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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 06/22/01 -- Vol. 19, No. 51

       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. In the weeks to come we will be making some transitions  in  the
       club.  The MT VOID will be coming to you from a new e-mail address.
       What is this all about?  Well, people who work for Lucent or  Avaya
       will know that the companies are changing a great deal.  We need to
       put the MT VOID  on  more  stable  ground.   We  will  be  shifting
       operations   off-company.    Hopefully   this   will  not  mean  an
       interruption in service.

       We expect to  start  sending  the  MT  VOID  to  people  using  the
       egroups.com  mtvoid  mailing  list  starting  July  6.   There will
       probably be a test mailing next week to see if  all  the  addresses
       listed work.

       If you are reading this on Evelyn's web page and want to subscribe,
       go  to  http://www.egroups.com  and  follow  the  instructions,  or
       contact Evelyn (evelyn.leeper@excite.com).

       One thing we cannot move off company is the  science  fiction  club
       library.   We  are  left with a collection of science fiction books
       some of which Bell Laboratories funded for its employees many years
       ago,  but  most  of  which were donations by members.  Who owns the
       library now is not clear.  It  might  be  best  made  a  charitable
       contribution.   We  need suggestions.  What would club members want
       us to do?  [-mrl]
       ===================================================================

       2. In the film THE WAR OF THE WORLDS they tell  you  it  is  taking
       place  in  a  pleasant  summer  season and about how Mars is at its
       nearest point.  I think that though the Martian year is  about  two
       Earth  years long (and exactly one Martian year) the two really are
       at their nearest points to each other  every  dozen  years  or  so.
       Well,  today  starts a pleasant summer season and right now Mars is
       at its nearest point.  Keep an eye out for falling stars.  [-mrl]

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

       3 Several years ago I used to go to the Readercon  Science  Fiction
       conventions.   I  stopped  going  for  a reason that came down to a
       matter of principle.  The idea of this convention is that it was to
       be  an  exhilarating  look  at  the  greatness  of literary science
       fiction.  It was sort of a Dead Poets Society of  science  fiction.
       However, from the beginning that is not what it turned out to be at
       all.  While it was a very positive convention during  the  day,  at
       night it would shed that image and take on a very different aspect,
       one that was actually kind of ugly.  The high point of the weakened
       was the Kirk Poland Bad Prose Contest.  The point of this event was
       to take passages from science works and to have a good laugh at how
       poorly  they  were written and what bad prose they are.  Never mind
       the fact they were quoting the passages out of context.  People who
       would  never laugh at their own children for being awkward in spite
       of trying their best seem to get perverse pleasure from laughing at
       well-meaning  authors who do the same.  (And it is amazing how many
       fans, when they find out I object to the Kirk Poland defend  it  by
       saying  that  it is so much fun.  I don't think anybody denies that
       mean-spirited games can be enjoyable.  I wonder how they would feel
       about Polish jokes.)

       I started a movement among my friends,  including  the  hard-willed
       Evelyn  who  otherwise  would have enjoyed Readercon, to oppose the
       literary snobbism that had quickly  become  the  hallmark  of  this
       convention.   And in successive years things got worse.  The people
       who ran Readercon started also venting their personal prejudices on
       cinema as being not literary enough and not really being literature
       at all while at the same time ironically  lauding  virtues  of  the
       rock  music  which  they said "had words and hence was literature."
       This for me was the final straw.  I told Evelyn that I would go  to
       no  more  of  these  conventions  I  thought would be better called
       Hypocricons devoted to  the  framers'  tastes  and  their  literary
       snobbery.   She  could go; I would just stay home.  She chose to be
       merely a supporting member.

       One of my memories from one of the few Readercons that  I  attended
       was  a  talk  by  Samuel  Delany, one of the authors who was smiled
       upon.  He was giving a talk he called "An Introduction to Semiotics
       and  Deconstructionism."  It  sounded  interesting  and while I had
       heard a little about semiotics, I really did not know what  it  was
       all about.  I went expecting to learn something.  And I did; though
       it was not what I expected.

