrl]

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

       4. GODS AND MONSTERS (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule:  A  gardener  comes  to  have  a  deep
                 relationship with James Whale, the gay director
                 of the first two Karloff Frankenstein films and
                 THE  INVISIBLE  MAN.   Through  Whale's  memory
                 flashbacks we come to understand him,  and  the
                 internal  storms  that came to inspire his best
                 films.  The film has a great performance by Ian
                 McKellan  and  a  decent one by Brendan Fraser.
                 Rating: 8 (0 to 10), low +3 (-4 to +4)
                 New York Critics: 18 positive,  0  negative,  1
                 mixed

       One of the finest directors of the early sound era was James  Whale
       whose  best-remembered  credits  include FRANKENSTEIN, THE OLD DARK
       HOUSE, THE INVISIBLE MAN, THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN, and  SHOWBOAT.
       At the same time he was one of the few Hollywood directors who were
       openly gay.  In GODS AND MONSTERS we get a glimpse  of  the  latter
       days  of James Whale in this adaptation of Christopher Bram's novel
       FATHER OF FRANKENSTEIN.

       Some time  around  1955  Clayton  Boone  (Brendan  Fraser)  is  the
       gardener  at a modest home near Hollywood.  In the house an elderly
       man (Ian  McKellan)  lives  nearly  alone  with  only  his  devoted
       housekeeper  for company.  The reclusive owner, an artist, wants to
       meet Boone, and when he does he wants to sketch Boone.  Boone  soon
       finds  out  this  is James Whale, a famous director.  He also finds
       out the  man  is  gay.   We  see  the  relationship  that  develops
       alternatively from both Boone and Whale's points of view.  McKellan
       gives a great performance as a man whose happy  moments  and  whose
       terrible  experiences are intertwined.  He struggles desperately to
       recreate the joyful moments, but for the most part he is successful
       only at recreating for himself the terrible ones.  With a deft hand
       writer and director William  Condon  theorizes  on  the  connection
       between  Whale's  World  War  I  experiences  and the themes in his
       horror films, especially those of THE BRIDE  OF  FRANKENSTEIN.   In
       some  ways  the  film is quite insightful.  We see that just as the
       trench soldier had to augment his  body  with  non-human  equipment
       like  gas  masks in order to escape death, the Frankenstein Monster
       is brought back from the dead only by becoming a mixture  of  human
       and  non-human  electrical parts.  Just as the film's Dr. Pretorius
       entraps Frankenstein into diabolical experiments,  Whale  tries  to
       entrap the straight Boone into a sexual relationship playing little
       cat and mouse games.

       Whale is surprisingly unhappy with the adulation  that  his  horror
       films  receive.   We see him interviewed by a rather gauche fan who
       has no interest in any but Whale's horror  films.   Whale  impishly
       invents a game that could be called "strip interview" to punish his
       unwelcome guest.  Whale laments that even among his horror films he
       prefers his INVISIBLE MAN, but people are drawn to FRANKENSTEIN and
       THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN, the films that really  made  a  star  of
       Karloff,  whom  Whale deems the "dullest man imaginable."  We see a
       major part of Whale's  whole  career  in  flashes  of  his  memory.
       Included  are  the details of a love affair with another soldier in
       World War I, "The Great War."  Condon does less to flesh out  Boone
       who  drifts  through  life,  recovering  from his relationship with
       alcoholic parents.

       Ian McKellan gives one of the most enjoyable  performances  of  the
       year  as  James  Whale.   So seamlessly does McKellan integrate the
       complex aspects of Whale's  life--his  homosexuality,  his  macabre
       sense  of  humor, his horror films, his graphic arts--that McKellan
       can almost be accused of over-simplifying the man  and  making  him
       too  comprehensible.   Meanwhile  the  character of Boone is left a
       little neglected in this study of Whale.  Also  somewhat  neglected
       is  the  enigmatically protective housekeeper Hanna, played by Lynn
       Redgrave.

       Condon does a great job of making his vision of a waning career  in
       1950s  Hollywood seem authentic.  Condon begins the film playing on
       audience expectations.  We see what appear to be  the  thick  heavy
       shoes  of  the Frankenstein monster as the owner puts them on, only
       to discover that they are simply the work  shoes  of  the  gardener
       Boone.   And  in  some  ways  the  film draws parallels between the
       guileless Boone and the innocent artificial human.   Also,  whether
       or  not  they  are  intentional  there are strong plot parallels to
       SUNSET BLVD.

