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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 11/24/00 -- Vol. 19, No. 21

       Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-817-5619, mleeper@avaya.com
       Factotum: Evelyn Leeper, 732-332-6218, eleeper@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist: Rob Mitchell, robmitchell@avaya.com
       HO Chair Emeritus: John Jetzt, jetzt@avaya.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. This is not exactly science fiction-related, but  since  it  has
       quite  a  following,  let  me  note that HBO will be re-running the
       entire  first  two  seasons  of  "The  Sopranos"  starting  Sunday,
       December  3, from 8PM to 10PM EST every Sunday night until February
       25.  [-ecl]

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

       2. America has been a melting pot  country  and  as  a  result  its
       cuisine is sort of a melting pot cuisine.  These days American food
       includes a lot of influence from Chinese, Greek,  Indian,  Italian,
       Japanese,  and many more.  Frequently the real American food is not
       a dish invented here but is just our own spin  on  somebody  else's
       dish.   We  may not even recognize it as being distinctly American.
       Sometimes the cuisine loses in the translation.  Beware the  ethnic
       food  served  at  Bell  Laboratories,  for  example.  The Diversity
       Department tells us to respect other nationalities and so often the
       cafeteria then slanders their cuisine trying to imitate it.

       But frequently an ethnic dish made to another ethnic group's  taste
       can  take  on  a life of its own.  What nationality of dish is Chop
       Suey?  It's American.  I believe that is common knowledge.   It  is
       made  in  a  Chinese style, but it is American.  Well, I don't care
       for Chop Suey but it was quite popular  in  Detroit  when  I  lived
       there.

       Pizza?  Well, pizza really is Italian, but by all accounts there is
       no  comparison  between American Pizza and Italian Pizza.  Marcello
       Mastroianni used to say that he wanted to do  more  American  films
       because  only  when  he  came  to  America he could get good pizza.
       American pizza is a whole different animal from real Italian pizza.
       The same thing seems to be happening in other countries also.  When
       I was in Wales I noticed that Indian restaurants had a dish  I  did
       not  recognize.   It  was  called a Balti.  I had never heard of it
       served in US Indian restaurants.  And for good  reason.   Balti  is
       not really an Indian dish, it is British.  But it tastes a lot like
       Indian curry.

       I will tell you some things that even  most  British  do  not  know
       about  this popular dish.  The Balti started showing up in Northern
       England in the mid-1980s.  Some restaurant created it and  when  it
       got  popular  other restaurants started copying it.  I do not think
       anybody knows who invented the dish.  It probably was  a  Pakistani
       restaurant  since  Balti is prepared much like a traditional way of
       cooking for Multani Pakistani communities in Britain.   Balti  food
       is  cooked  in  a  utensil  called  a  Karahi  and is quite similar
       traditional Multani Karahi cuisine.

       Now Balti cooking has spread all over Britain and  Ireland  and  is
       even  found  in India.  It was so popular that it started squeezing
       out  strictly  traditional   Indian   cuisine   in   some   British
       restaurants.   Some  restaurants  discovered  that  if they did not
       serve Baltis, they just did not get the business.  Now just like  a
       lot  of  our  Chinese  restaurants have some American dishes on the
       menu, most Indian restaurants in Britain have a Balti  menu.   They
       will serve many different kinds of Balti dishes.  Meanwhile back in
       India,  British  tourists  are  desperately   looking   for   Balti
       restaurants  and  to keep up with the demand Indian restaurants are
       starting to include Balti dishes in their menu.  It may well end up
       being  a  standard  dish  in  India  even though it was invented in
       Britain.

       In the US we have our own strange concoctions.  For me one  of  the
       stranger  American dishes is Cincinnati Chili.  Now I believe chili
       is originally a Mexican dish and what we  have  in  the  US  is  an
       Americanized  version.   But  Cincinnati chili is a whole different
       breed.  It is actually a Greek variation.  It is not piquant; it is
       sweet  flavored  with an unexpected hint of chocolate and cinnamon.
       But you can get it what they call five-way, four-way, down to  one-
       way.   This  syntax  is  as  strange  as the taste of the chili.  A
       "four-way" stop is a stop you  can  approach  from  four  different
       directions.   A  three-way-something  seems to be something you can
       use three different ways.  That's not what it means here.  A  "one-
       way" chili is chili in a bowl; a "two-way" is chili over spaghetti;
       a "three-way" is chili over spaghetti with grated cheddar cheese; a
       "four-way"  is  chili over spaghetti with grated cheddar cheese and
       chopped onions; and a  "five-way"  is  chili  over  spaghetti  with
       grated  cheddar cheese and chopped onions and kidney beans.  So you
       cannot have some ingredients without  other  ingredients.   If  you
       want  kidney  beans  in  your chili there is no way to do it unless
       there is spaghetti under it and grated cheddar and onions over  it.
       You  have  to  earn  the right to have those kidney beans by buying
       three other ingredients.  It is a little strange but that  is  what
       you get when you have a Greek variation on an American variation on
       a Mexican dish.  Yet Cincinnati  has  more  chili  restaurants  per
       person  than  any  other  city in the world.  So they must be doing
       something right.  Skyline was the chain I remember seeing and  they
       are more common than McDonalds is most parts of the country.

