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	                Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
	            Club Notice - 05/28/99 -- Vol. 17, No. 48

       Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-817-5619, 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. We are pleased to announce that the Science Fiction Club library
       is  now  consolidated and catalogued.  The catalog is available on-
       line (to Lucent members only, so my apologies to the rest  of  you)
       at  http://www.dnrc.bell-labs.com/~eleeper/sfclub.htm.   Most books
       circulate for four weeks at a time.  If you want to borrow a  book,
       please  contact Evelyn Leeper (eleeper@lucent.com, 732-332-6218) or
       Mark Leeper (mleeper@lucent.com, 732-817-5619).  [-ecl]

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

       2. Special thanks go this week to our  esteemed  factotum  who  has
       been  factoting  boxes  of  books  to organize the library.  Hey, I
       could have done it, but it  would  have  taken  me  a  lot  longer.
       Evelyn has done a lot of work and I want to thank her.   [-mrl]

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

       3. After seeing the commotion surrounding the opening of STAR  WARS
       I: THE PHANTOM MENACE, I feel a little more secure about the coming
       of the year 2000.  I live in central New Jersey and I  got  tickets
       for  the  film relatively easily and at the local going price, high
       as it is.  I believe that is $8.25 per ticket.  In  New  York  City
       the  scalpers  are charging $100 for tickets.  There is a fear that
       if the social order breaks down in New York  City  that  hordes  of
       marauders  are  going  to  attack central New Jersey scavenging for
       food.  But there were no such hordes coming looking for  Star  Wars
       tickets.  Maybe we are far enough away to be safe.  [-mrl]

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

       4. Last week I was saying that in general humans  have  a  sort  of
       prejudice  against  computers  and  tend  not to trust them when we
       should.  The big event of  disagreement  with  a  computer  was  in
       Harrisburg,  Pennsylvania.   Three  Mile Island was an example of a
       minor disaster that could easily have become a very major one.  And
       it really was started by a minor incident that the computer systems
       would have taken care of, but they were over-ridden by a human  who
       decided  erroneously  what  the  computer  was  doing was wrong and
       overrode the computer.  The result could well have killed everybody
       over  much  of  the Eastern seaboard.  What a fascinating alternate
       history story is sitting here waiting for someone to write it.

       But I think that we hear more of the instances where  the  computer
       is  wrong  and  the human would be right.  Banks just love to blame
       their errors on a computer failure.  "Our computer made  a  mistake
       and  posted  the wrong interest..."  That is the sort of thing gets
       said a lot.  I think what we are seeing is a new  sort  of  racism.
       There was a time when people felt good blaming the nearest black or
       Chinese or Jew for any problem that arose.  That is because  humans
       are suspicious of anything that is different.  On some level it may
       be that we know that people who look the way we do have  a  lot  of
       genes in common with us and we are sticking up for those genes.  In
       any case we trust what we feel is like us and distrust those things
       that  are  different.   Consider the history of the Dreyfus Case in
       France.  A whole nation made a Jew  a  scapegoat  for  little  more
       reason  than  that  he  was a Jew and different.  And computers are
       very different.

       So if you are making a movie there is a natural  tendency  to  make
       the  computer  the  villain.   And  on one level that may be a good
       thing.  If one must make one group the villain,  make  it  a  group
       that  has  no  feelings at all.  Let's face it, the bank's computer
       could not care less if someone really wanted to send it  to  Devils
       Island.   So  in  some  senses a computer is a safe scapegoat.  The
       danger is that we will come to believe that trusting  computers  is
       dangerous  and that as humans we know better.  That was the mistake
       we made at Three Mile Island and the next Three Mile  Island  might
       not be so fortuitously defused.

       I have the feeling that we are headed to a time when there will  be
       a  lot  of  mistrust of computers.  A human worker may come to work
       drunk or may have problems at home and  may  be  unreliable  for  a
       period  of time.  That is only human.  And being human such moments
       are scattered.  Computers too  have  their  moments  of  particular
       unreliability  but they are all synchronized.  Most of you probably
       know what I am talking about, but I will go into more  detail  next
       week.  [-mrl]

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

       5. STAR WARS EPISODE 1: THE PHANTOM MENACE (a film review  by  Mark
       R. Leeper):

	         Capsule: What George Lucas does well,  he  does
	         better  than anyone else.  Simply put this film
	         probably shows the greatest visual  imagination
	         of  any  film  ever  made.   (Probably only one
	         non-STAR WARS film even competes).  It even has
	         a   few   interesting  science  fiction  ideas.
	         George Lucas returns to many of the  values  of
	         EPISODE 4, missing in 5 and 6.  EPISODE 1 has a
	         host of new  alien  species,  another  strongly
	         mythic  story,  and  a  few embarrassments, but
	         overall it is a lot of fun.  Rating:  9  (0  to
	         10), +3 (-4 to +4)