       I choose to give Delany the benefit of the doubt and interpret that
       hour  as  his  subtle  joke at his audience's expense.  It may have
       even been his own comment on the literary snobbery of Readercon and
       if   so   I   applaud   him.   But  what  he  gave  was  a  lecture
       incomprehensible from first sentence to last.  This from  a  master
       wordsmith  in  a lecture he called "an introduction." I believe his
       intention was to overwhelm the uninitiated.  In any case  that  was
       certainly  the  effect.   No  physicist  giving  an introduction to
       quantum physics would have been so obscure.

       My interpretation  at  the  time  was  that  semiotics  was  indeed
       unintelligible  by  intention.   That some professor in the English
       department at some school, I thought, attended a lecture on quantum
       physics  or  perhaps  algebraic  topology  and realized that it was
       incomprehensible to him.  She  or  he  realized  that  her/his  own
       department's  literary analyses of MOBY DICK were nowhere nearly as
       complex or obscure and decided it reflected badly.  Hence semiotics
       was added to the lexicon of literary analysis.

       I have since gone to  other  sources  to  get  my  introduction  to
       semiotics.   I  find it is not the obscure subject that Delany made
       it.   I  propose  to  try  to  do  what  the  great  Samuel  Delany
       intentionally  or  not  failed to do.  I am going to try to explain
       semiotics and deconstructionism without  making  it  confusing  and
       obscure.   And  if  I  fail  at  least  I can point out that better
       writers than I have failed at the same task.  But we shall see.   I
       start next week.  [-mrl]

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

       4. ATLANTIS: THE LOST EMPIRE (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule:  While   SHREK,   still   playing   in
                 theaters,  mocks  the  old  Disney  traditions,
                 ATLANTIS:  THE  LOST  EMPIRE  pays   respectful
                 homage  to  old  Disney  films  while telling a
                 story like H. Rider  Haggard  on  steroids.   A
                 legendary book leads a mismatched expedition to
                 find the mythical city still alive, though just
                 barely, deep beneath the waves of the ocean.  A
                 little heavy on the mysticism and the fighting,
                 this   animated   film  is  not  a  bad  choice
                 adventure fans.  Rating: 7 (0 to  10),  low  +2
                 (-4 to +4)

       In the late 1800s there was still a lot of the world that was terra
       incognita.  Much of the map had still to be filled in and adventure
       stories were being written about fabulous finds of  ancient  cities
       still alive in the far corners of the world.  The greatest of these
       stories, in my opinion at least, was H. Rider Haggard's SHE, filmed
       in multiple silent versions and at least two sound versions.  Other
       authors who have written  lost  race  stories  include  Edgar  Rice
       Burroughs, Ian Cameron, and A. Merritt.  What science fiction is to
       many branches of science and alternate history is to the  study  of
       history, lost race stories are to archeology.  They are the stories
       of the  imaginative  dreams  of  every  archeologist.   (For  those
       interested  in  the  lost  race  genre I can recommend the web site
       http://www.violetbooks.com/lostrace-check-guide.html.)

       The current film starts at a breakneck pace as a huge  wave  rushes
       foreword to engulf the advanced island-civilization of Atlantis and
       some strange flying machines racing it to try to save  the  island.
       Meanwhile  there is something strange and mystical happening on the
       island, but not so powerful that it saves the island  from  sinking
       below the waves.

       Flash forward to 1910 or so.  Exploration runs in  the  family  for
       Milo  Thatch  (voiced  by  Michael  J.  Fox).  Thatch's grandfather
       searched for the lost city of Atlantis.  Milo has his own ideas  as
       to  where the city can be found.  His dedication and energy applied
       to this goal has won him a reputation of being a little demented on
       the  subject.   Then  an  enigmatic millionaire has his own plan to
       find Atlantis with the help of an ancient book thought to  be  lost
       but  found by Milo's grandfather.  A new expedition will search for
       the city and its mysterious power source.  The expedition  will  be
       led by Commander Lyle Tiberius Rourke (James Garner) and begin with
       a descent to the ocean floor in a fabulous submarine.

