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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 02/12/99 -- Vol. 17, 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 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. Academy Award nominations of science fiction, fantasy, or horror
       films include

          - Ian McKellen in GODS AND MONSTERS (Best Actor)
          - Ed Harris in THE TRUMAN SHOW (Best Supporting Actor)
          - Lynn Redgrave in GODS AND MONSTERS (Best Supporting Actress)
          - THE TRUMAN SHOW [Peter Weir] (Direction)
          - THE TRUMAN SHOW [Andrew Niccol] (Original Screenplay)
          - GODS AND MONSTERS [Bill Condon] (Adapted Screenplay)
          - PLEASANTVILLE (Art Direction)
          - WHAT DREAMS MAY COME (Art Direction)
          - PLEASANTVILLE (Costume Design)
          - A BUG'S LIFE [Randy Newman] (Music for Comedy or Musical)
          - MULAN (Matthew Wilder/David Zippel/Jerry Goldsmith] (Music for
            Comedy or Musical)
          - THE PRINCE OF EGYPT [Stephen Schwartz/Hans Zimmer] (Music  for
            Comedy or Musical)
          - PLEASANTVILLE [Randy Newman] (Music for Drama)
          - "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" from ARMAGEDDON [Diane  Warren]
            (Song)
          - "The Prayer" from QUEST FOR CAMELOT (Carole Bayer Sager, David
            Foster, Tony Renis and Alberto Testa (Song)
          - "That'll Do" from BABE: PIG IN THE CITY [Randy Newman] (Song)
          - "When You Believe" from THE PRINCE OF EGYPT [Stephen Schwartz]
            (Song)
          - ARMAGEDDON (Sound)
          - ARMAGEDDON (Sound Effects Editing)
          - ARMAGEDDON (Visual Effects)
          - MIGHTY JOE YOUNG (Visual Effects)
          - WHAT DREAMS MAY COME (Visual Effects)

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

       2. It is, I think, the common wisdom that something has gone  wrong
       with  the science fiction film.  We are getting a lot of films like
       INDEPENDENCE DAY, GODZILLA, and ARMAGEDDON that are not really very
       good  science  fiction.  The whole reason for their existence seems
       to be to show off special effects.  The  feeling  is  that  special
       effects  have run away with the intelligence of the science fiction
       film and we really can expect  only  big,  violent  stupid  science
       fiction films from this point forward.  This theory seems to be one
       that everybody has noticed and everybody seems to  agree  upon.   I
       would  like  to  question  if  that  is what is actually happening.
       Instead of special effects domination of the science fiction  film,
       I  would  like to suggest that something different is happening.  I
       think that science fiction is  coming  to  dominate  the  spectacle
       film.

       Science fiction films were a rarity before 1950.   There  are  some
       notable classic films before 1950, such as METROPOLIS and THINGS TO
       COME.  Occasionally films that were  made  for  a  horror  audience
       would  be  more  science  fiction  than horror.  This would include
       films like THE INVISIBLE RAY.  But it really took the  dropping  of
       the  atomic  bomb  on Japan to convince the general public that the
       changing world of science would have an  effect  on  real  people's
       lives.   But  already  common  since  the  silent days were the big
       spectacle films like THE MARK OF ZORRO and THE ADVENTURES OF  ROBIN
       HOOD.

       From the beginning of the 1950s there were better and worse science
       fiction  films.   The  first  science fiction film of the 1950s was
       ROCKETSHIP XM--a quickie rushed through production to  exploit  the
       publicity of the upcoming DESTINATION MOON.  The latter film, under
       the production of George Pal, made heavy  use  of  visual  effects.
       They  became  part  (or perhaps always were part) of Pal's style in
       science fiction  films.   Pal  completed  his  trilogy  of  science
       fiction  spectacle  with  WHEN  WORLDS  COLLIDE  and THE WAR OF THE
       WORLDS.  These were not intelligently written films but their  main
       entertainment  value  was  in  what  they created for the eye.  The
       special effects were not always perfect.  But they were  sufficient
       to  advance the plot.  It was much like watching a marionette show.
       You would not confuse what you were watching with reality.  You had
       to suspend your disbelief.  You occasionally had to do that even in
       the big budget adventure films like THE SEA HAWK.   The  great  sea
       battles  were  frequently  between  rather  obvious models.  In the
       1950s and 1960s though there was some overlap,  notably  from  Pal,
       most  of  the  spectacle  films  were  historical epics, especially
       Biblical epics.  Titles that  come  to  mind  are  GIANT,  THE  TEN
       COMMANDMENTS, THE VIKINGS, SPARTACUS, and BEN HUR.

       Hollywood liked the spectacle film because you  always  could  whip
       one  up.   You invested in enough Viking costumes and enough Viking
       ships and a story where  two  men  who  loved  each  other  end  up
       fighting  to the death, and there you have a piece of history right
       on the screen called THE VIKINGS.  You invested in enough togas and
       enough  chariots and a story where two men who loved each other end
       up fighting to the death, and there you have  a  piece  of  history
       right  on  the  screen  called BEN HUR.  Sometimes the stories were
       good, sometimes not.  But you knew from the  beginning  about  what
       the costs were.  An expert could look at the script and make a back
       of the envelope calculation.  You  might  be  able  to  whip  up  a
       FORBIDDEN  PLANET,  but only if you had the "creatures from the id"
       concept.  Of course, you could whip  up  some  pretty  bad  science
       fiction films also.  But for the most part the science fiction film
       was not ready for spectacles.  You had a few decent science fiction
       films  come  out  and a lot of spectacles, and rarely were they the
       same films.