       When KING KONG was released the trailers said, "this was  what  the
       films  were  made  for."   It may be a bit of an overstatement, but
       they  were  implying  that  the  films  are  made  to  show  visual
       imagination,  to  translate  from  somebody's mind's eye to a movie
       screen.  And KING KONG  did  just  that.   Willis  O'Brien's  stop-
       motion  animation  was  a  giant leap forward in translating images
       from the mind's eye to the movie screen.  Things then stagnated for
       44  years.   Ray  Harryhausen  refined  stop-motion  and  made some
       marvelous films, but there was no major leaps until 1977  and  STAR
       WARS.   The leap made with STAR WARS was really a big jump.  It was
       also the starting gun on a race to create new kinds  of  images  on
       film  to  stretch the audience's imagination.  Since then the field
       of special effects has been rapidly  developing.   In  1999  George
       Lucas  can  no  longer  hope  to  create a film so far ahead of the
       competition.  He can create a film that blends new effects with the
       best existing effects sufficiently to trump any other film that has
       ever been made.  For the most part he is competing  only  with  his
       own  previous  films.   The only non-Lucasfilm really to compete is
       the otherwise insipid WHAT DREAMS MAY COME.

       The reviews have been very mixed on EPISODE 1, but the ones who  in
       the  past  have  been  most  receptive  to  fantasy  on the screen,
       especially Roger Ebert, have been quite  positive.   I  think  that
       Lucas  is  determined that EPISODE 3 will absolutely blow away even
       the new jazzed-up version of EPISODE 4.

       Certainly for me the new film was a satisfying  experience.   There
       is  undeniable excitement from the very beginning in seeing the Fox
       banner and hearing the opening chords of  a  new  Star  Wars  film.
       George Lucas is starting a new trilogy but hardly needs to rekindle
       excitement in the series.  Teens born after the release of the last
       three  film  line  up  for  the  new film, a significant number are
       wearing costumes from the series or jackets with decals  for  "pod-
       racing,"  a  sport depicted in EPISODE 1.  It would be hard to live
       up to all that expectation, but  the  new  film  probably  manages.
       Lucas  is  trying  not  so  much to recapture the feel of the whole
       series but of the first film in specific.  EPISODE 4 took place  in
       a   polyglot  universe  where  many  different  species  of  aliens
       interacted with each other in a very matter-of-fact manner.   Often
       the interactions were light and comical.  That universe was missing
       in EPISODE 5 and though it partially returned  in  EPISODE  6,  the
       interactions  were  not  nearly  as  fun.  In EPISODE I Lucas again
       takes different alien races and tosses them together as casually as
       Robert Altman tosses together different personality types.  On once
       more he has a story with the resonance of a strong mythic  core  as
       he did in EPISODE 1.

       Just what the plot is I will not say in detail since any number  of
       other reviews will have it and I have heard that something like six
       different authors have books that tell the plot from a Terry Brooks
       version  down to one or two children's books.  In the plot a war is
       starting over, of all things, taxation.   At  first  that  seems  a
       lackluster  motivation  for  all  the fireworks of something called
       "the Star Wars."  But it is also a very realistic touch.   Taxation
       started  the  American  Revolution  and other wars through history.
       The "millions for defense but not one cent  for  tribute"  attitude
       may  very believably be part of the Star Wars universe.  So we have
       the Federation as the bad guys and one rebellious republic  as  the
       good  guys.   Lucas  has  finally  officially made his nasties "the
       Federation,"--perhaps a  direct  allusion  to  the  para-militarist
       Federation of STAR TREK.  Now we will see what the STAR TREK people
       will do to retaliate.  The real Star Wars may be a  battle  between
       STAR  TREK  and STAR WARS science fiction series with Lucas selling
       special effects to both sides.  But I should get back to the  plot.
       When  a  conflict  between the Federation and the Republic turns to
       open acts of war Jedi knights Qui-Gon (played by Liam  Neeson)  and
       Obi-wan  Kenobi  (Ewan  McGregor)  on  a  mission  to Queen Amidala
       (Natlie Portman).  Accompanying them is Jar Jar  Binks.   Binks  is
       done  entirely in three-dimensional animation.  He seems to be from
       a race descended from Hadrosaur-like duck-billed dinosaurs.  Having
       a  duckbill,  the  animation  of his mouth can use visual gags that
       usually were the sole province of the  animators  of  Donald  Duck.
       The  group  is  also  joined  by  a handmaiden from Queen Amidala's
       retinue.

