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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 06/15/01 -- Vol. 19, No. 50

       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. I have been reading some film reviews and comment  on  the  film
       PEARL  HARBOR.   Probably  one of the most thought-provoking was by
       Ian Buruma from the Manchester Guardian entitled "Oh! What a lovely
       war":

       http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/ Article/0,4273,4193709,00.html

       Buruma is a noted author with several  books  to  his  credit.   He
       wrote  THE  WAGES OF GUILT: MEMORIES OF WAR IN GERMANY AND JAPAN in
       which his thesis is that  Germany  exhibits  great  guilt  for  its
       atrocities of the 1930s and 1940s and that Japan exhibits virtually
       none at all.

       Buruma takes the film PEARL  HARBOR  to  task  for  minimizing  the
       horrors  of war.  His complaint about PEARL HARBOR is that the film
       is milking the event for the thrills when in fact it was a terrible
       and  painful  event.  Watching PEARL HARBOR Buruma is reminded of a
       1942 Japanese propaganda film THE WAR AT SEA FROM HAWAII TO MALAYA.
       It  had,  according to the Buruma, almost the identical camaraderie
       among the soldiers  and  what  was  then  state-of-the-art  special
       effects.  Like PEARL HARBOR it did not dwell on the villainy of the
       enemy but on the glory of war.  He concludes  his  comment  saying,
       "So  who  needs  reality?  Just sit back and enjoy the show.  Until
       the next war.  And then we die ingloriously."  Buruma really  wants
       to  avoid  that  next  war  at  all costs.  He feels with no little
       justification taht war is a very fearsome thing.

       At one time, specifically during the World War II,  American  films
       were all very pro-war.  It served a national purpose to stir people
       up against the country's enemies and to give  a  sort  of  carefree
       view  of  war.   Most  countries with film industries do this.  The
       Soviet Union had its ALEXANDER NEVSKY.  When we were  in  India  we
       saw  EK  HI  RAASTA, which had the good soldier having a great time
       blasting away at the enemy gloriously.   During  the  Second  World
       War,  the  film  industry  considered it only its patriotic duty to
       push the government line and build enthusiasm for the war with gung
       ho films.

       In the 1950s with the war over the government no longer just wanted
       but now demanded more, not less, from the film industry.  Films had
       to be pro-government or the filmmakers were in  big  trouble.   The
       industry  took  it  for  a  while letting many promising careers be
       ruined, but eventually  revolted.   This  led  to  something  of  a
       parting  of  the ways between government and the film industry.  By
       the time the Vietnam War became unpopular with the public, the film
       industry  followed  its  conscience,  or more accurately its paying
       audience,  and  was  mostly  anti-war.   Not  that  it  made  films
       specifically  about  the war.  It avoided mentioning the war itself
       as much as possible, but more often  than  not  its  sentiment  was
       anti-government.   For  the  most  part  the film industry has been
       anti-war and frequently anti-military in the interim.

       PEARL HARBOR is something of a throwback in  this  regard.   Buruma
       complains  about the fact that this is not an anti-war film.  There
       are at least two flaws in his argument.  At the same time  that  he
       finds  the  film  too  pro-war he claims it is also too easy on the
       Japanese.  They had committed multitudes of atrocities in Asia.  He
       complains  that Affleck calls the Japanese "honorable people with a
       certain point of view" instead of  listing  their  crimes.   Buruma
       seems  to be claiming that the Americans enthusiasm for fighting in
       the film is more justified than it was portrayed while at the  same
       time complaining about that enthusiasm.  It is true that there were
       some American terrified and there were some enthusiastic.  He  does
       not  like the see the latter portrayed.  They should all have looks
       of somber responsibility, I suppose.

