@@@@@ @   @ @@@@@    @     @ @@@@@@@   @       @  @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@
         @   @   @ @        @ @ @ @    @       @     @   @   @   @   @  @
         @   @@@@@ @@@@     @  @  @    @        @   @    @   @   @   @   @
         @   @   @ @        @     @    @         @ @     @   @   @   @  @
         @   @   @ @@@@@    @     @    @          @      @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@

                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 06/25/99 -- Vol. 17, No. 52

       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. On March 13, 1964, at about 3 AM, Catherine Genovese,  known  as
       Kitty  to  her  friends and neighbors, was returning to her Queens,
       New York, apartment when she was attacked by a man  with  a  knife.
       She  called  for help and woke her neighbors who yelled for the man
       to stop.  He went away momentarily, but returned minutes later.  He
       attacked  her three times that hour.  Each time Genovese called for
       help, each time the neighbors--38 witnesses to the crime--gave  her
       verbal  support,  for whatever good it did.  But nobody came to her
       aid.  Nobody even wanted to get involved enough to call the police.
       It  is,  of  course,  inconvenient  to  get  involved.  Worse it is
       possibly dangerous.  The third attack was fatal.

       For a little while afterward the Genovese incident was a  point  of
       national  shame.  What kind of people had we become to stand by and
       let this sort of thing happen?  Incidents afterward have shown that
       that sort of attitude is really not typical of the American people.
       Similar incidents have occurred, perhaps  not  as  newsworthy,  and
       people  have  come to the aid of others in danger.  I would like to
       think that the latter  behavior  is  more  representatives  of  the
       American people.  Look at nations, however, rather than people, and
       it is a different  story.   Nations  act  a  lot  more  like  Kitty
       Genovese's neighbors and for many of the same reasons.

       When  one  starts  examining  international  diplomacy,   Genovese-
       neighbor  attitude  is  much  more common.  Many countries consider
       isolationism  a  virtue.   That  is  why  there  is   international
       bewilderment  as to why President Clinton would want to involve his
       country in a war in Yugoslavia.  And he did  more  than  that.   He
       goaded  NATO  into  taking  action.  And it was a dangerous action.
       Countries that become embroiled in the Balkans often find they have
       bit off more than they can chew.  But then so do people who take on
       knife-wielding strangers in the night.  Some risks you take because
       they  are  moral.   Or  put  another way, if there were no risks in
       being moral it would not be a virtue.

       And the motive for our going to war in the Balkans is one we do not
       see  very  frequently  in international politics.  We were doing it
       because of what we, and what most people, would  consider  inhumane
       treatment  of  the Albanian population of Kosovo.  And that was not
       just the excuse; that WAS the motive.  It was really not to protect
       our  supply  of a commodity like petroleum.  It was not because our
       diplomats had been kidnapped.  It was nothing of the usual sort  of
       reason.  It genuinely was a matter of principle.  People were being
       murdered and raped and we thought it had to stop.

       Going to war for a principle is extremely unusual.  It  is  unusual
       to  see wars that do not serve a physical need for land or a hatred
       or a fear.  And of course most wars are for economic gain.   People
       understand that kind of motive for going to war.  And then you make
       up excuses like that you had to save the noble German people in the
       Sudetenland.  But the Serbs are no threat to us militarily and they
       are not economic competitors.  We went to war  because  one  people
       was  torturing  another  people.  I am not sure what the right word
       is.  "Persecuting" is far too  mild  a  word  for  the  raping  and
       murdering that was going on in Kosovo.  There was general consensus
       in the United States and the world that the Serb government  should
       not be doing what it was doing.  But it takes more than consensus.