       Along the way this group stops off on desert world Tatooine.  There
       they  encounter  a  boy  of mystical birth who is suffused with the
       force and whose coming may have been foretold in  prophecy.   Lucas
       does  not simply remake his previous successes--though there are of
       few repeated scenes--but he does give us a larger context  for  his
       story.   He  gives  us  some  new  concepts  including  a different
       understanding of what the Force really is.

       The script borrows from more than just mythical sources.   Anything
       that Lucas sees that seems nifty at the moment is grist for showing
       up in some way in the  films.   The  sweeping  lines  of  an  SR-71
       Blackbird  are  borrowed  for  a  silver  interstellar ship in this
       version.  There are  robots  that  are  probably  inspired  by  the
       wheelies  in  the  Frank L. Baum Oz books.  Little touches from THE
       ABYSS and BEN HUR are also present.  One can imagine  that  touches
       of  this  film  will  be imitated by other films for years to come.
       George Lucas has again  raised  the  bar  on  what  audiences  will
       consider  a  good  fantasy image on film.  His story values may not
       keep pace, but his greatest contribution has always been in  visual
       imagination.

       Lucas is too good a director not to have at least competent  acting
       throughout   the   film.   As  with  EPISODE  4  he  has  his  most
       distinguished actor, in this case Liam  Neeson,  playing  the  wise
       Jedi  knight.  But it is a role that requires only a limited amount
       of acting.  A Jedi keeps his emotions in check, Jedi  knighthood  a
       less   demanding   role.    Neeson  carries  his  SCHINDLER'S  LIST
       reputation with him and beyond that he needs only behave dignified.
       In  fact  the  only  really  unusual  acting in the film comes from
       Natalie Portman as Queen  Amidala.   Dressed  in  Chinese  Imperial
       Mandarin  robes  she  seems  very  stiff  and  uses  an  irritating
       autocratic diction making her a difficult character  to  like.   It
       does  become clear from the plot why Lucas wanted this, but it does
       not entirely work to the film's  favor.   The  film  has  almost  a
       Japanese   styling.   In  a  samurai  film  the  filmmaker  uses  a
       distancing effect between the viewer and the samurai.   One  rarely
       gets  inside  the  samurai's  head.  And royalty are generally even
       more stiff and impenetrable.  This attitude of Japanese  films  may
       have  its roots in Japanese society and making royalty or a samurai
       too comprehensible would almost be impertinence.   Lucas  seems  to
       have  borrowed  those  values for this film.  In EPISODE 4 one knew
       what made Luke do what he did and in this film we know  what  makes
       young  Anakin  tick,  but  Jedi Knights are a bit more inscrutable.
       And Amidala in her this white makeup and stiff  Imperial  robes  is
       even more so.

       Ewan McGregor has little acting to do but sound like Alec  Guinness
       and  fight  like Mark Hamill.  This is not his film.  Jake Lloyd as
       Anakin has a lot of personality and  screen  presence  for  one  so
       young.   Having  him behaving as adult as he does gives the film at
       times the feeling of a children's film.  But because we  know  what
       will happen to him, it should be remembered that even at this point
       he is possessed by both superhuman  talents  and  a  potential  for
       evil.  It is his life and the battle within him that is the central
       thread binding together STAR WARS.  (That may  not  have  been  the
       initial  plan,  but  with  Lucas  trimming  the  series back to six
       episodes that is how it has turned out.)

       Rounding out the cast are two familiar actors in dispensable roles.
       You have to wonder why an actor of Samuel Jackson's stature takes a
       role that might just as well be played by an  unknown  in  a  squid
       mask.   Terence Stamp and Samuel Jackson get their cards stamped as
       being Official Star Wars Characters but have little to do and  once
       they  do  it  they  leave  the story without a trace.  Their action
       figures will need no moving parts.

       It might have been a temptation to re-cycle much of the older  John
       Williams  STAR  WARS  musical  score, but that was not what he did.
       The CD has 74 minutes of music and besides  the  requisite  opening
       music  and  a  small  trace  of the old Obi- Wan theme, none of the
       music is familiar.  This film has more new music than most  totally
       new  films.  Some is of a familiar style, but much is experimental.
       Frequently the new score uses unexpected choral arrangements.  Only
       one piece seems a bit out of place.  The triumphal march at the end
       of the film sounds  a  little  too  much  like  a  marching  band's
       football  half-time music.  Perhaps STAR WARS music has been mauled
       by so many marching bands that Williams wanted to appease the bands
       by giving them something to play without them fouling up his better
       music.