       Buruma also complains that this film should come out at this  time.
       "The  notion  that  it  is  glorious  to  die  for the nation looks
       especially odd at a time  when  US  governments  have  an  absolute
       terror  of American casualties.  President Clinton was so afraid of
       'bodybags' appearing on the evening news that he preferred  bombing
       cities  from  a  great  height to sending in troops where they were
       needed. There is no evidence that Bush is any different."  I gather
       Buruma  would  like  to  see Americans more willing to go into real
       battle, but they should hate every minute.
       PEARL HARBOR is not a great film, but it is useful to start  debate
       on  war.  Is war always bad?  I think Buruma would say so.  I would
       disagree.  War is usually bad but to make the  statement,  "War  is
       bad"  a moral absolute is totally wrong-headed.  Many people accept
       that there are no moral absolutes.  From my point of view even  the
       Ten  Commandments  have  to be guidelines, and not moral absolutes.
       And society quite correctly does not treat them that way.   Killing
       for  ones  own  profit  is bad.  Killing for a higher moral good is
       not.  A SWAT  team  may  slay  a  potential  killer  in  a  hostage
       situation  to  prevent  a worse evil from happening.  For any moral
       wrong one can think of an extreme situation in which it  should  be
       chosen  as the lessor of two evils.  Admittedly if this is a public
       policy there is some danger that people  may  not  correctly  judge
       which  really  is the lessor of the two evils.  And selfish motives
       may play a part.  But then society has laws to correct them.   Ones
       conscience has to be the ultimate moral compass.

       Of course even if everybody followed  their  moral  compass,  there
       would  still  be  wars.  The film GETTYSBURG, based on the book THE
       KILLER ANGELS by Michael Shaara, ironically makes both sides appear
       noble.   Each  soldier  is fighting to overcome a perceived greater
       evil.  They cannot both be right.   This  unfortunately  is  not  a
       formula  to  avoid  bloodshed  since  both  sides cannot be totally
       objective, but it is the only realistic policy.  I cannot  look  at
       the  history  of  the 20th Century and not feel that there were and
       still are some causes that were worth fighting and even dying  for.
       Some  of those causes are still around and there are new ones every
       year.

       Human life is the most valuable commodity, but that  value  is  not
       infinite.   There  are  limits  to  life's  value.   We have to ask
       ourselves when faced with a great cause, as Patrick Henry did,  "Is
       life  so dear?"  It may not be a popular opinion any more but there
       are some causes worth dying for.

       Seven astronauts died in the  Challenger  disaster.   It  seriously
       derailed  the space program.  A hundred and forty years earlier the
       loss of seven people would have been commonplace when the goal  was
       just  to  cross  the  prairie  and find a somewhat better place for
       those seven people to live.  The Challenger astronauts had  a  much
       nobler  goal  and one that is worthwhile even if the price includes
       some lives.  There were roughly 16,000 people who died in  alcohol-
       related  traffic accidents in the year 2000.  That's well over 2000
       traffic deaths for every astronaut who died in the  Challenger  and
       the  astronauts  died  for  a far more worthwhile cause.  There are
       also worthwhile causes to war over.

       I don't think anyone likes war, but I do not as Buruma does that it
       is  bad  to tell audiences that some people enthusiastically fought
       back when the country was attacked.   Not  everything  about  PEARL
       HARBOR is true to history, but that part is.  [-mrl]
       ===================================================================

       2. Lakshmikanth "Lax" Madapaty is a good friend of mine and perhaps
       a  greater  film enthusiast.  My top ten list inspired him to write
       one of his own.