       The question was what should our reaction have been?  Well, this is
       what  it  could have been.  In time-honored tradition of nations of
       the world we could have gone to  the  United  Nations  and  clucked
       about  the  killing in Kosovo.  That would have been good and safe.
       We would have had an automatic exit strategy.  When it was over  we
       drive  up  some  limousines  to  the  UN  and drive our UN staff to
       dinner.  There is not much risk there.   It  is  always  easier  to
       withdraw  diplomats  from the UN than to withdraw troops from a war
       zone.  There would have been no entanglements.  Of course, it would
       not  have  stopped  anything.   But  we  would be on the record for
       opposing  genocide.   Kitty   Genovese's   neighbors   would   have
       understood  that approach.  We would have been opposing the carnage
       verbally and the carnage would have  continued.   But  that  wasn't
       what  we  did.  But we went to war for the human rights of a people
       half a world away and a people who do not otherwise touch our daily
       lives.   There  is  no  big  Albanian  lobby  in  Washington.   Few
       politicians court the Albanian vote.   As  far  as  the  press  has
       covered,  there  was  no  big  Albanian contribution to any Clinton
       Election Fund.

       The war really did have some costs.  There were  some  errors.   At
       least  temporarily  we  alienated  China  and  Russia--paragons  of
       morality neither.  They need our approval much more  than  we  need
       theirs.   Clinton  lost  some points in his popularity polls.  They
       will come back.  I certainly expect that the history books will see
       that  Clinton did the right thing and in the words of Mark Twain he
       really did gratify some and astonish  the  rest.   But  rightly  or
       wrongly  we  have  for  years taken on this role of being the moral
       leader of the world,  and  one  of  the  prices  of  that  role  is
       occasionally we have a responsibility to lead morally.

       We could have been entangled in another long  conflict.   It  still
       might happen.  We took one very large risk to set things right in a
       political backwater that really does not amount to  much  in  world
       politics.   But  then  knife-wielding assailants are dangerous too,
       and Kitty Genovese was just a barmaid.  [-mrl]

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

       2. TARZAN (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: Disney Studios has  made  three  films
                 about  the Tarzan-like Mowgli.  No they finally
                 have made a film about Tarzan himself, but what
                 a disappointment.  They have aimed it at a very
                 young  audience  and  thrown  in   a   lot   of
                 anachronistic  humor.   They  have turned their
                 backs on all but the  basics  of  the  original
                 plot.   The  Phil  Collins songs are nauseating
                 and the so-called comic style is just  as  bad.
                 The animation is great, but little else will be
                 of interest to Burroughs fans or adults.   This
                 is  a  real  letdown for Disney animation after
                 MULAN.  Rating: 4 (0 to 10), low 0 (-4 to +4)

       Disney Studios seems to love the concept of feral  children.   They
       have  made three films from Rudyard Kipling's THE JUNGLE BOOK.  Now
       they are starting in on Tarzan, Edgar Rice  Burroughs's  even  more
       popular  character  originally  inspired  by the Mowgli tales.  And
       with luck, starting is all they will do.  Tarzan would  be  a  good
       choice  for  Disney  studios  since Disney never feels particularly
       obligated to be faithful to the source material.   After  all,  why
       bother?   Their  version  will  be  the  canonical  one after it is
       released  anyway,  right?   But  Burroughs   fans   are   used   to
       disappointment.   With  all  the  many  theatrical film versions of
       Tarzan almost none have been accurate to the Burroughs  conception.
       Until  the  Disney version the original 1918 film version of TARZAN
       OF THE APES and the first half of GREYSTOKE: THE LEGEND OF  TARZAN,
       LORD  OF THE APES are the only films that even look at where Tarzan
       came from and how he got to be Tarzan.  The rest just assumed there
       was this man in the jungle.

