THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
05/17/02 -- Vol. 20, No. 46

El Presidente: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
The Power Behind El Pres: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

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Topics:
	Hugo Nominees Available On-Line
	Subtract Two Banthas (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	More on Spider-Man (film comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	The Legacy of Tom Corbett (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	STAR WARS II: ATTACK OF THE CLONES (film review by 
		Mark R. Leeper)
	KILN PEOPLE (book review by Joe Karpierz)
	HOLLYWOOD ENDING (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: Hugo Nominees Available On-Line

The short fiction nominees (novella, novelette, and short story) 
that appeared in ASIMOV'S, ANALOG, and F&SF are now available on-
line at the respective magazine sites: http://www.asimovs.com, 
http://www.analogsf.com/0204/nebulas.html, and
http://www.sfsite.com/fsf/fiction/hugo01.htm

(It would not surprise me to find that the first gets changed to 
http://www.analogsf.com/0204/hugos.html at some point.)  

There are no on-line versions of the stories from anthologies 
yet (Chiang, LeGuin, and Vinge).  [-ecl]

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

TOPIC: Subtract Two Banthas (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

You will notice that this issue contains a review of STAR WARS 
II: ATTACK OF THE CLONES which is just opening this weekend.  
Please do not be spoiled by this quick service--it will not 
always be possible with all films.  Most films open on Fridays 
these days.  I requested Mr. Lucas release it in time for me to 
get a review into the MT VOID in the first week.  He is, of 
course, knowledgeable about the importance of this publication 
and the eminence of its readership and arranged for the film to 
be released a day early.  Apparently this pushed back all his 
deadlines by a day and the result is that in scene 57 you see 
only one bantha where you should be seeing five.  In my one piece 
of dishonesty in a film review, I have split the difference with 
him and reviewed and rated the film as if there were three 
banthas.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: More on Spider-Man (film comments by Mark R. Leeper)

Last week I reviewed of SPIDER-MAN and I talk about some of the 
problems with the character faces with physics.  Something that 
should be mentioned is the physics of the Spider Swing.  The film 
shows Spider-Man gracefully swinging through the canyon-like 
streets of Manhattan.  This may look effortless, but the real 
thing would be anything but.  The problem, as Scotty would say, 
is "Och!  Ya canna' change the laws of physics."  Spider-Man is 
moving a fair mass at an impressive speed.  It looks to us like 
gravity is doing all the work.  Gravity, unfortunately, is 
nobody's friend and does free work for nobody.  That energy has 
to come from somewhere.  It probably comes from the muscles in 
his arms.  Yes, what Spider-Man puts in is good old muscle power.  
This means it would not be such a pleasurable way to travel.  Even 
with his new improved strength, it would quickly sap his energy.  
By the time he gets to the Green Goblin he should be an exhausted, 
sweaty mess, even with the help of spider muscles. What Spider-Man 
has is a sort of portable trapeze.  Trapeze work takes a lot of 
energy.  Naturally a trapeze is not completely efficient, and you 
must put energy in to avoid losing altitude on each swing.  
Traveling at these speeds under muscle power, even with his magic 
new muscles, should be very taxing.

Incidentally, I didn't think spiders are known for much muscle 
power.  And the swings are fast enough that he could easily 
dislocate a shoulder.  Small arthropods seem to have great 
strength.  Ants can lift several times their own weight.  But that 
is because we are talking about such small masses.  A spider can 
fall from the top of the Empire State Building and survive.  Don't 
try this at home kiddies.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: The Legacy of Tom Corbett (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

I was listening to some old-time radio and they had an episode of 
"Tom Corbett, Space Cadet."  This was a science fiction series 
that ran on the radio just a short time, the first half of 1952.  
It lasted only six months before being taken off, though it lasted 
much longer as a TV show.  This is one of the rare instances where 
a TV program was adapted to the radio instead of vice versa.  
Actually, it was adapted to several media.  There were Tom Corbett 
comic books from Dell, Tom Corbett young adult novels from Grosset 
& Dunlap, and Tom Corbett toys.  What few remember is that the 
whole Tom Corbett universe was a legacy of Robert A. Heinlein.  
The basic concept of the plot and the characters were actually 
based on Robert Heinlein's juvenile SPACE CADET.

As people note of original STAR TREK series, while it is set in 
the future, it really has the feel of the decade it was made.  I 
was noting how really 1950s-ish the Tom Corbett future was.  I am 
not talking about just the fact that it has another hero with an 
Anglo-Saxon name.  I know what you are thinking, what are the 
chances yet another hero is Anglo-Saxon?  Robert Heinlein called 
his character Matt Dodson, but TV renamed him Tom Corbett.  
Neither name sounds particularly ethnic.  You know the network 
would have never created an Izzy Rosenblatt, Space Cadet.  And 
Tawana Mifume, Space Cadet, would have been right out.

