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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 01/07/00 -- Vol. 18, No. 28

       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/evelynleeper
       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. There are shortages of many  things  in  the  world.   There  is
       always  somebody who has shortages of food, shortages of petroleum,
       shortages of silicon chips, shortages of Beanie Babies, and  always
       shortages  of money.  One thing that the world is blessedly free of
       is shortages of evidence.  Particularly easy is for anybody to find
       evidence  that he or she was right at some point in the past.  Even
       people who would seem to be irrefutably  wrong  can  find  evidence
       that they were right at the time.  Somewhere I have seen this image
       of a house being washed down a flooded river.  On  the  roof  while
       they  float  down  the river the wife is telling the husband, "Sure
       you said we should leave.  But when you said that, the  rain  wasnt
       going  to  be  all  that  bad.  It would have been stupid for us to
       leave then."  Even most  people  who  have  done  something  really
       stupid  can give probably give a good explanation why what they did
       was the right thing to do each step of the way.

       I have no intention of quibbling.   I  could  give  you  very  good
       evidence  that  my warnings about the computer crisis that the year
       2000 would bring could have been very bad.  I am going to say right
       up  front  that  I  WAS  WRONG.  I expected there was a significant
       possibility that the computer problems of the year 2000 were  going
       to  be much more serious than they turned out to be.  Clearly there
       was some misrepresentation about embedded chips failing.   Some  of
       the  stories  that circulated were just out and out wrong.  I think
       that if there were some large numbers of cars  on  the  roads  that
       failed  due to hitting the year 2000, we would have heard about it.
       I wrote an editorial passing along the story I had heard that  some
       cars  were  going  to fail because of embedded chips and that story
       appears now to have little basis in fact.  It is still too early to
       tell  for  sure,  but  it  looks like the world is handling the Y2K
       problem fairly gracefully.

       In general nothing like having the last two digits of the year drop
       to  zero  had ever happened before and there were no precedents for
       determining what level of concern there should have  been.   People
       were  finding  and  fixing  problems,  but until the thing actually
       happens there is no way to know if a  significant  percentage  have
       been found or if the surface has only been scratched.  Even at this
       writing, two days into the year, we know that  some  problems  have
       been  postponed  and  do not know what their cumulative effect will
       be.

       There definitely were some Y2K problems and we will be living  with
       for  a  while,  then  there  were some problems fixed in the months
       before the turnover, and some in the days after.  But  overall  the
       people  who  were  responsible  to fix the problems did a good job.
       Some of the people who seemed to be giving a lower priority to some
       Y2K problems may have been doing the right thing.

       Instead of things falling apart, the 2000s started have started  on
       a positive note.  We have had an object lesson that what may appear
       to be intractable problems are not always insuperable.  The  advent
       of  the  2000s  did not turn out to be an ever-advancing falling of
       night around the world, as it appeared was a possibility.   Instead
       what  we  had  was  more just a continuation of what our lives were
       before end of the last year.  It is a good sign for the century and
       millennium that will start in 12 months.

       I had written some editorials  suggesting  that  people  should  be
       prepared  for  the  worst.   At  the  time  that  was  good advice.
       Preparation was insurance.  As readers of science  fiction  we  are
       comfortable  with  the  knowledge that even low probably events are
       possible  and  should  be  prepared  for.   Where  there   is   any
       uncertainty  it  is  good to be prepared.  So I do not feel too bad
       having made some unnecessary warnings.  [-mrl]

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

       2. PAST LIVES, PRESENT TENSE edited by  Elizabeth  Ann  Scarborough
       (Ace,  ISBN  0-441-00649-3,  1999,  336pp, US$13) (a book review by
       Evelyn C. Leeper):

       This is a  "shared-world  anthology,"  for  which  Scarborough  has
       provided  the  premise (in "Soulmates"): Tsering manages to implant
       the personality of his  dead  mate,  Chime,  into  himself  without
       destroying his own, creating "Dr. Chimera."  The other authors then
       develop this idea independently of  each  other,  each  choosing  a
       different  past  life  to  "resurrect,"  with  Dr.  Chimera and his
       technique running as a thread throughout.

       My main problem with this book is that I have difficulty  with  the
       premise  that  all  our  personality and memories are stored in our
       DNA.  (Jerry Oltion's story says MRNA, but Scarborough specifically
       says  DNA,  so  Oltion  must  have gotten it wrong.)  First of all,
       there is a bandwidth problem.  Second of all, this smacks too  much
       of Lamarckian genetics.

       Given that, some of the stories are mildly entertaining.   "A  Rose
       with  All  Its Thorns" by Lillian Stewart Carl puts the personality
       of Anne Boleyn  in  a  (female)  Tudor  historian  at  an  academic
       conference  which  reminds one of Connie Willis's academic settings
       and characters--and performs admirably in that genre.

       Not surprisingly, Nina Kiriki Hoffman produces a very strong  story
       in  "Voyage  of  Discovery," in which the personality of Meriwether
       Lewis is implanted in a  young  woman  who  has  become  completely
       uncommunicative  after  an  accident.   And Carole Nelson Douglas's
       "Night Owl" treats the idea a bit differently than the others.