       In the new Disney animated version we begin with a mother,  father,
       and  baby escaping from a burning ship and trying to survive ashore
       in equatorial Africa.  (In  the  book  they  were  Alice  and  John
       Clayton,  but  the  name  Clayton  is  used  in  this  film for the
       villain.)  At about the same time the she-gorilla Kala  (voiced  by
       Glenn  Close)  lost  her  own  baby to Sabor the fierce leopard who
       holds Kala's tribe in fear.  The grieving Kala hears the cry  of  a
       human  baby  and finds a tree house destroyed by Sabor, and in it a
       dead  man  and  woman,  and  their  still-living  baby.   Over  the
       objection   of   her   mate  Kerchak  (Lance  Henrickson)  and  the
       disapproval of the other apes Kala  adopts  the  baby,  naming  him
       Tarzan.   Tarzan  (Alex D. Linz as a boy and Tony Goldwyn as a man)
       grows up  an  outsider  with  an  androgynous  friend  Terk  (Rosie
       O'Donnell who brings entirely too much Rosie O'Donnell humor to the
       film).  Tarzan struggles  to  win  the  approval  of  Kerchak,  but
       Kerchak  is  a  bigot  who  is not ready to accept a human into his
       family.  (Yes, there are many politically-correct  lessons  in  the
       course of the film.)  Eventually Tarzan meets humans who come in an
       expedition  to  find  gorillas.   The  expedition  is  made  up  of
       Professor  Porter  (Nigel  Hawthorne),  his  daughter  Jane (Minnie
       Driver),  and  guide  Clayton  (Brian  Blessed).   Of  course,  the
       expected love story is told one more time.

       I cannot think what Disney's studios could have done to so alienate
       Hans  Zimmer  that  he  would  leave them in the lurch when they so
       desperately needed him.  Zimmer, who scored  films  like  THE  LION
       KING,  has  a  feel  for the sound of African music.  He could have
       done a beautiful score for TARZAN.  Instead we have a collection of
       totally  obnoxious  songs  by  Phil  Collins.  Mark Mancina's music
       harmlessly fills in the spaces.  On the other hand,  the  animation
       is  little  short  of wonderful with odd stylistic touches that mix
       flat animation with some  impressive  three-dimensional  animation.
       In  Disney's  new  tradition, a different team animates each of the
       major characters.  One advantage of this, I suppose is a  lot  more
       people  can  be working in parallel on a single scene, yet a single
       character is consistently animated through the entire  film.   Some
       parts  of  the  screen  may  look  like traditional flat animation;
       others will seem to be almost filmed as live-action.  It  could  be
       bothersome  having  more  than one animation techniques in a single
       scene, but it really is not.  The one animation problem is that the
       words do not really fit the characters' lips well.

       Several problems with the script and  its  visualization  show  how
       this  film  talks  down  to  its audience.  We see Tarzan skid over
       tree-limbs with obvious skate-boarding motions.  And the tree limbs
       would have to be thirty feet long or more for the time he spends on
       each limb.  And  where  in  the  world  are  there  so  many  major
       waterfalls  in  such  close  proximity?   We  know immediately that
       Clayton is a villain because he is so ugly.  Just once it would  be
       nice  to  have  an  attractive  villain and an ugly hero.  (Lookism
       apparently continues to be exempt from  the  Disney  agenda.)   How
       likely  is it that the expedition has brought a magic lantern and a
       praxinoscope  and  hence  is  prepared  to   teach   Tarzan   about
       civilization.    This   seems  like  in  the  worst  traditions  of
       "Gilligan's Island."

       There  are  no  African  people  in  this  version.   That  is  not
       surprising  since however they are portrayed there would be someone
       unhappy with the representation.  Though Africans  are  present  in
       the  original novel, Disney decision-makers probably thought it was
       best  side-stepping  the  issues  of  including   them   in   their
       adaptation.  There have been some people taking issue with the fact
       they have been eliminated, but it is relatively few.  It is  ironic
       that  the  filmmakers may be afraid to put in native Africans since
       they have Tarzan himself ask the question, "why are you  afraid  of
       anything  different from you?"  Apparently the filmmakers felt they
       themselves had something to fear.  But it is doubly ironic  because
       Tarzan himself is a symbol of the power of diversity.  After all he
       is presumably the lord of the animals because he is actually human,
       and  he is an invincible hero among humans because he was raised by
       animals.

