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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 11/12/99 -- Vol. 18, No. 20

       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. Our Australia and Aussiecon Three logs are available at:
                 http://www.geocities.com/markleeper/australia.htm
                 http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper/austral.htm
                 http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper/a3.htm

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

       2. Last week I was saying  that  white  males  are  frequently  the
       villains  in  films these days.  When there are conflicts in films,
       the white or the male seems most frequently to  be  in  the  wrong.
       Let  us  get  some  hard  data  and compare.  Let's take the top 15
       grossing films and list the conflicts that  cross  gender  or  race
       barriers.   There  may  be other conflicts in the film, but we will
       ignore them.  That is white male against white male we will ignore.
       Asian  female  against  Asian  female  we will also ignore.  I will
       express them as an ordered pair, (bad guy(s);  good  guy(s)).   For
       example TITANIC has Billy Zane and David Warner as the bad guys and
       Kate Winslet as a good guy.  We ignore conflicts that do not  cross
       race  or  gender  barriers.   Remember  we  are  counting  only the
       conflicts between people of different genders or  races.)   Let  us
       see  how  many cases we have a white person correct against someone
       of another race.  How often is a man correct  in  the  right  in  a
       conflict  with  a  woman?   (My memory could be faulty on some plot
       points.

       1. TITANIC: (2 men bad; 1 woman good)

       2. STAR WARS: (2 men bad; 1 woman good) (the  bad  men  are  mostly
       Darth  Vader  and  Grand  Moff  Tarkin, they conflict with Princess
       Leia.)

       3. ET: (multiple men bad, one little girl good.)

       4. JURASSIC  PARK:  (1  man  bad;  1  young  woman  good)  sort  of
       questionable

       5. FORREST GUMP: none

       6. LION KING: none

       7. RETURN OF THE JEDI: (multiple men bad; 1 woman good)

       8. INDEPENDENCE DAY: none

       9. THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK: (multiple white men bad; 1 woman  good,
       1 black man mostly good)

       10. HOME ALONE: none

       11. JAWS: none

       12. BATMAN: none

       13. MEN IN BLACK none

       14. RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK: (multiple men bad; one woman good)

       15. TWISTER: (multiple men bad; one woman good)

       I am not sure that fifteen films, even the highest grossing  films,
       are  statistically  significant,  but  it  does argue for what I am
       saying that in most popular films when a male  and  female  are  in
       conflict,  the  female  has been scripted to be right.  We have one
       case here where there is almost  an  exception.   In  FORREST  GUMP
       there  is  a  woman  who is self-destructive and a man who tries to
       save her.  However her victim is only  herself,  unlike  the  other
       cases  above.   This data is insufficient but the majority of films
       where there are conflicts between races; the Caucasian is  scripted
       to  be  wrong.  Among what I think of as art house films that I saw
       at Toronto the same holds pretty much true though there  were  more
       counter-examples,  for  example DANCING AT LUGHNASA, where there is
       conflict the script generally has you siding with the men.

       But it is better if people just look for themselves at  films  they
       have  seen, think about whom the script favors and whom it doesn't.
       The conclusion I have drawn  for  myself  is  what  I  said  in  my
       PLEASANTVILLE comments above.  [-mrl]

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

       3. THE BONE COLLECTOR (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: A surprisingly uninteresting psychotic
                 killer  film with a very predictable yet absurd
                 solution.  Philip Noyce knows how to  give  the
                 film  a lot of style, but the story is an utter
                 waste of time.  People who enjoy  seeing  blood
                 and  pain  on the screen will have a good time.
                 For the rest  is  it  a  festival  of  cliches.
                 Rating: 4 (0 to 10), 0 (-4 to +4)