       There are, naturally, a couple of stories dealing with holy relics.
       And  depending  on  your  interests,  you  might like the Civil War
       themed story, or the sports one, or the author one, or one  of  the
       others.   But  on  the  whole,  most  of  the stories seemed merely
       repetitive.  This,  of  course,  is  a  problem  with  commissioned
       anthologies,  but  this  topic  is even more restrictive than most.
       The best stories would stand alone, and even  most  of  the  weaker
       stories  might  pass muster if it were the only one of its premise.
       But putting them all together takes away any claim of  originality,
       and just emphasizes their weaknesses.  [-ecl]

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

       3. THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: This is an old-fashioned murder story.
                 There is little real violence, no chases; it is
                 just  one  very  ingenious,  very  unscrupulous
                 person  trying  to  get  away with what he can.
                 But the show is really how he does it  and  the
                 suspense  of  wondering how long he can keep it
                 up.  This is a fairly intelligent thriller with
                 a  villain  that one almost has to admire.  The
                 warm 1950s Southern Italy setting works for the
                 film  also.   Though  he occasionally stretches
                 credulity, this is a fun film to go along with.
                 Rating: 6 (0 to 10), low +2 (-4 to +4)

       For me one of Alfred Hitchcock's best films is DIAL M  FOR  MURDER.
       It  is  a stage play barely adapted for film, but it is a very good
       stage play.  We have in it a murderer who is  a  formidable  force.
       His talent is not that he strong or fast.  He does not come popping
       out at anybody.  He does not outrun anyone.  His skill is  that  he
       thinks  very  well  on  his  feet.   You  can actually just see him
       thinking out possibilities and almost  unerringly  find  the  right
       one.   Once  he  makes a decision he stays with it.  He never seems
       troubled by uncertainty.  THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY is about  a  very
       similar  sort of criminal genius.  Quite a bit younger, but no less
       mentally agile is Tom Ripley (played by Matt Damon).

       It is 1958.  Tom Ripley is, to use his words, "a  real  nobody,"  a
       bathroom  attendant  and  sometime  piano player.  But he is good a
       mimicry and at forging signatures.  He decides that it is better to
       be  a  fake  somebody than a real nobody.  When he comes in contact
       with the Greenleaf family, wealthy from shipping, he passes himself
       off  as  a  friend  from  Princeton of Dickie Greenleaf (Jude Law),
       currently in Italy.  He is treated like one of  the  family  for  a
       while,  and Dickie's father Herbert Greenleaf (James Rebhorn) has a
       proposition for Tom.  He will pay Tom $1000  to  go  to  Italy  and
       convince  Dickie  to give up his playboy ways and return home.  Tom
       goes, meeting Meredith Logue (Cate Blanchett) along  the  way.   In
       Italy  Tom  arranges  a meeting and befriends Dickie and his fiance
       Marge Sherwood (Gwyneth Paltrow).  All  the  while  he  is  putting
       together  plans  to  kill Dickie and, where necessary for his plan,
       take his place.  Director  Anthony  Minghella's  screenplay  begins
       with  this  setup  and brings the characters together and then lets
       them simmer together in the warm Italian sun for  nearly  an  hour,
       choosing  the  leisurely  pace of a good Agatha Christie film.  The
       tempo is slow and thrills are cerebral, but we do get to  meet  and
       understand the characters and it pays off in the second half of the
       film.  We see that in more than one sense that Ripley is expert  in
       playing  people.   His  one failure is to fool the unctuous Freddie
       Miles (Philip Seymour Hoffman), an old friend of  Dickie.   Freddie
       takes   an   immediate  dislike  to  Tom,  complicating  the  plan.
       Eventually there is a murder and Ripley has to be both himself  and
       Dickie  Greenleaf  for a while.  He is walking a tightrope and must
       remember with each person what version of reality he is  trying  to
       project.  And as the film progresses his step must become ever more
       careful.

       The roles must have seemed like a little bit of dj vu for  the  two
       male leads.  Damon played the genius of lower class origins in GOOD
       WILL HUNTING.  Jude Law played the aristocrat whose  very  identity
       is borrowed by someone else in GATTACA.  In any case Law seems very
       much at home in his roll  as  the  young  jazz-loving  jet  setter.
       Damon  seems  sufficiently  controlled.  Paltrow is regal.  Special
       mention should be made of one of the bit parts.

       One of the ever more familiar faces showing up in films  is  Philip
       Baker  Hall  who  in  here  has  a  small  but important roll as an
       American lawyer.  Hall, in his late 60s,  is  able  to  project  an
       absolute authenticity of authority and at the same time a magnetism
       of a person in a position of power.  Anyone who has seen  the  film
       HARD  EIGHT  was  mesmerized by his performance from the very first
       scene.  He has been in films since the early  1970s,  but  probably
       because  of his performance in HARD EIGHT he is showing up in a lot
       of major films.

       The plot of THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY does not take a  whole  lot  of
       thought   before  contrivances  become  apparent.   But  under  the
       influence of the warm Italian sun,  the  audience  is  lulled  into
       going  along with it and even being thrilled as Ripley gets himself
       into and out of minor scrapes in his amoral  attempts  to  steal  a
       life.  I give the film a 6 on the 0 to 10 scale and a low +2 on the
       -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

            They say that life begins when the kids go away to 	    school and the dog dies.  But no man whose wife
	    believes that can rest easily.
                                          -- Mark Leeper


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