       10. THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY (1967):

       Among film genres, the Western is entirely American, much like Jazz
       and  Rap in music. For a genre that is so much American and for all
       the pioneering efforts of Americans in film making, there have only
       been  a handful of great Westerns ever made. HIGH NOON, ONCE UPON A
       TIME IN THE WEST and THE WILD BUNCH come to mind with THE SEARCHERS
       deserving  an honorable mention.  It took an Italian by the name of
       Sergio Leone to make what I consider to  be  the  greatest  Western
       ever.  By  the time he made this film, he already had the chance to
       perfect him film-crafting skills with the two other films  in  what
       is  now  called  the  "Dollar Trilogy". Right from the stylish main
       titles with the legendary Morricone main theme and the  intros  and
       outros for each of the three lead characters via freeze frame, this
       film tells us that it is unlike any other Western made.  The  story
       is  about  the  three  lead  characters  who  are  after a cache of
       $200,000 in Confederate gold bullion set in  the  backdrop  of  the
       American  Civil  War.  We  find  out by the end that the "good" guy
       isn't that good and the "ugly" guy (Eli Wallach in  an  outstanding
       performance)  is  a  lot of fun. Even the "bad" guy is smarter than
       your average Western baddie. Leone drenches the film in atmosphere.
       The  lonely, dry and sun-baked landscape is the perfect setting for
       our characters to dwell in and be a part of. By alternately cutting
       between  extreme  close-ups  and  long  range  wide  angle  shots -
       especially at the beginning and end of the film - Leone  creates  a
       wonderfully  unsettling effect on us. It not only gives us a chance
       to get inside the characters' heads and experience  their  feelings
       but also understand the backdrop in which they all dwell. The final
       shootout at the cemetery is worth a mention for  Leone's  brilliant
       use  of  editing.   Again,  alternating  between rapid-fire extreme
       close-ups and well-positioned long-range  shots  of  the  cemetery,
       Leone  creates  tension  in  a  way that would have made Eisenstein
       happy. Every image is married perfectly  to  Morricone's  brilliant
       score.  In  fact,  some  of the scenes seem to have been cut to his
       score, given the  close  relationship  the  director  and  composer
       enjoyed.  Cues  like  Ecstasy of Gold are routinely used even today
       from rock songs to product commercials.

       09. THE GUNS OF NAVARONE (1961):

       Exactly 40 years ago to this month, a rousing action adventure film
       opened  in  cinemas  around  the  world  to widespread critical and
       commercial acclaim. That film is the one written  and  produced  by
       blacklisted  writer  Carl  Foreman  (the  man  behind HIGH NOON and
       BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI) based on an Alistair MacLean novel.  When
       Gregory  Peck,  the  main  lead in the film was given the choice to
       pick a director (as is  the  wont  in  those  days),  Peck  made  a
       surprise  choice  -  J. Lee Thompson. His decision was based on the
       man's previous work in a little known character drama TIGER BAY and
       another  little  known  action  adventure  film,  FLAME OVER INDIA.
       Peck's  reasoning  was  that  the  script  needed  someone  who  is
       comfortable  with  staging  the action sequences and yet be able to
       develop characters and bring out  the  human  element  that  is  so
       critical  to  the  writing.  With  a strong visual sense and a good
       knack for pacing, J. Lee transformed Foreman's script into  what  I
       consider  to  be  the  greatest  action adventure film of all time.
       Budgeted at $ 6 million by Columbia, the film made $ 12 million  in
       the  US  alone,  was  nominated  for  7 Oscars and won one for Best
       Special Effects. In the film, six men are dispatched by the  Allied
       command forces on a desperate mission to destroy two German guns on
       the cliffs of the Greek island of Navarone. These are the guns that
       control  the  approach  to  the island of Kheros where 1200 British
       soldiers (2000 in the  script)  are  stranded.  The  guns  must  be
       destroyed  in  six  days,  before  six  Allied Destroyer ships pass
       through those waters to rescue the stranded  soldiers.  What  makes
       the  film  tower  above  others  in  its  genre is the attention to
       character development all around, not just to the three main  leads
       Peck,  Niven and Quinn. There are two standout scenes between Niven
       and Peck that examine  the  moral  dilemmas  of  killing.  This  is
       something  one  will  never  find  in the "burger and fries" action
       films being made since the mid-70's.  Dimitri  Tiomkin  embellishes
       the film with a rousing score.