       Disney studios had the potential to make a very good adaptation  of
       the  Edgar  Rice  Burroughs  classic  fantasy  TARZAN  OF THE APES.
       Instead they have set their sights considerably lower  and  made  a
       film  that  will  have  little  appeal  beyond  grade-school  level
       audiences.  I rate it a 4 on the 0 to 10 scale and a low 0  on  the
       -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       3. DISTRACTION by Bruce Sterling (1998, Bantam Spectra, HC, $23.95,
       439 pp, ISBN 0-553-10484-5) (a book review by Joe Karpierz):

       It took me the longest  time  to  figure  out  why  DISTRACTION  is
       classified  as  a  science fiction novel; I look for more than just
       "well, Bruce Sterling is an  established  science  fiction  writer,
       therefore  it  *must*  be  science  fiction novel."  I scratched my
       head, shrugged my shoulders, and came up with  "I  get  it--it's  a
       political  science  novel,  with  the operative word being science.
       Therefore it must be science fiction."

       Sheesh.

       I have a tough enough time  with  the  "soft"  sciences  being  the
       central  theme  of  a  science fiction novel without having to deal
       with something like political science  being  thrown  in  the  mix.
       Now, I know that this really isn't a "political science" novel, but
       it's the only way I could justify it, even though it contains  many
       trappings  of  "near  future"  science fiction novels.  It even has
       some neurological science mumbo-jumbo near the end of  it,  but  by
       then it doesn't count.

       DISTRACTION follows the story of one Oscar Valparaiso, a  political
       spin-doctor  and  campaign  advisor to a newly elected Senator from
       Massachusetts.  The good old U.S. of A. is one screwed up  country,
       politically,  socially,  and  economically.  There are some sixteen
       political parties, the country is broke, and  Wyoming  is  on  fire
       (and  Sterling  never  delves into this one for the reader, and yet
       I'd find this one intensely interesting).   And  Oscar  decides  he
       wants to save "big science," or something like that.

       Oscar has a couple of  problems,  however:   one  of  them  is  his
       "background  problem,"  which  is  genetic,  and the other is Green
       Huey, the politically corrupt governor of Louisiana,  the  location
       of  a  big  government  lab.   It  does turn out that Green Huey is
       behind everything  (like  *that's*  a  surprise)  from  the  start,
       including  the  big  neurobiological thingamabob that works its way
       into the end of the story.

       But, I say, so what?

       I find Valparaiso completely unbelievable.  By the time  the  novel
       was over I wanted to slap him upside the head with all the politcal
       weasel wording that he  used  in  ordinary  conversation.   I  also
       wanted  to  smack every other character who bought into him, asking
       if they were stupid or what?   I  also  just  couldn't  suspend  my
       disbelief  for  the  way he got out of some situations.  Other than
       the characters acting stupid, I could pretty  much  deal  with  the
       rest of them.  The only character that I thought was interesting at
       all was Green Huey, maybe because his motivation  made  sense  (and
       don't  ask  what  that says about me--I don't want to know myself).
       And yet Sterling introducing Green Huey's big  science  thingamabob
       well  past  the half way mark of the novel, and really only delving
       into it near the end, ticked me off to no end.

       I guess that's what it comes down to--Sterling didn't  do  anything
       interesting, in my opinion, with the ideas that were interesting to
       start with.  So, as a result, the novel itself  wasn't  interesting
       to me at all.