In this episode Tom Corbett was on Venus looking for the "the 
Secret Leader of the Revolution."  I found that part very 
interesting.  The first question that comes to mind is how can 
anybody be a SECRET leader of a revolution?  I thought that to 
lead an insurrection you probably had to convince a lot of people 
to revolt.  It is not a hit-and-run sort of thing like bombing.  
Leading revolutions is very different.  You can't just yell 
"Revolt!" and duck for cover.  Generally, leaders of revolution 
may be hard to find, but they are not all that secretive about who 
they are.  Too many people have to know them or there is no 
revolution.  They need a certain degree of fame.  And there is one 
other little thing they need.  They need people willing and 
motivated to fight for the rebellion.  People don't stage a 
revolution just because they have a long weekend and nothing to 
do.  There have to be a lot of people discontented with the 
current order of things to revolt.  That sort of puts the leader 
of the revolution in a different category than, say, a saboteur.  
To say a revolutionary leader is a villain is saying all the 
discontented potential revolutionaries should just stay 
discontented.  The existence of a revolutionary leader seems like 
more a symptom, it is not the disease itself.

A leader of a revolution has to be a popular leader.  In this case 
a secret popular leader which sounds like a contradiction in 
terms.  I suppose he might be like the villains of the old 1940s 
movie serials who wore robes and masks and gave their orders by 
radio until the final chapter when they were unmasked.  Somehow I 
do not think that was what was going on here.

Why did they make the villain a "revolution leader" then?  It was 
because of what was going on was 1950s politics.  This was during 
the Red Scare days when people in America were afraid that the 
Soviets would try exporting their revolution to the US.  So there 
were several types of villains that could be used interchangeably.  
For the villains, these children's TV shows had a limited set of 
types.  You could have saboteurs, mad bombers, people trying to 
control the world, bank robbers, people trying to get their hands 
on some secret super weapon, agents of other governments, and 
leaders of revolutions.

I wonder how much the writers thought about the fact they were 
making one of their villainous types the category of activist that 
included John Adams and Thomas Jefferson.  In the 1950s these were 
still taught in the schools as historic heroes, but they were 
supposedly the last revolutionary leaders who were good 
revolutionary leaders.  It is like the founder of your religion is 
good, founders of later religions are bad.

So they branded revolutionaries as a bad thing in 1952 and five-
year-olds heard how bad it was to be a revolutionary.  Fifteen 
years later these kids were in college during the Vietnam War.  
Suddenly they decided that they did not like the way things were 
going in the country.  So they picked up this negative image and 
suddenly everybody claimed to be a revolutionary.  Abbie Hoffman, 
Angela Davis, Malcolm X, members of the Students for a Democratic 
Society, members of the Black Panther Party, Jerry Rubin all 
claimed to be leaders of a revolution.  It was their form of 
protest.  At that time everybody in school talked about "the 
revolution" and how much better things would be when the 
revolution comes.  I was there and I was not sure how serious they 
were.  I wonder how many of them first heard about opposing the 
government by being "leaders of the revolution" when they heard it 
on 1950s shows like "Tom Corbett, Space Cadet."  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: STAR WARS II: ATTACK OF THE CLONES (film review by 
Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: What must be the most complexly plotted of any film 
series gets a new chapter.  SW-II seems to be the most complex 
STAR WARS film so far.  It busily knits up loose ends preparing 
the way for the last piece to neatly fit in place.  Many things 
are happening at once as Obi-wan goes in one direction uncovering 
conspiracies to control the future and Anakin completes unfinished 
business from his past.  Certainly the film is a mixed bag, but 
there is ample that is rewarding to make this film worth seeing.  
Rating: 7 (0 to 10), +2 (-4 to +4)

Perhaps the biggest fault of the George Lucas's STAR WARS series 
is what once was its greatest virtue.  Every new episode has to 
demonstrate how much the art of graphics has improved.  Some of 
the images that he creates in this film are so complex they could 
never have been accomplished three years ago when the last episode 
was released.  It could well be that he is pushing the art farther 
than it really should go.  In STAR WARS II: ATTACK OF THE CLONES, 
he now has so many elements combined in a single frame that the 
eye has trouble taking them all in.  Some of his images are 
needlessly complex and confusing because he is demonstrating as 
much as he can, not as much as he should.  The intricate hugely 
layered views of Coruscant at night make one long for the simple 
images of one or two dinosaurs one would find in an old Ray 
Harryhausen film.  Nevertheless, for better or worse, the 
technology has far surpassed the Harryhausen level.  George Lucas 
did not invent digital graphics, but his films certainly opened up 
the field.  His STAR WARS series is taking so long to come out 
that now the use of the digital graphics that he pioneered is 
already considered cheap artificial effects that have a bad 
reputation.  Still, every new film he makes in the series breaks 
new ground, and by now it may be more ground than was needed to be 
broken.

