THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
10/19/01 -- Vol. 20, No. 16

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.

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Topics:
	Contributions
	Parallel Footprints (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	IRON MONKEY (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
	More Films from the Toronto International Film Festival 
		(film reviews of WAKING LIFE, WHO IS CLETIS TOUT?, 
		and LAST ORDERS)

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

TOPIC: Contributions

When we (Mark and Evelyn) left Avaya/Lucent, we had to find new 
homes for the books in the science fiction club library.  The 
fiction books (about a thousand) were donated to the Holmdel 
Public Library and the Monmouth County library system.  The 
reference books were donated to the Science Fiction & Fantasy 
Writers of America (SFWA) Medical Fund Auction.  At Worldcon, 
the Contento index to anthologies brought $65.  The two-volume 
Tuck encyclopedia was held over for a future auction.

The fund is used to help pay medical expenses for authors who 
have no medical insurance.  [-ecl]

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

TOPIC: Parallel Footprints (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

I want to talk today about footprints.  In specific I want to talk 
about dinosaur footprints.  When it comes to fossils of dinosaurs, 
footprints definitely have in most people's minds a secondary 
status.  What people like to see is fossilized bone.  That at 
least looks like it was a part of the dinosaur (even if it really 
was not).  They want to see some piece of the dinosaur itself to 
spark their imagination.  Just knowing a dinosaur walked here and 
the shape of its foot seems less exciting than finding some big 
bone that will allow us to marvel at the size. 

The fact remains that some very interesting information can be 
gleaned from dinosaur footprints.  You can judge how fast a 
dinosaur ran by looking at the length of his stride.  Once you 
know that you can also judge how much energy the beast had.  Once 
you have that knowledge you have a much better idea whether is was 
a slow-moving, cold-blooded creature or a fast-moving, warm-
blooded animal.  But the single most amazing thing I remember ever 
hearing about dinosaurs has recently come from dinosaur 
footprints. 

The following is quoted from the article "Social Behavior in 
Dinosaurs" by Lynne M. Clos.  "The Triassic rocks on Mt. Tom, near 
Holyoke, Massachusetts preserve 28 parallel trackways made by 
tridactyl bipeds. The likelihood of this many parallel trails 
occurring randomly is minuscule, and the rare trails which do not 
follow the trend preclude the possibility of a restricted 
corridor." 

Think about what that is saying.  They found 28 sets of parallel 
tracks.  That seems to mean the tracks were all made at the same 
time by 28 of a species walking in a line, shoulder to shoulder.  
At a panel at the recent World Science Fiction Convention a 
paleontologist said they even wheeled around a turn.  The ones 
toward the outside walking further and faster to maintain the 
line.  One place one of them missed his footing and fell out of 
line knocking two others out of line.  They got back in line.  
This is pretty amazing behavior. 

Why would they do that?  Why would dinosaurs walk abreast?  Well 
they probably were something like hadrosaurs.  Those were 
duckbilled dinosaurs.  Individually they did not have a whole lot 
of defense mechanisms.  They did not have sharp horns or sharp 
teeth or spikes.  They could probably scratch a little, but that 
was about all.  One hadrosaur was pretty much meat on the hoof for 
any passing predator. 

On the other hand a predator would have to think twice about 
attacking a line of 28 hadrosaurs.  It is a really good defensive 
strategy.  They could put the weak and the young toward the center 
where they were the best protected.  There are some really good 
reasons why they would walk abreast.  There is only one reason why 
they would not.  To walk abreast like that requires organization 
and intelligence.  We are talking about a bunch of reptiles here.  
When do humans walk 28 abreast?  Prehistoric man did not do that 
that we know of.  The ancient Egyptians may have walked 28 abreast 
under certain circumstances.  The adjective that comes to mind is 
"military."  Humans did it only when they thought about it and 
realized it had tactical advantages.  Perhaps that is over-
anthropomorphizing them.  But it is a posture that demonstrates 
organization and intelligence.  Clos calls it herding, but it 
sounds to me to be too organized for simple herding.  Cows herd 
but they don't do it in formation.  Birds, the descendants of 
dinosaurs, may fly in formation but for each bird it is only to 
take advantage of the air currents that the bird ahead is making.  
There is nothing like that in the case of walking dinosaur.  No 
contemporary animal I know (except humans) walks in formation.  
The finding of parallel footprints raises the intelligence level 
of prehistoric reptile above the level of any current animals and, 
in fact, above prehistoric man.  If they had the reasoning power 
to walk in formation for defensive purposes, or for whatever 
purposes occurred to them, what other pieces of reasoning were 
they capable of that did not make it into the fossil record?  
[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: IRON MONKEY (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: IRON MONKEY is a movie that is easier to like than to 
respect.  It has a plot that could easily have been a Zorro 
episode but is reframed as Chinese martial arts.  There is lots of 
action but if you are old enough to read the subtitles, you have 
probably seen much of the plot before. Rating: 6 (0 to 10), +1 (-4 
to +4) 

CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON was the most successful foreign-
language film ever released in the United States.  It combined a 
story of some sophistication with some historical spectacle and 
more than a little martial arts action including some incredibly 
graceful wirework.  While the market for martial arts films is 
still hot other distributors want to cash in.  Action films like 
THE MUSKETEER are throwing in wirework in places where it does not 
belong.  One previously released film featuring martial arts on 
and off a wire has gotten a new lease on life.  The film is IRON 
MONKEY.  It is a nice polished production from Tsui Hark, who 
produced the CHINESE GHOST STORY films and WICKED CITY.  
Superficially it looks like it is in the same class as CROUCHING 
TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON.  It has the acrobatics and the elegant 
photography.  But it lacks the plot subtlety.  In fact, the 
plotting bears no small resemblance to an episode from the 
adventures of that American hero from old California, El Zorro. 

In IRON MONKEY, a corrupt governor rules a village and oppresses 
the innocent peasants forcing high taxes on them.  The governor 
needs to tax the peasants mercilessly to support his expensive and 
selfish life style including gourmet food for himself and his nine 
beautiful wives.  The one thorn in the governor's side, beside his 
comically inept captain of the guards, is a masked bandit who, in 
classic tradition, steals from the rich and gives to the poor.  
Wherever there is injustice, Iron Monkey seems to know it and is 
there to flip into action and clobber evildoers with ultra-perfect 
kung fu style.  Nobody knows that Iron Monkey is in reality the 
timid-seeming village doctor and the Monkey's sidekick is the 
doctor's beautiful assistant.  Iron Monkey is put into danger when 
another medical man comes to the village with a son.  In addition 
to the healing arts, they are also secretly expert in the martial 
arts.  They can cure or clobber.  They seem to be good, but their 
loyalties give the impression of being with the evil governor. 

The screenplay, a product of four credited writers, has more than 
a few plot holes and contrivances.  A character only has to claim 
to be oppressed, truthfully or not, and immediately the Iron 
Monkey comes to her aid.  In one case a woman only utters the 
words and the Monkey is there.  To give the film a one-up on other 
martial arts films even the Shao-Lin monks whose heroic virtue is 
lauded in so many martial arts films have been turned to the dark 
side by this evil governor. 

Visually the film has a few problems.  The virtuosity of the 
martial artists is clearly excellent, but too often they rely 
rather obviously on wires to create an impressive appearance.  
Another frequent but too obvious effect is to run the film 
backwards.  Both of these effects are extremely detectable.  
Wooden poles and pillars when struck like with a karate kick seem 
to break in perfectly smooth saw cuts.  One more visual problem in 
a different vein: Orchid, the Iron Monkey's assistant, can dress 
as a man and even wear a fake mustache, but it still is hard to 
believe the evil governor is fooled. 

Director Woo-ping Yuen loses no opportunity to show off Chinese 
dishes.  The governor is fond of shark fin soup.  The guards like 
Dim Sum.  (Is this an anachronism?)  And Orchid likes to make 
piquant meat dishes.  They seem to have people as adept in the 
kitchen arts as others are in the martial arts. 

If distributors are looking for a way to capture the fire of 
CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON, they will probably have to make 
new film.  IRON MONKEY just is not in the same class.  It is, 
however, just about right for a Saturday matinee.  I rate it a 6 
on the 0 to 10 scale and a +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.  FYI: A 
credit at the end says "Remembering Kevin Bartnof."  Who is that?  
Kevin Bartnof died June 30, 2001, at the age of 43.  He had been a 
foley artist (meaning he provided basic sound effects like 
footsteps, doors closing, etc.) on major films like THE ABYSS, 
SCHINDLER'S LIST, THE SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION, and THE PERFECT STORM.  
[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: More Films from the Toronto International Film Festival 

As you may have noticed from previous weeks the films I am writing 
about are all on a single theme.  I have broken the films I saw at 
the TIFF into categories.  After I grouped films into categories 
there were three films left over and I could not find a whole lot 
to group them.  So I just had a grab-bag sort of collection.  I am 
trying to publish the reviews before any of the films in that 
category is released.  The first of the collection of three 
miscellaneous films to be released is WAKING LIFE.  I think that 
is being released this weekend.  So, here then are the films that 
did not fit in with any other group.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: WAKING LIFE (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: The first digital video animated film is an account of a 
man going through his dreams listening to people talk about 
dreams, dream states, and the nature of time and reality.  Some of 
the speakers are philosophical, some highly speculative, and some 
incoherent.  The undulating animation is at times irritating, 
worse than hand-held cameras, but few films so revel in ideas.  
Rating: 7 (0 to 10), +2 (-4 to +4) 

