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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 01/05/01 -- Vol. 19, No. 27

       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. It is said that it is an ill wind that blows nobody any good.

       I turned on the radio to NPR in the middle of  a  story  and  heard
       this  odd  story.   It  was about a new classical concerto based on
       themes from the music of the rock group The Doors.  You know,  they
       did "Come on Baby, Light My Fire," "When You're Strange," that sort
       of thing.  In fact you probably know better than me.  It was not my
       style  of music.  Somebody wrote an entire concerto based on themes
       from their music and was now recording it.

       The first thing I thought of is that it is  probably  some  Eastern
       European  symphony  orchestra  playing  the music and lending their
       name to give dignity to something less than  their  usual  orthodox
       classical  music.   It  seems  in  Eastern  Europe  there are these
       orchestras that used to be under the  thumb  of  the  Soviets.   In
       those  days  they played Russian music until they had it coming out
       the kazoo.  They were probably not happy about  the  circumstances.
       Now  the  Soviet  Union  is no longer funding them and they realize
       some advantages of the old system.  They now need to earn money how
       they  may.   They  need  to  find  work where it found them before,
       however dull.  Playing dull Russian music may have been better than
       being out of work.

       This situation is bad news for them, but it is good news  for  some
       of  us  over  here  in the US.  There are those of us for whom film
       music is a genre of its own.  A lot of better  film  music  is  now
       turning  up.   For  example,  since the 1960s there were a few rare
       recordings of music taken from horror and  science  fiction  films.
       Sometimes  they  were  accurate  to the original film scores in the
       film.   More  often  it  was  filtered  through  the   questionable
       sensibilities  of  some  cretin  arranger  who wanted to see how it
       sounded with his own flourishes.  In  recreating  film  music,  the
       ideal is the original soundtrack recording.  Anything that makes it
       noticeably not like the original  score  is  bad.   You  would  get
       people  who  would  end  the  music  in  some  pointlessly creative
       impromtu composition; you would get music  that  would  change  the
       tempo.   These renditions would whet ones appetite for the original
       score rather than satisfy it.  There  were  some  pretty  miserable
       variations on a theme film fans cherished.

       Come the fall of  the  Soviet  Union  and  there  are  a  bunch  of
       orchestras  used  to  being paid little enough to play the Soviets'
       music.  Now they are scratching to earn even that much.  These  are
       orchestras  who work for a small part of what an American orchestra
       would.  And they have talented people,  people  who  grew  up  with
       great  melodic  music.   And  playing  that musis was a respectable
       profession.  Today these musicians just want work, they do not need
       to  put their own private creativity into film scores.  They may or
       may not have  even  seen  the  films  whose  scores  they  are  now
       imitating.

       One company, Monstrous Movie Music--named for their  first  CD--are
       getting  the  original  scores  to  classic films like IT CAME FROM
       OUTER SPACE, THEM!, and GORGO and getting them  together  with  the
       Slovak  Radio Symphony Orchestra in Krakow, Poland.  They are doing
       flawless re-recordings.  I do not know if the orchestras  ever  saw
       the  original  films or not, but they get the music pretty close to
       how it sounded in the film.  This music can get  what  would  be  a
       really expensive performance if done domestically.  They get it for
       a small fraction of the price because  they  are  recording  it  in
       Krakow.

       So the first thing I thought to myself when they said that  someone
       had  written  a  concerto  for  music  of  the  Doors is that it is
       probably recorded by the selfsame Slovak Radio  Symphony  Orchestra
       in  Krakow doing what nobody else would.  It sounds impressive that
       they are getting it played by a real symphony orchestra,  but  they
       may be doing it on the cheap.

       Well, I was half wrong.  The concerto was recorded by the  City  of
       Prague  Symphony  Orchestra.  No, they don't record science fiction
       film music as far as I know.  They record Western  film  music.   I
       have  their  album  "The  Wild West."  They do a pretty good job of
       recreating  the  scores  of  American  Westerns.   You  know:   THE
       MAGNIFICENT  SEVEN, THE SONS OF KATIE ELDER, THE SEARCHERS, THE BIG
       COUNTRY, some of the great Westerns.  Other notable albums  include
       ZULU, the music of John Barry.  They leave the monster movie scores
       to their Polish friends.  But they do  basically  the  same  thing.
       They  usually  record for Silva Screen, a label that deals in their
       own very good recreations of classic film music.  I guess they  can
       keep  the  orchestra going with jobs like this.  They may even have
       some fun with it.  I suppose old movies in English are a godsend to
       Eastern  European  symphony  orchestras.   And  even to someone who
       wants to put an impressive frame on a concerto written on themes of
       The Doors.  It is the musical equivalent of a vanity press.  [-mrl]