       Perhaps  the  most  interesting  touch  to  EPISODE  I  may  be  an
       unintentional result of making the film out of chronological order.
       STAR WARS is a bit like a spectacular film that you  came  into  in
       the  middle  and  stayed  for a second showing to see the parts the
       viewer missed.  Lucas does some interesting things with the  origin
       of his series.  He gives Anakin an origin that has strong parallels
       to the Christ story.  Making any other character a Christ figure is
       usually pretentious, but here it is pure audacity.  We already know
       that Darth Vader will be the second most evil  force  in  the  Star
       Wars  universe.   To  say  then he is really like Christ takes more
       courage and imagination than  most  films  show  these  days.   One
       starts  looking  for  a holy Trinity and quickly finds a father and
       son manifesting the same Force.  Is the Emperor the Holy Ghost?  We
       have  to  wait  and see where Lucas is going with this.  Few people
       have realized how subversive the series has  been  already.   Lucas
       repeatedly  has  images  of  a not very powerful or technologically
       advanced people fighting a large and much more  advanced  military.
       Lucas  reportedly has admitted privately that his prototype for the
       good guys of the Rebellion was the North Vietnamese.  We know  whom
       that makes The Empire, don't we?

       What is not good about the film?   I  do  thing  there  are  a  few
       problems.  There is a bit too much silliness going on.  The concept
       for the announcer at the pod race was a foolish  idea  that  should
       have  been left on the cutting room floor.  I would have toned down
       but not eliminated the hijinx of Jar  Jar  Binks.   It  may  be  my
       hearing   but  many  of  the  new  creature  accents  are  hard  to
       understand.  In addition Bink's people add an extra syllable, "sa,"
       to   many  English  words  that  is  at  first  very  difficult  to
       understand.  These accents could be toned down or subtitled.  Queen
       Amidala  tells  us  multiple times that her people are under attack
       and are being killed, but surprisingly for this  oh-so-visual  film
       series  the  plight  of  her  people  is  never  shown.   Lucas  is
       supposedly mimicking the style of serials  when  he  opens  with  a
       sheet  of  explanation  of  what  has  gone before.  But in a movie
       serial that exposition was intended to tell the audience  what  has
       gone  before in the previous chapter of the serial.  It would never
       be used in the first episode.  Lucas misuses it when in  the  first
       episode he uses it to set up what has gone before.

       The flying junkman could be  interpreted  as  an  offensive  Jewish
       stereotype.   Or  he could be just a stereotype of a junkman.  I am
       not sure if that is not as bad.

       The light-saber fights seem to go on too long, but  at  least  they
       demonstrate  Kendo  as  a fighting style, which makes them a little
       more interesting.  Certainly the fights are more engaging than  the
       endless  fights  in which anything could happen in THE MATRIX.  And
       finally I would say that "Feel, don't think" is a lousy philosophy.

       Starting a new trilogy George Lucas has to arouse interest  in  the
       series.   Certainly  the pre-release reception this film has gotten
       has got to have been as successful as  anything  Lucas  could  have
       hoped for.  The reviews to this point have been mixed, but a series
       that is always at its high-point will become tiresome.   STAR  WARS
       EPISODE  1:  THE  PHANTOM  MENACE is imperfect, but it surpassed my
       expectation.  I would give it a 9 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +3  on
       the -4 to +4 scale.  It is a nice neat packet of well-crafted fun.

       There are several questions left open by the film, but  I  want  to
       note a few.  I also want to make an observation.

       Why does beheading kill an imperial droid?  Why anthropomorphize  a
       fighting robot so much as to have a human vulnerability?

       In EPISODE 4 R2-D2 does not know Obi-Wan.  That is  fine  since  he
       might  have  had  that  memory wiped.  But Obi-Wan did not have his
       memory wiped.  Why does he not remember R2-D2?

       The junk dealer flies on what are obviously non-aerodynamic  wings.
       Is  this  just an error or are we intended to believe that he is in
       part levitating?

       Curiously in visual film fantasy the important years occur  at  22-
       year  intervals.   1933  saw a big leap with KING KONG.  1955 was a
       lesser jump with THIS ISLAND EARTH, followed shortly  by  FORBIDDEN
       PLANET.   Two  major studios had competed with each other to create
       the more impressive space opera.  The first STAR WARS film, a major
       jump,  was  1977.  This film which is again a large but lesser jump
       in fantasy visualization was released in 1999.  I  wonder  what  we
       can expect for 2021?  [-mrl]

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

       6. TO SAY NOTHING OF THE DOG by Connie Willis (Bantam  Spectra  HC,
       1998, Science Fiction Book Club Edition, ISBN 0-553-09995-7, 434pp)
       (a book review by Joe Karpierz):

       I like time travel stories.   I  like  stories  by  Connie  Willis.
       Therefore,  it  follows  that  I like time travel stories by Connie
       Willis.  Well, sometimes.

