THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
11/02/01 -- Vol. 20, No. 18

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:
	That Sad Time of Year (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	Near Earth Experiences (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	Fantasy and Horror from the Toronto International Film 
		Festival (film reviews of LE PACTE DES LOUPS, 
		THE BUNKER, EXTERMINATING ANGEL, and BUNUEL 
		AND KING SOLOMON'S TABLE by Mark R. Leeper)

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

TOPIC:  That Sad Time of Year (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

Well, I guess Halloween is over for another year.  It is always a 
little sad and melancholy when the Halloween season ends and the 
Christmas season with its forced joy is bearing down on you.  Make 
Halloween not just one day, but let it live in your heart all year 
round.  Dwell on the gruesome.  Read obituary pages.  Be familiar 
with the symptoms and course of plague, anthrax, and ebola.  
Fondle venomous spiders and snakes.  Pick forest mushrooms and 
give them as gifts.  Don't just know cancer's warning signs, but 
practice them.  Paint your fingernails black.  Do whatever you 
can.  Let's not let that Halloween spirit die.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Near Earth Experiences (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

Last week I was talking about how I think that science fiction is 
not producing as much of the idea stuff the way it did three 
decades ago.  At one point one of its major functions was to play 
with ideas generated by science and look at the implications of 
those ideas.  A lot seems to be really fantasy in style, a lot is 
social comment, a lot is war stories, and far too much is in 
series.  But what I really bemoan is the lack of stories based on 
recent findings in science. 

In a sense you would think that the science fiction would almost 
fall out of the science just as alternate histories should fall 
out of the study of history.  In studying history there is little 
point of learning that Napolean lost at Waterloo if you do not 
look at what would have happened if he had won and how history is 
different.  There may be a little more reason to learn the speed 
of light for practical reasons, but the very phenomena should 
suggest stories.  The physics student might likely also consider 
how things would be different if the speed of light were a 
different constant.  Books that look at basic changes to the 
physics of our universe are John E. Stith's REDSHIFT RENDEZVOUS 
and Alan Lightman's EINSTEIN'S DREAMS.  The first looks at the 
subject of what would happen if some universal fundamental 
constant were different, the latter looks at several. 

The subject of fundamental constants is particularly on my mind 
because of the news over the summer that the fine-structure 
constant, which defines the strength of the interaction of light 
and matter, might be better called the "fine-structure current 
value."  Its value, which was the same wherever we see it, appears 
to be a tiny amount different for very distant objects.  The 
reason the number appears different may be because the objects 
that exhibit the number are so old or because they are so distant 
that perhaps that region of the universe has a different constant.  
In any case the number has not changed very much if it really has 
changed at all.  It is thought to have increased by about one 
tenth of one percent of one percent.  That is not very much, but 
when you are talking about something assumed to be a constant, it 
is very much indeed. 

Explaining exactly what the fine structure constant represents is 
beyond the scope of this article and perhaps even that of my 
understanding.  But it comes out of the interaction of light and 
matter and measures the strength of that interaction and seems to 
be very close to 1/137 (without any units) both before and after.  
(Well I said it had not changed much.) 

A major problem in studying this phenomenon is one of our vantage 
point.  It is that we are so immobile in space and time, and 
always will be.  Hence any measurements we might have are 
extremely constrained.  That is one of the problems with physics.  
In physics you are very restricted in the length of time you can 
observe a phenomenon and are very restricted with the vantage 
point.  If light traveling multi-parsec distances undergoes a red 
shift proportional to the distance traveled would we ever realize 
it?  Probably not.  We use the fact that it is fixed to make other 
measurement.  Nothing guarantees that the frequency of light says 
fixed.  Not as long as we can only observe in the relatively tiny 
distances we will ever be able to travel.  At least I do not 
believe we could tell.  If different parts of the universe had 
different speeds for photons in gently undulating waves would we 
notice?  Suppose that around Sirius light travels around 1.001C.  
Maybe at Canus Major the speed is .99999C.  Could we ever tell 
this was true?  Probably we would misattribute the difference to 
motion. 

