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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 08/25/00 -- Vol. 19, No. 8

       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. Because of the various spin-offs, we have decided  to  move  the
       mailing  list  administration for the MT VOID to eGroups, a mailing
       list hosting service.

       Some time in September, you will get a piece  of  mail  saying  you
       have  been  added  to  the  mtvoid  group at eGroups.  No action is
       required unless you  want  to  unsubscribe  or  change  your  email
       address, in which case it's probably easier if you do this ahead of
       time by sending email to eleeper@lucent.com  or  mleeper@avaya.com.
       [-ecl]

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

       2. With the release of GODZILLA 2000, there have been a  number  of
       reviewers  mentioning  the  first  Godzilla film, both the Japanese
       version GOJIRA and the re-cut American version  GODZILLA,  KING  OF
       THE  MONSTERS.   The  web  has,  however,  very  few reviews of the
       original film.

       GODZILLA really has to be seen as two very  different  films.   You
       have  to  see the film as it was released in the United States, and
       you have to see through that to the original  Japanese  film.   The
       Japanese  film,  made  as  an  imitation  of  THE BEAST FROM 20,000
       FATHOMS, turned into a fairly serious allegory of the close of  the
       Second World War and the fear of nuclear weapons.  This was in part
       because of timing.  The film was made just after a Japanese fishing
       boat  had  strayed into the waters where the hydrogen bomb had been
       tested.  The fish they  caught  were  radioactive  but  were  still
       allowed  to  be  sold  in  Japan.  When the Japanese found out that
       dangerous radioactive fish had been sold to  unsuspecting  citizens
       they blamed the United States and they called the incident Americas
       third atomic attack on Japan.  The script is also is an exploration
       of  the  theme  of the responsibility of the scientist to the world
       and an indictment of the developers of the  atomic  bomb.   So  the
       plot  of  BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS, the indignity over the fishing
       incident, and festering anger over the use of  nuclear  weapons  in
       the  war all came together into a story of a primordial evil coming
       out of the sea.

       The American version crudely interpolates American  reporter  Steve
       Martin  (played  by  Raymond Burr) into the story.  The scenes with
       Burr  are  obviously  of  a  different  film  stock  and  have   no
       overlapping   characters   whose  faces  are  seen.   Actually  the
       characters of Emiko Yamane  is  both  in  scenes  with  Martin  and
       without,  but when she is with Martin her back is to the camera and
       her blouse is a different plaid.  Clearly another  woman  stood  in
       and  the  filmmakers  could  not  quite  match the blouse material.
       Martin appears to be in several of the key points  of  activity  as
       the  Japanese  react  to  the  attack  of the monster, without ever
       really  participating  much  in  the  action  except  to  throw  in
       occasional comments like "I can't believe what just happened."

       For the plot here I will  describe  the  American  version,  though
       there  are  some differences in order of events.  (For example, the
       Japanese version is not told in flashback like the American version
       is.)   The  film  opens  looking  at  the destruction that has been
       wrought on Tokyo.  It looks like it was intended to suggest that  a
       nuclear blast has taken place.  That was probably not the intent of
       the original film, since it does not have  this  opening  sequence.
       Journalist  Martin  was on his way by plane to cover another story.
       During a layover in Japan to visit a school friend,  Dr.  Serizawa,
       he  is called in and questioned if he saw any anything unusual from
       his plane.   Ships  from  the  Japanese  fishing  fleet  have  been
       disappearing.   Sometimes  they  get  off  distress  calls that say
       mysterious things like the "ocean has exploded."  (That is actually
       a very powerful image, by the way.)

       Soon the mystery seems to be centering around Odo Island,  near  to
       all the disasters.  There the natives have worshiped a terrible god
       who has lived in the sea.  They call him Godzilla.   Scientists  go
       to Odo Island to discover if there could be some connection between
       the island and the disasters.  While they are there something  very
       like a storm destroys half the island.  But it is a funny kind of a
       storm that is oddly destructive.  It destroys their  helicopter  as
       if  it  were  a  toy  (which with the low-budget special effects is
       exactly what it looks like).  The  natives  think  the  island  was
       attacked by their deity.