Not only is it rare to find a feature film like WAKING LIFE 
itself, it is rare to find a feature film that is even plays in 
stylistic fields this far from the norm.  First what is the film 
about?  An unnamed character played by Wiley Wiggins talks to 
people about the relationship and duality of dreams and waking 
life.  Richard Linklater filmed with a hand-held camera Wiggins 
and some people who talked to him and gave their views of reality.  
The visual images were transferred to computer where animators 
superimposed animation over Linklater's filmed images in a 
technique like rotoscoping.  So we just have animated films of 
Wiggins talking to many and various people about the nature of 
dreams.  The film is little more than that.  Wiggins does little 
of the talking.  He just listens with a "Wow!  Cosmic, Man!" 
expression on his animated face. 

The film is a symphony of ideas the viewer may not be able to hum 
later.  The point is not assimilating all the ideas on one 
viewing; it is to immerse the viewer in the flood of ideas.  I do 
not believe that any of the people shown in the film are in any 
way considered expert, but each has philosophy of sorts.  The 
ideas are concepts of life, death, and time.  They are views of 
dream and reality.  The ideas just interplay as we as an audience 
in Wiggins's dream go from one person to the next.  We hear some 
old chestnuts like that time is an illusion.  And probably no 
matter who you are you hear some ideas that are new to you. 

At some point one must discuss the artistic decision to animate 
this film and to use the style of animation that was used.  I 
think that the style that is used is near right, but on some level 
it sabotages the effort.  It certainly gives the film the right 
dreamlike quality.  Linklater himself says that he is going for 
the feeling of being on drugs and made the film for people on 
drugs.  If so I think he is also showing us a little of the 
downside.  The images give motion where it is not needed.  At time 
the scenery seems to undulate on dry land as if it were on an 
ocean.  There it distracts rather than enhances.  Other places the 
animation comments on the discussion, illustrating an idea here or 
there or playfully turning the speakers into billows of clouds.  
Linklater had the animation assignments broken down by character 
and not by scene, an approach the better animation studios use 
now.  That way stylistic differences become part of the character 
rather than errors and inconsistencies.  It eliminates the need 
for the director to police the style to maintain consistency.  
Rather than the new very realistic animation styles this film 
falls back on an easier impressionist approach.  But the people 
are still recognizably the same people with the essence of their 
expression still there in simplified form. 

To tell too much of the ideas discussed would be a little like 
revealing the jokes in a comedy.  One moment the person speaking 
will be talking about the philosophy of Kierkegaard, the next the 
subject will have gone to out of body experiences.  One person 
will be talking about different concepts of life and the physical 
universe; the next will be as concrete as giving ways to recognize 
dreams. 

The film was written as well as directed by Linklater though it 
would be interesting to find how much of what he wrote was 
transcription of conversation and how much was contributed by the 
speakers.  One would be tempted to believe these are all 
interviews with real people presented verbatim but for a scene of 
actors Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy, possibly playing their 
characters from Linklater's BEFORE SUNRISE, also entering into the 
discussion.  It is not at all obvious what it means to say the 
screenplay is by Richard Linklater.  I would rate the film a 7 on 
the 0 to 10 scale and a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: WHO IS CLETIS TOUT? (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: This is (intended to be) a romantic comedy of an escaped 
convict mistaken for a man wanted dead by gangsters.  Chris Ver 
Wiel has several good ideas, but overall the film is very slight 
and never really involves the viewer.  The characters are thin and 
the writing is generally weak.  A few chuckles do not make WHO IS 
CLETUS TOUT? worth seeing.  Rating: 5 (0 to 10), high 0 (-4 to +4) 

This is the second film by Chris Ver Wiel and the fourth he has 
written.  It seems to have gotten a quality production including 
actors like Christian Slater, Richard Dreyfus, and Tim Allen, but 
it still feels like a student production.  The opening credits 
make this look like they expect it to be a madcap comedy, but 
somehow the timing is off.  Instead of being offbeat it might 
better be described as out of kilter. 

A mob kill named Critical Jim (played by a miscast Tim Allen) is 
holding the man he thinks is Cletis Tout.  He does not know that 
Tout is actually dead and the man he is holding is actually Trevor 
Finch (Christian Slater).  Finch is an escaped convict and a 
forger who has taken the name of a dead man in the hope it would 
keep him out of trouble.  It did not work.  Critical Jim likes old 
movies (excessively) so Finch tells his story to Jim as if it were 
an old movie.  I will not go into detail into the plot, but it 
involves a botched robbery, an escape from a chain gang, a chase 
after stolen diamonds, and a plan to break into prison. 