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

       2. O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU?  (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: In 1937  Mississippi  three  fugitives
                 from  a chain gang race to save a treasure from
                 being flooded by a new dam.  Lacking the  power
                 of the best of the Coen Brothers, this is a sly
                 little Southern  Odyssey  with  more  than  its
                 share  of  chuckles.   The  story works only in
                 episodes but the unusual time and  setting  and
                 the  odd  characterization pull the film along.
                 Rating: 7 (0 to 10), low +2 (-4 to +4)

       The 1941 Preston Sturges comedy SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS told of a  movie
       director  who  decided  that  in  the  hard  depression era, fluffy
       comedies just were not what the world needed.  He wants to  make  a
       serious  film  about  the  down-trodden  in  the  South.   When the
       director sees the real world he discovers  what  the  world  really
       needs  is  more  fluffy comedies like . . . well, like that Preston
       Sturges guy makes.  On to the ash heap go his  plans  to  make  the
       serious  and  important film O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU?  Apparently
       Joel and Ethan Coen have decided to make a film called  O  BROTHER,
       WHERE  ART  THOU?  after  all.  In spite of the dour title it seems
       that neither Sullivan nor the Coens could resist the urge  to  make
       fluff that belies the harsh setting.

       The plot is simple enough.  We start  with  a  chain  gang  working
       soulfully  in  the  blistering  Mississippi sun.  Somehow three men
       have managed to escape (as convicts always seem to  from  cinematic
       chain  gangs) and are hiding in a cornfield.  They are hobbled by a
       chain around their ankles and betrayed  by  their  telltale  broad-
       striped  prison  clothing.  There is Everett Ulysses McGill (played
       by George Clooney), Pete  Hogwollop  (John  Turturro),  and  Delmar
       O'Donnel  (Tim  Blake  Nelson.   The  story follows them on a short
       odyssey into the poor South past sights  and  though  a  series  of
       episodes,  some  of which will be drawn together in the final reel.
       Along the way they pick up and then lose a  black  guitarist  Tommy
       Johnson  (Chris  Thomas  King).  They mix into music, and politics;
       they see a famous criminal's getaway, a baptism, and a Klan  rally.
       In  the  end they have multiple whimsical Dei Ex Machinae.  Some of
       the incidents are  loosely  and  slightly  pretentiously  based  on
       episodes  of  Homer's  Odyssey.   Others are inspired by SULLIVAN'S
       TRAVELS and perhaps bits of other films set in  the  Depression-era
       South  like  NIGHT  OF THE HUNTER and FOOLS' PARADE and Davis Grubb
       stories.

       The Coen Brothers  are,  of  course,  some  of  the  most  creative
       filmmakers  going.   This  film  is  released by the unconventional
       combination of Touchstone and Universal.  Roger  Deakins  shot  the
       entire  film with washed out colors to give the film something of a
       period feel.  It works, though I am not sure why.  They  drop  into
       scenes  1930s  products,  particularly  hair  pomade for the dapper
       Ulysses.  They avoided two pitfalls  here.   They  used  no  brands
       currently  available  so  they respected their film sufficiently to
       avoid product placements.  They also avoided that great  cliche  of
       the  South,  Moon  Pies.   One  cliche  they  did  not avoid is the
       choreographed and slightly too poetic chain gang.  It always  seems
       like  an appeal to social conscience to show men chained up, though
       how different is it from children led together through  town  on  a
       rope as we see in the latter portion of the film?

       The music by T-Bone Burnett and others becomes an important element
       of  the  film  rather  than just creating atmosphere for incidents.
       The movie is suffused with the "Old  Timey"  music  of  the  period
       which becomes important in the plot.  There is a repeating theme of
       the characters getting  into  strange  circumstances  by  following
       mystical  music  coming  from the woods.  Each time it is heard the
       boys will be tested in some way.  Tim Blake Nelson is  not  one  of
       the  more familiar faces on the screen but manages to stand up with
       the more popular Clooney and Turturro, though in the musical scenes
       he  seems  relegated to a distinct third place.  Also along in much
       smaller roles are familiar  Coen  veterans  Charles  Durning,  John
       Goodman, and Holly Hunter.

       As a single story, O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU? just does not  amount
       to  much.  But the individual episodes are entertaining.  I rate it
       a 7 on the 0 to 10 scale and a low +2 on the -4 to  +4  scale.   [-
       mrl]

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

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

                 Capsule: Gus Van Sant returns to  the  familiar
                 territory  of  GOOD WILL HUNTING with a retread
                 of that concept.  This time  the  genius  is  a
                 ghetto  boy  and  basketball star who hides the
                 fact he  is  one  of  America's  best  writers.
                 While  there  are  a  few nice moments the film
                 reeks of a filmmaker who is desperate to have a
                 successful  film.   Sean Connery stars as J. D.
                 Salinger type who helps the  hero  develop  his
                 talent.   Van  Sant  respects great writers but
                 desperately needs one himself.  Rating: 4 (0 to
                 10), 0 (-4 to +4)

