THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
12/21/01 -- Vol. 20, No. 25

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:
	The State of American Film (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING 
		(film review by Mark R. Leeper)
	VANILLA SKY (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

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

TOPIC:  The State of American Film (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

My parents have officially served notice.  They are going on 
strike.  They will no longer rent any Hollywood action movie.  I 
think I understand how they feel.  In the human development you 
reach a point, a state of maturity, where bigger explosions, 
longer and more action-filled car chases, and even better kick-
boxing just does not do it for you.  In fact, I am thirty years 
their junior and it sure does not do it for me.  What is happening 
to the American film industry? 

Well, a number of things are happening.  The first is that making 
a profit on films has become more of a science.  The demographic 
that has the most money to spend on films is males age twelve to 
eighteen.  Studios can aim for a different audience, but they are 
aiming where there is less profit to be made.  And of course, the 
more that the filmmakers aim for male teen audience, the more 
people outside that demographic become frustrated with the films 
being made and go to theaters in smaller numbers.  So the prophecy 
that those are the people buying the tickets more and more 
fulfills itself. 

Another trend in the film industry is internationalization.  At 
first look that should be a good thing.  After all, we have known 
for a long time that some of the best films to see are foreign 
films.  A Kurosawa or a De Sica film can be much more powerful 
than the standard fare that Americans make for themselves.  But 
only a small part of the foreign audience is so discerning.  Sadly 
a lot of the Japanese and French and Italian film market like 
"blow 'em up real good" films.  Paddy Chayevsky said "Television 
is democracy at its ugliest."  The film industry is worse than 
democracy, it is a situation of each movie ticket bought is a 
vote.  And there are a lot of people out there who want to see 
martial arts fights on the big screen.  There is a lot of effort 
to sensitively take someone baring their soul and to translate it 
into Japanese, French, Spanish, and Italian.  But explosions, 
chases, and fights transcend the language barrier.  Action films 
sell the best in this country, are the easiest to translate to 
other languages, and sell best in other countries.  No wonder then 
that as big multinational corporations acquire film companies, 
they want them to concentrate on the most profitable product. 

Before films can be made there have to be ideas for films.  You 
cannot demand that some author go out and write some new material 
that will illuminate some previously unlit facet of the human 
soul.  That takes real inspiration.  Moreover if the assignment 
is that the author thinks of a situation that will entail two car 
chases, three explosions, and numerous fights with martial arts, 
nearly any writer can meet that demand.  It takes very little 
imagination to figure out how to rework the Boris Karloff THE 
MUMMY to use CGI special effects, martial arts fights, and chases. 

As a side note, I think people have been seeing this happening for 
a long time and many seem to want to blame Steven Spielberg for 
the problem.  And Spielberg has certainly made his share of action 
films.  Blaming him always bothers me since I see Spielberg as 
doing something else entirely.  Spielberg more than most other 
filmmakers is a student of what makes a good film in a particular 
genre.  Yes he will make an action film, but it will be an 
exercise in the principles of what makes an action film good.  A 
fair percentage of the time that will make a good action film.  
But he also makes serious films exercising principles that make 
serious films good and frequently that will result in a good 
serious film.  The name I most associate with just making 
exploitation action films is Jerry Bruckheimer.  He seems to make 
one soulless and successful action film after another and nobody 
seems to tag him for his part in the deteriorating state of the 
American film. 

It may sound like things are getting worse and worse with American 
film.  To some extent they are.  But in some ways the Internet can 
save the filmgoer, for those who know how to use it.  Next week I 
will talk about how I use the Internet to improve the set of films 
I see.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING (film 
review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: Three hours of what may be just about the best fantasy 
film ever made tells the story of J. R. R. Tolkien's THE 
FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING.  Intelligent and visually beautiful, Peter 
Jackson's first film of the LORD OF THE RINGS trilogy is an 
instant classic and quite possibly this generation's GONE WITH THE 
WIND.  Rating: 10 (0 to 10), +4 (-4 to +4) 

