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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 04/09/99 -- Vol. 17, No. 41

       Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-957-5619, mleeper@lucent.com
       Factotum: Evelyn Leeper, 732-957-2070, eleeper@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist: Rob Mitchell, robmitchell@lucent.com
       HO Chair Emeritus: John Jetzt, jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian Emeritus: Nick Sauer, njs@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 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. More changes:

       The Factotum is moving to Holmdel April 12.   The  Editor/Chair  is
       moving  to  Holmdel April 28.  There will probably be a name change
       of the club.  For now, note that the *internal* archive of  old  MT
       VOIDs is now at http://www.dnrc.bell-labs.com/~eleeper.

       The MT VOID will be renamed.  The Chair/Editor and the Factotum are
       arguing about the new name.  [-ecl]

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

       2. Ironically, in any such argument with the Chairman, Editor,  and
       Grand  Exalted Poobah on one side and the simple little Factotum on
       the other side, the Factotum always wins.  This will show  you  how
       much faith to put in titles.  [-mrl]

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

       3. When I was in school we studied physics, and I have to say  that
       it  did  not  always  make  a  lot  of sense to me.  In specific we
       studied nuclear reactions.  We studied fission reactions and fusion
       reactions.   In  some  senses they were the opposite of each other.
       One is the breaking up of the nuclei of atoms; one is the gluing of
       them  back  together.   They  seem  like  they  are  the same thing
       happening, just in one you are running the clock forward and in the
       other  you  are  running  the clock backward.  But that is not what
       really happens.  Each of them releases a very great deal of energy.
       Of  course,  usually  when  you  think of fission, you think of the
       atoms with big clumsy nuclei.  Uranium  has  a  really  big  atomic
       number  and a big clumsy nucleus.  There are lots of particles in a
       uranium nucleus.  If you hold a uranium nucleus in  your  hand  and
       are  even  the  slightest  bit careless, pieces of the nucleus will
       fall off on their own.  It is like halvah.  But  when  the  uranium
       nucleus breaks apart you get a lot of loose energy leaking out.  On
       the other hand, when you think  of  fusion  you  think  of  smaller
       nuclei  and  they  are not all crumbly.  They love to stick to each
       other.  They are like wads of gum.  You can stick them together and
       they stay where they are stuck so you end up with a bigger nucleus.
       And again you end up with a lot of loose energy leaking off.

       Now intuition tells us that one should have absorbed a  great  deal
       of  energy,  but that is not how it happens.  And this was always a
       puzzlement to me.  That is it was until I came to work for AT&T and
       telecommunications  industry  in general.  I have to say that while
       this has not helped me to understand the physics any better, I have
       seen  the  same principle apply to major corporations that apply to
       nuclei of atoms.  Employees really are where the  corporation  gets
       its  energy; they are the energy of the company.  Now when I worked
       for AT&T it was big and crumbly.  Twice it broke into pieces.   And
       energy  was emitted in the form of laid-off employees.  I guess the
       model was that there were employees acting as glue to keep the  big
       corporation together.  When the company fissioned, former employees
       were emitted in all directions.  Now you would assume  mergers  and
       acquisitions  are  just the reversal of this operation, but--aha!--
       that is not what happens.  Instead what you have is just like  what
       happens  in  the  nucleus of an atom.  When two companies merge you
       have lay-offs and again you have one-time happy and loyal employees
       emitted from the system.

       Now what happens when these  employees  are  emitted?   They  start
       desperately   looking  for  jobs.   The  lucky  ones  go  to  other
       corporations.  And they may even look good  to  other  corporations
       since  they have experience.  The other corporation hires them, but
       then has to face the question of how to pay them.  Now put yourself
       in  the  place  of  a  corporation  where  one  of  these people is
       applying.  This is someone experienced and may even have  knowledge
       of  a  competitor's  processes.   They cannot afford to let him go.
       But they have to find the money to pay him.   They  could  let  one
       employee go, but the salary from one less-experienced employee will
       not cover the salary of the newly hired-more experienced  employee.
       Plus  money  has  to  come  from  somewhere  to  pay  for the Human
       Resources people who run the hiring process.  They really  have  to
       lay  off  two  of  their employees to cover their expenses.  So one
       lucky employee is absorbed and two unlucky  employees  are  emitted
       into  the  job  market.   They  will  probably  go to two different
       companies, each of which will lay off two  employees,  making  four
       unemployed  people.  What you get then is a classic chain reaction.
       Companies all over the industry are  laying  off  employees  faster
       than  they  can  get absorbed and you have massive unemployment and
       terrible destruction like one gets from  a  nuclear  fission  chain
       reaction.

       So American corporations and nuclear particle reactions  each  shed
       light  on  the  behavior  of the other.  Each acts in much the same
       way.  Presumably the answer to why  is  it  that  both  fusion  and
       fission  reactions  give  off  energy  is simple.  Somewhere in the
       nucleus there has to be a particle that enhances itself  by  making
       "the hard decision" to let the energy packet go, supposedly for the
       good of the atom.  One the energy packet is emitted  the  this  new
       particle is raised to a higher energy state though overall the atom
       has less energy.  Of course, the atom  will  be  totally  destroyed
       somewhere  down  the  line  of  the  reaction as the result of this
       reaction and others like it, but for the time being the  atom  will
       feel better about itself.  I would like to name this new particle a
       "moron."