       A ship full of scientists, headed by Emiko's father, paleontologist
       Dr.  Yamane  (Takashi Shimura), comes to investigate the island and
       discover radioactive remains from the storm.   Finally  the  island
       deity shows himself in clear weather, a four-hundred-foot dinosaur,
       a survivor from two million [sic] years ago.  (The Japanese version
       says  he  is  two  hundred  feet.)  He has lived in the sea for all
       human memory, but now nuclear testing has goosed him up,  made  him
       radioactive, and he wants to wreak revenge on the world.

       Godzilla dodges the depth charges of the Japanese fleet  and  makes
       his  way to Tokyo harbor.  Then he comes ashore twice, laying waste
       to the city in two very  nicely  filmed  sequences.   Up  to  these
       sequences  we have seen little of the monster and after we will see
       little, but these two sequences are supremely powerfully filmed.

       Meanwhile we learn that Emiko has been promised to Dr. Serizawa but
       is actually in love with Ogata, a young navy officer.  Serizawa has
       his own problems and is not  very  interested  in  Emiko.   He  has
       developed a powerful weapon that could kill Godzilla, but to use it
       would mean revealing it to the  world.   Being  a  moral  Japanese,
       unlike immoral American scientists, he believes that the discoverer
       has responsibility to be certain that his discoveries are not  used
       for  evil  purposes.  Serizawa has revealed the weapon to Emiko and
       she has told Ogata.  Serizawa must weigh  his  fears  against  what
       Godzilla  is  already  doing to Tokyo.  (Ogata argues that Serizawa
       should use the weapon.  You  have  your  fears,  which  may  become
       reality.   And you have Godzilla, which is reality.)  Serizawa must
       resolve his moral dilemma.

       Sometimes the lack of a budget can work in the  favor  of  a  film.
       GODZILLA  certainly  benefits  from  the  low budget of some of its
       production.  The scenes of the attacks on  Tokyo  have  a  sort  of
       crudeness  that  in  black and white, a little fuzzy, gives them an
       almost documentary quality.  Scenes of the great beast  are  almost
       always  shot  from  a low angle, looking upward.  Why this approach
       was abandoned in later Godzilla films is unclear, but the  size  of
       the  creature  is  emphasized in a way that would be difficult in a
       color film.  Filming in color at eye level just does not convey the
       threat  and  no  other  film  has  ever  made  a  giant  monster as
       frightening.

       Some of the best effects were found by  chance.   The  model  steel
       towers  melted  under  the hot studio lights.  They were remade and
       the effect of their melting was combined with an aerosol  spray  in
       Godzilla's  mouth  to  create  the effect that his fiery breath was
       causing the damage.  The sound of the great beast's heavy footfalls
       were  created  by  a  drum.   I  personally  never  associated  the
       drumbeats as being anything but mood music,  but  the  sound  works
       that  way.  On the other hand, the sound of stroking the strings of
       a large cello-like instrument with a leather glove, then slowing it
       down  and playing it backwards, acts as the groans of Godzilla.  It
       sounds like steel girders giving way in hell.  The effect  is  just
       about  perfect.   The  musical  score  is  crude  with its military
       marches, but somehow they seem to work.