       GODS AND MONSTERS is a most enjoyable portrait of  a  film  pioneer
       and of Hollywood in the 1950s.  I rate it an 8 on the 0 to 10 scale
       and a low +3 on the -4 to +4 scale.

       While GODS AND MONSTERS is better in this regard than was  ED  WOOD
       JR.,  not  all  the  historic  details  presented  are  necessarily
       accurate.  This fictionalized Whale takes credit for the design  of
       the  characteristic  look  of  the  Universal Frankenstein monster.
       Most film historians have said  the  person  who  gets  the  credit
       really should be Jack Pierce, the makeup artist who created most of
       the classic monsters of the 1930s.  Whale consulted and contributed
       ideas,  but Pierce is thought to have done most of the creation and
       proved his abilities many times in Universal films.  [-mrl]

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

       5. [Last week's review of BABE: PIG  IN  THE  CITY  had  truncation
       problems  at the ends of paragraphs, so here it is in its entirety.
       I don't want to point any fingers at whose  fault  it  was,  and  I
       certainly don't want to get her mad at me.]

       BABE: PIG IN THE CITY (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: The second BABE film is more  creative
                 than  the first, but it is also darker in tone.
                 We are back in the world where animals talk  to
                 each other, but never to humans.  Babe is taken
                 to the big city in an attempt to  save  Hoggett
                 farm.    But   Babe   gets  separated  and  has
                 adventures with a whole menagerie  of  animals.
                 The art direction of this film is almost as big
                 a feature as the animal  animatronics,  but  it
                 may  be confusing for younger children.  Still,
                 parents will find that they will have to  go  a
                 long  way  to  find  a  film  so enjoyable both
                 adults and for children.  Rating: 6 (0 to  10),
                 high  +1  (-4  to +4).  A minor spoiler follows
                 the review.

       The second Babe film, BABE: PIG IN THE CITY, had plenty of room  to
       repeat  what  was  good about the 1995 BABE. Co-writer and director
       George Miller really did not need to change  the  film's  approach.
       But  Miller  was not content to rest on his laurels.  The sequel is
       quite a different film and gives the audience much that is new  and
       quite  different to enjoy.  Is it as good as the first film?  To my
       mind it is not quite as  good.   The  story  is  a  little  less  a
       coherent story and the big climax of the film is more slapstick and
       less subtle excitement.  Like BABE this  is  family  entertainment,
       but  I think it offers a little less for the children and perhaps a
       little less for the adults also.  The tone is definitely darker and
       more  disturbing.  But like BABE, BABE: PIG IN THE CITY is probably
       the best family film of its year.  And it is one of the rare family
       films  that  may  well  be  better  appreciated  by  adults than by
       children.

       The Hoggett Farm is certainly having its ups and it downs.  After a
       series  of  adventures  related  in  the  first  film  Babe has won
       international fame as the pig who is a sheep dog.  Things are going
       well  until Farmer Hoggett is disabled in a freak accident.  (Note:
       the scenario of this accident was a joke told as early as the  Fred
       Allen  radio  program  in  the  1940s and has appeared other places
       since.  It may even be older than that.  But  to  the  best  of  my
       knowledge,  this  is  the  first  time  anybody filmed this strange
       sequence of events.) With Mr.  Hoggett unable to care for his  farm
       it  falls  on  hard times and the bank is ready and anxious to make
       the times even harder.   Mrs.  Hoggett  takes  the  famous  pig  to
       display  him at a fair.  But events conspire to maroon Mrs. Hoggett
       in the city with her pig and then to leave her pig all alone.  Babe
       finds  himself  the  new  animal  in  a  house full of animals with
       dubious human supervision.  Among  the  animals  Babe  meets  is  a
       Damon-Runyan-esque  pit  bull,  a  family  of  chimpanzees,  and  a
       taciturn orangutan.
       The film is told in the same style  as  the  first  Babe  film  but
       differently.   Again  the story is divided in chapters whose titles
       are read to us by the trio of  singing  mice.   The  Classical  and
       popular  music is back including the theme from Saint-Saens's Third
       Symphony.  Miller has managed to get the  same  cast  back,  though
       James  Cromwell  has a much more limited role as Farmer Hoggett and
       Magda Szubanski has a much larger role this time continuing as Mrs.
       Hoggett.   Again  the  comedy is genuinely funny and sometimes very
       funny.  The acting and voicing seems to have all the same people in
       the  same  roles.   The  major  characters are all present, even if
       their roles are much foreshortened.  And as with  the  first  film,
       the   animals  are  frequently  three-dimensional  characters  with
       interesting personalities.  But the city Babe visits is not so much
       a  city as a Disneyland-modified city-concentrate.  It seems like a
       Frankensteinian grafting together of many of the  great  cities  of
       the world.  Looking out a window, Babe sees landmarks of cities all
       over the world.  The interior  of  the  city  is  an  expressionist
       wonderworld  looking  like  something out of Disneyland.  While the
       first film had some physical comedy,  this  new  film  has  a  long
       slapstick  sequence  that  seems  out  of  character for the person
       involved.