       Time travel stories are amongst the oldest in the  sf  genre.   The
       earliest  that I can remember, and probably the most famous, is THE
       TIME MACHINE by H. G. Wells.  My favorite kind of time travel story
       is  one  in which the characters don't just visit another time, but
       specifically go back  to  the  past  and  muck  with  things,  thus
       changing  the future, which may be the present from the perspective
       of the characters.  Usually this involves some sort of paradox.   A
       standard  time  travel paradox question raised at sf conventions is
       "if you go back in time to kill your grandparents, would you  blink
       out  of  existence?"  So, we can either change the future, or cause
       massive  paradoxes  (anybody  who's  ever  watched  Doctor  Who  is
       extremely   familiar   with   both).    Sometimes  the  paradox  is
       intentional, sometimes it's something the  author  just  failed  to
       take into account for some strange reason.

       A few years ago, Connie Willis wrote a very good time travel  novel
       called  DOOMSDAY  BOOK,  which  co-won  the  Hugo  the  year it was
       published.  TO SAY NOTHING OF THE DOG is set in that same universe,
       but  while  entertaining,  doesn't  live  up  to  its predecessor's
       standards.

       The story takes place in 2057, and Lady  Schrapnell  is  rebuilding
       Coventry  Cathedral,  destroyed  back  in  WWII by a Nazi air raid.
       Since "God is in the detail"s, she wants to duplicate the cathedral
       exactly.   Her last obsession is something called the bishop's bird
       stump, and she wants it  very  badly.   So  badly  that  every  one
       involved  in the time travel institute, who stands to receive a lot
       of money from Schrapnell if they  find  the  stump,  and  therefore
       recreate  the  cathedral, is hunting for it and everything else she
       is asking for.  Our hero is Ned Henry, who has made so many "drops"
       that  he  is time lagged, is badly in need of a rest.  So he's sent
       to Victorian England to run a mission, then take  a  long  deserved
       rest away from the chaos.
       Let me interject here to say that Willis has a nice  little  design
       for  her  time  travel environment.  When an incongruity is caused,
       the time travel net automatically, and on  its  own,  corrects  it.
       One of the things it does is cause "slippage," a phenomenon wherein
       you don't quite get where you want to, because the timeline doesn't
       want you to.  Some time/place combinations are impossible to get to
       because they are crisis points.  The net  just  won't  let  you  go
       there.

       Anyway, Ned goes back to Victorian England, as  it  turns  out,  to
       deliver  a cat, which another time traveller, Verity, saved because
       the butler for the family she was staying with at that  time  threw
       it  into  the Thames (cats are extinct, sad to say, in 2057, so she
       wanted to save it).  Verity is in Victorian England to try and read
       the   diary  of  one  Tossie,  great  grandmother  or  so  of  Lady
       Schrapnell.  It's  already  starting  to  get  too  complicated  to
       explain.   Needless to say, the institute thinks that the cat being
       rescued has caused an incongruity, and they want it fixed.

       Trust me people, it's more complicated than that.

       Yes, it's a mystery novel as well as a time travel story.  And it's
       not  a  bad  mystery novel.  The mystery can be unravelled with all
       the clues given to the reader,  but  it  is  extremely  convoluted.
       Henry proposes a solution based on an extremely involved fix of the
       incongruity caused by the missing bishop's bird stump that I  found
       a little over the top.  And while it all fits, well, I found that I
       didn't care.

       Willis always writes entertaining novels, and many are  laced  with
       her  trademarked  and  snappy  banter, as is this one.  But I never
       really cared for any  of  the  characters,  although  I  wanted  to
       strangle  Tossie  on  at least a half dozen occasions.  And while I
       was mildly interested in finding out the solution to the mystery, I
       was  disappointed  in  it,  and I was never really engrossed by the
       novel.

       So, if you like Connie Willis and time travel stories, this one  is
       probably okay for you.  It just isn't Hugo material.  [-jak]

	                                  Mark Leeper
	                                  HO 1K-644 732-817-5619
	                                  mleeper@lucent.com

	    To believe is very dull.  To doubt is intensely
	    engrosing.  To be on the alert is to live, to be
	    lulled into security is to die.
	                                  -- Oscar Wilde


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