       (This article is dedicated to Gary Zukov.)  [-mrl]

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

       4. THE MATRIX (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: What a mixed bag!  This is a film with
                 great   ideas,   beautiful   visuals,  terrific
                 martial arts, and concepts that tie reality  in
                 knots.   It also has incredibly thin characters
                 and long  sections  where  the  plot  does  not
                 advance  beyond  who  is  kicking, shooting, or
                 blowing up whom.  The storytelling  is  totally
                 muddled.   But  for the characters and the plot
                 this would be a great film.  Rating:  6  (0  to
                 10),  high  +1  (-4 to +4).  Note: Every effort
                 was made to keep this review spoiler-free.

       THE MATRIX is a tough film to review for  many  different  reasons.
       In  the  first  place,  what  can  one  say about the basic concept
       without revealing too much?  The entire  premise  of  the  film  is
       something  of  a  surprise.  I will say that it is fair to say that
       things are not as they seem at  the  beginning  of  the  film,  but
       saying  anything more than that about the premise could conceivably
       damage the viewer's enjoyment of  the  film.   In  this  story  the
       actuality  is really very different from being what it seems to be.
       Philip K. Dick would have been right at home in THE MATRIX with his
       frequent  stories  of  reality  being turned inside out.  I believe
       there was an episode of the newer series of THE  TWILIGHT  ZONE  on
       this  concept,  but  this  is  its  first  treatment in detail in a
       feature-length film.

       Neo, the main character (played by  Keanu  Reaves),  has  this  gut
       feeling  that  there is something different that is going on beyond
       with everybody seems to know.  It is something VERY different.  Neo
       wakes  up one morning with a phone call from the mysterious Trinity
       (Carrie Anne-Moss) Trinity seems to be something like a hacker with
       what  frequently  look  like magical powers--powers like an ability
       jump amazing distances.  Trinity takes her orders from someone even
       more  elusive  and  mysterious,  the nearly omniscient super-hacker
       Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne).  The government is trying  to  track
       down  the  hackers  Trinity  and Morpheus, and sends to recruit Neo
       some agents who look a lot like the  title  characters  in  MEN  IN
       BLACK.   Neo  is given the choice of helping to capture Morpheus or
       of being enslaved by strange forces.  Soon it is not clear  to  Neo
       what  is real and what is in his dreams.  But when he throws in his
       lot with Morpheus and Trinity, things become  even  stranger.   And
       then they become a lot stranger still.

       THE MATRIX is written and  directed  by  brothers  Andy  and  Larry
       Wachowski  who  previously  demonstrated  that they could write and
       direct a nice compact and  tightly  plotted  thriller  with  BOUND.
       There  is,  sadly,  little that is compact or tightly plotted about
       THE MATRIX.  This is a film just chock full of martial arts fights,
       shootouts,  and  bomb  explosions.   But  the Wachowskis spend very
       little screen time fleshing out their main characters or getting us
       to  care too much what happens to them.  We know they stand between
       the world and some really nasty fate.  Presumably if they lose, the
       people  in  the audience lose also.  But that is not the same thing
       as making us really care if these people live or die.  Keanu Reeves
       sees  to  be is a sort of stupor through much of the film.  That is
       not unrealistic considering  the  circumstances  but  it  certainly
       kills  his empathy value.  The characters get themselves in and out
       of danger without ever creating dramatic tension.

       Somehow in BOUND the Wachowski Brothers did a much  better  job  of
       getting  the  audience  to  identify with their primary characters.
       Unfortunately, the two brothers were far more concerned  about  the
       look  of  the  film  than  about making the audience empathize with
       Trinity or  Neo  or  even  Morpheus.   This  film  shows  the  main
       characters getting lots of action, having lots of fights, but never
       giving us any reason to care who wins and who loses those fights.

       The exquisite look of the film,  frequently  variations  in  visual
       themes of blacks and reds, is created by cinematographer Bill Pope,
       who previously filmed DARKMAN,  ARMY  OF  DARKNESS,  CLUELESS,  and
       BOUND.   Perhaps  part of Pope's inspiration was the noir-ish world
       of DARK CITY.  His photography nicely  shows  off  the  stunts  and
       martial  arts  work of Hong Kong director Wu-ping Yuen, here just a
       stunt coordinator and a martial arts instructor. But all too  often
       Yuen seems to be soaking up screen time.  It seems a pity that this
       film has such an audacious concept and ends up with so many  fights
       that  could have been taken from any simple police procedural plot.
       It is a little insulting to the audience to  present  some  of  the
       more interesting ideas and then to treat them on such a superficial
       level, almost as if the script did not realize  how  good  its  own
       ideas  were.  THE MATRIX could have done so much more to engage the
       intellect and not simply a gut reaction.

       When there was so much potential for an intelligent story here  the
       Wachowski Brothers have opted to spend most of their screen time on
       mindless action.  This is a good martial arts film and action  film
       in  a world already overflowing with martial arts and action films.
       It should please the vast bulk of the audience who want to  see  it
       Friday  night,  have  a  good  time, and have forgotten about it by
       Saturday  morning.   Those  who  would  want  an  intelligent   and
       thoughtful  piece  of  science  fiction will be more tantalized and
       frustrated than gratified.  I rate THE MATRIX a 6 on the  0  to  10
       scale and a high +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

            Heaven goes by favor.  If it went by merit, you would
            stay out and your dog would go in.
                                          -- Mark Twain


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