       I tried.  I really did.  I wanted to give this novel a  fair  shot.
       And I did.  And I *still* don't like Bruce Sterling novels.  [-jak]

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

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

                 Capsule: A failing economy and times of  stress
                 in Alaska take their toll on an ex-fisherman, a
                 singer, and her daughter.  John  Sayles  wrote,
                 directed, and edited LIMBO with a good feel for
                 dialog and character.  He holds off a long time
                 before  revealing  where  the  plot  is  going,
                 leaving even the viewer in limbo.  Rating: 7 (0
                 to 10), +2 (-4 to +4)

       Limbo is  "a  place  or  state  of  restraint  or  confinement;  an
       intermediate   or   transitional   place   or  state;  a  state  of
       uncertainty."  The essence of limbo is being between this and that.
       Limbo  is  waiting.   One  knows  what  has passed, but not what is
       coming.  John Sayles has constructed LIMBO like a  fractal  pattern
       of  limbos  within  limbos.   Alaska  is in limbo politically.  And
       within Alaska the town of Port Henry is in limbo economically.  And
       within  Port Henry most people are within a state of limbo in their
       personal lives.  As the film opens a major chapter has  just  ended
       in   the  life  of  Donna  De  Angelo  (played  by  Mary  Elizabeth
       Mastrantonio).  When the film closes a major chapter in her life is
       about  to  start  and there is complete uncertainty as to what that
       chapter will hold for her.  The film covers that period  of  limbo.
       It  also  covers  a  limbo  in  the  life  of  Joe Gastineau (David
       Strathairn), once a fisherman that he can no longer be and  waiting
       for the next chapter in his life.

       LIMBO begins with a 1950s travelogue showing what  wonderful  times
       it is in Alaska.  The film has faded, but not as badly as the local
       economy.  Hard times have hit in Port Henry, Alaska.   With  demand
       vanishing  for  canned  salmon  the  local economy is slowly dying.
       Factories are closing one after another.  A few wealthy people plan
       the  next  big  thing  for Alaska with more enthusiasm than wisdom.
       ("Think of Alaska as one  big  theme  park.")   Within  Port  Henry
       people  are  trapped  between the old and the new.  Their old jobs,
       mostly in the local salmon canning plant, are  coming  to  an  end.
       There may be a future for Port Henry or there may be just oblivion.

       Donna has for years stayed without commitment with one man and then
       another.   In  her singing career she does the same.  Currently she
       has a not very good job singing in the local  saloon.   She  has  a
       troubled  daughter,  Noelle  (Vanessa  Martinez),  who has seen her
       father only twice.  Unknown to her mother, Noelle has a friend  and
       confidante,  Joe  Gastineau,  and  in spite of his much greater age
       Noelle is starting to think of him in romantic terms.  Joe used  to
       be a fisherman, but for his own reasons wants to stay away from the
       water--not an easy feat in Alaska.  Donna is sour on  all  men  and
       barely  notices when she meets Joe that he may in fact be something
       special.  Still, the two of them build a relationship.

       For most of the film Sayles lets the story drift along without  any
       obvious  direction.   We  just  spend  time  with  the  three  main
       characters  getting  to  know  them  very  well.   Noelle  is  very
       intelligent  but  completely  alienated  from  her  mother  and  is
       rebelling purely  by  being  morbid.   The  film  delves  into  her
       relationship  with  her mother as Donna and Joe become increasingly
       serious about each other.  Eventually all three relationships  will
       be tested by hard realities of survival in the Alaskan wilderness.

       This is a film that has been wisely  cast.   David  Strathairn  and
       Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio are two very fine actors who rarely get
       the public attention they deserve.  Certainly  they  are  far  more
       talented  than  many  actors  with much more bankable marquee value
       are.   Mastrantonio  even  does  her  own  singing  in  this  film.
       Strathairn has the quiet, likeable stage presence of a Henry Fonda.
       Kris Kristofferson is along with a small role  as  the  bush  pilot
       Smilin' Jack.

       Sayles's story is an enigma and a curiosity.  It very clearly is an
       independent  film, because it does some things and goes some places
       that are more intelligent than profitable.  Not  everyone  will  be
       pleased  by  some  of  the  decisions  that  Sayles  makes,  but on
       reflection, it is just those decisions that are the point.  I  give
       LIMBO  a 7 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-
       mrl]

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

            [Democracy is] the blugeoning of the people, by 	    the people, for the people.
                                          -- Oscar Wilde