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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 12/24/99 -- Vol. 18, No. 26

       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. Christmas celebrants everywhere, this article is not written for
       you.   I  have  been  asked  to  write  up  a  Jewish guide to good
       Christmas music and films.  On the other hand, you can look  in  on
       what  I  have  to  say.  Rest assured that like Old Ebeneezer I may
       start out nasty and crotchety but I end up with at  least  some  of
       the Christmas Spirit.

       Well, the Christmas season is upon us again.  Christians  all  over
       are  preparing  for  what  is  for  them  a  joyous  time  of  year
       apparently.  I look at this somewhat as an outsider, being  Jewish.
       But  in  every  store  and restaurant I go into I hear them playing
       those darn Christmas carols.  I sure hope I never become so  joyful
       about  ANYTHING  as  the  Christian  community  tries  to  be  over
       Christmas.

       And the Christmas stuff is everywhere.  Yesterday I was at a  local
       sushi  bar.   The  patrons  were  my  wife  and  me  and a Japanese
       foursome, probably Shintoist.  And the place was playing  Christmas
       carols.  Why?  There were probably no Christmas fans there at all.

       And by Christmas day I will be totally sick of "Silent Night."  The
       melody  is  little  more than the same four notes being played over
       and over with minor variations.  I can well believe it was written,
       as the legend says, in one night.  But it is played with the tiring
       manic repetition of a four-year-old singing the alphabet song  over
       and over in the mistaken belief that all adults love to hear it.

       The only good Christmas carols are the Olde English ones, as far as
       I  am  concerned.   Some  of those have very nice melodies.  I like
       "Green Sleeves" since for one thing it is not a Christmas carol  at
       all;  it  has only been adapted to be one.  The other nice carol is
       "The Holly and the Ivy." It is only a Christmas  carol  but  it  is
       such  a  nice  piece of music.  And when I mention it to Christians
       most have never even heard of it.  Rare is the year that I hear  it
       played  at all.  That may be the secret of why it still is welcome-
       -it is not overplayed.  I think in the past  Jews  have  gotten  so
       sick  of some Christmas music that they have written their own just
       so there will be something new to hear.  How else can  you  explain
       why a Jew like Irving Berlin was dreaming of a white Christmas?  It
       was featured in WHITE CHRISTMAS directed by a Jewish Michael Curtiz
       and  featuring a Jewish Danny Kaye.  I think Danny Kaye did his own
       Christmas album.  A Jewish Mel Torme wrote instead about  chestnuts
       roasting  on  an  open  fire.  Actually there is a lot of Christmas
       music written by Jews.  But my real subject was movies.

       This is the  time  of  year  when  the  airwaves  are  filled  with
       Christmas  movies,  just  like  the  air  is  filled with Christmas
       carols.  Remember the kid singing  the  alphabet  song?   The  same
       thing  goes  for  retellings  of  Dickens's  CHRISTMAS CAROL.  From
       situation comedies to movies that story has been done so many times
       it  hangs limp.  I wish that people would make the darn thing right
       once and stick with it.  I have  no  objection  to  the  1951  film
       SCROOGE  with  Alistair Sim in the title role.  It also is called A
       CHRISTMAS CAROL, of course, because people would not  remember  the
       real  title.   And  it was a big improvement over the Reginald Owen
       version of the same story.  But we have that film  with  the  great
       performance  by Sim.  Let's not make any more versions of the story
       until somebody can really top it.  I have seen so many  adaptations
       that  are  just  pale  shadows  (no  pun intended).  A few like the
       recent Patrick Stewart may be as decent, but let  nobody  redo  the
       story until they know that they can top the Sim version.

