THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
10/05/01 -- Vol. 20, No. 14

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:
	Crisis of Faith (Comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	Wartime Films at the Toronto International Film Festival
 		(Film reviews of ENIGMA, TO END AL WARS, 
		TAKING SIDES, and FOCUS by Mark R. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: Crisis of Faith (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

I consider myself to be fairly liberal and also more libertarian than 
not.  I am a card-carrying member of the American Civil Liberties Union.  
But I have to say that I also consider myself a pragmatist and there are 
times that I do stray from the purist adherence to those beliefs.  I 
have crises of faith with a few of the supposedly liberal stands.  
People who follow my editorials know that I have some problems with some 
of the extreme actions and extreme opinions some people have in the name 
of feminism.  This week I want to talk about a couple of others.

In general I am against any form of killing for any purpose except 
survival.  I do not believe in hunting for any purpose except to 
preserve ones life.  I believe in hunting is all right for food and in 
very cold climates hunting for fur.  I think that beyond those two 
purposes, there is no such thing as a moral right to bear arms.  In 
general the National Rifle Association should consider me an opponent.  
I certainly oppose them.  But I also oppose the stand of the ACLU on gun 
ownership.  More accurately they agree with my viewpoint on gun control 
and I am paying them to oppose me.  It is like having a dentist 
recommend a brand of rich candy bar.

The ACLU has a position to defend Constitutional rights and some of the 
ones they defend are much more tenuously connected to the Constitution 
than the right to bear arms in well-ordered militias.  I think that the 
Founding Fathers did not foresee what problems the second amendment 
would cause.  Nevertheless the ACLU should be as protective of the 
second amendment as they are of the other nine.  I still support gun 
control, but I while I do that I would like to think the ACLU is looking 
out for the Bill of Rights in case I go too far.  But I do not have a 
lot of confidence in the consistency of their viewpoint.

The other issue, and another one where I would differ from the ACLU's 
viewpoint, is racial and ethnic profiling.  For a couple of years now we 
have heard a great deal about police who racially profile motorists.  I 
admit on the surface it sounds like a bad thing.  But all along deep 
inside I know I don't know.  That will probably infuriate some people, 
but hear me out.  I can see circumstances in which racial or ethnic or 
gender profiling makes sense.  Let's take an extreme case.  Suppose the 
police are looking for a rapist and the victim can not identify the 
rapist.  Should they be detaining equal numbers of men and women?  After 
all very few men are rapists.  But still you are 100% (or very nearly 
100%) sure the person you are looking for will appear to be a man.

Let us look at an example in which it is not so sure?  There currently 
is a hunt on for terrorists.  I am almost certain that profiling is 
going on and people who get special attention are Muslims of Middle 
Eastern origin.  Do all terrorists fit this mold?  Certainly not.  There 
are terrorists who are anarchists.  There are some who are just 
unbalanced.  Are most Muslims of Middle Eastern origin dangerous 
terrorists?  No, only a very tiny percentage.  Is there a correlation 
between terrorists and Muslims of Middle Eastern origin?  You better 
believe there is one.  Pick a terrorist threatening the United States 
and the odds are really good that he or she is a Muslim of Middle 
Eastern origin.  There are certainly more than you would find by pure 
chance.  And the reasons are obvious.  So the investigators are giving 
special attention to Muslims of Middle Eastern origin.  Is that fair?  
Under the current circumstances I would say it is.  It is never a good 
thing when the innocent are inconvenienced, but the alternative is 
worse.  It is one of the prices people pay in society.

So what about the police giving "special attention" to motorists of a 
particular ethnic background?  It superficially seems wrong.  But 
whether there is a correlation with the actual perpetrators or not, I 
don't know.  And if the police only racially profile that will certainly 
skew the results since only people who fit the profile will be accused.  
It is easy to see that racial or ethnic profiling could be misused and 
give rise to great injustices.  It could easily be misused.  Perhaps it 
is being misused and abused.  But its accusers are stating without proof 
that it definitely is being abused.  It is not intrinsically wrong, 
however easy it would be to abuse.  Accusers have the burden of proof 
that it is being abused.  I think ethnic profiling in looking for 
terrorists is valid.  But leave it to the professionals.  Don't try it 
at home, kiddies.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Wartime Films at the Toronto International Film Festival
(film reviews by Mark R. Leeper)

While we now attend each year the Toronto International Film 
Festival, certainly this will be the one that will be best 
remembered.  Essentially this was the one where the US went to 
war.  There was inevitably a lot of introspection by everybody, 
certainly every US citizen, on what would be the effects on people 
of this new kind of war in which we suddenly found ourselves.  
Several of the films focused on the reaction and behavior of 
people in the war between fascism and democracy that was the 
greatest event of the last century.  Films that fit into this 
category were ENIGMA, TO END ALL WARS, TAKING SIDES, and FOCUS.