       The base story by Bryce and  Jackie  Zabel  leaves  room  for  some
       spectacular  action scenes with an undeniable excitement.  The film
       seems to be an H. Rider Haggard  adventure  in  concentrated  form.
       The  story moves faster and has more action than Haggard would have
       given it, but the spirit is there.  One  thing  that  does  seem  a
       little  out of place: most lost race stories were told in a serious
       tone.  Because of the subject matter the stories were  rarely  told
       with  much  humor.  There is a lot of Disney-style comedy and weird
       international characters on the expedition.  (Is the  character  of
       Moliere  based  on the character of the same name in the ZBS's Ruby
       series?  There are definite similarities.)  The  writers  make  the
       usual  politically correct choice for the presence and ethnicity of
       the villain.  The script in the end feels a little  top-heavy  with
       fighting  and mysticism.  Some may long for the subtlety of some of
       the writers of years past, but  overall  the  film  does  have  its
       moments.

       To some extent ATLANTIS: THE LOST EMPIRE is an  experiment.   First
       it  is  a PG cartoon, unusual for Disney.  The whimsical nature and
       the less realistic animation techniques seem  less  likely  choices
       for  the subject matter.  The style might go better with a humorous
       animal story.  Further toward the end of the film a lot of what  is
       happening  is  not  carefully explained and is left to the viewer's
       interpretation.  The film does have some breathtaking images of the
       city  Atlantis  and  especially of the great submarine seen all too
       briefly in the first part of the film.  The submarine seems like  a
       cross  between  Disney's  Nautilus  and the interior of an airship.
       Real submarines don't look like this, but they ought to.

       Once again we have an all-star cast of voices in an  animated  film
       where their familiarity can be only a distraction.  We have Michael
       J. Fox in the lead.  We also have James  Garner,  Jim  Verney  (who
       died  in  February of 2000), Claudia Christian, Don Novello (who on
       frequently played the comedic Father Guido Sarducci), John Mahoney,
       and  Leonard  Nimoy as the King of Atlantis.  While far from ideal,
       Atlantis is a good  adventure  film  with  at  least  some  of  the
       nostalgic  feel of classic exploration films.  I rate it a 7 on the
       0 to 10 scale and a low +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       5. Here is a recap and more from Lax Madapaty's top ten list

       10. THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY (1967)
       09. THE GUNS OF NAVARONE (1961)
       08. THE GODFATHER (1972)
       07. THE HEART IS A LONELY HUNTER (1968)
       06. LAWRENCE OF ARABIA (1962)

       05. SPARTACUS (1960):

       This film is about a rebellious Thracian slave hero  who  gave  the
       mighty  Roman  Empire  a  runaround  in  73  B.C.,  led  an army of
       gladiators against the Roman legions,  and  in  the  process,  came
       heartbreakingly  close  to  defying an empire and win freedom. What
       makes the film a notch above LAWRENCE is the  fact  that  it  deals
       with  values  that  are  universal to humankind whereas LAWRENCE is
       more of a one-man-show. In giving due  credit  to  Dalton  Trumbo's
       literate   script,  producer  Kirk  Douglas  defied  the  Hollywood
       blacklist, a bold and unprecedented  move.  The  film  has  several
       memorable scenes most notably the one where Spartacus shouts, "I am
       not an animal" from inside a cage when a woman is  thrown  at  him;
       his  reply,  "No  more  than  I  was afraid to be born" when asked,
       "Spartacus, are you afraid to die?"; his  observation,  "And  maybe
       there's  no peace in this world, for us or for anyone else, I don't
       know. But I do know that, as long as we live, we must  remain  true
       to  ourselves"  and the final scene where many gladiators including
       Spartacus are crucified along the road to Rome and his wife Varinia
       tells him while holding their child that he is born free. This film
       also gets my vote for the greatest ensemble cast ever assembled for
       a  film.  Acting  heavyweights  such  as Charles Laughton, Laurence
       Olivier and Peter Ustinov are pitted  against  Kirk  Douglas,  Tony
       Curtis,  Jean Simmons and John Gavin. Commenting on the $12 million
       budget (a lot of money in those days), Kirk Douglas  said  that  if
       the  film  was a thrilling spectacle (which it more than was!), the
       money was a drop in the bucket and if not, it was too much! Most of
       the  money  went  into  authentically  recreating  Rome in a studio
       backlot in Hollywood.  The results are better than the  recent  CGI
       epic  GLADIATOR.  Yet  another remarkable aspect of the film is the
       Alex North score.  North  reportedly  studied  the  script  several
       times  and  ran  the  film  18  times  start  to finish before even
       committing a single note of music on paper!  Aside from  assembling
       a  huge  87-piece  orchestra to conduct his rousing themes, he also
       augmented  the  score  with   several   rare   and   unconventional
       instruments. They include the sarrousophone, a wind instrument, the
       Kythara, a  plucked  Roman  instrument  much  like  the  lyre,  the
       dulcimer  which  is really German in origin, an Israeli recorder, a
       Chinese oboe, a Yugoslav flute and a strange electronic  instrument
       called the Ondioline. The result is one of the five great scores of
       motion pictures.