       Two films back Gus Van Sant had a  large  success  with  GOOD  WILL
       HUNTING.   The public seemed to go in a big way for this story of a
       blue collar mathematics genius. (Mine was one of the few dissenting
       opinions  and  mostly  for  the  unlikelihood of the premise.)  Van
       Sant's follow-up made a definite thud  with  an  almost  scene-for-
       scene  remake  of the classic PSYCHO.  PSYCHO is one of those films
       that one ought not to remake.  Van Sant needs  another  success  to
       show that GOOD WILL HUNTING was not just a fluke.  He really has to
       have another GOOD WILL HUNTING.  Sadly that is rather transparently
       what  he was trying a little too hard to make.  He took the premise
       of his former success and doctored it to be an even surer  success.
       First  he  plays  the  race card.  This time his hero is not just a
       blue collar worker, he is a really deserving sixteen-year-old black
       writer  who  is trying to succeed in an academic world dominated by
       white males, some of them nasty.  Coming to a new and posh school a
       rich white girl takes an interest in our young writer, and you know
       immediately they are going to hit it off.  Why?  Van Sant is taking
       no chances.  If they fight the script will have to make one of them
       right.  It can not make a white right in a conflict with a black or
       a  man  right  in  a  conflict with a woman.  Neither would be safe
       filmmaking, so the clearly can be no conflict between  the  two  of
       them.   Then  to  make  the film even safer there is a big part for
       Sean Connery as a great writer who takes our  deserving  lad  under
       his  wing.  Connery makes few films that do not succeed and here he
       even  was  one  of  the  producers.   Retread  concept,   political
       correctness,  and  Sean Connery: this is Van Sant playing it super-
       safe.  Oh, yes, and did I mention there is also a "big game"?

       Outwardly, Jamal Wallace (played by Robert Brown) seems  like  just
       about  any other ghetto kid.  Well, he is great at basketball.  But
       privately  Jamal  likes  to  read  the  great  works   of   Western
       literature.   And  then  he  has  his notebooks where he writes his
       thoughts that he does not want to share with the  world.   In  this
       Bronx  neighborhood there is a strange old man who never leaves his
       apartment.  He just stares out the window at the passing parade and
       does  who  knows  what  else.  He just looms as a presence over the
       neighborhood.

       On a dare Jamal breaks into the strange apartment and is  about  to
       steal  something  small to prove he was there but is frightened off
       leaving behind  his  backpack  with  his  writings.   The  old  man
       eventually  gives  the  backpack  back, but the notebooks have been
       marked up with the critical comments that could only  come  from  a
       great  writer.   It  is the kind of tutelage that Jamal desperately
       wants.  The recluse turns out to be  the  great  William  Forrester
       (Sean  Connery), the J. D. Salinger-like writer who wrote one great
       novel and then never published again.

       Meanwhile Jamal has attracted the attention of a prestigious school
       who   wants  the  students  for  his  basketball  skills  and  only
       secondarily for the potential that his test  scores  show  he  has.
       But  there  is  pressure  in  the new school to push Jamal into the
       basketball track while his writing teacher Professor  Crawford  (F.
       Murray  Abraham)  finding  his  writing  getting  better and better
       bigotedly suspects Jamal of cheating.

       There is not doubt that the best part of the film  is  the  writing
       lessons  which  are written with insight.  Suggestions like writing
       first from the heart and then rewriting from the mind sound useful,
       though  they may be a little obvious.  And they are a special treat
       delivered by the charismatic Connery who, though not known for  his
       writing ability, has the hypnotic style that would make even toilet
       repair sound enthralling.

       This is the second film I  have  seen  this  year  photographed  by
       Harris  Savides,  the  other  being  THE YARDS.  I definitely see a
       pattern forming.  Both are films in film noir style with overuse of
       dimly lit scenes.  Many of the scenes really seem to be carved from
       the darkness.  In Forrester's apartment the lighting  is  so  muted
       that   shadows  on  Connery  join  with  the  background  darkness.
       Crawford's classroom is also filmed  in  dim  and  downbeat  style.
       Scenes  are  frequently  washed  out.   It feels to me like this is
       manipulation, though in a better film it might more sympathetically
       be  called  style.   In  any case there seems to be an excess of it
       here.

       By trying too hard to be successful, this film rarely  rises  above
       mediocrity.   I  rate it a 4 on the 0 to 10 scale and a 0 on the -4
       to +4 scale.   I  did  like  the  writing  lesson,  but  with  that
       exception  everything I ever needed to know about FINDING FORRESTER
       I got from watching the trailer.  [-mrl]

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

           Cynicism is an unpleasant way of saying the truth. 					  -- Lillian Hellman