ENIGMA

CAPSULE: Dark and complex espionage thriller based on the Robert 
Harris novel.  March 1943 the British lose their former ability to 
decode German messages to their submarine fleet.  They must either 
get it back or lose an important shipping convoy.  An intelligent 
thriller perhaps a little too reserved to be thrilling.  Rating: 7 
(0 to 10), low +2 (-4 to +4)

For thirty years after the end of the World War II Britain's most 
secret weapon remained secret.  Like the US had done with the 
Manhattan Project, Britain had put many of their best minds onto 
their own scientific wartime project.  What they found could well 
have saved the war for Britain.  At minimum it shortened the war 
by at least two years by negating the Germans' most effective 
weapon, the U-boat.  The Germans communicated with their men in 
the field (or in this case the sea) with an incredibly complex 
code called Enigma.  The code was encrypted and decrypted with a 
device of mechanical and electronic components that created an 
unimaginably large number of possibilities that has to be 
considered in decoding the message.

The mathematics necessary for decoding Enigma was considered to be 
orders of magnitude beyond what any country could accomplish, even 
if the closely guarded Enigma boxes fell into the hands of the 
enemy.  What the Germans did not know was that an Enigma box had 
fallen into allied hands and teams of puzzle solvers and 
mathematicians were recruited for the purpose cracking the code.

The team was installed at Bletchley Park under the direction of 
Alan Turing.  For the first time rudimentary electronic computers 
were used to search for and test solutions.  By July of 1941 the 
work had already borne fruit and supply convoys from America were 
saved from submarine wolf packs.  It typically took two days to 
decode a message, but for many of the messages that was short 
enough time.

Then in February 1942 the code changed.  It was still Enigma, but 
a new order of complexity had been added.  The code could not be 
solved.  At the same time the strategy of the submarine packs 
changed.  The Germans could not know how great a setback it was.  
By December the Allied shipping losses had quadrupled.  It took 
ten months to recover the old capabilities and the Battle of the 
Atlantic again turned in favor of the Allies.  And so it remained.

All this is history.  It is history filmmakers have not made much 
usage of, though code breaking was an important part of World War 
II.  The film U-571 told the fictional story of Americans 
capturing an Enigma box and set it much later than the British 
actually did.  The film MIDWAY tells a little about the Americans 
efforts at code breaking.  Robert Harris wrote the novel ENIGMA, a 
mystery story set in and around the Bletchley Park project.  Tom 
Stoppard has adapted the novel into a screenplay and Michael Apted 
directs.

The premise is that in March 1943, the Germans changed the code 
again.  The British have just four days to break the modified code 
before an important convoy from New York will be entering waters 
that may have German U-boats.  Without knowledge of where the U-
boats are there is no way to avoid these waters.  With nary a 
mention of Alan Turing in the screenplay, sullen mathematician Tom 
Jericho (played by Dougray Scott) who had left the Bletchley Park 
project has been brought back onto the project.  He had been 
instrumental in breaking the code the last time, but had since 
suffered a nervous breakdown.  That breakdown was brought on by 
being rejected by lovely co-worker Claire (Saffron Burrows).  She 
was a fellow project member with whom Tom had fallen in love.  Now 
there is evidence that Claire intentionally broke project security 
and perhaps was spying for the Germans.  Tom has a double problem 
of resolving the new German code and looking for the now missing 
Claire.  Helping him is Claire's swatty and bookish housemate 
Hester Wallace (Kate Winslett).  Making life even more difficult 
is sinister and polished intelligence operator Wigram (played 
nicely by Jeremy Northam).

Tom Stoppard's adaptation is better than one might have expected 
retaining some reasonable explanation of the history and the 
mathematical issues involved without obvious expository lumps, 
though by the end of the film some technical problems are going by 
too fast to comprehend.  Perhaps in deference to Apted the script 
has some feminist touches that I do not remember from the book.  
It also has one gratuitous car chase.  John Barry has provided a 
score that is by turns lush and ominous.

An interesting chapter in history could have made for a better 
thriller, but as it stands it is reasonably exciting if reserved.  
I rate it a 7 on the 0 to 10 scale and a low +2 on the -4 to +4 
scale.

People interested in the efforts to break the Enigma can find a 
lot of intriguing material at 
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/decoding/.  This is information to 
accompany the excellent episode of Nova "Decoding Nazi Secrets."  
Included is a transcript of that broadcast.