       This is more expensive and a cut  below  its  predecessor,  but  it
       still  is a good outing for the whole family.  I give this film a 6
       on the 0 to 10 scale and a high +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.

       Spoiler... Spoiler... Spoiler... Spoiler...  Spoiler...  Spoiler...
       Spoiler...

       Like ANIMAL FARM, BABE: PIG IN THE CITY may have  many  allegorical
       meanings  and perhaps even religious overtones.  Babe wins over his
       enemies with kindness and feeds  his  flock,  but  then  allows  an
       enforcer  to stand over feeding and no animal is allowed to partake
       of the  food  without  thanking  Babe,  under  apparent  threat  of
       violence.   What  begins  looking  like an allegorical Christ turns
       into more a Huey Long allegory.  [-mrl]

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

       6. A BUG'S LIFE (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: Our second animated ant  film  of  the
                 season edges out the first for humor and actual
                 animation style.  A BUG'S LIFE has  a  mediocre
                 story-line,  seemingly  derived from Kurosawa's
                 SEVEN SAMURAI, but its  animation  will  dazzle
                 the eye.  This film offers adults a little less
                 plot and characterization than  did  ANTZ,  but
                 the  visuals  are better and jokes are funnier.
                 Don't  miss  the   closing   credit   sequence.
                 Rating: 7 (0 to 10), low +2 (-4 to +4)

       Let's get the expository lump out of the way at the beginning.  All
       bugs are insects but not all insects are bugs.  Bugs have tube-like
       mouthparts and wings that are joined to  the  body  in  a  sort  of
       thickened  area.   Scientists call them "Hemiptera."  Ants, walking
       sticks, and  certainly  spiders  are  not  bugs.   And  to  further
       correct,  ants have six legs as we saw in ANTZ (well, sort of), not
       four as portrayed in A BUG'S LIFE.  And speaking  of  inaccuracies,
       in  my  review  of  ANTZ I said that Pixar and Disney might have to
       look to their laurels to match the animation quality of ANTZ.  Well
       I  was  wrong;  Pixar and Disney are doing just fine, thank you.  A
       BUG'S LIFE actually is the more visually sophisticated of  the  two
       animated films, but each has far surpassed TOY STORY.  There may be
       more animated figures in some scenes in ANTZ,  but  Pixar  has  the
       edge on life-like animation and in giving a three-dimensional look.
       They  have  also  made  some  perceptive  improvements  in  digital
       representation light and surface texture.  Facial animation is also
       better.  In fact looking at the faces of the grasshoppers  as  they
       talk,  they  really  have  more texture than a camera would pick up
       looking at a real grasshopper.  They  have  gone  into  a  kind  of
       hyper-reality,  much  like the saturated Technicolor of musicals of
       the 50s created a sort of hyper-reality.  But since  people  get  a
       little  squeamish  looking too closely at real insects, Pixar seems
       to reserve this over-texturing for the villainous grasshoppers  and
       there to make them a somewhat more repulsive foe.

       Where  A  BUG'S  LIFE  has  a  problem  is  that  it  has  a   less
       sophisticated  or  interesting  plot than either TOY STORY or ANTZ.
       The plot is directly or indirectly  a  rehash  of  the  late  Akira
       Kurosawa's  SEVEN  SAMURAI.  The ants of Ant Island could live very
       well if they were not obliged to pay a heavy tribute of  food  each
       year  to  a ferocious band of grasshoppers.  In the colony ant Flik
       has many ideas how to do things differently-he even has  ideas  for
       how  to  deal with the grasshoppers.  The catch is that none of his
       ideas seems to work very well.  Flik's idea for how  to  deal  with
       the grasshoppers is to get bigger bugs to fight for the ant colony.
       So the colony decides to send someone to find defenders.   And  who
       do  they  choose?  The ant they can most spare, Flik.  Our intrepid
       ant finds defenders,  but  does  not  realize  that  they  are  not
       fighters  but  flea  circus performers.  With Flik's ideas and with
       the aid of what they  think  of  as  fighter  insects,  the  colony
       prepares  to  defend  itself  against  the cruel grasshoppers.  The
       grasshopper leader is the nasty Hopper, voiced with real menace  by
       Kevin Spacey.

