THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
08/31/01 -- Vol. 20, No. 9

Big Cheese: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
Little Cheese: Evelyn Leeper, evelyn.leeper@excite.com
Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

To subscribe, send mail to mtvoid-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
To unsubscribe, send mail to mtvoid-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com

Topics:
	MT VOID Schedule
	Apology for Punning (comments)
	Animal Rights (comments)
	GHOSTS OF MARS (film review)
	JAY AND SILENT BOB STRIKE BACK (film review)
	CURSE OF THE JADE SCORPION (film review)

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

TOPIC: MT VOID Schedule

Due to various commitments, this MT VOID is being sent out a day 
early.  Next week's will be four days early (Monday), and the 
following week's will be three days late (another Monday).  The 
regular schedule will resume the week after that.  [-ecl]

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

TOPIC: Apology for Punning (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

I have to apologize for the pun last week.  I had an article about 
Atlantis that ended "Put them together and what do you get?  
Bimini bomb in a bull!!!"  I have to apologize.  That was really 
bad.  In fact, it was abominable.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Animal Rights (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

I am continuing a discussion of animal rights. 

Most of us treat other people at least with cordiality, but as a 
whole do not treat animals very well. America has championed--or 
perhaps paid lip service at least to--Human Rights but have much 
lower standards of consideration for animals. Popular causes among 
animal advocates seem to be raising chickens and calves in 
barbaric and tortuous conditions for the more efficient production 
of meat. But I see almost every day examples that the activists 
just have not gotten to yet but probably should eventually. That 
is no negative reflection on the activists who have to start 
somewhere. 

Most of us are justifiably irate when we hear of under slavery 
husbands and wives separated for their masters' profit. Most of us 
would think little of an incident where mated wolves were 
separated. This in spite of the fact that wolves mate for life and 
have on the whole a much better record of fidelity and as far as 
we can tell love in mating than humans do. 

Only a cursory look at the way animals are treated in our society 
shows a routine indifference to their pain and suffering. Not all 
animals if this true of, but in far greater proportions than we 
want to admit. And the arguments used to defend this behavior are 
identical to ones that once were used to defend inhumane behavior 
against other humans. 

Probably the most reviled philosopher in the world is Peter 
Singer. There are few writers who seem more outrageous when quoted 
out of context. People take lines out of his writings and perhaps 
conclusions to some of his arguments and use them to damn him. Yet 
from an admittedly small initial sample he seems constitutionally 
unable to write an argument that is not well reasoned or that when 
examined does not have a ring of truth to it. His detractors do 
not seem to find faults in his reasoning, only in the conclusions. 
As a mathematician I feel that is the wrong approach. If you 
cannot find a problem in the reasoning, you cannot decide the 
conclusion is false, just because you do not like it. 

A lot of what Singer says sounds really bad to many people if 
taken out of context and yet if I read his actual arguments I can 
always at least sympathize with his point of view and almost 
always agree with them. On the other hand the arguments of his 
detractors seem less well reasoned, are frequently false, and 
almost always seem at base motivated by self-interest. 

An example can be found at 
http://slate.msn.com/dialogues/01-06-11/dialogues.asp?iMsg=1 
[Follow the links for all four parts.]  Here he debates the issue 
with Richard Posner, a judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 
7th Circuit and a senior lecturer at the University of Chicago Law 
School. 

Posner is cordial and polite, but his arguments in the end come 
down to issues of self-interest rather than morality. He begins by 
saying that he agrees that human life is not infinitely more 
valuable than animal life, but when asked about numbers he still 
feels that a human life is more valuable than any number of 
animals. 

Posner says we are accustomed to giving preference to humans and 
that is what our intuition tells us to do. He might have said 
"whites" instead of "humans" and the argument would be immediately 
obvious to be bred of bigotry. I think it still is bred of 
prejudice, albeit one acceptable in our times.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: GHOSTS OF MARS (a film review by Mark R. Leeper)

    CAPSULE: In 2176 on the planet Mars police taking into custody 
    an accused murderer face the title menace.  There is a lot of 
    fighting and not a whole lot of story otherwise.  John 
    Carpenter reprises so many ideas from his previous films, 
    especially ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13, that the new film comes off 
    as his homage to himself.  Rating: 4 (0 to 10), 0 (-4 to +4).