Chris Ver Wiel wrote and directed and while the Toronto Film 
Festival program book calls him a first time director, this is 
actually the second film he has directed.  The film has the feel 
of being pieces of ideas fitted together.  There is a little too 
much violence for a light comedy.  You have actors each doing his 
own thing and their performances not really working together.  
Richard Dreyfus is mellow playing an older con with an interest in 
stage magic, but when his magic comes into the plot it is in 
unbelievable ways.  Portia de Rossi plays a sort of hardened woman 
and love interest, but she has no chemistry with Slater.  The 
characters are thin and not well developed.  RuPaul is thrown in 
as a drag queen, but then not really used. People do things that 
they never would do in real life and the film does nothing to help 
us suspend our disbelief.  The whole film seems more like an 
exercise in seeing if the writer has enough ideas tumbled together 
to total to a feature length film.  They fall just a bit short. 

The music by Randy Edelman is sufficiently bouncy. But Slater does 
not carry the film and Portia de Rossi is not very interesting as 
either a crook or a love interest.  This film aimed at being a 
FOUL PLAY sort of film, but it never finds its pacing.  I give it 
a 5 on the 0 to 10 scale and a high 0 on the -4 to +4 scale.  
[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: LAST ORDERS (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: Four close friends travel a day-long odyssey to scatter 
the ashes of a recently deceased fifth friend.  As they travel 
they think about the past and their relationship to the their 
friend.  An excellent cast bring Graham Swift's novel to the 
screen written and directed by Fred Schepisi.  This is a moving 
look at the meaning of death.  Rating: 8 (0 to 10), high +2 (-4 to 
+4) 

In some ways film is more real than reality.  After seeing an 
imaginary person on the screen for two hours one frequently can 
have more of a feeling for that person than someone you met in 
real life two hours before.  Perhaps it is because a good director 
can show you more sides of a person and more of that person's 
personality that you could see in that person's presence in a much 
longer interval. 

Early in LAST ORDERS you meet Ray, Vic, and Lenny (played by Bob 
Hoskins, Tom Courtney, and David Hemmings).  They are three old 
blokes hanging around a pub and drinking and remembering their 
recently dead friend Jack (played by Michael Caine and J. J. Field 
depending on how far back is the flashback).  As we soon find out 
Jack has been cremated and his ashes are in the container the 
three are toasting.  Jack's last trip will be that day.  He will 
go to Margate, the resort area where he and his wife Amy 
honeymooned.  There his friends will scatter his ashes into the 
sea. 

The three men and Jacks son set out in a car for Margate, each 
talking about and thinking about the past.  Amy is not joining 
them because she is visiting her mentally retarded daughter whom 
Jack had rejected and who is in a home.  Amy is played by Helen 
Mirren who previously has played so many glamorous roles.  This is 
a remarkably unglamorous role for her.  So the men drive, talk, 
and argue.  Through flashbacks we see their memories.  Some are 
about the recent past and Jack's financial worries with a failing 
butcher shop.  More often they go back to World War II.  Younger 
actors are used for those much earlier times and do reasonable 
impressions of the older versions of themselves.  These are people 
who remember well because they have not much to show for those 
times but memories.  This is a film about relationships and 
endings.  The writing by Schepisi, based on the novel by Graham 
Swift, is both delicate and sad.  Underscoring it is Paul 
Grabowsky's melancholy score. 

I rate it an 8 on the 0 to 10 scale and a high +2 on the -4 to +4 
scale.  [A personal note: As we were sitting at the Toronto 
International Film Festival waiting for this film to start at 9:30 
AM someone in the row ahead of us told us that a plane had crashed 
into the World Trade Center.  I remembered that it had happened 
during World War II with the Empire State Building, I thought 
trying to picture the WTC with a hole in its side.  It was a 
disaster, but it seemed also a bit of a novelty.  I would be 
curious to see the films.  It did not enter my mind that the 
incident could have been intentional.  When the film was over it 
was announced that Schepisi would had canceled the question and 
answer session due to "the events of the morning."  This must have 
been a serious plane crash.  As I exited I heard that a second 
plane had also hit the WTC.  That was when I knew the world had 
changed.  I suspect each person in that audience that day will 
think of the incidents of that day whenever they think of this 
film.]  [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          mleeper@optonline.net


           Democracy is a process by which the people are free 
           to choose the man who will get the blame. 
                                          -- Laurence J. Peter


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