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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 01/29/99 -- Vol. 17, No. 31

       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.unitedmedia.com/comics/dilbert.  The
       Dilbert  Zone--a  review  of the television series follows later in
       this issue.  [-mrl]

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

       2. How come at the end of an episode Star Trek shows you scenes  of
       what  they call an "all-new episode?" If these are really scenes of
       the episode it won't be all new.  [-mrl]

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

       3. I write this going into a cold and I can tell this is  going  to
       be  a bad one.  I have been known to get the kind of colds that are
       strong enough to stomp whole cities.  My colds  are  the  kinds  of
       things  that  people  make  disaster  movies about.  My throat gets
       sore.  My nose runs, I start coughing uncontrollably.  Sometimes my
       digestion goes caflooey.  I lose my sense of taste.  So I know what
       you are asking yourself.   Why  am  I  complaining?   Aren't  these
       things  that  I  look  forward to when I eat spicy food?  Sure they
       are.  But I want to earn them myself, not  have  some  virus  force
       them on me.  After all, who knows where that virus has been?  It is
       bad enough getting infected by a virus, but what if it is  a  dirty
       virus?

       Of course, these days I rarely get a cold like this  one.   It  has
       been  a  while  since I have had a bad one, which may be, because I
       have been taking Vitamin C, which acts like Kryptonite  for  colds.
       And  my  colds  need something like Kryptonite.  Vitamin C seems to
       work for me to fight colds.  But as luck would  have  it  this  one
       started  at about 9:30 AM on a workday.  If we had little emergency
       Vitamin C dispensers at work--in case of cold, break glass--I might
       have been healthy today.  But I have to take Vitamin C in the first
       few hours of symptoms or it does not prevent the cold.  I took more
       than  enough  to know I will not get scurvy on top of the cold, but
       that was about all the good it will do.  If I  had  been  smart,  I
       would  have  run  home  and  taken  Vitamin  C  at the first throat
       tickling, but that would just not have been practical.

       Science tells us that Vitamin C does absolutely nothing for a cold.
       Vitamin  C  is  good only for preventing the aforementioned scurvy.
       And it may be that my colds are really just a breed of scurvy,  but
       I doubt it.  Let's just say that I love the illusion that Vitamin C
       gives me that it is doing something good for  my  cold.   The  only
       light  colds  I ever get are when I take Vitamin C in the first few
       hours.  For  once  I  think  I  will  believe  in  a  folk  remedy.
       Particularly if the folk are people like Linus Pauling.

       When I was a kid, I would these colds that I  knew  would  last  me
       three  months.   Maybe the cold would end, but I would have a cough
       for three months.  And I would think of the cough as being part  of
       the  cold.   It  would  not  be unusual for me to get a second cold
       while the first one was still going on.  You would think  that  you
       should  get  some  sort  of deferment in a just universe.  One cold
       should give you resistance to the next one, but I am  living  proof
       that  it does not work that way.  I had a friend who had a cold all
       through high school.

       Back then and ever since every time I got a cold I  would  get  the
       same  picture in my mind that some alien organism has come to earth
       on a comet, landed in my back yard, and has found me as  its  first
       human  host.   These  few hours of misery were the quiet before the
       storm.  It would not be long before it  would  totally  engulf  me.
       First  there  would  first be more of it than me, then take me over
       entirely, then (as though it matters to me at that point)  it  will
       go  on  and take everybody down.  Like the Blob, it would just keep
       engulfing people.  At the same time next week Earth will have a new
       master.  At least this took some of the sting out of catching cold.
       I was being a pioneer.  Back when I was a kid my mother thought  it
       was  important for me to stay inside when I had a cold.  She had no
       idea why I kept combing the back yard looking  for  a  tiny  meteor
       crater.   I don't know how that would help, but it would.  But then
       we don't really have a good grasp of what causes disease.
       That was one of my cold fantasies and  one  that  persists.   These
       days  I  don't  check  the back yard.  When someone is looking.  My
       other cold fantasy came from Richard Matheson's I AM LEGEND.   That
       was  the  novel  in which the main character was bitten by a bat at
       some point in his past.  He had  gotten  very  sick  but  survived.
       Many  years  later there is a pandemic disease, literally pandemic.
       Everyone gets it and apparently dies.  Everyone dies but  our  bat-
       bitten  hero.  Everyone around him sickens and dies, but his former
       disease has left him immune.  Scary thought.  So when I get a  cold
       I  consoled myself with the thought that everyone else including my
       bully English teacher would be dead, but I  would  live  on.   (Mr.
       Lynch  ran  his English class like a Marine drill instructor.  Most
       of what I know about English literature I know from Lynch,  but  it
       is really hard to summon up much gratitude for him.)