       The same goes for stagings of THE NUTCRACKER except I  cannot  pick
       even  one  good  version.  Frankly I am a little nauseated by Sugar
       Plum Fairies.  I picture E.  T.  A.  Hoffman  and  Charles  Dickens
       consoling  each  other in the afterlife.  And each should be played
       only once a season.  What should be done with  the  extra  airtime?
       You  could  do  a  lot  worse  than  replaying  AMAHL AND THE NIGHT
       VISITORS.  It is a very nice short opera  by  Gian  Carlo  Menotti.
       Amahl is a lame boy whose mother becomes host for three kings.  One
       of the networks played it once a season  when  I  was  growing  up.
       Yes, it is not my religion, but as I have said I am willing to make
       exceptions for good music.  After all, I also listen to Wagner  and
       the Ring.

       What else would go in my Jew's Guide to Christmas films?   Well,  I
       quite  enjoyed  MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET.  Once or twice maybe.  That
       is enough.  I think the fact that it is played every season is less
       a  tribute to its popularity and more to the lack of good Christmas
       programmng.  How many times can you watch a  grinch?   MIRACLE  did
       not  need  one  remake and I have seen at least two.  The same goes
       for IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE, which makes so much  more  convincing  a
       case  that  it  is a pretty awful life.  These films are good a few
       times but for me they  have  limited  wear.   And  they  have  been
       overused.

       Quickly joining the same overuse category  is  A  CHRISTMAS  STORY.
       This  is  Jean  Shepherd's  semi-autobiographical  comedy about his
       youth and Christmas time.  Frequently it is very funny.  I think  I
       heard  that  one  of the Turner stations is going to play it twelve
       times in 24 hours some  time  this  Christmas  season.   That  will
       probably  wear it out.  I wonder how long it will be before someone
       remakes it.

       My current Christmas classic is Tim Burton's THE  NIGHTMARE  BEFORE
       CHRISTMAS.   So many Christmas films try to be charming and from my
       point of view Burton's film is the only  one  that  ever  made  it.
       There  is  so  much  going on in every corner of the screen in this
       film that it is always fresh.

       Believe it or not I really do try to schedule to watch a  Christmas
       movie  every  25th  of December.  And I do keep films for this very
       purpose.  The last few years it has been  the  Burton  film.   This
       year I think I will do AMAHL.  [-mrl]

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

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

                 Capsule: Barry Levinson's fourth Baltimore film
                 again examines his neighborhood as he remembers
                 it, but  now  he  looks  at  class,  race,  and
                 religious  tensions.   His conclusion, however,
                 seems to be that none of these tensions  really
                 amounted  to  much.   He  finds everybody being
                 basically of good will even if they  can  be  a
                 bit  confused at times.  This is a good-hearted
                 film  with  three  strong  story  lines  and  a
                 textured  recreation  of  the atmosphere of the
                 1950s youth.  Rating: 7 (0 to 10),  +2  (-4  to
                 +4)

       As Barry Levinson looks at the Baltimore  of  his  youth,  in  each
       successive  film  things  get  more  serious.  In DINER there was a
       small group of guys who were friends.  In TIN MEN we see that there
       were  also the more serious types who had to earn a living.  AVALON
       told us that these people we are talking about are  immigrant  Jews
       who  have to struggle to make the American thing work for them.  In
       LIBERTY HEIGHTS we see that the Jews have to interface  with  other
       classes,  other  races,  and  other  religions.  There are definite
       tensions in this film as the diverse groups come  in  contact  with
       each  other,  but  Levinson is not as militant as a Spike Lee would
       be.  His approach is more that of a peacemaker who sees no villains
       in  the  tensions.   His world is populated with diverse groups who
       feel uneasy about each other only  pending  getting  to  know  each
       other better.