       But as the years went by the film industry had a bigger and  bigger
       problem with the spectacle.  History education was not what it once
       was.  A filmmaker knew exactly what it cost to put a Viking on  the
       screen,  but was less and less sure that the viewer in the audience
       actually knew what a Viking was.  Hollywood filmmakers see audience
       members  saying, "Who are these Vikings?  You know, they seem to be
       a lot like old-time Klingons."  So the big, often  dumb,  spectacle
       films  are  moving  from historical themes to science fiction ones.
       Science fiction is the mythology of our age.

       I am sure no filmmaker sat down and said, "You know,  I  am  really
       worried  about  what  might  happen if a giant mutant iguana should
       attack New York City."  What the filmmaker more  likely  said  was,
       "We  have the special effects to do it.  Let's show a giant monster
       trampling New York City."  You still  have  a  few  decent  science
       fiction  films  come  out each year, films like GATTACA, THE TRUMAN
       SHOW, and DARK  CITY.   But  a  bigger  and  bigger  piece  of  the
       spectacle  output  is  also science fiction.  Yes, we get our films
       like BRAVEHEART, our films like THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS, but  they
       are  getting  rarer.   Instead  we  get  some  big  science fiction
       spectacles--often dumb, sometimes not so dumb.  So by proportion it
       looks  like  special  effects  are  taking over the science fiction
       film.  In fact we are getting  about  the  same  number  of  decent
       science  fiction  films  that  we  have  gotten for decades and the
       spectacle films that at one time would have been historical are now
       in large part science fiction.  [-mrl]

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

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

                 Capsule: Several months ago Porter,  played  by
                 Mel  Gibson,  was  double-crossed  and left for
                 dead after he participated in  a  robbery.   He
                 wants  his $70,000 share and is willing to burn
                 down or kick his way through anybody who stands
                 in   his  way.   He  faces  bigger  and  bigger
                 enemies, who intend to stand  between  him  and
                 his  money, but he is tougher than any of them.
                 And he knows  how  to  play  hardball.   It  is
                 obvious  that whomever Porter faces is going to
                 come out second.  The fresh characters keep the
                 film  watchable,  but  even  a  large  cast  of
                 veteran  actors  cannot  make  this  remake  of
                 1967's  POINT  BLANK believable.  Rating:  4 (0
                 to 10), 0 (-4 to +4)

       Several months earlier Porter (played  by  Mel  Gibson)  planned  a
       clever  robbery.   He  was  supposed to get a cut of $70,000 as his
       share.  Instead he got nothing but bullets in the back before being
       left  for  dead.  As the film opens he is being treated by the just
       about the most nightmarish doctor  imaginable.   It  is  a  painful
       scene  to  watch  and  will not be the last painful scene by a long
       shot.  It was not easy getting back on his feet, but now he is  and
       he  wants  his  money.  But the proceeds of the robbery went to the
       Syndicate,  an  organization  not  generally  known  for  fast  and
       friendly  refunds.   The  harder  Porter  pushes  for his money the
       harder he is pushed back by people who have the power to push back.
       But Porter is able to counter-punch for every punch.  Along the way
       we get amusing portraits of  hoods  with  sado-masochistic  tastes,
       crooked  cops, prostitutes with hearts of gold, prostitutes who are
       nothing but greed, and bizarre Mafiosi.  This is a film  with  many
       bizarre characters, not all as funny as the trailers would have you
       believe.

       PAYBACK had the potential to be a modern OUTLAW JOSEY WALES if  the
       lead  had  held  the  film together.  But Porter is just not a very
       well written character.  Occasionally he is smart but more often he
       gets  out of trouble by being lucky.  Somebody shows up at just the
       right time, or he is just in the  right  place  because  he  needed
       cigarettes.  When someone tries to kill him with a bomb he knows to
       check just the right object in the room.  Or over the telephone  he
       hears  just  the  right background conversation.  And in a fight he
       hits harder and shoots straighter than anybody else.  In fact he is
       saved  so  often by contrivances that the story becomes predictable
       and one rarely has to watch the film.  We just know  he  will  come
       out  all  right  even  if  painfully  the  worse  for  wear.  He is
       basically Superman and the bad guys do not know it  yet,  but  they
       are  way  over-matched.  The script was a cooperation between Terry
       Hayes and Brian Helgeland.  Hayes wrote the excellent thriller DEAD
       CALM.   Helgeland  (who  also  directed) wrote the scripts for L.A.
       CONFIDENTIAL and CONSPIRACY THEORY.  He also did work on the script
       for THE POSTMAN.  PAYBACK itself is a remake of POINT BLANK (1967).
       Here, however, their character's capabilities  are  just  not  very
       plausible and Gibson cannot carry the film the way Lee Marvin did.

       Among the familiar faces in all-too-brief roles are William Devane,
       James  Coburn,  and  Kris Kristofferson.  Coburn just lights up the
       screen.  All three are Syndicate members of various  ranks.   David
       Paymer  is  a  small-time hood with the wrong friends in the police
       department.  Maria Bello of ER plays Porter's friend and confidant.
       Ericson  Core's camera-work keeps the colors muted, mostly in blues
       and grays.  This has much of the  emotional  impact  of  black  and
       white photography, without actually using black and white.

       We have seen before the story  of  the  good-guy  crook  who  plays
       hardball  with anyone who gets in his way.  For better thrills, the
       viewer might want to rent the original POINT  BLANK.   This  remake
       gets  a  4  on the 0 to 10 scale and a 0 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-
       mrl]

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

            Marriage is the only adventure open to the cowardly.
                                          -- Voltaire


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