       But this leaves some unanswered questions.  If it is so popular  in
       Cincinnati, why is our traditional American chili not more popular?
       Maybe it is better than standard American chili.  But if it is that
       good,  why is this Greek variant on chili only popular in Ohio?  As
       far as I know Cincinnati is the only American city  known  for  its
       chili.   There  is  need  here for some anthropologist to find some
       answers.  [-mrl]

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

       3. SHOLAY (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: This is the longest running  and  most
                 profitable  Hindi  film  of all time.  Strongly
                 influenced by  THE  MAGNIFICENT  SEVEN,  albeit
                 with   two  heroes  instead  of  seven,  it  is
                 basically a Western made and set in  1975  with
                 locales  in  then  current  India.  Some of the
                 Hindi  Film  conventions  will  chafe  American
                 viewers,  but  overall  it  is quite enjoyable.
                 Rating: 6 (0 to 10), high +1 (-4 to  +4)  Note:
                 This  review  is written from the point of view
                 of  an  American  for  other  Americans.    The
                 viewer's  experience  may  vary.   I  find that
                 Indians can be extremely fond of this film  and
                 will  probably like it considerably more than I
                 did.

       When the film SHOLAY was released in 1975 it at first appeared  not
       to  attract  much  of  an  audience  in India.  Word of mouth grew,
       however, until it was the  highest  grossing  and  most  profitable
       Hindi  film ever made.  It had a theatrical run of over seven years
       in Bombay and five years in Delhi.  Today  there  are  Indians  who
       will  unabashedly call it one of the finest films ever made.  While
       the film takes place in its present, it is basically a reframing of
       SEVEN  SAMURAI  and  THE  MAGNIFICENT SEVEN, retold with two heroes
       instead of seven.  Directed by Ramesh Sippy who picked up  many  of
       the  conventions  of  American  Westerns  and  especially  form the
       Italian Westerns of Sergio Leone.  Madhya Pradesh in Central  India
       and  a  few other areas in India are perhaps the only places in the
       world where there are still conditions so similar to  the  American
       West.   There, at least according to my informant, gangs of dacoits
       still ride horses in rocky terrain and live relatively free of  the
       law  enforcement.   It  is a strange mix of times to see bandits on
       horses and people in contemporary dress on modern  motorcycles.   I
       am  informed  that  the  view  of  village  life  in  India is very
       accurate.  SHOLAY, whose name means "sparks of fire,"  follows  the
       conventions  of  Indian  neighborhood  films.   That  means  it has
       several songs in production  numbers,  it  has  generous  doses  of
       comedy.  And the film is in the range of 190 minutes long.

       Thakur Baldev Singh (played by Sanjeev Kumar) has a problem.  As  a
       Thakur--sort  of the equivalent of what in England was a squire--he
       is responsible to protect his village from the  ravages  of  a  the
       gang  of the bandit named Gabbar Singh (Amjad Khan).  To do this he
       wishes to enlist the aid  of  two  of  the  worst  thieves  in  the
       country, Veeru (Dharmendru) and Jai (Amitabh Bachchan).  The Thakur
       has dealt with them before when he was not the police force and  he
       knows  them  to  be  decent  men and good fighters who are his best
       chance to defeat Gabbar Singh.  He hires  them  to  capture  Gabbar
       alive.

       In flashbacks we see that the Thakur previously was  to  bring  the
       two  to  prison  via train.  When the train was attacked by bandits
       the two escaped from his chains, fought off the bandits,  and  then
       turned   themselves  into  the  authorities  rather  than  let  the
       policeman die of his wounds.

       As is frequently the case is Westerns the most memorable  character
       is  the  villain.   Think  of  Calvera  in THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN or
       Hannibal Lector in THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS.  In India Gabbar Singh
       has  taken  on  a  life  of  his own.  Indian children memorize his
       lines.  He is has become one of the most popular screen villains of
       all  time  for  reasons  that  must  be  only  partially  clear  to
       outsiders.  He certainly has personality, though perhaps not all of
       it transcends the language barrier.