But given our limited vantage point in space and in time, who is 
to say what things we consider physical constants really are 
constants through space and time?  How might the nature of energy 
and matter be different if we could really see the universe end-
to-end and forward and backward in time rather than just look at 
it through a peephole?  Will we ever be able to do that?  As Henry 
asks at the end of THE LION IN WINTER, "What do you think are the 
chances?"  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Fantasy and Horror from the Toronto International Film 
Festival (film comments by Mark R. Leeper)

I previously did a piece on films of the supernatural at the TIFF.  
The subject matter has some overlap with this week's selection of 
films, but it was just the best way to break things down.  This 
week I will discuss two delightful comedies, one made by Spanish 
filmmaker Luis Bunuel and one featuring him as the main character. 
Surprisingly enjoyable is Luis Bunuel's THE EXTERMINATING ANGEL.  
It sounds kind of bleak, but it really is a film of the same mold 
as GROUNDHOG DAY.  BUNUEL AND KING SOLOMON'S TABLE is a 
unique film from Spain that mixes comedy and a fascinating trio of 
heroes.  Less delightful are two horror films, one from Britain, 
one from France.  LE PACTE DES LOUPS has already been released in 
France and has done very well in their domestic box-office.  THE 
BUNKER is a very dour film about Nazis fighting the supernatural.  
[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: LE PACTE DES LOUPS (THE BROTHERHOOD OF THE WOLF)  (film 
review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: A strange and fearsome beast is preying on the peasants 
of the Gevaudan region of France.  This is an extremely 
frustrating film that tries very hard to create a 1760s period 
feel and then scuttles it with anachronistic fighting techniques 
and 20th Century attitudes and values.  Mostly this is just a 
recombination of familiar elements.  Rating: 6 (0 to 10), +1 (-4 
to +4) 

For a long time starting in the 1970s popular filmmakers were 
avoiding making films set in historical periods.  The belief was 
apparently that people were not being taught history as well in 
schools and that the big money demographic as far as film 
audiences were concerned, that is teenage boys, did not know much 
about and hence could not identify with historical periods.  I 
think someone must have realized that most teenage boys do not 
know that much about Middle Earth either and that is not going to 
get in the way of LORD OF THE RINGS.  So several adventure films 
will be coming out soon set in historical periods.  The problem is 
filmmakers realize that teenage boys still do not know much about 
those periods so while the films may use the periods as exotic 
settings, the films being set in these earlier times are not 
necessarily historically accurate.  A prime example is Christophe 
Gans's LE PACTE DES LOUPS which does a terrific job of recreating 
the look of 1760s France and then adds martial arts, what looks 
like wire-enhanced acrobatics, and characters with 21st century 
values. 

Some twenty-five years before the French Revolution, which would 
bring upheaval to all of the country, a beast has come to the 
rural Gevaudan region of France.  Over the course of three years 
it has killed one hundred women and children.  To clear things up 
Louis XV sends Fronsac, an ex-military naturalist.  With Fronsac 
comes his faithful American Indian equal Mani, a great kickboxer 
and a noble savage who happens to follow Fronsac around.  From the 
beginning of his visit Fronsac and Mani are embroiled in local 
conflicts.  Fronsac has his own ideas about the nature of this 
strange creature that has killed so many. 

The trailer tries to present the impression this is a film in the 
vein of THE CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF.  Perhaps that done with this 
level of production values could have been a fresh and effective 
film.  In fact, it is more like a warmed-over Sherlock Holmes 
story done with some panache, but not enough to make it worth 
while.  Initially the script generates some wonder at the nature 
of this strange beast but the writing soon proves to be a real 
disappointment.  The hero has 20th century thinking and values in 
spite of the 18th century look.  The fight scenes do not help much 
either.  The digital effects and what appears to be wirework do 
not help.  Fights are unrealistically staged with gangs of 
attackers conveniently coming on conveniently one at a time. 

Director Christophe Gans shares writing credits with Stephane 
Cabel.  The editing is by David Wu who also edited THE BRIDE WITH 
WHITE HAIR, giving the viewer some idea what to expect from the 
fight scenes.  The film may be edited down from the 142-minute 
version playing at film festivals, which might be a bit long for 
subject matter. 

There is the germ of a good idea here, but in the writing all 
sorts of commercial compromises were made to dumb the film down to 
make it play better with wider audiences.  This is a film that 
looks a whole lot better than it sounds.  My advice to American 
viewers: just enjoy the art design and do not bother reading the 
subtitles.  I give this film a 6 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +1 on 
the -4 to +4 scale. 