       It is tempting to compare this film's weaker  plot  but  impressive
       visuals  with the current trend of sci-fi films being taken over by
       special effects.  But many respected classic  films  did  much  the
       same.   Busby  Berkley  musicals  had  real  visual  style  but had
       relatively bland and cliched plots.  Then as so frequently now  the
       entertainment was in what the audience saw, not what the film said.

       It is worthwhile to see A BUG'S LIFE just to see how the  animation
       technology is progressing. If the story-line is weak at least there
       are moments of really good humor, though many are  in  the  closing
       credits.  It  would  be  interesting  to know if ANTZ eats into the
       profits of A BUG'S LIFE.  ANTZ seems to have been timed to do  just
       that,  but  if so it may have been a miscalculation.  The two films
       dealing with the one non-conformist ant in  the  colony  could  co-
       exist at the box-office much like DEEP IMPACT and ARMAGEDDON have.

       I would rate A BUG'S LIFE a 7 on the 0 to 10 scale and a low +2  on
       the  -4  to  +4  scale.   There  are  a  few  scenes  that could be
       frightening to younger children.

       This film has been released with the short film "Geri's Game" which
       won  Pixar  an  Oscar.   It  is  a funny little short of an old man
       playing chess with himself in the park.  It  humorously  makes  the
       point that playing chess with yourself as an opponent is not really
       like playing a different person.  Actually it  could  almost  be  a
       study  of  schizophrenia,  though I think that is reading more into
       the short than Pixar intends.  One of the more interesting  aspects
       of  "Geri's  Game"  is  to  see  how  far  Pixar  has progressed in
       representing computer animation of human figures.  It is one  thing
       to  represent  in  animation  toys  and  insects  with  their rigid
       surfaces, but it  is  harder  to  represent  humans  realistically.
       Human  characters  were  kept to a minimum in TOY STORY and are not
       present at all in A BUG'S LIFE.

       I have one question about the  closing  credits.   (Hopefully  this
       will  be  meaningless  to  anyone  who has not seen the film.)  How
       genuine is what we are hearing?  The joke  is  obviously  that  the
       visuals are false, but the audio track may be genuine.  [-mrl]

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

       7. The 1998 Toronto International Film Festival (film  reviews  and
       commentary by Mark R. Leeper) (part 10 of 10)

       ANTZ (United States)

       CAPSULE: The story is okay in a Disney sort of way, but the star is
       the  state-of-the-art  computer  animation  in this film that shows
       life in an insect colony from the Dreamworks.  The mass scenes  are
       impressive  and the individual ants are expressive.  Voices include
       Woody Allen, Sylvester Stallone, and Gene Hackman.  Rating: 7 (0 to
       10), low +2 (-4 to +4)

       Directed by Eric Darnell and Tim Johnson.

          - Voices also include Sharon Stone,  Christopher  Walken,  Danny
            Glover,  Dan  Aykroyd, and Anne Bancroft.  Part of the game is
            in recognizing the voices.
          - Story involves a worker ant who does not want to be one  of  a
            sea  of ants, he wants to be an individual.  Masquerading as a
            soldier ant he sees war first hand.  Meanwhile the general  of
            the  soldier  ants  is making plans to massacre the whole nest
            and go off to found his own colony.
          - Do not believe any entomology you see represented here.   Most
            is  wrong.   I believe male ants basically fertilize the queen
            and die.  The termites don't look like  real  termites.   They
            look less like real termites than the ants look like ants.
          - There is some irony in the ants all  deciding  en  masse  that
            they are individuals.
          - In some ways this is STARSHIP TROOPERS as seen from the  other
            side.
          - Most of the animation sequences seem  more  complex  than  TOY
            STORY,  though  the  story is not really as good perhaps. This
            could spark a race  for  most  complex  scenes.   There  is  a
            tremendous  amount  happening in some of these scenes as a sea
            of ants, each individually animated,  swarm  onto  the  enemy.
            Pixar and Disney may have to look to their laurels.
          - Could be frightening for younger children.

