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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 04/16/99 -- Vol. 17, No. 42

       Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-957-5619, mleeper@lucent.com
       Factotum: Evelyn Leeper, 732-332-6218, 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. Our esteemed Chair (and the Club itself) are mentioned  on  page
       753 of ROGER EBERT'S MOVIE YEARBOOK 1999.  [-ecl]

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

       2. Today we live in an age when free expression  is  given  greater
       license  than  at just about any time in the past.  I would like to
       take a look at how free  expression  manifests  itself  in  today's
       journalism.  If you publish a magazine these days you don't have to
       worry about anybody telling you what you can and cannot put on  the
       cover.   No  subject  is  forbidden.  The taboos are gone.  I guess
       that's why when I walk past a magazine stand I  am  struck  by  how
       mind-bogglingly  similar and boring magazine covers are these days.
       Every magazine looks the same on a newsstand.  Every one is on  the
       same  subject.   What subject?  Sex, of course.  We used to have an
       artificial super-diversity of  subjects  that  magazines  could  be
       about  because the forces of the status quo were stopping magazines
       from writing about  what  we  all  knew  was  everybody's  favorite
       subject, sex.

       When I was growing up the subject of  sex  was  too  racy  for  any
       magazine  but  PLAYBOY.   You had to go to books to read about sex.
       And there used to be separate whole bookstores  for  this  type  of
       book.   And  even if you went into those bookstores and bought that
       sort of book the covers were plain with just a title.  You  had  to
       read  the  inside to find the nasty stuff.  These days that sort of
       store doesn't carry books any more.   Video  has  taken  over  that
       market.

       These days you don't have to buy that sort of book.  You just  need
       to  read the covers of the women's magazines at any newsstand or at
       the grocery checkout.  And they always are  on  the  same  subject,
       month  after  month.  Each one promises to improve your sex life by
       teaching you to find that all-important  "one  spot  to  drive  him
       wild."   Another  one  is  on health and fitness so you "look great
       naked."  One magazine after another crassly uses sex to entice you.
       Each promises to improve your sex life so that every month your sex
       will be better than the previous  month.   I  assume  that  if  the
       passion really did increase like this month after month, year after
       year, you would eventually get people rupturing themselves  if  not
       outright  exploding.   In  SAME  TIME NEXT YEAR a character bemoans
       having seen a magazine telling women how to  have  better  orgasms,
       and  it  was the same magazine that his mother used to read for the
       cookie recipes.  That play was written quite a while back, but  the
       situation has only gotten worse.

       Of course men's magazines seem to be about sex also.  I  guess  the
       principle  is  if  they  are  about  men  telling  men about sexual
       experiences the magazines have to be hidden behind counters or have
       boards  over  the covers.  If the magazines are about women telling
       women how to have sex, then it is fine for general consumption  and
       can be sold at grocery checkout stands.  Of course, being fair, you
       have to protect public morals and hide away PLAYBOY that will  show
       on  its  cover a half- naked lady on a garish red background.  This
       is totally unlike COSMOPOLITAN that shows on its cover a half-naked
       lady on a pastel lavender background.

       I used to love to browse newsstands for all the different kinds  of
       magazines.   Now  what you see is sex instruction for women and the
       magazines for men are mostly about video games, pickup trucks  with
       five-foot-diameter wheels, and professional wrestling.  I won't say
       these are any more intelligent than WOMAN'S G-SPOT MONTHLY, but  at
       least  they  seem  to have their mindset at least marginally out of
       the gutter.  Not that it makes for anything more readable.

       It wasn't supposed to be this way.  When censorship  went  away  we
       could  have  let  a  thousand  flowers bloom, not just one flower a
       thousand  times  as  big.   Paddy  Chayevsky  said  television   is
       democracy at its ugliest.  I don't think he ever looked at a modern
       newsstand.  [-mrl]

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

       3. COOKIE'S FORTUNE (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: A gentle crime story set in  a  sleepy
                 Mississippi  town  has  more  than its share of
                 eccentric  but  likeable  characters.    Robert
                 Altman  has  given  us  his  most  relaxing and
                 pleasant film.  For once we do not care if  all
                 the  plot strands are going to come together or
                 not, this is just an interesting set of people.
                 Rating: 8 (0 to 10), high +2 (-4 to +4)