       When the effects work they are terrific, when  they  do  not  work,
       they  do not work.  All too often the effects are just a bit on the
       cheesy side.  There are scenes when we are obviously looking  at  a
       hand-puppet.   Even  that would not be so bad, but we then see what
       is supposedly a photograph of what we had just seen  and  it  looks
       nothing  like  the  puppet version.  There was a similar problem in
       THE BEAST  FROM  20,000  FATHOMS.   Another  problem  is  with  the
       Godzilla  suit  itself.  Godzilla has what can best be described as
       an A-line figure.  He has very heavy massive  legs  and  gargantuan
       feet,  but  his  trunk  is not commensurately large.  His legs also
       have and unfortunate tendency to have folds on a way that a  jacket
       might  but an arm would not.  The crudeness of the filming conceals
       the fact that Godzilla has external ears in a way that reptiles  do
       not.   The  producers  at  Toho  thought  that  people would assume
       Godzilla was deaf if they did not give him obvious  external  ears.
       Of  course  a  parrot has no external ears and hears well enough to
       repeat sounds he hears.  The film also features a  traveling  matte
       of  a  view  directly into the face of the beast as seen from Tokyo
       tower.  It is one of the worst jobs  of  matting  I  ever  remember
       seeing.   Some  of  Bert  I.  Gordon's  matte  jobs  look  good  by
       comparison.  In most scenes the  beast  is  shown  moving  in  slow
       motion  to  accentuate his size, but when he bats away missiles, he
       moves at normal speed and spoils much of the illusion.  However, it
       should  be  remembered many of Universal's classic films have their
       moments when they do  not  show  consummate  visual  craftsmanship.
       DRACULA,  for example, has some very silly scenes including a silly
       scene of a bee coming out of a bee-size coffin.  In  some  ways  we
       cannot  be  really  sure where some of the errors crept in.  We are
       told a disaster at sea occurred at 3:30 AM,  but  when  we  saw  it
       earlier the crew was on the deck and the sun was shining.

       Where THE BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS had just showed its monster  in
       the  streets  and  people running from it, GOJIRA looks more at the
       emotional effect on people.  What made it to the  American  version
       is  fairly effective, but what was cut out are some very impressive
       scenes.  In one scene of the Japanese film only, a mother  sits  at
       the  base  of  a building near where the monster is rampaging.  She
       sadly tells her children that they will all be  with  their  father
       soon.   This  tone  is surprisingly bleak for a monster movie.  The
       whole population of Tokyo seems to mourn the great  losses  wrought
       by  Godzilla.   Themes  of  sacrifice,  honor,  and suicide seem to
       accent the bleak tone  of  this  film.   Other  imaginative  scenes
       include  a  view of the monster ravaging Tokyo with a cage of birds
       seen in silhouette in the  foreground.   In  other  scenes  we  see
       Godzilla walking and the dust his huge feet kick up.

       It is never easy to judge acting ability of someone who is speaking
       in  a  language  you  do not know.  This film does have the second-
       best-known international actor from Japanese film.  Dr.  Yamane  is
       played  by  Takashi  Shimura,  the star of films like IKIRU and THE
       SEVEN SAMURAI.  Unfortunately the actor who dubs his lines  in  the
       American  version is not very good.  Particularly noticeable is his
       inability  to  pronounce  the  word  "phenomenon"  which  he   says
       "phenonemon."   To  have  such  an  educated  man making that silly
       mistake is unintentionally humorous.

       This is a film with some very nice visual imagery and it has become
       a favorite film.  It is not so much a good film as a weak film with
       some very good moments.  The American version I would have to  give
       only  a  high  +1  on  the -4 to +4 scale.  The Japanese version is
       probably a high +2 film.

       It should be noted that also that this is the most influential film
       ever  made  in Japan.  It was Japan's first international cinematic
       success.  It spawned the Japanese genre of "kaiju" films.   "Kaiju"
       is  Japanese  for  "monster"  and  the  continuing Godzilla series,
       Japanese anime, and even Pokemon are  direct  descendents  of  this
       film.  [-mrl]

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

       3. GOJIRA NI-SEN MIRENIAMU (a.k.a. GODZILLA 2000) (a film review by
       Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: This is the first  Godzilla  movie  to
                 get a wide American release since GODZILLA '85.
                 And it is  no  bargain.   The  plot  is  poorly
                 constructed  and  things happen for no apparent
                 reason.  The effects are  better  than  in  the
                 past,  but still occasionally cheesy.  Godzilla
                 has a new look that makes him resemble  more  a
                 martial  arts  weapon  than  a  giant dinosaur.
                 Still this film is fun for  Godzilla  fans  who
                 rarely  get  a chance to see the big guy on the
                 big screen.  Non-fans are unlikely find much to
                 enjoy.  Rating: 6 (0 to 10), high +1 (-4 to +4)