       08. THE GODFATHER (1972): AFI 3

       The 70's were the most  exciting  period  of  creative  filmmaking.
       Several  young, promising and talented film directors like Coppola,
       Leone,  Spielberg,  Bogdanovich,  Nic  Roeg,  Ken  Russell,  Lucas,
       Kubrick,  Boorman and Scorcese made some of their best works during
       this period. Maybe this explains why fewer Americans  went  to  the
       cinemas  each  week  in  the 70's than at any time in the preceding
       three decades! Even European Cinema was taking off in exciting  new
       directions with young talent like Bernardo Bertolucci, Eric Rohmer,
       Francois Truffaut, Louis Malle, Rainer Fassbinder and  Luis  Bunuel
       contributing  significantly. It is during this exciting period that
       a 32-year old Coppola made what is widely considered to be  one  of
       the  greatest films of all time. Coppola accomplished nothing short
       of a cinematic miracle with this film. Up until that point in time,
       whatever  reputation  Coppola  had  was as a screenwriter, with his
       films as a director having  been  box  office  failures.  Paramount
       offered  the project to Richard Brooks, Peter Yates and then Costa-
       Gavras, all of who refused to do it. The film  is  based  on  Mario
       Puzo's bestseller - not a great piece of literature by any measure.
       At that time, Brando's career was on a downward spiral. Even before
       shooting  began,  the  Italian-American  Civil Rights League raised
       money to stop making of the film.  There were bomb threats and  the
       producer's  car  was fired at.  What Coppola essentially did was to
       edify a piece of pulp fiction with his film crafting genius and  in
       the  process, influence a whole genre and generation of filmmakers.
       The film has  everything  that  constitutes  greatness  -  terrific
       acting  by  some  of the most talented actors of our times (Brando,
       Duvall,  Pacino),  superb  production  design,  the  almost-perfect
       characters  who just miss greatness, the themes of honor and family
       values among gangsters, rock solid direction and a memorable  score
       by  Nino  Rota. Most Italian restaurants around the world must have
       played this film's main theme at one time or the other!

       Special Mention: A MAN  FOR  ALL  SEASONS  (1966):   Mark  Leeper's
       article  already  mentions the film's plot. What makes this a great
       film is the writing.  It is very difficult  to  write  convincingly
       about  a  penetratingly  intelligent  man  who  also  happens to be
       morally upright  with  strong  values.  Robert's  Bolt's  brilliant
       script  accomplishes  exactly  this  by the use of some of the best
       dialogue ever written for the screen. Some of it is  included  here
       as  a  tribute  to  the film.  [Spoilers: skip ahead if you haven't
       seen the movie and don't want to know the dialogue ahead of time.]

       Thomas More: You threaten like a dockside bully.
       Thomas Cromwell: How should I threaten?
       More: Like a minister of state. With justice.
       Cromwell:  Oh, justice is what you're threatened with.
       More: Then I am not threatened.

       Thomas More: I think that when statesmen forsake their own  private
       conscience  for  the  sake  of their public duties, they lead their
       country by a short route to chaos.

       Margaret More: Father, that man's bad.
       Sir Thomas More: There's no law against that.
       William Roper: There is. God's law.
       Sir Thomas More: Then God can arrest him.
       Wife:  While you talk he's gone!
       Sir Thomas More:  And go he should, if he were the  Devil  himself,
       until he broke the law!
       William Roper:  So, now you give the Devil the benefit of law!
       Sir Thomas More:  Yes! What would you do?  Cut a great road through
       the law to get after the Devil?
       William Roper:  Yes, I'd cut down every law in England to do that!
       Sir Thomas More:  Oh? And when the last law was down, and the Devil
       turned  'round  on  you,  where would you hide, Roper, the laws all
       being flat? This country is planted thick with laws from  coast  to
       coast.  Man's laws, not God's. And if you cut them down--and you're
       just the man to do it--do you really think you could stand  upright
       in the winds that would blow then? Yes, I give the Devil benefit of
       law, for my own safety's sake!