       The  South  is  frequently  represented  negatively  in  film   and
       television,  particularly  since  the  civil rights movement of the
       1960s.  While few even from the South would claim  that  reputation
       is  entirely  unearned, like anywhere else there is good and bad in
       that  part  of  the  country.   Most  frequently,  "Mayberry,  RFD"
       notwithstanding,  the views of the southeastern part of the country
       have been the unpleasant images one sees in NORMA RAE  and  IN  THE
       HEAT  OF  THE NIGHT.  Some of the negative stereotypes met and were
       defeated by a more positive and even sentimental view in MY  COUSIN
       VINNEY.  MIDNIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF GOOD AND EVIL took things a step
       further and actually portrayed the fancy  section  of  Savannah  as
       having dignity, charm, and appealing people.  COOKIE'S FORTUNE goes
       even another step to spread the  charm  to  the  middle  and  lower
       middle  class.   Holly  Spring,  Mississippi, the setting of Robert
       Altman's new film, seems to have only one unpleasant person.  These
       people  are  just a pleasure to watch.  In fact, Altman has finally
       mastered a problem that he  has  had  with  his  films  for  years.
       Altman  makes  films  in  which  a  lot  of individual strands come
       together in the final reel.  Too frequently there seems  to  be  no
       obvious reason for the audience to follow a strand other than faith
       that it will become relevant eventually.  In COOKIE'S  FORTUNE  his
       characters  are  eccentric  and interesting enough, that they would
       worth watching even if the strands did not tie together.   This  is
       an  amiable  film  to  watch, one with rich characters and one with
       frequent chuckles.  We would not feel cheated even if  the  various
       plotlines  did  not  come  together.   For  that  reason  it may be
       Altman's film best coordinated with his style.   Even  without  the
       important  messages  of NASHVILLE or THE PLAYER, it may be Altman's
       most successful piece of art.

       Holly Spring, Mississippi is one of those sleepy  towns  where  the
       sun  takes  three  days  to  come up and five to go down.  The only
       thing that is complex about Holly Spring is  the  leading  family's
       family tree.  The leading citizen is Cookie, legally known as Jewel
       Mae Orcutt (hey, Patricia Neal is  still  acting).   Cookie  has  a
       modest  fortune,  but  her close companion Willis Richland (a show-
       stealing Charles Dutton) is afraid that  she  might  be  getting  a
       little *too* eccentric.  One of the most touching things about this
       film is the platonic, cross-racial love that  these  two  have  for
       each  other.   Then  there are Camille Orcutt (Glenn Close) and her
       pet human Cora Duvall (Julianne Moore)--  sisters,  and  nieces  to
       Cookie.  Camille absolutely dominates the dim Cora, though Cora was
       married once (hence the different surname) and had one  child,  the
       town's  scandal, Emma Duvall (Liv Tyler).  Emma has had a checkered
       past  and  is  also   the   town's   leading   criminal--flagrantly
       disregarding  parking  laws  as she delivers fresh catfish to local
       restaurants.  This makes things difficult for her current boyfriend
       and  lover  Jason Brown (Chris O'Donnell), the only young policeman
       in town.  All the rest of the police seem  old  enough  to  be  his
       grandfather.  When Cookie decides it is time to move on and commits
       suicide, Camille sees this as her chance to get her fair  share  of
       Cookie's  fortune.   She also wants to avoid the stigma of having a
       suicide in the family, so tampers with the crime scene to make  the
       suicide look like a burglary and murder.

       In the end, the plot of COOKIE'S FORTUNE seems a little  contrived.
       But  at  the  same  time  it  is  beguiling.  In what are generally
       considered to be Altman's best films he nevertheless talks down  to
       his  audience.   There are frequently laughs in an Altman film, but
       in THE PLAYER the laughs are  cynical  and  cold.   Here  they  are
       richer  and  not  at  all mean-spirited.  It is the old distinction
       between laughing with  someone  and  laughing  at  him.   For  once
       Altman's  message is simply "kick off your shoes and enjoy people."
       That might make this the best and  ironically  the  most  important
       film  he  has ever made.  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

            The more I see of men, the better I like dogs.
                                          -- Madame Roland