       What can I say?  For the sort of viewer who enjoys seeing  two  men
       in  rubber  monster  suits  battle  over  a  city  that  looks like
       cardboard boxes, this might be the  film  for  you.   I  liked  it.
       Godzilla  got  to  me  at  an  early age and I am too old to become
       objective about Godzilla films now.  As  I  said  in  the  capsule,
       there  is  not a lot done really well in this film, but it is a lot
       of fun for people who like Godzilla  films.   There  is  a  certain
       thrill  of  anticipation  in  seeing  the  Toho Films banner at the
       beginning.  Even the best are  crudely  made  and  often  a  little
       incoherent, but they are also a good time.  Non-fans can be assured
       that they will not be much impressed by GODZILLA 2000 and can  tune
       out of this review at this point.

       Plot?  Well, truth be known, there is not  a  whole  lot  of  plot.
       Scientist  Yuji  Shinoda left the employ of the Japanese government
       and formed the minuscule Godzilla  Prediction  Network,  a  startup
       that predicts where and when Godzilla will show up and strike next.
       Yuji does the science and Yuji's  ten-year-old  daughter  does  the
       financial  work.   They  are  joined  on  a  Godzilla  hunt by Yuki
       Ichinose, a photojournalist looking for  a  story.   Together  they
       discover that finding Godzilla can be a big mistake.

       At the same time some scientists have found an odd rock,  600  feet
       across,  in  the  ocean of Japan.  Because it shows some intriguing
       abnormalities they decide to bring the rock to the surface where it
       can  be studied, lifting it with floats.  Oddly the rock seems more
       enthusiastic about reaching the surface than can be explained as it
       rises  up  past the floats.  It then hangs over the water and waits
       for sunshine to activate it.  It seems under the stone shell is  an
       alien  craft that has been waiting 60 million years to come back to
       life so it can complete its mission.  It would be  telling  to  say
       what  its  mission  is,  except  that logical or not, there will of
       course be another monster for Godzilla to fight.  (And of course it
       will  be  just  roughly  Godzilla's height.  Godzilla never has any
       fifty-foot monsters to fight.)

       Word on the street has been that the new film is intended  to  come
       right after the original Godzilla film in its own new series.  That
       was true of the film we call GODZILLA '85, which did spawn its  own
       separate series of Godzilla films in the 1980s and 1990s.  (To save
       confusion I will use American titles.)  That second series repeated
       many  of  the  same  mistakes that the first series did, but it was
       aimed at a higher level.  The rumor has been that like GODZILLA '85
       (and  of  course  the  film  we  call  GIGANTIS, THE FIRE MONSTER),
       GODZILLA 2000 is a direct successor to the original GODZILLA,  KING
       OF THE MONSTERS.  However, a cursory look at the film tells us this
       is simply not true.  Godzilla died in the first film and all  other
       films are supposed to feature a second very similar Godzilla beast.
       Yet in GODZILLA 2000,  attacks  by  Godzilla  are  taken  to  be  a
       periodic  phenomenon.  There is even a Godzilla Prediction Network.
       At the end of the film there is a comment about all  of  Godzilla's
       attacks  in  the past have taught lessons.  None of this would make
       sense if only the events of the first film and this one  had  taken
       place.   The  second  series apparently ended with the death of the
       second Godzilla and his  replacement  by  his  son,  just  reaching
       maturity.   Logically  it  would  make  sense  to  say that the new
       Godzilla is really the son from the second  series.   But  so  much
       logic  is  probably more than the series can reasonably be expected
       to bear.

