THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
08/16/02 -- Vol. 21, No. 7

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:
	Trip Logs
	A Brighter Black Bird (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	Of Books and Birds (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	THE KID STAYS IN THE PICTURE (film review by 
		Mark R. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: Trip Logs

The trip logs for our recent trip to the north central United 
States are available at:

http://www.geocities.com/markleeper/n_cent_usa.htm
http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper/dakota.htm

("A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.")

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

TOPIC: A Brighter Black Bird (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

What must have been one of the great double-takes in science 
happened last week to some scientists in a lab at Oxford.  They 
were doing some experiments in animal intelligence and recognition 
of tools.

Ravens are known to be really intelligent birds and crows are 
considered their slightly less intelligent cousins.  Both use 
tools to a limited degree.  The paragon of intelligent animals is 
thought to be the chimpanzee who really does find objects to use 
as tools.  But do crows really understand the concept of tools?  
Answering that was the object of the experiment.  Two crows were 
being tested, Abel and Betty.  There was food placed in a small 
basket inside a vertical tube.  The food was too far down for the 
crows to get it with beaks alone and without tools.  The 
scientists put some wires at the base of the tube.  One was 
twisted into a "J" and could be used as a hook to bring up the 
basket.  Would the crows recognize the straight wire was useless, 
but the J could be used as a hook to bring up the basket?  Would 
the crows recognize the hook as having a characteristic they could 
exploit?

It seems the experiment ran into a small snag.  Abel flew off with 
the hook.  Betty, who was left behind, wanted the food but had no 
way to get it.  She went for the useless wire, the one that did 
not have the hook.  With her beak she bent the wire into a hook, 
used it to lift the basket out of the tube, and devoured the food.  
Uh, well, yeah, that's another solution to the problem.

The scientists were intrigued and repeated the experiment over and 
over leaving Betty with straight wires and food she could not 
reach.  Betty made her own hooks when she wanted to get at the 
food.  In ten tries Betty made nine hooks.  It was no fluke.

So what was learned?  Chimpanzees are smart enough to understand 
and use tools.  And ravens are pretty smart.  But now it may be 
that their more intelligent cousins are crows who actually 
understand tools and FORGE THEM THEMSELVES.  Tool forging is not 
all there is to animal intelligence, it is only one measure.  It 
does not prove that crows are the smartest animals by any measure, 
but it proves they are by at least one.

Actually it had been known for a while that crows cut and rip 
shapes out of leaves to make them more effective as tools.  Crows 
use leaves to extract insects from places their beaks will not go.  
There is a fine line of distinction between taking a leaf and 
turning it into a more effective tool and turning a wire into a 
tool.  Tearing parts off the leaf to make it effective is very 
near tool-forging.  I have to admit that even as I write this, I 
am not clear why one is counted as tool-making and the other only 
as tool improving.  Perhaps Betty can explain it.

But it seems our observations of chimp intelligence may have been 
tainted with prejudice.  Our reasoning was that we humans are the 
most intelligent animals, the second most intelligent animal will 
be the one that is most like us.  Still there are rumors of 
surprising avian intelligence.  Even avian politeness.  I am told 
that if you are handing out fish to penguins they queue up.  No 
pushing or cutting in line.  And if you give a penguin too small a 
piece how does he show it?  He quietly walks to the end of the 
line and waits for a second turn.  This sort of etiquette seems to 
come more naturally to penguins than it does to humans.  I am not 
sure that is really considered to be an intelligent feat.  But now 
a crow has performed something that has been a standard of 
intelligence.  In fact, what was one of the old distinctions of 
human superiority to other animals has fallen by the wayside.  
Yes, humans are tool-making animals, and now we know so are crows.  
Chimps still have not joined this select fraternity.

Crows are also smart enough to use human machines, though not 
always in ways they were intended.  Another article I read talks 
about how crows line up with humans at traffic crossings waiting 
for the light to change.  But they are not trying to cross the 
road.  When the light changes they walk into the road to drop 
walnuts.  Then they go back and wait for cars to drive over the 
walnuts.  When the traffic clears again they pick up the edible 
pieces.  If the nuts were not hit, they will often reposition the 
nuts to where they think they will have a better chance of being 
hit by the car.  Another technique that has been observed is for a 
crow to sit on electrical wires over the road and drop nuts right 
into the path of the wheel of a moving car.  They know where the 
tires are and this one should work the first time.

Back in December it was discovered crows share another interesting 
characteristic with intelligent primates and few other animals.  
They tend to develop one side more than the other.  Humans, 
chimps, and gorillas tend to use one side more then the other.  In 
humans we call this right-handedness or left-handedness.  Some 
animals like crabs will favor one side due to a natural asymmetry.  
But the animals who tend to more develop one side, having one side 
that specializes in strength and dexterity, is usually seen in 
animals closer to humans.  But over the last year it was 
discovered that most crows are right-beaked.  When they use tools 
they tend to use the right side of their beaks.  This is one more 
characteristic that we share with these birds.