       04. JING KE CI QIN WANG (1999):

       Also know as THE EMPEROR AND THE ASSASSIN, this  Mandarin  language
       film  by  Chen  Kaige  (TEMPTRESS MOON, FAREWELL MY CONCUBINE), the
       talented young filmmaker from China, is stunning in virtually every
       frame  of the 161 minute duration. Set in the 3rd Century B.C., the
       film depicts the struggle of Ying Zheng (Li Xuejien), ruler of  the
       Qin  dynasty,  to unify the 7 provinces that make up most of modern
       China into one magnificent and peaceful kingdom, free from barbaric
       invasions  from  the  north.   Assisting  him  in  his quest is his
       childhood sweetheart Lady Zhao (Gong Li) who is  impressed  by  his
       seemingly   noble   convictions.  Zheng's  quest  is  predominantly
       dictated by an ancestral decree that is  complicated  by  the  fact
       that  he  is really a bastard child and hence not a real descendent
       of the Qin kingdom.  Nevertheless,  by  employing  various  tactics
       including  surviving  an assassination attempt (in what is really a
       ploy to find an excuse to attack the kingdom of Yan), Zheng finally
       manages  to succeed. But for his success, Zheng pays a terrible and
       ultimate price. In the process of realizing what started off as  an
       honorable   quest,  Zheng's  methods  become  increasingly  brutal.
       Constantly in struggle with himself and his methods throughout  his
       quest,  Zheng starts slowly losing every one around him. His mother
       has an affair with the  Marquis  out  of  loneliness  and  has  two
       children  by  him.  They are all brutally murdered when the Marquis
       tries to stage a coup to overthrow Zheng. His father  has  to  kill
       himself  (right  in  front  of  his  own son) to prevent tarnishing
       Zheng's claim as a descendent of Qin.  Even the one person close to
       him,  Lady  Zhao deserts him after a particularly brutal assault on
       Yan where thousands of children are buried alive at the  orders  of
       Zheng. At the very end, as Zheng stands alone on the bridge that he
       constructed in memory of the sweet times he had with Lady Zhao as a
       child  (he  used  to  play by a similar bridge on a river back when
       they were poor but happy), he comes to a tragic realization -  that
       he  has  lost  himself.   Every  scene  in  the film is emotionally
       powerful, grandiose, superbly acted  and  visually  stunning.   The
       film  is  also  blessed  with  an  evocative  musical score by Zhao
       Jiping, with an unforgettable main theme. At the very  end  of  the
       film,  we  come  to know that in spite of all the efforts of Zheng,
       his rule lasted only 15 years after the unification.  Still,  Zheng
       was  responsible  for creating what is today one of the largest and
       most powerful countries in the world. His legacy lives on  for  all
       of  us  to  admire  and appreciate in the form of the Great Wall of
       China and the awe-inspiring Terra Cotta Warriors in Xian, China.