John Carpenter apparently believes that action scenes in which 
people fight something horrible are the same as horror scenes.  
For a writer and director of horror films, supposedly an expert on 
horror, it is a very bad mistake to make.  GHOSTS OF MARS is 
called a horror movie, but it is more just a drawn out fight 
between humans and a surprisingly low-powered alien menace.  In 
addition if anybody but John Carpenter had made GHOSTS OF MARS, 
Carpenter would have grounds to sue.  This film is just chock full 
of pieces taken from ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13, THE THING, and PRINCE 
OF DARKNESS.  It is, in fact, surprising that Carpenter managed to 
fit so many pieces of his previous work into this film in such an 
admittedly novel way.  But that still does not make for a really 
good science fiction experience.

GHOSTS OF MARS takes place in the year 2176.  Mars has been mostly 
terraformed so that humans can walk on the surface without 
breathing gear (which is good for the film's budget).  It is never 
mentioned, but the gravity on Mars has been increased somehow to 
earth-normal, again making it easier to film.  Society has changed 
a bit by that time, but it has advanced surprisingly little.  
Apparently the culture has changed so that women are much more in 
positions of control.  And from Carpenter's view, women have 
really made a mess of things.  Society has stagnated under female 
control so that beyond some minor technological advances society 
has changed less in 175 years than we might expect it to change in 
ten.

The basic plot of GHOSTS OF MARS has much in common with that of 
ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13 except that Precinct 9 (yes, Precinct 9) 
has been replaced by a somewhat tacky looking rundown Martian 
mining colony.  Instead of having the criminal "Napolean" Wilson, 
this film has the criminal "Desolation" Williams.  Instead of 
facing hoodlums with automatic weapons the police face, well, 
ghosts of Mars.  Because the ghosts are somewhat alien in nature 
they should behave in some alien manner, but they essentially 
behave as human savages, in another lapse of imagination.  The 
story is told in flashback, flashback within flashback, and 
flashback within flashback within flashback.

GHOSTS OF MARS takes place entirely at night and is filmed almost 
entirely in tones of red, yellow, and black.  Carpenter manages to 
give us a powerful opening scene, showing a mining train rushing 
through the Martian night to the sound of music with a heavy beat.  
Sadly what follows is not really up to the buildup.  The terror he 
creates looks a little too much like fugitive wannabes from the 
rock band Kiss.  His idea of building suspense is having a bunch 
of sudden jump scenes that sucker the viewer into thinking 
something scary is happening and then prove to be just something 
boring.  These are standard haunted house film shock effects that 
require no great talent to give the audience.  Somewhat newer but 
also unimpressive are the CGI digital decapitations in some of the 
fights.

Within a short stretch of time we have seen the release of MISSION 
TO MARS, RED PLANET, and GHOSTS OF MARS.  After MISSION TO MARS 
was panned by too many reviewers it looks better and better and 
better as time goes by.  I rate GHOSTS OF MARS a 4 on the 0 to 10 
scale and a 0 on the -4 to +4 scale.

Following the movie I showed my wife, who liked GHOSTS OF MARS 
moderately more than I did, Carpenter's classic ASSAULT ON 
PRECINCT 13.  Her comment is that it was seeing the same film 
twice.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: JAY AND SILENT BOB STRIKE BACK (a film review by Mark 
R. Leeper)

    CAPSULE: The running gag pair of characters from all of Kevin 
    Smith's films gets their own movie.  The gags are sporadically 
    funny.  It is more than occasionally funny for teens who are 
    fond of scatological humor and anti-gay jokes.  The plot is 
    weak and  the leads are not a particularly funny comic team.  
    The little inside jokes and digs at other entertainment and 
    particularly at Kevin Smith films are the best features of the 
    film.  Sadly for me they were just not funny enough to make the 
    film worth watching.  This feels like the high school skit that 
    that the principal would not let the kids do on talent night.  
    (And it turns out he had very good reasons.)  Rating: 4 
    (0 to 10), low 0 (-4 to +4)

