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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 08/04/00 -- Vol. 19, No. 5

       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. In the mid-1950s Walt Disney's TV  show  did  three  imaginative
       documentaries  on  space travel.  They were very popular and helped
       to inspire the space achievments of the  next  decade.   Then  they
       dropped  from  sight.  They have never shown up anywhere and people
       have been lobbying Disney Enterprises to make them available again.
       They  will  be  running  on  the Disney Channel August 8, 9, and 10
       (late Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday; VCR  settings  would  be  for
       Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday) respectively at 1 AM EDT.  [-mrl]

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

       2. Okay, we are continuing our discussion of restaurants.

       Mexican food is a prime  example  of  a  cuisine  that  has  to  be
       rendered  inoffensive  before  it  can  be successful as restaurant
       food.  It has sort of crossed over and become the  mainstream  food
       in  many  places  in  this  country, particularly the South and the
       West, but it still has some people a little  leery.   I  have  been
       told  that Mexican is the fastest growing ethnic cuisine in the US,
       but it is not clear to me it should be considered a single cuisine.
       Near  where  I live in New Jersey there are four different concepts
       of Mexican food vying for public patronage.

       First there is the mass-produced fast food of Taco Bell.   This  is
       the  most successful.  Kids who would never think of eating spinach
       or quiche will hang out at a  Taco  Bell.   It  will  never  be  as
       successful  as  Burger King, but for a successful chain the food is
       surprisingly exotic, featuring things like whipped  beans  inspired
       by  someone  who  may  have  eaten  real Mexican food once.  I have
       actually seen in stores where everything sells for a  dollar,  Taco
       Bell brand taco sauce.  I guess they thought somebody would want to
       be able to recreate the Taco Bell experience at home.

       For  the  second  type  there  are  the  serious   gringo   Mexican
       restaurants.   These  are  not  chains.   Some  of  the dishes were
       inspired by real Mexican dishes.  However, the food  is  distinctly
       different in style and flavor from what you might expect in Mexico.
       Perhaps they have this sort of food in the gringo resorts,  but  it
       is  not  what  Mexicans  eat  at  home.   If  you  go into a little
       restaurant in Oaxaca, don't expect this sort of food.

       Somewhere between these two types is the third  type,  the  Mexican
       chain.   In  my  area  the  popular chains are Chi-Chi's and On the
       Border.  These are not fast food like Taco Bell, but they are still
       very  plastic.   Generally  they  have  identical  menus  from  one
       restaurant in the chain to the next.  Do not expect to find tamales
       on  the  menu  unless  some  MBA  has statistics to show there is a
       nationwide demand for them based on test market figures.   And  let
       me  assure you, there are no such statistics.  In spite of the real
       Mexican-looking wall decorations and the giant  margaritas  at  the
       bar, this is a lot like eating inside a computer.

       Then we have the fourth kind of Mexican  restaurant.   One  of  the
       secrets  of  restaurant  going  is  to  find  ethnic neighborhoods,
       particularly where  the  people  don't  earn  very  good  salaries.
       Unbeknownst  to  even  most of the acceptors in the area there is a
       small Mexican community very near Rutgers.  And in  this  community
       there  are  restaurants.   And  you  can  go  there  if you are not
       threatened by the very real possibility that you might be the  only
       person  in  restaurant  speaking in English and that the jukebox is
       playing songs you never heard before  sung  in  Spanish.   Some  of
       these  restaurants  do  not  even  bother translating the menu into
       English.   This  is  pretty  authentic  Mexican.   This  is  to  my
       admittedly  uneducated  eye  the  closest  food  to  what we had in
       Mexico.  Do I like the food?  I have to say I put it roughly  on  a
       par  with  what  we get in the second type of restaurants above.  I
       know I should like it a whole lot more, but what can I say?  I know
       myself pretty well and what I am is a gringo.

       By the way, as a bonus it is priced for people who  have  not  been
       able  to  get very good jobs.  For about $8 you get a plate of food
       that will not quit.  You can do that at Chi-Chi's but there will be
       less  food  and lower quality.  Now if only they had food that good
       in the chains.
       Next week I hope to have some things to  say  about  what  makes  a
       decent ethnic food chain. [-mrl]

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

       3. I have gotten so much response on my X-MEN review all of  it  so
       similar, that I am going to write a single response for the notice.

       I frequently review films that I have a special interest  in.   For
       example  when  I  was  growing  up  I was growing up I was a fan of
       Zorro.  I have seen just about every English language Zorro  movie.
       And  I said that in my review of THE MASK OF ZORRO.  The reason why
       is not just to brag that I am  a  completist,  it  is  to  tell  my
       readers  that  they  may have a very different reaction, not having
       such a special interest.  I basically told people that  they  might
       not  want  to  trust my opinion because all judgement is subjective
       and clearly I am biased toward Zorro films.  Is THE MASK  OF  ZORRO
       really  a  good  film  and most of the public cannot appreciate it?
       Probably not.  In any case I  write  my  reviews  for  the  general
       viewer.  If the general viewer cannot trust my opinion on a film, I
       try to be very frank about it as I was with THE MASK OF  ZORRO.   I
       always  give  my  true  opinion  of  a film and if necessary I tell
       people where I am coming from.  I always admit I am not  objective.
       Nobody is.

       The situation is reversed for the X-MEN film.  This time I  am  the
       general  viewer  and  I  am still reviewing for the general viewer.
       That is good.  I do not need to make any  disclaimers.   But  there
       are  a  lot of people around me who have been big fans of the X-MEN
       comic book.  The response I hear from these people is that this was
       really a terrific representation of the great comic book.  I do not
       doubt it.  It may even make it a great feat to  have  made  such  a
       film.   But  that  does  not make it a film I can recommend to your
       maiden aunt in Pittsburgh.  You may see something special in  X-MEN
       the  way  I did with THE MASK OF ZORRO, but it is not great cinema.
       The film may lose points if it is not really faithful to the source
       material,  but  the  critic  should be reviewing a film, not a film
       based on a comic book.  [-mrl]

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

            If you are gong to sin, sin against God, not the 	    bureaucracy.  God will forgive you but the
	    bureaucracy won't.
                                          -- Hyman Rickover


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