One side note: in the beginning of the film JAWS we see a woman 
attacked near a buoy.  We do not see what is attacking her but she 
seems two or three times to be tugged back and forth like she is 
getting away and being pulled back.  She is flopped around like a 
rag doll.  I was never sure what the shark was supposed to be 
doing that would create this back-and-forth motion.  That scene is 
imitated on dry land toward the beginning of this film and that 
motion makes less sense on dry land.  In neither film when you see 
the creature is that movement repeated.  It just does not seem 
that motion would result from the attack.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: THE BUNKER (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: This horror film set in a Nazi bunker.  In the closing 
days of World War II, German troops hide in a defensive bunker as 
the Americans advance on their position.  But some supernatural 
threat may be worse than the enemy.  The film offers more mayhem 
than suspense and does not really work beyond the "something scary 
in the dark" level.  Rating: 3 (0 to 10), -1 (-4 to +4) 

I once observed that it was wrong to tell ethnic or gender jokes, 
but that it was a shame since some of them actually are funny.  So 
there should be a way to sanitize the jokes without losing the 
humor.  The way to do that I suggested was to change them all to 
"bigot" jokes.  I mean use the jokes to make fun of bigots.  
Nobody, I said, is going to go out of his way to defend bigotry.  
There are few categories of people that nobody defends.  Nazis are 
one.  People may complain about a violent and bloody gore-fest 
horror film if the victims are American teenagers.  But nobody 
feels to bad if eldritch forces vent their hostility on Nazis.  It 
almost to be a form of justice.  That is what THE BUNKER does.  It 
does not develop its characters; it does not have any message 
beyond "don't be a Nazi"; it portrays no emotions beyond hatred, 
fear, and paranoia.  The plot is just a mechanism to put Nazis in 
a confined space and have supernatural forces and their own fear 
kill them. 

In the late days of the war in Europe a detachment of German 
soldiers have found a bunker deep in the German forest.  A few 
Germans are already holding the bunker, but they seem more like 
"the walking wounded," burned out by their experiences.  The 
Americans are moving on this location, so the German soldiers must 
decide if they must hold the bunker and the tunnels underneath, 
dug by slave labor, or if they should use them to escape.  But 
escape in the tunnels may not be such a good idea.  There seems to 
be some sort of supernatural force in the dark.  If the current 
events did not scare them enough, there is the stormy weather and 
the dankness of the surroundings and the locals' ghost stories 
about this part of the forest.  And of course their fears are 
justified soon in the best tradition of haunted haus films. 

Unless you count bodies, the pace of the film is rather slow.  THE 
BUNKER is heavy on atmosphere but weak on real plot.  Clive 
Dawson's screenplay under Rob Green's direction should have been 
better able to use the premise of the characters being Nazis.  
Considering the horrors of Germany in the Second World War the 
problems faced by the Germans are tame compared to the horrors 
they inflicted on others.  Even Rod Serling used the premise to 
better effect multiple times in Twilight Zone episodes. 

I suppose this film is better than a film with a stalker with a 
hook or a knife going after teenagers.  But perhaps what makes THE 
BUNKER a disappointment is that it does have decent production 
values in the service of what is basically just grind 'em up plot 
with plenty of gunfire but without a whole lot of characterization 
beyond the uniforms.  In fact, the uniforms make it harder to keep 
the characters straight.  It would be hard enough to identify with 
these characters if the viewer liked them.  I found myself rooting 
for the supernatural whatsis. 

Atmosphere is added by making even the fully lit scenes seem dim.  
With some care taken for the visual values THE BUNKER still fails 
to have much in the way of new ideas or even suspense.  I have 
seen positive comments about this film, but THE BUNKER seems to be 
a prime example of a film that is full of sound and fury but which 
signifies nothing.  I rate it 3 on the 0 to 10 scale and a -1 on 
the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: EXTERMINATING ANGEL (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: This is Luis Bunuel's strange and humorous attack on the 
upper classes in Mexico.  After a dinner party the guests find a 
strange force will not let then leave.  Instead their refined ways 
are deconstructed.  This is a weird but likable fantasy.  Rating: 
7 (0 to 10), +2 (-4 to +4) 

It is going to be a marvelous party.  All of the upper crust in 
town is invited.  In the host's house the servants are working 
overtime to prepare.  Well, not all of them are preparing.  Some 
just want to walk out of the house.  They are not sure why they 
feel compelled to leave, but they are willing even to lose their 
jobs just to get out of the house. 