TO END ALL WARS

CAPSULE: This is a harrowing look at a rarely dramatized chapter 
of WWII, life in a Japanese prison camp. TO END ALL WARS is a 
moving film about the struggle of prisoners to retain their 
humanity and their dignity.  The somewhat religious interpretation 
may not be to everyone's taste.  Rating: 9 (0 to 10), +3 (-4 to 
+4)

More than any other people the Japanese seem capable of acting 
with one goal and not letting any other consideration get in their 
way.  This may be a holdover from the code of Bushido when loyalty 
to ones master was the only law.  During World War II, of course, 
the one goal was winning the war.  This led them to do some very 
inhuman things in pursuit of that goal.  When the Japanese had 
captured prisoners, they were very much treated in whatever way 
would be optimum for achieving the one goal.  Minimum resources 
were to be spent in maintaining prisoners in keeping with maximal 
positive output.  While the Germans, not known for their kindness 
in those days, had a 6% mortality rate among captured prisoners of 
war, the mortality rate of Japanese prisoners of war was 27%.  The 
best thing for the war effort was working prisoners nearly to 
death on the Thailand to Burma railroad.  That railroad was needed 
if Japan was to attack India as it planned to do.  The best thing 
for the effort was not to waste much food on the prisoners so 
short and amazingly wretched food was the order of the day.  And 
just being in the jungle without proper medical aid took its toll.

In the public mind Japan has never been held as accountable for 
war atrocities as was Germany.  Filmmakers have been reticent to 
tell the story, perhaps for fear of offending the Japanese.  There 
are comparatively few films about the Japanese POW camps.  
Certainly there was David Lean's THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI.  
There were some low-budget British exploitation films and that was 
about it.  Then there were TV series "A Town Like Alice" and 
"Tenko."  Lest the experience be forgotten we have a new film TO 
END ALL WARS directed by David Cunningham and written by Brian 
Godawa.  It is based on the account of Ernest Gordan who survived 
the horror of that World War II prison camp and went on to become 
for 26 years the Dean of the Chapel at Princeton University.  The 
film while realistic shows the conditions in the camp as being 
considerably more brutal and sadistic than BRIDGE ON THE RIVER 
KWAI portrayed them.

The story opens with six or so soldiers being marched into the 
prison camp only to be immediately placed in front of a firing 
squad.  It turns out to be a grim joke, one of many that the 
sadistic Japanese play to amuse themselves.  Beating and torture 
are commonplace events.  Men already imprisoned tell the new 
arrivals to enjoy the last of their health; it will not last long 
with parasites and disease almost inevitable.  However, unlike as 
in KWAI, the prisoners want to avoid going to the hospital, called 
by the prisoners the Death House.

So goes a war within a war with the prisoners trying to maintain 
their humanity and with the Japanese trying to make them 
interchangeable and highly expendable cogs in a rail-laying 
machine.  This is more than just a battle of who will win the war 
but a battle of ideologies.  The Japanese believe that the 
individual is nothing, that conformity to group's norms is all 
that gives a life meaning.  Conformity is purpose.  Before the 
film is over there will be some surprising revelations about the 
character of the prisoners and the character of those running the 
camp.  If this story showed nothing but sadism from the Japanese 
it would be one kind of story.  If the British (with one American, 
by the way) and the Japanese learned to respect each other it 
would be another kind of story.  It is neither.  It is a stirring 
and believable account of camp life.

The color has been distorted in the film to give a washed out 
yellow.  This serves a double purpose for Cunningham.  It gives an 
effect of Technicolor film that has been left in heat.  It also 
creates a distancing effect.  The only touch that seems a little 
out of place is the use of Gaelic music.

This is a powerful and philosophical view of the prison camp 
experience.  I rate it a 9 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +3 on the -4 
to +4 scale.

TAKING SIDES

CAPSULE: This is a film that avoids easy answers.  Wilhelm 
Furtwangler, then the world's greatest orchestra conductor stayed 
in Germany and cooperated with the Nazis.  What were his views; 
was he a war criminal or a secret resistance fighter?  How much 
did he know about crimes against humanity?  The US government 
investigated him after the war and this film is a dramatization of 
that investigation.  Rating: 8 (0 to 10), high +2 (-4 to +4)

In my opinion one of the best films of the last few years is 
Istvan Szabo's SUNSHINE, a film that covers the fortunes of a 
Jewish Hungarian family under the reigns of three different 
regimes, Hungarian aristocrats, Nazis, and Communists.  Szabo's 
follow-up film, a German production, is much more limited in 
scope.  It is about the post-war investigation of who criminally 
supported the Nazis and who opposed them.  Ronald Harwood's 
screenplay ambiguously looks at the investigation of a great 
classical music conductor who stayed on in Germany when the Nazis 
took power and became the most popular conductor of the Third 
Reich.