       03. HEY RAM! (2000):

       The Partition of India in 1947 is one of the  biggest  catastrophes
       in  the history of the world. It led to a massive loss of lives and
       forced many to evacuate their lands. East and  West  Punjab,  North
       West  Frontier  Province,  North India and Sind were engulfed in an
       orgy of violence for months. Mammoth  migrations  of  Muslims  from
       India   and  Hindus  from  Pakistan  took  place,  shattering  both
       communities down to their core.  Nearly, 5,00,000  people  died  in
       the  holocaust  and  55,00,000  people  were forced to migrate from
       their abodes.  This  is  the  largest  exodus  in  the  history  of
       humankind. It is this painful chapter in Indian history that serves
       as a backdrop for this sad, intense, personal and  honest  film  by
       Kamal  Haasan,  one  of the most talented actors of the Indian film
       industry. More than  95%  of  Indian  films  are  unbearable,  with
       randomly placed song-and-dance sequences that simply don't make any
       sense. HEY RAM! was financed only under the  condition  that  there
       be  a certain number of songs in the film. Fortunately most of them
       (except one or two) make sense in the overall context of  the  film
       and  hence  don't really distract from what the film has to say. It
       is the story of an archeologist Saket Ram (played by Kamal  Haasan,
       who   also  wrote  and  directed  the  film)  who  is  irreversibly
       transformed into a killer while caught in the Hindu-Muslim riots in
       Calcutta that preceded Partition in undivided India.  When his wife
       is brutally raped and killed by  Muslims,  Saket  Ram  goes  around
       killing  Muslims  in  a fit of rage. In time, he goes down South to
       his native state in search of peace and remarries,  but  ghosts  of
       the  past keep haunting him. A misguided Saket Ram joins a group of
       Hindu extremists that intend to  assassinate  Mahatma  Gandhi  whom
       they  hold responsible for the partition and the painful effects it
       had on  the  people.  In  crafting  the  film,  Kamal  displays  an
       unprecedented  intelligence  and  a  deep  understanding  of Indian
       history and translates his vision into a powerful  motion  picture.
       Uncommonly,  both  the female lead characters in the film are well-
       educated, cultured and intelligent. In addition,  Kamal  challenges
       the  viewers  by  prominently  featuring  no less than seven Indian
       languages in the dialogue. Good and bad people are shown among both
       Hindus  and Muslims. Gandhi himself is more realistically portrayed
       than in Attenborough's GANDHI. Interestingly, the role is played by
       one  of  the  great  actors  of Indian cinema, Naseeruddin Shah who
       happens to be a Muslim. However, prosthetics have  transformed  him
       so  much  that  I didn't realize this until the end credits rolled.
       The film score is yet  another  surprising  aspect  of  this  film.
       Composed  and conducted by India's musical maestro Ilaiya Raja, who
       is as well versed with Indian Classical as with  Western  Classical
       music.  As an Indian, it is difficult for me to be unbiased about a
       touchy and personal subject matter the film deals  with.   However,
       this is an experiment with truth that no Westerner should miss.

       01.(A tie for first  place.)   BLADE  RUNNER,  The  Director's  Cut
       (1982):

       I have always  maintained  that  Cinema  is  essentially  a  visual
       medium.   Sound  in  Cinema  came  thirty  years  after the Lumiere
       Brothers filmed workers walking out of a factory and showed  it  to
       the  public.  But  it  is  the  sight that really distinguishes the
       medium. Given this, surprisingly few directors have  exploited  the
       visual  nature  of Cinema to the maximum. Fritz Lang, Orson Welles,
       Alfred Hitchcock, Stanley Kubrick, Terry Gilliam, David Lean, Peter
       Greenaway  and  the Coen Brothers have all realized the criticality
       of visuals  in  films.   However,  Ridley  Scott  has  consistently
       provided  us  with unique and dazzling visuals right from his first
       feature THE DUELLISTS up until his last one, HANNIBAL.  It is BLADE
       RUNNER  that  towers  above  every  film  every made in its complex
       visuals and stunning production design.   A  breakthrough  in  film
       making  much  like METROPOLIS, 2001 and the recent DARK CITY, BLADE
       RUNNER has been an enduring influence on film visuals -  especially
       science  fiction  films like the recent PHANTOM MENACE.  The homage
       to 40's Film Noir is a nice touch. But what makes this a great film
       is  the  poignant  story  of  five  dying  Replicants - genetically
       engineered humanoids - who return to Earth in search of  longevity.
       Deckard  (Harrison  Ford), Blade Runner par excellence, is asked to
       hunt down these Replicants and terminate them. In the  process,  he
       discovers a profound truth - that the so-called Replicants turn out
       to be more human than even  human  beings.   The  script  by  David
       Peoples  and  Hampton Fancher, based on a short story by Phillip K.
       Dick, goes beyond questioning the existential dilemma we  all  face
       at  one  time or the other in life. It questions the very nature of
       humanity and what it is  that  makes  us  human.   Even  in  Rachel
       (played by Sean Young), there is a certain poignancy in discovering
       that all that she has in her mind - her memories - are just made up
       and  not  real. The fact that she is not human and doesn't know how
       long she will survive (again, a dilemma even humans face!) does not
       deter  her  from  having an open-ended love affair with Deckard who
       may or may not be a Replicant himself.  Another  remarkable  aspect
       of the film is Vangelis' stunning film score in the vein of his New
       Age albums. Here he not only creates a dense  layer  of  sounds  to
       accompany  Scott's  masterful  visuals,  but  also extrapolates the
       unknown from the unknown, much like the visuals. In the  film,  one
       sees  familiar  billboards  selling  familiar  products  but  in an
       entirely unfamiliar setting. In the score,  there  are  touches  of
       Jazz  to  the  New Age music, again, blending the familiar with the
       unfamiliar. My favorite moment in Cinema occurs  towards  the  end,
       when  Roy  Batty  (Rutger  Hauer)  saves  Deckard  on a rain-washed
       rooftop and says, "I've seen things you  people  wouldn't  believe.
       Attack  ships  on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams
       glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser  gate.  All  those  moments
       will  be  lost in time, like tears in rain.  Time to die".  Even as
       he is dying, Roy must have realized the beauty of life and  decided
       to save a life, even if it is that of his hunter.

