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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                     Club Notice - 7/14/00 -- Vol. 19, No. 2

       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. Our trip logs for Ireland are available at:
       http://www.geocities.com/markleeper/ireland.htm
       http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper/ireland.htm

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

       2. CARTOON WITHOUT DRAWING: Nostradamus driven mad by a  vision  of
       something called "e-commerce."

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

       3.  What  we  are  going  to  discuss  here  is  a  little  bit  of
       restaurantology--the   new   emerging  anthropological  science  of
       restaurants.  Restaurants are very  important.   An  alien  species
       looking at Earth's culture would undoubtedly conclude that the most
       remarkable, not to say unique, thing about  human  civilization  on
       earth is that we have restaurants.

       A restaurant is a place where one buys food.  With the invention of
       restaurants  you  can pick your food much more freedom than you can
       pick your friends.  At least  in  theory.   But  friends  are  only
       companions,  other  bodies  to keep in proximity to your body.  The
       choice of food is a much more personal one.   Food  is  not  merely
       kept  around  the  body;  it  is physically taken into the body and
       actually becomes part of the body.  Objectively speaking this is  a
       very personal relationship indeed.  When you choose a piece of food
       you are really recruiting.  You choose in the expectation that part
       of it will remain inside you and actually become part of you.  This
       is what would be fascinating to an  alien.   Only  on  rare  social
       occasions  does a human take even a part of a friend into ones body
       and almost never does that part become recruited as part of you.  A
       restaurant  is a place where this very personal relationship can be
       negotiated for money.

       The weight of a baby  is  roughly  1/20  that  of  an  adult  human
       specimen.   Even  if none of the baby cells ever died and went away
       an adult would still be a minimum of  95%  reformatted  food.   The
       most  intimate biological relationship a human ever has is not with
       another human but with food.  Hence how one chooses  the  food  one
       negotiates  from  restaurants  is  a  more  basic  and personal and
       important study than mating rituals.

       As it might be expected just as you have technology  acceptors  and
       technology rejecters one has people who are food rejecters and food
       acceptors.  These are people who in the recruiting process are more
       and  less  selective.  The rejecters do not reject food altogether,
       but reject new experiences with food tending to want to remain with
       the foods that are familiar.  One might assume that what determines
       whether someone is an acceptor or a rejecter is whether that person
       is  cosmopolitan  or  not.   One assumes that if someone is used to
       what seems to be an exotic cuisine from our point of view, they  we
       be acceptors.  This is, however, not true.  I have found that Asian
       Indians in the US may be used to what is  to  us  a  fairly  exotic
       cuisine,  but  that  does not make them acceptors.  An Asian Indian
       friend considered himself to be cosmopolitan because he ate  Indian
       and  American cuisine.  When confronted with Mexican food he turned
       out to be extremely tentative.   You  cannot  assume  that  because
       someone  eats  his  own  exotic  cuisine  that  he  is an acceptor.
       Someone who in his own country eats a delicacy  of  earthworms  may
       well  balk  at  the  concept  of  eating  a peanut butter sandwich.
       Another Indian recently told me that he was not expecting  to  like
       Japanese sushi but on trying some discovered that it is quite good.
       Since he seemed to like a number of cuisines foreign to his own,  I
       could  more  or less expect that he was a natural acceptor and that
       he would not let the knowledge that what he was eating was raw fish
       get in his way.

       Next week I will look at what an  alien  would  find  some  of  the
       ironies of food accepting and food rejecting.  [-mrl]

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

       4. DISNEY'S THE KID (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: A successful image consultant  who  is
                 rude to just about everybody gets a look at how
                 he turned out the way  he  did  by  meeting  an
                 eight-year-old   version   of   himself.   Even
                 attributing much of what is going  on  in  this
                 film  to  magic,  there  is a lot that does not
                 make sense.   This  is  a  mildly  entertaining
                 comedy  for  those  who do not think too deeply
                 about the logic of their films.  Rating:  5  (0
                 to  10),  low  +1  (-4  to +4)  A minor spoiler
                 follows the review asking where  we  have  seen
                 this plot before.

       Russell  Morely  Duritz  (played  by  Bruce  Willis)  is  an  image
       consultant.   He  is very successful at this.  Unconcerned, he uses
       his talents to make society's slimeballs acceptable to the  public.
       His  assistant Amy (Emily Mortimer) tries to get him to reform him,
       but he ignores her efforts.  Lately however,  Russell's  life  does
       seem to be unraveling.  He is seeing a red bi-plane flying overhead
       and occasionally buzzing his convertible.  Nobody else seems to see
       it.  There is a young child who seems to be breaking into Russell's
       property.  But proof that what is happening is not in the realm  of
       the  natural  is  that this Rusty (Spenser Breslin) turns out to be
       Russell at age eight.  This is an opportunity for  Russell  to  see
       himself  at  age  eight and come to understand better where he came
       from.  Rusty gets a chance to see what he will  really  become:  no
       wife, no dog, in short a loser.

       Questions about what is going on in this film come  in  two  types.
       One  type  is things that we can gloss over with the explanation it
       is all magic, the other flavor is real logic  flaws.   We  can  say
       that  the  fact  Russell  has  very  little  memory of this strange
       interlude is magical.  Part of the process is wiping  the  memories
       clear.   It  is  a  lot  harder to explain why Russell remembers so
       little of his life at age eight.  It is almost like he  is  delving
       into the life of a stranger.

       DISNEY'S THE KID is light fantasy of the sort that when  it  works,
       you  get  a  magical film like a BEING JOHN MALKOVICH or even a JOE
       VERSUS THE VOLCANO.  Here the magic makes the story  run,  but  the
       magical  never  takes  hold of the viewer.  It seems like a strange
       complaint but this film has  a  serious  lack  of  Wonder  and  the
       Wonderful.