       Thomas Harris did a lot  that  was  original  with  the  novel  RED
       DRAGON,  later  made into the film MANHUNTER.  He established or at
       least revitalized the entire sub-genre of  stories  of  police  and
       psychotic  serial killers.  This sort of story had been made before
       but he upped the ante by making the killers  more  interesting  and
       dangerous.   Today  the  novel would not be as good because so much
       has been plundered for use elsewhere.  Had THE BONE COLLECTOR  come
       out  at  that time, it would have been a much more intriguing film.
       But by now most of what it offers is familiar.   Phillip  Noyce  is
       not  new  to  psychotic  killer films.  His DEAD CALM is one of the
       best because it is as much a sea adventure as a murder  plot.   Now
       he  demonstrates  just how important it is to do something creative
       with the genre by giving us a thriller does just  about  everything
       else  right  and  still  makes  for  a very mundane film.  THE BONE
       COLLECTOR gives the ready-made audience who  want  to  see  another
       violent  psychotic  thriller  film  a  film  to  see,  but  does no
       interesting playing with the genre.  The attraction of dealing with
       a  killer  who thinks differently than a sane person should be that
       he is unpredictable.  But just  about  everything  about  THE  BONE
       COLLECTOR  is  mechanical  and  done  by  the numbers.   The killer
       always leaves a clue to his next crime and the heroes always figure
       out what the clue means and exactly where the crime will occur down
       to a street address.

       The team  of  investigators  seems  to  have  been  pulled  from  a
       checklist  of  ethnic  types.   We  have  a  beautiful white patrol
       officer unsure she wants to do forensics.  Then there  is  a  black
       forensic  genius confined to a bed and suffering from seizures that
       he hopes will soon kill him rather than become  a  vegetable.   And
       finally  there  is a Latino forensic science researcher.  Of course
       the team of investigators have to contend with a police  department
       dominated  by  the  stupid and incompetent white males.  This gutsy
       team races the clock and bucks the power  structure  finding  clues
       that  nobody  else  in  the  police department can see.  This could
       almost be a TV pilot it is so formulaic.

       Lincoln Rhyme (played by Denzel Washington) is the forensic  expert
       who  literally  wrote  the book that defines police detective work.
       Now he is bed-ridden and subject to  seizures  that  any  time  may
       leave  him  a  human  vegetable.   Before  that happens he wants to
       arrange his own death.  Emily Donaghy (Angelina Jolie) is a  plucky
       young  patrol officer.  When she answers a report about a dead body
       found she has to stop a train in order to prevent it  from  rolling
       over a clue.  This brings her censure from her superiors, but earns
       her the respect of Lincoln Rhyme.  Over her own objections  she  is
       drafted to help do the detective work to track the killer.  The two
       quickly discover that they are dealing with a psychotic killer  who
       in  the  best  traditions of Batman villains always leaves a puzzle
       clue to what his next crime will be.  The team is  rounded  out  by
       Eddie  Ortez  (Luis Guzman), a genius at materials analysis.  There
       is something wrong with the script when with  no  additional  clues
       the  audience gets way ahead of the experts in guessing the killer.
       About a third of the way  through  I  had  a  very  short  list  of
       suspects.   But  then  there  were  no clues whatsoever until it is
       revealed who the killer is.  When at the  end  one  does  know  the
       killer  and  the  motivation  it  too seems more out of Batman than
       reality.

       Cinematographer Dean Semler does a lot of obvious things to  create
       the  feel  of the film.  Scenes are kept dark and oppressive.  When
       the plot shifts a setting into the sunlight  the  lens  is  heavily
       filtered  to  give  an  unwholesome  look  to  the  street and sky.
       Outdoor distance shots  try  repeatedly  and  without  subtlety  to
       establish that this is Manhattan while close-ups, those that do not
       take place in the basements and bowels of the city, do not  look  a
       lot like New York and in fact are filmed in Montreal.

       Denzel Washington plays his role with entirely  too  much  vitality
       for  the man on the brink of death.  I am told in the book Rhyme is
       middle-aged, which would have  seemed  more  believable.   Here  he
       happily pokes fun at his own seizures, which seems entirely a wrong
       gesture for a man in  his  supposedly  depressed  state.   Angelina
       Jolie,  daughter of Jon Voigt, does little to make the character of
       Emily Donaghy her own and dozens of young actresses could have been
       snapped  into  the  same  role  like  interchangeable  parts.  Luis
       Guzman, recently of THE LIMEY, is certainly watchable.   And  Queen
       Latifah as Rhyme's caregiver matches Washington's amiability.

       THE BONE COLLECTOR  is  an  extremely  forgettable  TV-pilot  level
       serial killer film.  Only real fans of the sub-genre will enjoy it.
       I give it a 4 on the 0 to 10 scale and a 0 on the -4 to  +4  scale.
       [-mrl]