       We did not have tickets for anything until the midnight  show.   We
       decided  to  try the rush line for the two theaters showing THIS IS
       MY FATHER.  We could not get a pair of tickets,  but  there  was  a
       single  ticket offered.  Everybody in the line was couples.  Evelyn
       suggested I take the single ticket and she  would  see  me  at  the
       midnight film.  I did.

       THIS IS MY FATHER (Canadian/Irish)

       CAPSULE: An American schoolteacher (James Caan) travels to  Ireland
       to  trace a father he never knew.  In uncovering the story he finds
       the story of a good simple man and a tragic story  of  lovers  kept
       apart by prejudice and intolerance.  Aiden Quinn stars, his brother
       Paul directs, and brother Declan photographs.  Rating: 7 (0 to 10),
       low +2 (-4 to +4)

          - Production of the Quinn Brothers based on the story  of  their
            own father.
          - Mournful score by Donal Lunny.
          - Kieran Johnson (James Caan) is an  unpopular  English  teacher
            voted among the most boring by his class.  His life at home is
            equally bad with a rebellious son and a bed-ridden mother.  He
            decides  to  take time to go to Ireland and find out about his
            father Kieron O'Day (Aidan Quinn).  The story he is told  puts
            his own life and his problems into perspective.
          - Kieron O'Day is a simple farmer with a hard life.  He romances
            Johnson's  mother,  played  at this age by Moya Farrelly.  The
            arouses the ire of both the local priest (Stephen Rea) and  of
            the mother of the woman he loves.
          - Priest is an intolerant man who curses O'Day from the  pulpit,
            delivers fire and brimstone sermons, and chases a man from the
            confessional yelling after him "Get out and don't come back to
            the church until you stop doing that."
          - One happy night when out with is love on  a  beach,   Airplane
            lands with Life Magazine photographer (John Cusack) wanting to
            rest the night  and  looking  for  someone  to  play  American
            football.
          - Nice representation of Irish village life.

       Coming out, there was Evelyn standing there.  They had come through
       offering a single ticket for the other theater.  Again everybody in
       line was couples but Evelyn so she took the ticket and saw THIS  IS
       MY  FATHER  on the other screen.  People forward of us in line were
       unhappy that they had not  taken  single  tickets  when  they  were
       available.   We  both  saw the same film, but on different screens.
       Also we both had to sit to the side in the front row, which  was  a
       minor  inconvenience.  But we ended up both seeing the same film at
       the same time, so we could discuss it.  Then off to our final  film
       of  the festival.  This one everybody knew was going to be bad, but
       it was sort of a last night joke.

       [to be continued] [-mrl]

       MIGHTY PEKING MAN (Hong Kong)

       CAPSULE: A wild jungle woman and an 11-story gorilla are discovered
       in  Tibet  and  taken  to  Hong  Kong where the gorilla escapes and
       causes havoc.  This is a  laughable  1977  rip  off  of  KING  KONG
       (1976),  itself a rip-off.  Production values are low and audiences
       seem to like the film mostly for derisive laughter.  Rating:  2  (0
       to 10), high -2 (-4 to +4)

          - Directed by Ho Meng-Hua.
          - This film is provided to be a sort of laughing stock to finish
            the festival.
          - An  earthquake  uncovers  an  11-story  tall  gorilla  in  the
            Himalayas.  A hunter, chosen because he just broke up with his
            girl and is at loose ends, gets sent to find the ape and finds
            a sort of female Tarzan who controls the ape.
          - Evelyne Kraft is the jungle girl in a leather bikini that  she
            is  pasted  into  so she always looks on the verge of bouncing
            out of.
          - Gorilla actor has no  idea  how  gorillas  move  and  suit  is
            terrible.  Nice miniature effects, however.
          - Has almost a music video inside it of jungle girl playing with
            animals like Chi-chi the leopard.
          - Several places there is narrative that is nearly incoherent as
            if  there  are missing scenes and the viewer has to guess what
            happened in the interim.
          - Actual location shooting in Mysore.  Ape  shown  badly  matted
            behind temple.
          - Combining of images usually pretty bad.  Incompetent  matching
            of film stocks.
          - Stock footage frequently used.
          - Gorilla brought to Hong Kong by greedy entrepreneur who really
            abuses  the  ape  before  it  escapes and tears things up real
            good.

       From there it was a walk back to the room.  We put on  channel  10,
       which was covering the film festival for our last remnants.  And so
       ended our Toronto International Film Festival.  [-mrl]

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

            What science can there be more noble, more excellent,
            more useful for men, more admirably high and
            demonstrative, than this of the mathematics?
                                          -- Benjamin Franklin


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