       Well, hope you fair better in this cold season than I did.   Button
       up.  [-mrl]

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

       4. PLAYING BY HEART (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule:  Here  are  six  stories  with  people
                 talking  about  love  intercut  together.   The
                 stories by writer/director Willard Carroll  are
                 about love and death, candor and lies.  PLAYING
                 BY HEART is also something  of  a  puzzle  film
                 along  the  lines  of  THE USUAL SUSPECTS.  But
                 mostly the film proves that veteran actors like
                 Gina  Rowlands,  Sean  Connery,  and especially
                 Ellen  Burstyn  can  act  rings  around   their
                 younger  competition.   Rating: 6 (0 to 10), +1
                 (-4 to +4)

       "Talking about love is like dancing about architecture."  That  one
       line  is  probably  the  cleverest thing about PLAYING BY HEART and
       will probably be remembered as a trivia  question  long  after  the
       rest  of the film is forgotten.  (Actually the quote is a variation
       on the aphorism that talking about  music  is  like  dancing  about
       architecture  which  has  been variously attributed to Frank Zappa,
       Laurie Anderson, Thelonious Monk, and Steve Martin.)  Yet,  knowing
       the  futility  of talking about love, yet knowing that futility the
       film still attempts to tell a series of stories about love, all cut
       together.

       In PLAYING BY HEART we have the  story  of  Joan  (Angelina  Jolie)
       whose  intended  new  lover  Keenan  (Ryan  Phillippe)  is  totally
       uninterested in relating to another person.   Gillian  Anderson  of
       THE  X-FILES  plays  stage  director  Meredith who is suspicious of
       Trent (Jon Stewart) who would like to  start  a  relationship  with
       her.   Gracie  (Madeleine Stowe) and Roger (Anthony Edwards) have a
       great time together  and  are  married,  but  not  to  each  other.
       Mildred  (Ellen  Burstyn)  and  Mark  (Jay Mohr) are mother and son
       talking one last time before  Mark  dies  of  AIDS.   Hugh  (Dennis
       Quaid)  is  looking  to form a relationship with anybody, female or
       male, as long as he can build the relationship on a  lie.   Finally
       and  perhaps best, there are Hannah (Gina Rowlands) and fatally ill
       Paul (Sean Connery) who after a  long  marriage  want  to  reaffirm
       their  vows, and just now Hannah has discovered that early in their
       marriage,  Paul  loved  another  woman.   Six  stories  about   six
       relationships, working and failing.

       As he tells these stories Willard Carroll is doing something behind
       the  curtain  that the viewer comes to suspect early on, but is not
       actually confirmed until late in the film.  By the time it  becomes
       clear  what the script has done, it is probably too late to pick up
       all the details, at least on the first  viewing.   Like  THE  USUAL
       SUSPECTS, one probably has to see the film twice to pick up on some
       of the subtleties.

       Sean Connery's character Paul is dying yet even he  does  not  have
       the  vulnerability  of Ellen Burstyn's Mildred who has to cope with
       the death of her son.  It may be that having to deal with the death
       of  a loved one is harder than dying oneself or it may be just that
       Burstyn is an actor who can reach from the screen  and  tear  at  a
       viewer's  heartstrings.  Paul Newman was approached for the part of
       Paul.  In fact, he seems to fit the role better than  Connery.   It
       was  probably  written  with  Newman in mind.  It may say something
       about acting styles, but ten hours after having seen this film  one
       still  cares  about  the Burstyn, Connery, and Rowlands characters.
       Speaking for myself I can picture the younger characters, but I  do
       not  really  care  a  whole  lot for what happens to them and their
       relationships.  Burstyn can whimper more powerfully  than  Angelina
       Jolie  can  shout.   Perhaps the problem is that there are too many
       characters to cover the material more than superficially.   Carroll
       is  satisfied  to  just  give  us a feel for the personality of the
       characters.  The veteran actors know how to make the most of  their
       time.