That is not the only way Lucas has been experimental by any means.  
He has convinced the world that to do a major series like STAR 
WARS out of chronological order is actually possible.  But he has 
not shown that it is a good idea.  In his Indiana Jones series he 
found he could not keep making Harrison Ford a younger man each 
successive film.  In the STAR WARS series he faces different 
problems.  Everyone--at least every fan--knows how the series is 
going to end and that the second half of the story is less 
spectacular than the first half.  Will Obi-wan die in this fight?  
No, we have already seen that he lives to be an old man.  By 
examining ATTACK OF THE CLONES and A NEW HOPE we already know a 
great deal of what has to happen in the one remaining film.  There 
are far more plot requirements on the next STAR WARS film than on, 
say, the next James Bond film.  All that is required of the next 
Bond film is that it has to be reasonably entertaining.  Lucas has 
set himself more stringent goals and surprisingly he generally is 
able to achieve those goals.

So what is the current story?  It begins with an attempt on the 
life of formerly Princess but now Senator Amidala (again played by 
Natalie Portman).  Obi-wan (Ewan McGregor) and Anakin (now played 
by Hayden Christensen) try to guard her, but a second 
assassination attempt ends in an incredible (but not necessarily 
good) mid-air chase high, high above the BLADERUNNER-inspired 
streets of Coruscant.  A clue left at the scene sends Obi-wan off 
looking for planet that no longer seems to exist to find a very 
real conspiracy that is quite literally hatching.  In his absence 
Anakin goes off to Tatooine to tie up the largest remaining loose 
end in his short screen life.  Along the way several pieces fall 
into place from other stories.  We learn more about how Luke 
Skywalker will come to be on his moisture farm.  We see why the 
schism is forming between Anakin and the Jedi.  There is even some 
explanation of why go from robotic troopers to what might seem 
like lower-tech humans that we see in the 1977 film.  This is a 
film that might not stand well on its own, but it offers plenty to 
followers of the series.
 
While George Lucas, who once again wrote and directed, is a 
visionary filmmaker, he is not necessarily a great director.  He 
does not always seem to know the difference between a good line-
reading and a bad one.  While there are instances of some very 
good acting in the films, they generally are there because he has 
actors like Liam Neeson, Samuel L. Jackson, Alec Guinness, Peter 
Cushing, and Christopher Lee.  These are actors who are well-known 
because they can provide a good performance.  Frequently a lesser 
character delivers a line that gets by with a terrible and flat 
delivery.  The director should have caught it, but has not.  Of 
course, it is not clear that any actor could give lines like "You 
are in my very soul tormenting me" a believable delivery.  But the 
actors who are really professionals manage to compensate for the 
over-tolerant director.  In order for a love relationship like the 
one in this film to work, the viewer must understand what each 
person sees in the other.  The chemistry is just not there between 
Padme and Anakin.  Natalie Portman is attractive, as I suppose is 
Hayden Christensen, but their love scenes come off stilted and 
cold.  There just is no chemistry between them.  On the other 
hand, a little more reserve in the Jar-Jar Binks character in this 
film is more than welcome.  I give Lucas credit that he did not 
simply read the fans' opinions and decide to eliminate Jar-Jar.  
He even has a return of Watto the junk dealer.  The Empire should 
be a democracy, but a film production needs to be a dictatorship.

Visually much more of this film is more dark and murky than 
previous films have been.  This may be to cover loss of resolution 
Lucas expected transferring from a film shot digitally to a film 
print.  Much of the effects of the film, like the circus of images 
in the complex cityscapes, are covered by a curtain of night.  The 
darkness only serves to make the complex images more confusing.  
John Williams musical score has a lot of retread to it, but he has 
written a very nice love theme.

