THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
09/17/04 -- Vol. 23, No. 12

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
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Topics:
	In Defense of Visual Imagery and Special Effects (comments 
		by Mark R. Leeper)
	This Week's Reading (10 TALES TALL & TRUE; UNLIKELY 
		STORIES, MOSTLY; POOR THINGS; THE VOICE OF THE 
		CORPSE; MYSTERY MIDRASH; IBID: A LIFE / a novel in 
		footnotes; THIS JUST IN: WHAT I COULDN'T TELL YOU 
		ON TV, and THE MAN WHO BECAME SHERLOCK HOLMES) 
		(book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: The Cat Woman Mystique (comments by Mark R. Leeper) 

I didn't see the film CATWOMAN, but at the same time it was on I 
was listening to an old time radio show about another mysterious 
fictional cat woman.  I guess the exotic mysterious feline 
personality seems to be easily melded to the feminine.  I remember 
a Sherlock Holmes movie in which he reasoned that a crime was 
committed by a woman because the reasoning was feline and not 
canine.  The one in the radio play was always surrounded by cats.
It takes something from her mystique to think how she must 
continually be opening tins of smelly meat and emptying even 
smellier litter boxes.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: In Defense of Visual Imagery and Special Effects (comments 
by Mark R. Leeper)

This weekend we will have the release of SKY CAPTAIN AND THE WORLD 
OF THE FUTURE.  From what I have seen of this film it is mostly 
visual images with an intentionally pulpish plot.  Films like this 
and SPIDERMAN 2 now seamlessly mix animation and live action so 
that what you are seeing is more a cartoon than live action.  Just 
about anything an artist could draw on paper could be put on the 
screen these days.  And it is true that films with really good 
scripts are not as common as films with great special effects.  I 
was in a discussion recently about the value of visual effects.
It was just after the release of THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW.  The 
person I was having the discussion with pointedly asked me what 
was the value of a film with spectacular visual effects that did 
not have interesting characterizations.

Now he had a good point as far as it went.  Human drama is 
important, but it is not the only virtue a film may have.  The 
truth is that we are getting a lot of films whose whole reason to 
be is to show off special effects.  That is not too surprising.
Filmmakers and financiers can much more easily mandate good 
special effects than they can a good script.  There are fewer 
people out there who can write a good script time after time.
Unlike the education system in England, our school system does not 
really teach the writing of drama in schools.  And that makes a 
big difference.  Most people in this country get through school 
without ever having written in the dramatic form.  At least at one 
time it was taught in the British schools.  I do not know if they 
teach the writing of drama currently, but we rarely or never did.
England seems to be acutely aware that it is the country of 
Shakespeare.  Meanwhile we get a lot of films that are poorly 
written and seem to be just canvasses for special effects.  I, 
ROBOT is for me a good example.  It is not a good thing to not 
have the writing needed for the story, I admit.  But my 
correspondent went what was in my opinion too far in the other 
direction.  He asked me who cares about a film like THE DAY AFTER 
TOMORROW given that we're not seeing anything that realistically 
resembles [human drama] but a bunch of spectacular visual 
effects?"  Who cares?  Well, I have to say I care.  Just like I 
learn from seeing artist depictions of what happens when a black 
hole rips a star apart or a comet impacts the Earth.  It makes the 
science more meaningful.

Science fiction is not the only genre that has benefited from the 
visual revolution.  I saw THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS not for deep 
insights into the human condition but to get a mental image of the 
French and Indian Wars.  It made that history more meaningful for 
me even if the story could have been better.  (And, as Samuel 
Clemens pointed out, James Fenimore Cooper was not such a great 
writer to begin with.)

Consider that a hundred years ago people read in books about 
Ancient Egypt or Ancient Rome or Troy, but they did not have a 
good mental picture of what it was like.  They could not picture 
the world of the ancients.  Today they have a much better mental 
vision of what it was like.  That isn't because the education 
system got a lot better.  It didn't.  But films have become great 
educators.  Today I have a better mental picture of what really 
extreme weather conditions are possible and might look like 
because I saw THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW.  It may not be 100% accurate 
in every scene, but I am thinking in the right direction.  For 
that matter astronomical pictures like the previously mentioned 
black-hole-destroying star may not be entirely accurate either.
They are just suggestions that other scientists frequently correct.
And filmmakers are concerned with getting the effects accurate.
Cecil B. DeMille said, "The value of special effects depends 
entirely on the impression they give of reality." 