       Making this a Hindi film are the usual standard  touches.   In  the
       course of the three-hour-plus film there are five production number
       songs.  An early one is a  colorful  number  set  during  the  Holi
       holiday.   At this holiday Indians throw large volumes of brightly-
       colored powders into the air and at each other, which certainly  is
       visually colorful.  Another production number toward the end of the
       film is a bit sadistic and makes the audience involuntarily  wince.
       Music  is  by  R.  D.  Burman,  but its quality is a little hard to
       measure by Western standards.  The music and the comedy tend to pad
       out  what in the West we would make into a more focused and intense
       film.  Some of the comedy is rather bizarre including  a  scene  in
       prison  in  which  the  warden  has  chosen  one  of the most hated
       personalities of this century  on  whom  to  model  his  looks  and
       actions.

       A number of pieces of the style are  reminiscent  of  Sergio  Leone
       films.  Some scenes are drawn out for the greatest amount of drama,
       but  will  be  done  almost  silently  with  one  irrelevant  sound
       dominating  (e.g.  the  repetitive  squeaking  of a swing).  In one
       scene several people are shot in a sort  of  massacre,  but  rather
       than  showing  the carnage, each time the action stops in a freeze-
       frame for a second or two.  When the father of the house  comes  to
       see  the  bodies,  each  is  covered  in  a sheet, but as he stands
       looking the wind comes and one at  a  time  blows  the  sheet  away
       leaving  a  body.   In  another  scene  a  man is aiming a gun at a
       defenseless boy.  There is a quick jump to a  train  venting  steam
       with the same explosive sound.  These are very evocative scenes and
       these touches give parts of the film  a  definite  Italian  Western
       feel.   That  part  of  India has landscapes much like the American
       West anyway.  It is odd to find such good work  in  the  same  film
       that  has  some  of  the silly comic musical numbers that this film
       has.  There  some  of  the  comic  editing  features  under-cranked
       cameras and touches one would more associate with "The Monkees."

       The non-Indian wishing to  try  Indian  neighborhood  entertainment
       films could do worse than to begin sampling with SHOLAY.  Though it
       may seem uneven, like the British "curate's egg," parts of  it  are
       excellent. I rate it 6 on the 0 to 10 scale and a high +1 on the -4
       to +4 scale.  The film is now available on  DVD.   (Thanks  to  Lax
       Madapati   for  showing  me  and  giving  me  extensive  background
       information on this film.)  [-mrl]

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

       4. RISK (a film review in bullet list form by Mark R.  Leeper  from
       the Toronto International Film Festival):

                 Capsule: Australian film shot in Sydney.  A new
                 employee  at  an  insurance company gets pulled
                 into  an  insurance  fraud  scheme   with   two
                 unscrupulous  people.   A  different  idea, but
                 only a standard execution.  High speed  climax.
                 Based on a story by Tracy Kidder.  Rating: +1

          - Sydney, Australia setting
          - Ben Madigan (Tom Long) thought insurance helped people (before
            joining industry)
          - Told a good adjuster will pay out minimum
          - Taken under wing of Kreisky (Bryan Browne)
          - Experiment to avoid lawyers and split difference with client
          - Kreisky using experiment to cover scam involving false claims
          - First case is a cheater
          - Ben's scruples bothered by the job, really bothered by  people
            he deals with
          - Kreisky scam involves beautiful woman Louise Roncoli  (Claudia
            Karvan)
          - Scheme gets more complex
          - Crash tests under credits
          - Fisheye lens for exterior shots
          - Scenes in blues and blacks, like razor blades
          - Visually sparse
          - Fast paced climax
          - Not clear why more companies don't settle compromise like  the
            one in the film

       [-mrl]

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

       5. LA MOITIE DU CIEL (a film review in bullet list form by Mark  R.
       Leeper from the Toronto International Film Festival):

                 Capsule: A woman goes to China to adopt  a  son
                 and finds herself in a fight for her life.  The
                 story is set in a  very  different  China  from
                 what  the  Chinese  government  would  have  to
                 believe  exists.   She  sees  extreme   poverty
                 feeding  crime  and  political  oppression.   A
                 moving and angry film.  Rating: +2