The marvelous guests arrive and have charming witty conversation.  
The party is so nice that they cannot bring themselves to leave.  
Soon it is clear something out of the ordinary is going on.  
People now want to leave, but cannot bring themselves to cross the 
threshold.  Hours turn into days and food and water are running 
out.  Still the guests are compelled by force or forces unknown to 
stay and continue the party.  Soon sickness and death will follow 
if they cannot leave. 

Luis Bunuel's films are noted for their bizarre twists on reality.  
This 1956 low-budget, black-and-white fantasy from Mexico takes a 
nasty bite out of the upper class.  While it was filmed in Mexico, 
there is little visual clue of its country of origin.  It could 
take place any big city of America or Europe.  The conflicts 
Bunuel is commenting on are those of class and not nations.  He 
deconstructs the upper classes of society and tests them under 
stress in ways they could not be tested in the real world. 

It is interesting to see the mechanics by which the sinister 
barrier seems to work.  The characters see themselves as trapped 
and even are dying as a result. On one level they want to leave.  
Still, physically they cannot force themselves to make the exit.  
It is almost as if they have become addicted to being in the house 
as if it were a drug they abhor but are physically unable to give 
up.  Perhaps this was even intended to be a metaphor for drug 
addiction, which would be similarly destructive.  Eventually the 
victims degenerate into barbaric behaviors for their habit.  
Meanwhile people outside want to get in, but they are tied up with 
the official bureaucracy.  The local government, with concern for 
safety matters is controlling entrance.  The simple action of 
stepping across a threshold is seemingly forever forestalled. 

THE EXTERMINATING ANGEL, if made today, might be considered a 
light comic fantasy on the level of a GROUNDHOG DAY.  For its time 
is was a startlingly different classic from a great experimental 
director.  I would give it a rating of 7 on the 0 to 10 scale and 
a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  It was shown at the Toronto 
International Film Festival as a companion piece to BUNUEL AND 
KING SOLOMON'S TABLE.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: BUNUEL AND KING SOLOMON'S TABLE (film review by Mark 
R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: In the 1930s Luis Bunuel, Salvador Dali, and Federico 
Garcia Lorca join forces and have an Indiana-Jones-style adventure 
looking for one of the great (non-existent) treasures of history.  
The feel is a little like RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK.  But the pace 
is slower.  There are some sly comic touches.  The film was made 
for the 100th anniversary of Bunuel's birth in the year 2000.  
Rating: 7 (0 to 10), low +2 (-4 to +4) 

The story is told in flashback as an elderly Luis Bunuel remembers 
his adventures with his friends and plans to film them.  In the 
years just prior to the Spanish Civil War three internationally 
respected artists: Luis Bunuel, Salvador Dali, and Federico Garcia 
Lorca have a wild film serial adventure looking for a mythical 
artifact that allows one to look into time.  The table is given a 
history that would make the Maltese Falcon green with envy.  With 
a bizarre sense of fun co-writer and director Carlos Saura throws 
in anachronisms, jokes about the making of the film itself, film 
references, and a beautiful sense of elegant photography.  The 
story is told in flashback as Bunuel's reminiscences.  The present 
time flows into the 1930s and passersby seem to know about films 
Bunuel would make in the future and about the making of this very 
film.  Meanwhile we are treated to the comical repartee of three 
slightly mad geniuses as they go on their madcap quest through 
mystical Toledo, Spain, with its strange dark rooms and corridors, 
fighting mysterious foes, and seeing incredible sights.  Some of 
the visual ideas have a ring of Monty Python; some are state-of-
the-art visual effects.  While a few of the images lack sufficient 
imagination, others are delightful and some astonish.  Set design 
is by the remarkable Jose Hernandez.  The score, featuring a 
flamenco motif, is by Roque Banos. 

Saura has filled the film with interesting images, but he has a 
pacing problem.  Basically, the story bogs down in the middle act 
and does not progress for a good long time.  The film shown at the 
Toronto International Film Festival at 9 AM on September 10.  That 
is just 24 hours before the terrorist attacks.  This coincidental 
incident put its secret religious spy networks into a wholly 
unintended and unfortunate context.  Some slightly anti-Semitic 
comments take on a much more serious aspect in retrospect. 

This is a fresh and exciting fantasy film.  I give it a 7 on the 0 
to 10 scale and a low +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          mleeper@optonline.net


           Admiration, noun. Our polite recognition of another's
	   resemblance to ourselves. 
					  --Ambrose Bierce


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