Henry Ward Beecher said "If men had wings and bore black feathers 
few of them would be clever enough to be crows."  In fact it seems 
that crows are better adapted to live in a human world than we 
would be to live in theirs.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Of Books and Birds (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

I was talking about bird intelligence and, you know, there is 
someone who has associated intelligence with birds all along.  
That is book publishers.  They so frequently seem to choose bird 
names for their the names of their publishing houses.  There's 
Penguin Books, Bluejay Books, Puffin Books, Roc Books, and Bantam 
Books.  The one that tickles me was the publisher that resulted 
when Penguin Books bought Viking Press and for a while they were 
calling the resulting publisher "Viking Penguin."  I think they 
should have used the name for a cartoon series.

And speaking of publishers with weird names, isn't it about time 
Random House put their house in order?  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: THE KID STAYS IN THE PICTURE (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: The autobiography of Robert Evans gives insights into his 
own life and the Hollywood studio film industry in general.  In 
his tenure as the production head of Paramount Robert J. Evans 
undeniably has made no small number of the right decisions about 
the film business and no smaller number of wrong decisions about 
his personal life.  Gossip-magazine-level material but still this 
a compelling biographical documentary.  Rating:  6 (0 to 10), high 
+1 (-4 to +4)

I didn't read Robert Evans's book THE KID STAYS IN THE PICTURE.  
Instead, I listened to the audio book on a long drive.  I am sure 
there was a lot that was cut out from the book to put the material 
in the audio book format.  There always is.  Do I think that I 
missed a lot of the story?  No.  The audio book was "read" by the 
author.  Actually he didn't so much read the material, he 
performed it.  This is material that should be performed and not 
just delivered in printed format.  The film THE KID STAYS IN THE 
PICTURE itself is more like the audio book than it is the printed 
book.  The film is just an abridged version of the audio book with 
the same ironic laconic delivery and some visual illustrations.  
The visuals use all sorts of clever ways to illustrate Evans's 
memories, but they are not Evans himself the way the monologue is.  
They are someone else's illustrations.  What is important is what 
Evans is saying and how he says it.  How he says it is how he 
feels about it.

Like MY DINNER WITH ANDRE or the Spaulding Grey monologues, the 
visual aspect adds less to the film.  It is nice to see what some 
of the people looked like in the still pictures turned as three-
dimensional as the filmmakers could manage.  We even get to see a 
little of the Evans mansion, the building which means so much to 
the man.  But it was the audio book where I think he poured his 
heart out, probably even more so than the book, and the film is 
just a quick and considerably shorter version of that audio book.

So who is this Robert J. Evans?  If you didn't know, don't worry.  
All is explained in the film.  He started with cinema as the 
wholesome-looking young actor who played legendary producer Irving 
Thalberg in THE MAN OF A THOUSAND FACES, the (highly Hollywood-
ized) screen biography of Lon Chaney.  The film ended but the 
Thalberg role has gone on for Evans for a lifetime.  Evans decided 
that what he wanted to be was Thalberg.  He wanted to use his 
artistic taste to build films that he thought the public would 
like.  And for the first half of his career he did just that 
surprisingly successfully.

As his entrance to the production world he acquired the rights for 
the novel THE DETECTIVE.  He parlayed that into a career in film 
production.  He produced the weepy potboiler LOVE STORY and then 
married its star.  Other films he put together include ROSEMARY'S 
BABY, BAREFOOT IN THE PARK, THE ODD COUPLE, CHINATOWN (as an 
independent producer), MARATHON MAN, and BLACK SUNDAY.  And the 
list goes on.  He battled his company executives to get to make 
THE GODFATHER, then battled Francis Coppola to make the film more 
of an epic.  Evans seemed to know what kind of films the public 
wanted to see, even before the public knew.  Under his control 
Paramount went from being the eighth most successful studio to the 
number one spot.  Then Evans started making mistakes.

The story of his career and his life from the 1950s to the 1980s 
is told with surprising candor in the film.  Though cut down and 
toned down from the source material the film is still very 
revealing.  There is probably nobody in Hollywood as positive or 
as negative on Robert Evans as Robert Evans is himself.

The directors of this film, Brett Morgen and Nanette Burstein, 
have found tricks to taking still photographs and making them 
visually interesting to go with the dialog.  But they remain just 
tricks.  Frequently they even seem pretentious and it is good the 
monologue distracts from them.  Curiously the script is credited 
to Brett Morgen, though it seems like Evans is telling his own 
story in his own (frequently course) words.  Perhaps Morgen just 
determined what stories would go in the film version.

Evans has a slightly irritating delivery but the authenticity of 
having him do the talking more than makes up for it.  I rate THE 
KID STAYS IN THE PICTURE a 6 on the 0 to 10 scale and a high +1 on 
the -4 to +4 scale.  Stay for the closing credits.  [-mrl]

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

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          mleeper@optonline.net


            A man always blames the woman who fooled him.  
            In the same way he blames the door he walks into 
            in the dark.
                                          -- H. L. Mencken

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