       Godzilla is like James Bond.  His looks change  but  the  character
       himself is timeless.  His face had a very lumpy appearance and buck
       teeth in the earliest film and then became more  dinosaur-like  for
       KING  KONG  VRS.  GODZILLA.  As the series became more childish and
       aimed at younger children his  features  became  rounder  and  less
       frightening.   In  the  second  series  he  looked a lot better and
       consistent from to film, but just a bit rubbery.  His  looks  never
       changed.   For  GODZILLA 2000 again his looks have been modified to
       please the younger set.  This time, however, it is  a  younger  set
       brought up on NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET and FRIDAY THE 13TH.  The new
       Godzilla has sharper teeth with four canines  regularly  spaced  on
       each  side.   His  back  fins  are more jagged, sharp, and vicious-
       looking.  It looks like they crossed the traditional Godzilla  with
       a punk rocker.

       Toho Studios from the beginning  did  excellent  work  with  labor-
       intensive  special effects.  But not every effects problem could be
       solved with inexpensive labor.  Visually their  films  were  always
       very   nice,  but  their  special  effects  were  not  always  very
       convincing.  As time went by their visual effects got better.  This
       film  really represents a big jump in the quality of their effects.
       There are many very nice images.  And what  attracts  people  to  a
       Godzilla  film  has got to be the visuals.  It certainly is not the
       writing.  Toho films can usually be counted on for nicely  composed
       scenes  with  good  use  of  color.  Where possible in the new film
       Godzilla is shown from a low angle to accentuate the height.  A low
       angle camera was used in the first film and then abandoned for most
       of the first series.  It was used sparingly in the  second  series.
       Here again the camera creates an illusion of great size by shooting
       upward, in fact he looks larger than he ever has  before.   Several
       new  compositions of shots give this film a look that is unique for
       the series.  For those who like to just stare in awe  of  the  size
       the mega-saurian, this is the film.

       The writing however, is not the best of the  series  and  has  some
       strange  touches.   There  are  some half-hearted attempts at humor
       that seem thrown in  as  an  after-thought.   There  is  one  short
       sequence  of  slapstick  comedy,  in  this  case  almost  literally
       slapstick, and it seems like it belonged in another  movie.   There
       are some allusions to JURASSIC PARK, DR. STRANGELOVE, and perhaps a
       few other films.  (By the way, the film scene someone  is  watching
       on  TV  when  we  can  hear  only the dialog is Morris Ankrum being
       interrogated by aliens in EARTH VS. THE FLYING SAUCERS.   I  wonder
       what film was used in the Japanese-language version.)  I have never
       been quite able to make out if the writing in these films is out of
       kilter  or  if  it  just  works  better in Japanese.  But the final
       scene, like the writing in several of the situations, just does not
       work.   It  almost  seems to be rooting for Godzilla as he destroys
       Tokyo.

       The musical score by Takayuki Hattori is a little too polished  and
       Western  for a Godzilla film.  Godzilla films usually have Japanese
       military marches and brash brassy music.   Much  of  that  feel  is
       missing  here.   The film is released by Tristar who hopefully have
       learned to leave Godzilla films to  the  experts  after  their  own
       attempt  to  make  a  Godzilla  film  ended  up with something of a
       monstrosity.  (Though rumor has it that their own attempt to make a
       Godzilla film failed in large part because of constraints placed on
       them by Toho executives.)

       Even for Godzilla fans, this could have been a better film.  It  is
       only mid-range in the quality of films in the second series.  Still
       as he approaches fifty years old, it is good to know  the  big  guy
       still  looks good on the silver screen and in some ways better than
       ever before.  I rate this GODZILLA 2000 a 6 on the 0  to  10  scale
       and a high +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.  It will be interesting to see
       if its sequels will get an American theatrical release.  [-mrl]

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

       4. THE CELL (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: Yet another serial  killer  plot,  but
                 one  with  some difference.  This one becomes a
                 sort of FANTASTIC VOYAGE of  the  mind  crossed
                 with  NATURAL  BORN  KILLERS.   A  psychologist
                 travels within the  mind  and  visions  of  the
                 serial  killer  (and  vice  versa) in a race to
                 save a victim from a deathtrap.  The  film  has
                 some   remarkable   visions   in  an  otherwise
                 pedestrian plot.  There are lots of  intriguing
                 ideas  floating in this film of psychology made
                 visual.  Be warned that the  visuals  and  even
                 the dialog are a harrowing experience.  Rating:
                 7 (0 to 10), +2 (-4 to +4)