Years ago, there were animated versions of parts of 
J. R. R. Tolkein's THE LORD OF THE RINGS made for television, and 
Ralph Bakshi made one for theatrical release.  None was very 
satisfying.  But the technology of creating images on the screen 
has advanced a very great deal since that time.  Today, if you can 
visualize it, it probably can be put on a screen.  How difficult a 
task is it to make a definitive version of Tolkien's THE 
FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING?  Two tasks are necessary.  The novel is 
already intelligent.  What is needed is a way to abridge the very 
long story down to a screenplay without sacrificing the spirit or 
the intelligence.  Also, for years Middle Earth has been 
beautifully visualized in the paintings of the Brothers 
Hildebrandt.  Theirs have become as much the classic images of 
Middle Earth as the John Tenniel's illustrations have become the 
classic images of Lewis Carroll's fantasy world.  What is required 
in making a film version is to have every frame of the film look 
like a Hildebrandt illustration.  Both are impressive tasks that 
require a lot of hard work, but neither is insuperably difficult.  
Peter Jackson saw that both tasks could be done and the result 
would be one terrific film.  We have that film now, and it 
delivers a heavy load of adventure, spectacle, and beauty, three 
hours with too many delights to list, all for the price of a 
standard film ticket. 

Ironically, the filmmakers have to contend with how well-known and 
respected the original story is.  Indeed, my wife can list a 
multitude of small variations from the book.  They are of the sort 
"When Frodo escaped by boat he was invisible and Sam saw only what 
looked like an empty boat.  The film has him visible."  And people 
who love the story do pick up on changes to the story like that.  
But nobody criticizes THE GUNS OF NAVARONE for what are far 
greater variations from its source novel.  Indeed, few criticize 
even THE TEN COMMANDMENTS so much for liberties taken with its so-
well-loved source material. 

Dramatically, the biggest problem of THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING is 
the classic one going back to the first publication of the story.  
THE LORD OF THE RINGS was one mammoth novel that the publisher 
arbitrarily decided had to be split into three pieces, published 
at six-month intervals.  It is a story without an ending since 
Tolkien intended only a chapter break at that point.  The film has 
the same mid-stride ending.  Peter Jackson has promised his films 
will be released at twelve-month intervals to catch three 
Christmases. 

The anticipation for that second part is already building.  The 
public's keenness of the first film, based on rumors and the 
trailer, has been very great.  Now that the public has seen a much 
bigger sample of what Jackson can do with the story, the 
expectancy for the second film will probably be much greater.  By 
the time the third film is ready to be released the phenomenon 
will probably be stronger than the STAR WARS phenomenon.  George 
Lucas pointed the way to what computer effects could do for the 
fantasy film with his STAR WARS films.  But he has had to write 
his own material and he is no Tolkien, so none of his films have 
been as well-realized as THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING. 

As few viewers will need to be told, the story is of a ring that 
holds absolute power.  But the power it represents seduces and 
corrupts absolutely the person who wears the ring.  A great and 
wise wizard, Gandalf the Grey (played by Ian McKellen), knows the 
power and the seduction of the ring.  So he does not want to 
possess the ring himself but asks an innocent, Frodo Baggins 
(Elijah Wood), to take the ring and carry it where it can be 
safely destroyed.  Thus Frodo begins a dangerous trek through 
Middle Earth, a magical world created by Tolkien with accents of 
British and Germanic folklore.  Jackson moves the story right 
along as there is much territory to be covered, literally and 
figuratively, in a story that is rushed to be told in a three-hour 
film.  Along the way the filmmaker gives us one beautiful scene 
after another.  He needed a wide variety of shooting locations, 
but with a little help from computer enhancement, he managed to 
create the settings he needed all in his visually diverse homeland 
of New Zealand.  But the plot is still complex.  Those unfamiliar 
with the story of THE LORD OF THE RINGS can expect to be lost by 
the background and history sequences which move fast and violently 
in the first part of the film.  But the viewer is not lost for 
long.  The world soon simplifies to the travelers, their allies, 
and their enemies. 

Throughout the film familiar faces appear.  Christopher Lee shows 
up here, Cate Blanchett there, but no single actor dominates the 
film.  Not even Elijah Wood, who plays the main character, 
dominates.  Actors seem to have been chosen because they were 
right in the part, not because their names would sell tickets.  
Nobody will think of this as a Liv Tyler film or a Sean Bean film.  
If it is anybody's film, it is that of forty-year-old Peter 
Jackson.  Jackson has shown continuous improvement since his 1987 
feature film debut with the aptly named BAD TASTE.  My advice to 
him would be not to try to improve at this point.  If he makes 
three LORD OF THE RINGS films of consistent quality that play like 
a single film, he will have a great artistic and financial 
success.  His series will be the standard and the benchmark of 
fantasy on film.  If, like George Lucas did, he falls into the 
trap of trying to outdo himself each outing he will end up with 
mismatched and less satisfying pieces.  He has an excellent start.  
I admit that I am partial to the fantastic on film, but I rate THE 
LORD OF THE RINGS: THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING a rare full score of 
10 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +4 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: VANILLA SKY (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: Reality gets seriously bent in a film that breaks the 
barriers between a dreamlike reality and realistic dreams.  Tom 
Cruise is the vertex of a love triangle we are sure will end 
badly.  But when it does end the strangeness is just beginning.  
This would have been a good film at 45 minutes.  Nearly two hours 
is too much of perhaps not a good enough thing.  Rating: 7 (0 to 
10), low +2 (-4 to +4)  Spoiler warning: as a friend cautioned me, 
this is a film that the less you know about it going in, the 
better the film will be.  I have tried not to put in any spoilers, 
but perhaps my friend is right. 