Like many very talented people, George Lucas does not always 
recognize his limitations.  This tends to make films of mixed 
quality.  Still, there is always enough that is excellent to make 
them worth seeing.  There is enough here that I thought was good 
to give the film a 7 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +2 on the -4 to +4 
scale.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: KILN PEOPLE by David Brin (copyright 2002, Tor, 460pp, 
$25.95 HC, ISBN 0-765-30355-8) (a book review by Joe Karpierz)

Okay, raise your hand if you have a list of authors that are 
"automatic hardbacks" - that is, they publish a book, and you go 
out and buy it right away without caring what anybody says about 
it.  I have a list like that, and David Brin is high on that list. 
But he's been slipping.  His installment in the Second Foundation 
Trilogy was tremendous, but his Uplift Trilogy was below his usual 
standards, and The Transparent Society said a lot of interesting 
things, but seemed to be disorganized. 

At Worldcon in Chicago a couple of years ago I went to a panel 
where Brin read from KILN PEOPLE, and quite frankly I was *not* 
impressed.  Brin seemed to be going off in some weird direction 
that was completely different than anything he had ever done 
before, one that I certainly didn't care for. 

Well, after reading KILN PEOPLE I discovered that I was right:  
Brin has gone off in a weird direction that he's never gone 
before.  It turns out that it's quite alright - KILN PEOPLE is 
one of the best books that Brin has ever written. 

It is sometime in the reasonably near future, and scientists have 
been able to quantify and capture the essence of the human soul.  
Not only that, but a method to copy the soul has been developed.  
So, what you do is make a specialized clay version of yourself, 
copy your essence into that clay version, and let that "ditto" go 
run around for a day taking care of your business, whether it be 
mowing the lawn or doing the grocery shopping, or going to 
important meetings with clients.  The menial tasks go to the green 
dittos, the grays do the standard things like work and business 
stuff, black dittos are the super-intelligent genius type dittos, 
etc.  The catch is that dittos last a day.  At the end of the day, 
the ditto comes home and "inloads" its experiences and memories to 
the original. 

And herein lies the greatness of this novel.  The society that 
Brin has set up here is fascinating and thought provoking.  Think 
about it - you never have to go to work again! Just fire up a gray 
in the morning, send him or her to the office.  Fire up a green, 
and let it do the chores for you.  In business for yourself and 
have a ton of clients that you need to meet with?  Fire up a bunch 
of grays and let them do all the work at the same time, while you 
collect the money for your services!   

But wait, there's more.  Brin couldn't resist throwing elements of 
The Transparent Society in this novel (indeed, he even uses the 
term early in the book).  There are cameras all over the place to 
record everybody's doings and whereabouts.  The key is 
accountability, which was a major theme in The Transparent 
Society.  Major crimes are virtually no longer committed, as there 
is a visual record of almost everything. Furthermore, it's not a 
crime to commit act of atrocities on dittos, so violence and crime 
again real people is virtually unheard of. 

But do dittos have rights as real folks do?  Can they vote?  
Should they be protected from harm as real folks are?  After all, 
they have the same soul as their creator, don't they? 

There are lots and lots of fascinating things to think about in 
this novel, but Brin doesn't really explain them all to the 
reader.  He drops a hint or makes a statement, then moves on to 
the next thing.  Bam Bam.  Off to another one. 

But I haven't said anything about the story yet.  I suppose I 
should do that. It's a detective story, or more appropriately, a 
"ditective" story.  There are a lot of terms like that in the 
novel that play on the word ditto, and to be honest it gets a 
little annoying by the end.  Albert Morris is a private 
investigator looking into pirated copies of a famous "actress".  
However, that little job ends up being way more than it appeared 
on the surface.  As a matter of fact, that actress is one small 
piece of a gigantic puzzle involving murder, new ditto technology 
that will allow dittos to last more than one day, long-distance 
imprinting (current dittoing technology dictates that the ditto be 
in very close proximity to the original), and some very weird and 
wild stuff that would give too much away if I spilled the beans 
here.   

This can hardly be called a standard detective story, given the 
society and technology involved, and yet it really is, given just 
what it is that detectives do. 

This is a very good read and an excellent novel, and one that I 
highly recommend.  [-jak]

Addendum:  Yes, once again it's Hugo time, and every year I review 
as many of the Hugo-nominated novels as I can, given time and 
real-life commitments.  As I've said before, the Hugo-nominating 
science fiction community and I have widely differing tastes.  I 
have read none of this year's nominees, although I have to say that 
two of them are already in the house and at least one I had wanted 
to read but hadn't picked up yet.  So up until the voting deadline 
I will be frantically reading and reviewing.  I hope I can say 
something intelligent for all of you.  [-jak] 