       In 1998 Willard Carroll wrote and directed PLAYING BY HEART as well
       as TOM'S MIDNIGHT GARDEN.  Before this year Carroll has not has not
       directed since his debut in 1990 with a somewhat  under-appreciated
       horror  film,  THE RUNESTONE.  If PLAYING BY HEART is no worse then
       THE RUNESTONE, it is really little more accomplished.  I would give
       it  a  6  on  the 0 to 10 scale and a +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.  Of
       some tangential interest is the fact that the  MPAA  in  a  bizarre
       ruling  rejected  the  shooting  title  of  this film DANCING ABOUT
       ARCHITECTURE as  being  too  similar  to  the  current  DANCING  AT
       LUGHNASA.  It is hard to imagine the two being confused.  [-mrl]

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

       5. DILBERT (a television review by Mark R. Leeper):

       One of a small elite of the funniest men in America--up there  with
       Gary  Larsen,  Kenneth  Starr,  and Dave Barry--is Scott Adams, the
       creator of the "Dilbert" cartoon strip.  In an  era  when  American
       business  management  is  so  frequently awarding itself higher and
       higher salaries for questionable business  decisions,  Dilbert  has
       become  the  voice  of  the middle class.  He is a typical engineer
       facing the pains of the late 20th century.  Many but  by  no  means
       all   of  those  pains  are  being  visited  upon  him  by  obvious
       insensitive blunders by bad management.  The line  level  engineers
       have  adopted  Dilbert  as  one  of their own.  It is unlikely that
       there is a technical company in America without some Dilbert strips
       decorating hallways.

       And now for the time being there is a "Dilbert" television  series,
       but catch it quick on UBN if you want to see it because it probably
       will not last long.  The problem is that something that works  well
       as  a  three-panel  daily  comic strip does not necessarily work as
       well in a longer format.  A half-hour program requires a plot.  The
       "Peanuts"  comic  strip  made  the transition with what was at some
       infrequent television specials.  The creators mastered the  art  of
       balancing little comic strip incidents and at the same time telling
       a story.  Eventually  they  even  went  into  feature  films.   But
       "Dilbert"  is  starting  as  a  weekly half-hour show.  The task of
       telling a story worth telling and long enough to fill  a  half-hour
       slot,  week  after  week,  is going to be much more difficult.  And
       judging by the first half-hour the series  is  already  struggling.
       The  half-hour  had  many  short chuckles that would have made good
       comic strips, but the narrative plotting was weak.  The first story
       came  to  a  climax that was not even obviously any sort of climax.
       Dilbert had to find and choose among names for an unknown  product-
       -unknown not just to the audience but also to the characters in the
       story--and in the end one silly name was hesitantly  chosen.   Here
       we  have  even  less  idea than in the strip what Dilbert's company
       does.  In the comic strip we get a strong  impression  Dilbert  and
       his cronies are in the telecommunications business.  Indeed Adams's
       background was from one of the Bell Operating  Companies.   But  in
       the  cartoon  his company seems to have dabbled in herbal lozenges.
       That is, to say the least, disorienting.  It was,  perhaps,  better
       to leave the business vague.

       Visually there are  some  problems  adapting  to  the  new  medium.
       Dilbert  is always shown in the comic strip with his tie turned up,
       which I had always interpreted as meaning that the wind had somehow
       picked  it up.  But perhaps it was better to leave that mysterious.
       In the animated version we see  that  his  tie  is  always  stiffly
       curled as if there is a wire inside it.  This makes far less sense.
       The mouthless Dogbert is given a mouth in the animation,  but  only
       when  he  speaks.   The  animation seems to otherwise be consistent
       with the comic strip.  The music accompanying the show is by  Danny
       Elfman.  The theme is called in the credits "The Dilbert Zone."  In
       fact, Danny Elfman recycled it from his score  from  THE  FORBIDDEN
       ZONE  (1980), a film he made with his brother while with the Mystic
       Knights  of  the  Oingo  Boingo.   That  recycling   may   not   be
       unreasonable  since  I  would  estimate that only about forty-seven
       people saw this weird little film and eight of those saw it  at  my
       house.

       The first half-hour of "Dilbert" is not a promising start and  many
       of  the  decisions  made in the production will be disappointing to
       loyal "Dilbert" fans.  [-mrl]

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

            Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes.
                                          -- Oscar Wilde