       The story follows the Kurtzman  brothers,  Van  (played  by  Adrien
       Brody)  and  Ben  (Ben Foster).  They are growing up in the area of
       Forrest Park and Liberty Heights in Baltimore.  Their  neighborhood
       is  so overwhelmingly Jewish that growing up Ben had just assumed a
       Chinese pupil in his grade school was also Jewish.   Levinson,  who
       wrote  as  well as directed, makes some humorous comments about how
       Jewish and non-Jewish households are different.  Ben is  amazed  at
       how  the  Christians  seem  hung up on the color white, even to the
       point of eating their bread raw.  In 1954 Van is in college and Ben
       in  high school, but they remain somewhat provincial.  At home they
       learn there are Jews and "the other kind."  They are getting to the
       point  when  they  will  have  to  deal with the other kind.  Their
       father, Nate Kurtzman (Joe  Mantegna),  runs  a  failing  burlesque
       house  as  a front for his illegal numbers racket.  Yet in spite of
       being a criminal, he deals only in a victimless crime and is a  man
       of honor.

       Van, Ben, and friends are planning to crash a Halloween  party  put
       on  by  some  upper class other kinds.  Bens parents are shocked by
       his dressing up as Adolph Hitler.  Ben is told that he will have to
       stay  home.  At the party Van sees a woman, Dubby (Carolyn Murphy),
       who looks to him like a vision  in  white  and  he  is  immediately
       smitten.   But the presence of uninvited Jews at the party leads to
       a fight that the other kind boys are spoiling for.

       Meanwhile, Ben is also getting interested in a girl  of  the  other
       kind.   But  in  this case it is another kind of other kind.  He is
       intrigued by Sylvia (Rebekah Johnson) the one  black  girl  in  his
       class.   He  strikes up a secret friendship with her.  He finds the
       black community has their own comedians as well as their own music,
       but  he  quickly  develops  a  taste for both.  A third though less
       well-developed  line  of  plot  follows  their  fathers   financial
       problems  when the numbers racket proves to be less than profitable
       for him and when he finds himself owing a great deal of money to  a
       small-time drug dealer, Little Melvin (Orlando Jones).  Nice little
       personal  touches  characterize  Nate.   He  dresses  like  a  very
       successful man and always drives the latest model of Cadillac, even
       after one  stroke  of  bad  luck  threatens  to  leave  him  nearly
       destitute.   He  practices  his  ballroom  dancing  in  their semi-
       finished basement with his wife Ada (Bebe Neuwirth).

       As usual, Levinson gets  convincing  acting  from  his  cast.   But
       somehow  neither  Mantegna  nor  Neuwirth  seem  very  Jewish.  And
       neither has the angular face that the Brody or Foster  has,  making
       the  family  a  little  less  believable.  It has been claimed that
       stage comics make  very  good  actors  and  so  it  should  not  be
       surprising that Orlando Jones, formerly of MAD TV, has a great deal
       of stage presence.  Perhaps Levinson should have increased the size
       of his role.

       Levinson ties his series together with touches running though  most
       of  his  series.   Once  again  the main characters hang out in the
       Fells Point Diner.  At the diner or  elsewhere  some  of  the  best
       conversation (and much of the comic dialog) is around the table and
       over a meal.  Levinson repeats  the  image  of  handsome  women  on
       horseback which he previously used in DINER.

       Through the  film  Levinson  sustains  the  1950s  feel  though  he
       overuses  the  device  of  wall-to-wall 1950s music.  Chris Doyle's
       camerawork could have done the job by itself without so  artificial
       a  device.   Also there are a few anachronisms notable.  There is a
       reference to watching Perry Mason which would not debut until 1957.
       It  also  looks like Hitchcock's 1951 STRANGERS ON A TRAIN is being
       broadcast to television on in 1954, which seems highly unlikely.

       LIBERTY HEIGHTS was for me not quite  the  film  that  AVALON  was.
       Some  people  are  a  little too unrealistically nice in this film.
       There is nothing in this film that matches the scope of that one or
       the  tender  relationship between the Aiden Quinn character and his
       son in AVALON.  I would give it 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

            A man likes his wife to be just clever enough to 	    comprehend his cleverness, and just stupid enough
	    to admire it.
                                          -- Israel Zangwill


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