       Bruce Willis and Spencer Breslin do act well together.  There is  a
       certain  chemistry between them.  They do play off each other well.
       Lily Tomlin is present to be a voice of  reason,  Janet,  Russell's
       righteous  secretary.   Similarly principled is Russell's assistant
       Amy played by Emily Mortimer of THE  GHOST  AND  THE  DARKNESS  and
       currently of LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST.

       The problem is not that THE KID is lacking in magic, but  that  too
       much  of the magic does not really work.  I rate it a 5 on the 0 to
       10 scale and a low +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.

       Spoiler...Spoiler...Spoiler...Spoiler.. .

       I think the breezy summertime look of this film belies  its  actual
       origins.   We have the story of a man nasty to people in and out of
       his profession.  He is happy to go through life with no human  ties
       except  to  his  employees  whom  he abuses.  He has little thought
       about the future he is making.  Then through supernatural  agencies
       he  is  confronted  with  his  past,  his  present, and his future.
       Suddenly he knows what he wants in life and it transforms him  into
       a  loving  and  generous man.  He will be good to his employees and
       will have human ties.  Isn't this a plot  we  have  seen  someplace
       before?   Maybe it might be connected to some December holiday?  [-
       mrl]

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

       5. SUNSHINE (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule:  Covering  the  last  140   years   of
                 Hungarian  history  and anti-Semitism, SUNSHINE
                 is the story of one  Hungarian  Jewish  family,
                 each  willing  to  do  what  is necessary to be
                 successful and safe with the current regime and
                 each  finding  it  impossible  to  be accepted.
                 Ralph  Fiennes  plays  three   generations   of
                 fathers and sons.  The film does not quite live
                 up to its ambitions, but in trying  it  is  far
                 better  than many a film that succeeded in less
                 ambitious undertakings.  Rating:  9 (0 to  10),
                 +3 (-4 to +4).

       SUNSHINE chronicles four generations of the Hungarian  Sonnenschein
       family, from around the 1870s to recent history.  Three generations
       of sons share a common desire to be accepted Hungarians.  They have
       more  loyalty  to  the  country than to their religion.  Each finds
       sooner or later that they can deny their religion, but they  cannot
       become what they are not.  Each new regime uses the family's Jewish
       origins as a weapon against them.

       Emmanuel has two sons, Gustave and Ignatz.  He also adopts  as  his
       daughter  his  niece  Valerie.  To his horror, as his sons age they
       become romantically interested in Valerie.  Since he has raised all
       of  them as his children this has the feel of incest.  And there is
       some truth to his fears because they are cousins.  But  Ignatz  and
       Valerie  as adults (Ralph Fiennes and Jennifer Ehle) are willing to
       ignore Emmanuel's wishes and marry.  And Ignatz has a bright  legal
       mind.   He  is  willing to give up his religion, change his name to
       the non-Jewish name Sors, and surrender his scruples to advance his
       legal  career  in  the  military,  yet  he is always limited by the
       Hungarian aristocracy who cannot accept a man born as a Jew.

       Ignatz's son Adam (Fiennes again) makes himself the  finest  fencer
       in  Hungary.   Even one generation removed from his Jewish origins,
       the Hungarian aristocracy still holds his religion against him.  In
       the 1936 Olympics he becomes a Hungarian national hero.  And in his
       success he feels he is at last free of his origins.   He  is  three
       ways  exempt  from  the  new  Jewish  laws  that the Nazis bring on
       Hungary.  But he discovers all the barriers he has  placed  between
       himself and his religion are to no avail.

       Adam's son Ivan (a third personality for Fiennes), indignant at the
       horrific  treatment  of  his  father  at the hands of the Fascists,
       eagerly joins the Communists to embrace their reforms  against  the
       previous  regime.  But he is unwilling to learn from the history of
       his own family that political regimes come and  go,  but  the  same
       prejudices remain with all political systems.

       SUNSHINE was written and directed  by  Istvan  Szabo,  director  of
       MEPHISTO  and  HANUSSEN.  At just three hours it strikes the viewer
       not so much as being long  for  a  movie  but  as  being  short  to
       chronicle  a family over so many years.  Sadly, there are few media
       for a drama whose natural length  is  something  like  five  hours.
       Szabo  is  able to give us a textured view of Hungary, occasionally
       doing it by giving in  to  artificial  devices,  especially  camera
       filters,  to  suggest  the  age of chapters.  The change of filters
       jarringly announcing the beginning of a new chapter of  his  story.
       A  different  filter  still  is  used  where  there  is documentary
       footage.  In each generation there is a different  personality  for
       Fiennes, but each makes much the same decision to try to fit in and
       assimilate.  Each has the same pessimism that  he  must  cover  his
       origins  and  the same optimism that it will help.  Each generation
       rebels, but at last the similarities in  the  stories  are  greater
       than the differences.   And over it all is watching Valerie, played
       by Jennifer Ehle and later Rosemary Harris, in reality daughter and
       mother  actors.   The  choice  of Maurice Jarre to score is well in
       keeping  with  its  historical  sweep.    Lajos   Koltai's   camera
       frequently  beautifully  recreates Hungary through the 1930s, until
       there is much less beauty  in  Hungary  to  film.   Viewers  should
       expect some fairly explicit depictions of love and just as explicit
       are the depictions of hatred.

       As rushed as it is this is a  film  with  a  sweep  of  history,  a
       personal story within the turmoil.  It is a remarkable document and
       one worth seeing.  I give it 9 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +3 on the
       -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]
                                          Mark Leeper
                                          HO 1K-644 732-817-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com

            The Trouble with the world is that the stupid are 	    cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt.
                                          -- Bertrand Russell