       01. VERTIGO (1958):

       This  is  the  other  film  that  is   deeply   affecting,   almost
       metaphysical  in  its  effect.   Only  an established master of the
       medium such as Hitchcock could have made such a daring  and  tragic
       film  with  mainstream  actors for a big Hollywood studio. The film
       opened to mixed reviews and public reaction. Frankly,  I  think  at
       that  time,  people  didn't  really  know  what to make out of this
       unconventional crime drama cum dark  romantic  fantasy.  Our  hero,
       Scottie   (James   Stewart)  is  hardly  a  conventional  hero,  an
       acrophobic retired detective obsessed by a strange,  beautiful  and
       suicidal  woman (Kim Novac) he is hired to tail. What follows after
       her apparent suicide is  a  complex  psychological  drama  that  is
       dreamily shot by Hitch and beautifully photographed (chiefly in San
       Francisco) by Robert Burks in Vista Vision. Right from the stirring
       main  titles  by  Saul  Bass (who also did SPARTACUS) to the eerie,
       menacing score by musical genius Bernard Herrmann, the  film  sucks
       the  viewer into a labyrinth of unsettling and haunting situations.
       In fact, Herrmann tells the whole story of the  film  in  his  main
       title  cue,  combining  dissonance,  harmony  in minor scales and a
       certain monotony and repetition that hint  at  the  film's  central
       themes  of obsession, fear, longing and passion. Many consider this
       film to be the director's portrayal of his own fears and obsession,
       his  masterpiece. There is such depth to the film that it is one of
       the most  widely  discussed  and  analyzed  in  film  history.  For
       instance, there is this Fibonacci spiral motif (an integral part of
       chaos theory) that runs throughout, hinting at attempts by the lead
       characters  to  bring  some  sort of an order to the chaotic events
       unfolding around them. Madeline is shown  in  multiple  reflections
       and repetitions. Reputed playwright Maxwell Anderson was brought in
       to do a first draft of the script based on the French novel d'Entre
       les  Morts  (From  Among the Dead, the working title for the film).
       Reportedly, Anderson's work was so incoherent - his title  for  the
       film was "Listen Darkling" - that Hitch got Samuel Taylor to do the
       job.  Hitch  created  his  vertigo  effects  for  the  audience  by
       inventing  a new technique - the camera pull back while at the same
       time zooming in.  This  film  gets  better  and  better  with  each
       viewing.  A  special  mention  to  Robert Harris and James Katz for
       lovingly restoring three of my favorite films - VERTIGO,  SPARTACUS
       and LAWRENCE.  [-lm]

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

           Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative.
                                          -- Oscar Wilde