       Also worth mentioning is Paul Scofield's portrayal  of  Sir  Thomas
       More,  breathing  so much life into Bolt's script. Scofield belongs
       to a select group  of  actors  such  as  Charles  Laughton,  Marlon
       Brando,  Robert  Duvall,  Al  Pacino  and  Anthony  Hopkins who can
       express themselves well by superb phrasing of speech and modulation
       in  their  voices.   This can be at times very demanding physically
       but all these actors are up to it and have proved it to us time and
       again.   Scofield,  Bolt  and  director Zinnemann won well-deserved
       Oscars for this film, which also won the Best  Picture  trophy  for
       that  year.  This  one  gets  my  vote  for  one  of  the two great
       screenplays of all time. Make  this  film  today  and  it  will  be
       largely ignored.

       07.  THE HEART IS A LONELY HUNTER (1968):

       This heart-breaking film depicts the events in the last  few  weeks
       of  a  wonderful  human  being's life in this world. What makes the
       film so powerful is the depiction of how unspeakable cruelty can be
       inflicted  on people just by words alone and how failure or lack of
       communication can be a crippling barrier  to  understanding  people
       and   building   relationships.  Racism,  physical  disability  and
       generation gaps are all themes that are so powerfully  examined  in
       this  little known gem of a film. Once I was asked what constitutes
       manipulative filmmaking. In a plot, when a  film  has  scenes  that
       deliberately  panders  to  the  audience's  emotional  core without
       really serving any function to further the plot (and in some cases,
       not even making any sense in the overall context of the film), when
       sentiment and compassion are treated as a  commodity  that  can  be
       nicely packaged and sold, that is when I lose respect for that film
       and filmmaker. (This is the one big problem I have with  a  certain
       popular  director  with  a string of commercial successes that most
       people seem to enjoy and like a lot.) And then there are films such
       as  this  one,  where  there is a certain honesty in the director's
       approach to the material that just cannot be faked.  Up  until  the
       point in time when I saw this film, I must have seen a few thousand
       films in twenty years. This is the first ever film (and one of only
       3)  that  brought tears. More than anything else, this film teaches
       the importance of treating everyone as human beings,  with  respect
       and dignity. All we need to do to make this world a better place is
       to be John Singer once in a while. Alan Arkin as  John  Singer  and
       Percy Rodriguez turn in great performances.  The only thing I would
       change with this film is strip away the Grusin score and commission
       John Barry to do one of his lilting elegiac scores.

       06. LAWRENCE OF ARABIA (1962):

       Yet another film that features in many critics' lists of top  films
       of  all  time.  David  Lean is a master of cinematic story telling.
       With  the  advent  of  today's  CGI  and  other  modern  filmmaking
       techniques,  his  toils may seem somewhat old-fashioned but make no
       mistake.  THIS is the real deal. No matter how good CGI  is,  there
       is  no  comparison  to  the  real  stuff.  Most of Lean's films are
       extremely cinematic in nature. However, what sets this  film  apart
       is  the  fascinating  and  intimate  portrayal  of T. E. Lawrence's
       enigmatic (such as his repressed homosexuality) and  complex  (such
       as his sadomasochistic tendencies) character. To add to the joy are
       several support roles that are equally fascinating, such as  Prince
       Faisal (Alec Guiness), Sherif Ali (Omar Sharif) and General Allenby
       (Jack Hawkins). Early on in the film, Lean generates  interest  and
       intrigue  in  the  viewer in the funeral scene where several people
       who know and know of Lawrence make comments about him.  As the film
       unfolds,  all these remarks start  making sense to the viewer. Lean
       could very well have book-ended the  film  with  this  scene.  Omar
       Sharif's  entrance  as a mirage in the desert is the greatest intro
       to a screen character. A young and relatively unknown  French  film
       composer  Maurice  Jarre  was  selected by Lean to provide the film
       score. Jarre did a fine job in writing several big  themes  for  an
       orchestra and augmenting them with ethnic instruments.

       [to be continued next week] [-lm]

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

           Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for 	   humanity.
                                          -- Horace Mann