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

TOPIC: HOLLYWOOD ENDING (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: This is a flaccid attempt at movie industry satire.  It 
might have made a whimsical three-page story, but the plot is too 
thin to carry a feature film.  It is repetitious and the 
characters have little innate interest value.  Woody Allen, while 
so often painting himself as insecure, is a man whose self-
confidence is starting to exceed his artistic abilities.  Trying 
to dredge humor from the limitations of the blind is a sorry task, 
unworthy of Allen's talents.  Rating: 4 (0 to 10), 0 (-4 to +4)

Woody Allen can make some very funny comments in two or three 
sentences.  He might suggest a stage actress was so bad that the 
underworld backers of a play put a hit on her.  When he starts 
thinking that he can take these quips and adapt them into full-
length films, he gets himself into trouble.  That is what his 
comedies these days seem to be doing, taking simple ideas and 
making films from them.  He also has claimed that he can always 
sit down and write really funny material.  Allen is overestimating 
his abilities.  The longer the public is exposed to any breed of 
humor the less funny it seems.  The old double-whammy is getting 
him.  First his mind is not as young and supple as it once was so 
his writing is not be quite as funny as it once was.  Secondly the 
public is used to his style so there is less anarchy and less of 
the unexpected in his humor.  While at in the 1970s his style was 
uproariously funny, these days he is aiming at merely the 
whimsical and for much of his audience he is missing even that 
target.  A film like BANANAS is a sharp staccato of use-'em-and-
leave-'em jokes; HOLLYWOOD ENDING is more just one single joke 
endlessly elaborated and amplified until it has over-stayed its 
welcome.

One can hear Woody's voice saying, "A BLIND MAN could direct this 
film."  It is the kind of anecdote he might have told in one of 
his books like WITHOUT FEATHERS.  Here he tells the story, filling 
it out with dialog and some character development but advancing 
the story only slowly.  Some jokes are bad misfires.  In one scene 
Allen has an extended argument with his ex-wife in a restaurant.  
He is trying to discuss the film he is making and he keeps 
returning to his complaints with his ex-wife until he is dragging 
in people at other tables.  He plays boorish and rude in public as 
if his being a bad boy is by itself funny.  Conceivably this could 
be a humorous situation if properly written, but it simply becomes 
embarrassing and irritating.  Allen seems to have lost the ability 
to ask himself, "Is this really funny?".

Tea Leoni plays Ellie, the ex-wife of director Val Waxman (Allen).  
She knows Val needs work and arranges to have him chosen to direct 
a crime film.  The executives at Galaxie Films, including Ellie's 
new fiance Hal (Treat Williams), are leery of the neurotic and 
unreliable Val, but the film is expected to be undemanding to 
direct and Val gets the job.  Then just before shooting starts Val 
develops hysterical blindness.  Knowing that Val is washed up if 
he quits the film, his agent convinces him to bluff his way 
through directing the film.  This brings Val in close contact with 
Ellie.  She has some affection for him and must choose between him 
and a new love, the slightly oily film executive Hal.  It is never 
clear what she would see in either.  Allen gives us little reason 
to invest interest in any of these characters, with the possible 
exception of Ellie.

Ironically the film is at its most interesting before it gets to 
its premise.  Allen shows us some of the conflicts that a director 
has to resolve in setting up a production shoot and that filler is 
more interesting than the mainstream of the story.  Once he loses 
his sight, we get a tedious repetition of scenes of him memorizing 
the layouts of rooms, bumping into objects, and staring off into 
space as he bluffs his way through his job.  Woody's character is 
basically the same he has played since the beginning of his film 
career (except that at some time around ANNIE HALL it went from 
unsuccessful with women to highly successful).  Where the film 
needed a strong satirical edge, instead you get a vague feeling of 
sympathy for directors' job.  This film is not in the same class 
as THE PLAYER or THE BIG PICTURE.

Allen should have realized that from the start the story had three 
serious problems.  First, there is no way to resolve the film.  If 
Val makes an unsuccessful film, the story says blind people do not 
make good film directors.  Big surprise for a visual medium.  But 
if he is successful, this film is a weak shadow of THE PRODUCERS.  
Second, Allen cannot properly create and develop characters who 
are so self-absorbed they cannot tell that Val is blind.  Third, 
his character is bumping into things, not from being humorously 
clumsy, but because he is blind.  He is asking the audience to 
laugh at the handicapped.

Allen plays a film director who was good at one point and seems to 
have lost the recipe.  I wonder if he realizes how close he is 
hitting to home.  I rate HOLLYWOOD ENDING a 4 on the 0 to 10 scale 
and a 0 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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


                                          Mark Leeper
                                          mleeper@optonline.net


           The fanatic who kills in God's name makes his God 
           a murderer.
                                          -- Elie Wiesel

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