A film needs a plot.  It needs characters for empathy value.  It 
needs a story and an emotional center.  If a film is just a chain 
of jokes it can only be so good and any entertainment value will 
succeed or fail based on how funny the jokes are.  Kevin Smith has 
now made two satisfying films, CLERKS and CHASING AMY.  With DOGMA 
he tried to make a philosophical religious comedy and mixed with a 
madcap romp.  Peter Cook and Dudley Moore did that very 
successfully with their BEDAZZLED.  But getting the combination to 
work is very hard to do right and Kevin Smith's fecal monsters in 
DOGMA were not the way to do it.  His remaining two films, 
MALLRATS and his new JAY AND SILENT BOB STRIKE BACK are aimed 
squarely at a teenage audience.  JAY AND SILENT BOB STRIKE BACK is 
a compendium of gay jokes, penis jokes, flatulence jokes, film 
pastiches, and in-jokes.  How funny the jokes are will be a 
subjective call.  For me, the vast majority of the jokes were just 
not very funny.  There was not enough cleverness or variety.  It 
is funny at most once or twice to accuse someone of being gay.  
Penis jokes work only so many times.
 
Showing up as minor characters in every Kevin Smith film Jay and 
Silent Bob were a clever pair of human running gags.  They were 
sort of the modern equivalents of Naunton Wayne and Basil Radford, 
the comic duo who showed up satirizing the English middle class in 
several good British post-war films including DEAD OF NIGHT, THE 
LADY VANISHES, and PASSPORT TO PIMLICO.  Jay and Silent Bob were 
originally supposedly typical Generation X stoners.  As the series 
wore on they had larger and larger parts.  In JAY AND SILENT BOB 
STRIKE BACK they are the leads.

Jay and Silent Bob (played by Jason Mewes and Kevin Smith) are 
chased away from the front of the convenience store where they 
were dealing drugs in CLERKS.  This leaves them at loose ends.  
They are not sure what would be worthwhile to do with their lives 
when they hear that a comic book with characters visually modeled 
on them will be adapted into a movie.  They decide to devote their 
lives to wrecking the movie or getting some of that big movie 
industry cash.  So it is off to Hollywood to shake down the movie 
company and having adventures along the way.  The film is mostly 
about their adventures on the road and when they get to Hollywood

The problem with this comedy team is that neither really pulls his 
weight to make the film funny.  Silent Bob, being silent, can only 
contribute to the comedy by reacting with that very expressive 
face of his.  This makes his piece of the comedy even less than a 
straight man like a Dean Martin or Bud Abbott would have.  Jay has 
to be the comic.  He could carry the load for both if he were 
extremely inventive.  The problem is that he is not sufficiently 
funny.  He is too bland to be the comic half and his lines just do 
not show any comic flair.  So Jay and Silent Bob are a long way 
from being a successful comic team.  Their starring roles and the 
low humor make this a comedy for those young at mind and for 
people who can laugh at gags they have seen before--sometimes just 
minutes before.

Like DOGMA before it, but definitely not like CHASING AMY, this 
film feels more like an amateurish skit than a real movie.  
Certainly neither the plot nor the characters are at all 
involving.  They are excuses for gags, many of which still fall 
flat.  It is DOGMA without any of the humorous theological 
content.  The film does not offer much to an adult audience.  I 
rate it 4 on the 0 to 10 scale and a low 0 on the -4 to +4 scale.  
[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: CURSE OF THE JADE SCORPION (a film review by Mark 
R. Leeper)

    CAPSULE: This film is more interesting for its nostalgia value 
    than for actual story values.  That value is certainly better 
    than any comic value it might have.  Woody Allen writes, 
    directs, and stars in a whimsical B film of a style that was 
    popular in the year it is set, 1940.  Allen's humor just is not 
    as funny as it used to be.  This is better than some of his 
    recent efforts, but that is not saying much.  Rating: 
    4 (0 to 10), 0 (-4 to +4). 