       French language

          - French film set in China
          - Title means "Half of Heaven," referring to woman
          - Anne with ten-year-old daughter Sophie came to adopt boy
          - Must take girl
          - While waiting visit circus outside hotel
          - Meet performer Anya
          - Daughter has imaginary friend Scaredy
          - Sophie keeps going to circus
          - Baby taken back through red tape
          - Enlists help of local only to make things worse
          - Must go after baby she has named Mimi
          - Victim of scam and becomes a fugitive
          - Complex adventure in China
          - View of modern China could not get from China
          - Babies bedded in boxes
          - Officious woman bureaucrats
          - Faces crime
          - View of prison very grim, "Write your self-criticism"
          - Poverty suffuses everything

       [-mrl]

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

       6. HOW TO KILL YOUR NEIGHBOR'S DOG (a film review  in  bullet  list
       form  by  Mark  R.  Leeper  from  the  Toronto  International  Film
       Festival):

                 Capsule:  Written  and  directed   by   Michael
                 Kalesniko,  adapted  from  a stage play.  Peter
                 McGowan is not a very likable person.  He is  a
                 formerly  successful  playwright  with writer's
                 block who hates children and dogs.  He is beset
                 with  problems that he just whimpers about.  By
                 the end of the play with less going on  than  a
                 Seinfeld  episode  he  is  a  little less self-
                 obsessed a person and slightly  nicer  and  his
                 neighbors' dog is dead.  Rating: 0

          - Robin Wright Penn, Lynn Redgrave, Peter Riegart
          - Peter is a jerk, it is hard to feel sympathy
          - Wife wants kids
          - Peter terrified of children
          - Writers block
          - Nasty comments in obstetric exam
          - Director of Peter's current play seems to be a moron
          - Rehearsals go terribly
          - Doppleganger: bum has same name and claims to be him
          - Interviewed on TV, attacks interviewer
          - Satire on traffic reports
          - Neighbor  with  slight  cerebral  palsy,  parent   discourages
            dancing
          - Being around neighbor girl helps Peter
          - Closing credits resurrect dog
          - Parts seem nasty spirited including making fun of senility
          - Not clear where the film is going, but at the rate it moves it
            cannot be far
          - Plot does not advance much

       [-mrl]

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

       7. SONGS FROM THE SECOND FLOOR (a film review in bullet  list  form
       by Mark R. Leeper from the Toronto International Film Festival):
                 Capsule:  Very  dull  attempt  at  comedy  from
                 Sweden.   More a pile of semi-related absurdist
                 scenes, in some you could tell the point,  than
                 an actual story.  Part of the joke is that some
                 of the scenes go on way too  long.   Not  worth
                 the  wait  for  the  one  or  two  good  jokes.
                 Rating: -2

       Swedish language

          - Slow absurdist collection of scenes from Sweden
          - Man taking orders from man on tanning machine
          - Laying man off after thirty years
          - At airport a line of check in stations and  a  tidal  wave  of
            people pushing huge trolleys of luggage
          - Man nearly cut in half by magician
          - A traffic jam that never moves and nobody knows the cause
          - Fancy bar where man vomits while a woman cannot  pull  herself
            up to chair
          - Pacing is slow
          - Long pauses between speeches
          - Not very entertaining
          - Words not synched to lips
          - Film seems very, very long
          - Many strange scenes and threads
          - Running gags
          - Written and directed by Roy Anderson
          - Special studio built to film strange surrealistic  scene  like
            in this film

       [-mrl]

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

       8. FAST FOOD, FAST WOMEN (a film review in bullet list form by Mark
       R. Leeper from the Toronto International Film Festival):

                 Capsule: Light pleasant comedy set in Manhattan
                 about several people who are pair-wise friends,
                 but do not know they all know each other.   Two
                 couples   cannot   seem   to  decide  they  are
                 romantically connected because the men  do  not
                 want to commit.  Rating: high +1

          - Gentle comedy with likable people
          - Manhattan setting, several odd characters
          - Stammering prostitute
          - Diner waitress Bella approaching 35 and getting desperate
          - Divorced taxi driver  Bruno  writes  novels  he  cannot  sell,
            unexpectedly gets children
          - Bella has affair with older man George, play producer
          - Bella has low self-esteem
          - Paul about 70 but good looking and wants to date
          - Paul and two friends get together  daily  at  diner  affirming
            life
          - Bruno dates Bella, Paul dates older woman (Louise Lasser); men
            afraid to commit
          - Bruno goes out for night leaving his young  children  untended
            (illegal)
          - Women who want men to commit
          - Ending contrived
          - Character  actors  Austin  Pendleton,  Louise   Lasser,   Mark
            Margolis

       [-mrl]

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

           America is the only nation in history which miraculously
           has gone directly from barbarism to degeneration without
           the usual interval of civilization. 					  -- Georges Clemenceau


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