A lot of films these days start well, but the writer does not know 
where to take the story.  Much rarer is a film like VANILLA SKY in 
which the writer had a pretty good idea how to end the story but 
fumbles badly in getting to the point where he can use the ending.  
This is a film with a lot of seemingly pointless material, and 
most of it is in the first half of the film.  I cannot fault the 
ideas behind VANILLA SKY, but several times I found myself 
frustrated waiting for them to appear.  Writer-director Cameron 
Crowe plays with the audience and mysteriously hints that there 
may be more going on than meets the eye.  Some of the hints mean 
something, some are red herrings for the sake of style.  As good 
as the end is, it may not be worth the patience that the buildup 
requires. 

"Open your eyes."  They are the first words of the dialog, the 
title of the film on which VANILLA SKY is based, and words that 
will take increasing significance as the story progresses.  David 
Aames (played by Tom Cruise) is the playboy heir to a publishing 
empire.  With money, power, and good looks his every wish is 
someone else's command.  The Board of Directors of his company 
would be happy to be rid of him, but his father died leaving most 
of the company's stock to him.  David's lover Julie (Cameron Diaz) 
is hoping that David will get serious sooner or later, but David 
cannot be serious about work or about play.  When David's best 
friend Brian Shelby (Jason Lee) shows up at David's birthday party 
with his new girlfriend Sophia (Penelope Cruz), David and Sophia 
are immediately attracted to each other and Julie is not happy to 
discover she has just lost her future.  Cameron Crowe fills the 
story with flash-forwards, flash-backs, and scenes that turn out 
to be dream sequences.  There are weird visual images and odd 
little background touches.  The final effect is to disorient the 
viewer.  It may be just me, but I did not particularly care if 
David would find love with Sophia.  In a story of many questions, 
will David be successful is one of the first asked and one that 
Crowe may have been interested in only slightly more than I was. 

VANILLA SKY is Crowe's remake of Alejandro Amenabar's ABRE LOS 
OJOS (OPEN YOUR EYES).  Spanish director Amenabar's only English-
language film, the ghost story THE OTHERS, turned out to be one of 
the surprise sleeper hits of the year.  Once again he shows that 
if one patiently sticks with one of his stories there is a rich 
and thoughtful idea awaiting to engage the viewer.  VANILLA SKY is 
a film that has a lot of nice details done very precisely, but 
which for most viewers first seeing the film will fly by totally 
unnoticed.  It may well be that for many viewers a second viewing 
will be more rewarding than the first. 

Crowe uses motifs that seem to recall Cruise's recent work for 
Stanley Kubrick.  At some point in the plot masks become very 
important.  It is reminiscent of the masks in EYES WIDE SHUT, 
though Cruise's character is somewhat different from the one in 
that film.  There he was on the outside of philandering looking 
in, here he is on the inside looking further inward.  Even the 
titles seem linked.  That was about having EYES WIDE SHUT, this is 
a remake of OPEN YOUR EYES.  

VANILLA SKY is a film in which it becomes clear there is a lot 
more going on than meets the eye.  That is achieved in part by 
Cameron Crowe making sure that so little of what is happening 
actually meets the eye until major clues are given toward the end 
of the film.  What is wrong with the film is not that it is a deep 
intellectual exercise but that for so long it gives so little hint 
that that is what all its strangeness is leading to.  It is a 
riddle too well wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.  I rate it 
a 7 on the 0 to 10 scale and a low +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  
(Personal note: My initial rating on leaving the theater was 
considerably lower based on the film's slow development.  As the 
film unwinds in my mind I see more and more to like in what was 
done.  That, by itself, is probably an achievement.)  [-mrl]

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

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          mleeper@optonline.net


          Gratitude is merely the secret hope of further favors. 
                                  --Francois de la Rochefoucauld

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