And *similarly* I ahve read about the errors in THE DAY AFTER 
TOMORROW and know what they *should* look like rather than what 
they did look like.  Even the inaccuracies were productive.  There 
is a lot more I look for in a film than special effects, but 
special effects have their place as well as good acting, 
particularly when they have an informational and educational 
value.  Now one might argue that SKY CAPTAIN is not all that 
anxious to teach real science, but just as the existence of 
Stradivarius violins allows an artist more latitude to be 
expressive, so good techniques for creating special effects also 
help artists to express themselves.

By the way, if you want to get a better idea of the physics, where 
films get it right and wrong, see the movie physics site:

.

They get have a fairly good and amusing style analyzing the 
physics in popular films.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

This week will be a bunch of quick takes.

Alasdair Gray recently achieved fame (or notoriety, depending on 
your point of view) with his introduction to the Canongate edition 
of the Bible's "Book of Jonah", which many denounced as 
blasphemous.  However, his other works tend to be a bit less 
controversial--and unusual, in that he also does illustrations and 
interesting layout designs for his book.  I enjoyed 10 TALES TALL 
& TRUE (ISBN 0-156-00196-9), and also UNLIKELY STORIES, MOSTLY 
(ISBN 0-862-41737-6), but found his novel POOR THINGS (ISBN 
1-564-78307-3) (about a female creation a la Frankenstein) not 
enough to hold my interest.  It may be that Gray is an author who 
works best in short fiction.

Max Murray's THE VOICE OF THE CORPSE (ISBN 0-486-24905-0) is yet 
another Dover mystery from the first part of the last century, and 
is full of blackmail and hidden secrets, perhaps to excess.  I 
suppose it is possible that everyone has such things to hide, but 
that one person could ferret them all out strains credulity a bit.

Lawrence W. Raphael's MYSTERY MIDRASH (ISBN 1-58023-055-5) is a 
collection of Jewish mystery stories.  It is not just that the 
characters happen to be Jewish, but also that there is some aspect 
of Jewish law, or some story from the Jewish written or oral 
tradition that ties in, or some other more substantive connection.  
I enjoyed them, but as with the "cat mystery" of a few weeks ago, 
these seem aimed at a fairly specialized audience.  And the not 
everything was fact-checked.  For example, one author makes a 
reference to "Lee's strategy at Vicksburg."  Lee was not at 
Vicksburg; he was a thousand miles away at Gettysburg at that 
time. Another author claims there are three laws one may not 
violate even to save one's own life, and that Sabbath observance 
is one of them.  Actually, it's not.

Mark Dunn's IBID: A LIFE / a novel in footnotes (ISBN 1-931561-65-
6) is just what it says.  The introductory material explains how 
the actual book was accidentally destroyed, and only the footnotes 
are left.  (There was, of course, no such book.)  The book was/is 
about a three-legged man and his life.  The problem is that the 
gimmick wears thin quickly, and the view of his life is as one 
seen through a strobe, with brief unconnected vignettes that were 
footnoted.  Dunn's earlier book ELLA MINNOW PEA, in which 
gradually each letter of the alphabet is discontinued, transcended 
its gimmick by having a fairly straightforward story to carry it.  
But in IBID: A LIFE the anecdotes are too bizarre and the story 
too fragmented to keep my attention.

The most fascinating part of Bob Schieffer's THIS JUST IN: WHAT I 
COULDN'T TELL YOU ON TV (ISBN 0-399-14971-6) are his stories of 
how the Nixon White House brought pressure on the news media 
(especially television) to present a more favorable view.  His 
comments on the evolution of party conventions is also 
particularly timely, but a lot is autobiographical information 
that is not of general interest.

Terry Manners's THE MAN WHO BECAME SHERLOCK HOLMES (ISBN 0-7535-
0536-3) is about Jeremy Brett and his life and career, and is 
probably more thorough about his earlier career than his stint as 
Holmes.  In part this is because his illness (manic depression) 
became most pronounced during his times as Holmes, and so Manners 
concentrated more on the illness than on Brett's portrayal of 
Holmes.  It all seemed a bit sensationalist at times, but I suppose 
if one is attempting to explain a lot that people may have 
misinterpreted, that is necessary.  (For example, towards the end, 
Brett was too heavy to be an accurate Holmes, but this weight gain 
was a side effect of medication and not something he could 
control.)  [-ecl]

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

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          mleeper@optonline.net


           Pessimism is only the name that men of 
           weak nerve give to wisdom.
                                          --Mark Twain




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