Maj. Steve Arnold (played by Harvey Keitel) has been assigned by 
his superiors to investigate Wilhelm Furtwangler (Stellan 
Skarsgard), perhaps Europe's greatest classical music conductor.  
When other artists fled Germany, Furtwangler remained behind and 
conducted for the Hitler and his henchmen.  After the war is over 
Arnold assigned to interview Furtwangler and members of his 
orchestra and if appropriate to prosecute him for war crimes.  He 
secretly is told by his commanding officer to find Furtwangler 
guilty.  From there we follow him and learn a little about Arnold 
and something about Furtwangler and his orchestra.  As he 
interviews members of the wartime orchestra Arnold starts noticing 
odd peculiarities that may or may not point to a conspiracy 
against his investigation.  There is a certain sameness to the 
responses that he is getting.  Perhaps any cooperation he is 
getting has been in some ways managed.  If so, perhaps he can 
never come to the truth.

In large part the film is about mind games that Arnold uses to 
manipulate his interviewees and especially Furtwangler.  Where the 
script has problems is that in the end it is so ambiguous.  It has 
no obvious resolution and not much of a final act.  When it is 
over whether anything has been established is open to 
interpretation.  Perhaps that is better than so many films that 
make it all to obvious what the audience should believe, but it is 
like watching a murder mystery and never finding out who the 
killer is.  We are given clues to something but they are never 
tied up.  In the end we just know more about both Arnold and 
Furtwangler.

The film is basically a stage play.  The visual is not very 
important.  Corners are cut visually including touches like 
filling windows with photographs to avoid having to shoot on 
location.  As with a stage play, what this film centers on the 
dialog, and that is intriguing.  I rate the film an 8 on the 0 to 
10 scale and a high +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [There is one piece 
of sloppiness few people but me would notice.  At one point we 
clearly see Arnold's desk calendar say "Jan 16 Tues."  A quick 
mental calculation told me that combination could occur in 1945 
and then not again until 1951.  The events had to take place in 
1946 or 1947.  A possible date could be obtained from any World 
Almanac.]

FOCUS

CAPSULE: In the late years of World War II a man sees anti-Semitic 
influences moving into his neighborhood but wants to remain 
neutral.  As neutrality become more and more difficult he 
struggles with his conscience.  Neil Slavin directs this 
adaptation of a novel by Arthur Miller.  Rating: 7 (0 to 10), +2 
(-4 to +4)

FOCUS is a story of an anti-Semitic movement during the years of 
World War II, but it does not take place in Europe, but in the US.  
Kendrew Lascelles wrote the film based on Arthur Miller's 1945 
novel FOCUS.  It is the story of Fascism creeping into a middle-
class neighborhood.

Lawrence Newman (played by William H. Macy) lives with his mother.  
He works in a prosperous Manhattan company interviewing new 
applicants.  He interviews people applying for jobs and generally 
makes sure the company hires only the "right type," good gentiles.  
One of the people he turns down is non-Jewish Gertrude Hart (Laura 
Dern) who nonetheless looks too Jewish to be put in a visible 
position.

Lawrence happens to witnesses a tough-guy neighbor beat up a 
woman.  But he does not want to make trouble in the neighborhood 
by going to the police.  Another neighbor Fred (the intimidating 
Meat Loaf Aday) seems to be on a personal campaign to chase out of 
the neighborhood the corner news dealer, a Jew (David Paymer), to 
move out of the neighborhood.  When Lawrence gets new glasses, 
glasses that accidentally make him look Jewish; suddenly he gets a 
new view of his street and especially neighbor Fred who is 
inviting "Americanist" organizers into the neighborhood.  Lawrence 
tries desperately to hold onto his neutrality in the Jew-baiting 
in spite of the dictates of his conscience.

For his first feature film commercial producer Neal Slavin has 
chosen a particularly timely theme, that of a slow but insidious 
spreading prejudice and fascism.  The targeting of ethnic groups 
for particular hatreds is especially timely.  Particularly 
chilling is that Fred so anxious to introduce the same fascism 
that was currently engulfing Europe.

Slavin symbolizes the cycle of evil with the image of merry-go-
round accompanied by ominous music.  The film's one less than 
subtle touch is the big billboard at the end of the infiltrated 
street proclaiming "There's no way like the American way."

It is interesting that two of Arthur Miller's novels were adapted 
at the same time.  Like FOCUS, Amos Gitai's EDEN also was shown at 
the Toronto International Film Festival.  Both are about people 
caught up in evil circumstances and having to take a stand.  
However, FOCUS is by far the better of the two.  I rate it a 7 on 
the 0 to 10 scale and a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          mleeper@optonline.net

     In heaven all the interesting people are missing. 
                                          --Friedrich Nietzsche


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
FREE COLLEGE MONEY
CLICK HERE to search
600,000 scholarships!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/Pv4pGD/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/