       THE CELL is one more story of the FBI  trying  to  catch  a  serial
       killer  and  free  his captives.  But when it seemed that there was
       not much more that could be done with that tired  plot,  this  film
       has  some  refreshing  new  ideas.   It  is  the  premise that some
       unspecified technological advance allows psychotic and psychologist
       to  enter  the  other's  dreams  and  walk  around  in that surreal
       landscape.  Similar ideas have been  tried  before  in  films.   In
       SPELLBOUND,  Alfred  Hitchcock  took  us  through  the  mind  of  a
       neurotic's nightmare  in  a  symbolic  surreal  world  designed  by
       Salvador  Dali.   The  concepts of actually visiting inside another
       person's mind or dreams were explored in DREAMSCAPE and BRAINSTORM.
       The  latter  film even suggested that there was a particular danger
       being inside a psychotic's mind.  NATURAL BORN KILLERS  suggests  a
       natural  disorder  to  a  psychotic's mind, though it explores that
       disorder without use of science fictional devices.  All these ideas
       come  together  in  an  otherwise  simplistic violent serial killer
       plot.

       Catherine Deane (played by Jennifer Lopez) is a psychologist trying
       to  get  into  the mind of her young patient, Edward.  A new device
       allows her to do it in a much more direct fashion than what we  see
       used  today.   The invention lets her visualize his mind and dreams
       and actually become a character inside of them.  It is a tremendous
       leap  toward  understanding her patient.  And the vistas within his
       mind are strange even if the boy has a rather standard normal mind.
       Then  Deane  is  given an opportunity to enter a most unusual mind.
       The FBI has  captured  a  serial  killer,  Carl  Stargher  (Vincent
       D'Onofrio), and has him under sedation.  But his most recent target
       is still alive in a death trap somewhere.

       FBI agent Peter Novak (Vince Vaughn) would like Deane  to  go  into
       Stargher's twisted, violent mind and retrieve a clue as to where he
       is hiding and torturing his current victim.  That  said,  there  is
       not  much  more  plot  to  the  film.   The  serial  killer plot is
       abbreviated and for the most part predictable.  The real story goes
       on  inside the heads of Deane and Stargher and we see it as fantasy
       worlds.

       The  success  of  THE  CELL  becomes  very  much  the  property  of
       production  designer Tom Foden (of cable TV's "The Hunger") and art
       directors Guy Dyas and Michael Manson.  Dyas is debuting as an  art
       director, but he has been a production illustrator on several major
       films including MEN IN BLACK, MIMIC, ARMAGEDDON, and GALAXY  QUEST.
       The  worlds  this  team  created  in  Stargher's  mind are dank and
       forbidding, twisted, dark and bloody.   Religion  is  an  important
       aspect  of  both  Deane's and Stargher's mindscapes but it has very
       different roles in each of those worlds.  Each uses religion  in  a
       different  way.   There  are  many other tantalizing ideas floating
       around.  There is a strong hint that two  different  people  seeing
       the  same subconscious world will see it quite differently yet each
       will find the others actions consistent with the world they see.

       First-time film director Tarsem Singh directs a  script  by  first-
       time writer Mark Protosevich.  Singh intentionally mutes the colors
       of the film to heighten the oppressive effect.  So much of the film
       is  taken up with the fantasy world action, the real world story is
       somewhat shorted.  How  Stargher  was  able  to  build  his  ornate
       torture  device  leaves  many  unanswered questions.  Other writing
       problems are obvious.  The film had a nearly  perfect  ending  very
       shortly  after the action ends.  Unfortunately the film keeps going
       to tie things up more pleasantly and warmly and out of keeping with
       the cold style of the best of what had preceded it.

       The viewing public hardly needed another serial killer  film.   But
       if  another  must  be  made,  at  least  this  is the way to do it.
       Combine it with something fresh and creative with  ideas.   I  rate
       THE  CELL  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

           The Believer is happy; the doubter is wise.
                                          -- Hungarian Proverb