As far as I am concerned Woody Allen, once one of our finest 
filmmakers, has not made a really satisfying film since his 
excellent CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS.  CURSE OF THE JADE SCORPION is 
his best effort in recent times.  At least he is not obviously 
trying to write about his life, as he was in DECONSTRUCTING HARRY.  
There are not missing scenes, as there were in SWEET AND LOWDOWN.  
He does get the feel of the genre of film he is resurrecting, 
unlike EVERYONE SAYS I LOVE YOU.  Here he tells a whole story and 
it feels right (mostly).  The one problem is that it is not a 
really good story.  It has plot holes and the plot might very well 
have been used for a 1930s or 1940s B picture.  It probably would 
not have had a lurid, pulpish title like CURSE OF THE JADE 
SCORPION.  In filmdom those titles were pretty much confined to 
the serials at that time.  And this film is in color, albeit 
sepia-tinged, and is a little more explicit about sex than one of 
those films would have been.  But those exceptions aside this 
might well have been a film that might have starred Lee Tracy and 
nestled at the bottom of a double bill right under a big Warner 
Brothers studio film.  If that was what Allen was trying to 
recreate, that does not make this a particularly ambitious film, 
but it probably achieves those ambitions.  Even the comedy is up 
to the standards of that sort of film. 

C.W. Briggs (Woody Allen) is a super-hot-shot investigator for the 
North Coast Insurance Company.  (Does the U.S. have a north 
coast?)  He gets all the big cases and breaks them with lightning 
speed with the aid of his network of skid row informants.  He has 
just broken a tough case of a stolen Picasso.  Everybody in the 
office is agog but for the insurance company's executive 
efficiency expert Betty Ann Fitzgerald (Helen Hunt).  Fitz, as she 
is called, has absolutely no use for smug, self-obsessed, 
egotistical Briggs, and Briggs has no use for the officious Fitz 
who can match him insult for insult in battles of double 
entendres.  One night the two go with a group to see a nightclub 
hypnotist, Voltan (David Ogden Stiers).  When called up to the 
stage neither thinks that Voltan can put them under.  He does and 
temporarily makes them love each other.  He also leaves them with 
post-hypnotic suggestion that makes them his slave when he uses 
the right code word (a la THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE).  He has plans 
of his own for them. 

This is, of course, not Allen's first outing into nostalgia for 
the world of the popular culture of his youth.  His most 
successful film along these lines would probably be RADIO DAYS.  
There he showed how the entertainment world and his own real world 
interacted and fed each other.  There is no such attempt here.  
His script is pure pastiche.  His humor is more than a little 
strained and for me at least was just not funny.  At one point he 
tells police that he cannot talk to them because he has a chorus 
girl in his bedroom.  An instant later he tells them he has to get 
back to his nurse.  When they remind him that he just said she was 
a chorus girl, flustered he says it is a chorus girl who does a 
little nursing.  The line is very Woody Allen, but it is not at 
all clever or funny.  The film is just full of predictable twists 
and gags that do not quite amuse. 

In this film Allen is looking a little tired and bedraggled.  He 
continues to cast himself as the romantic lead in his films.  The 
heart wants what the heart wants, and the heart no longer yearns 
to see him get a woman twenty-eight years his junior.  It seemed 
only recently that Helen Hunt was in several films released at the 
same time.  Now she is content to be in just Allen's film. Allen, 
like Robert Altman, is in the enviable position that he can put a 
familiar face in just about every major role.  This film has Dan 
Aykroyd, Wallace Shawn, David Ogden Stiers and Charlize Theron.  
One can tell from the beginning that this is a Woody Allen film.  
Every Allen film these days starts with a jazz score and white on 
black credits. 

CURSE OF THE JADE SCORPION is whimsical, but it is empty and 
rarely elicits a laugh.  I give it a 4 on the 0 to 10 scale and a 
0 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          mleeper@optonline.net


	I cannot believe in a God who wants to be praised all the
	time.
                                          --Nietzsche


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
FREE COLLEGE MONEY
CLICK HERE to search
600,000 scholarships!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/zoU8wD/4m7CAA/ySSFAA/J.MolB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->

To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
mtvoid-unsubscribe@egroups.com

 

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/