THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
09/03/10 -- Vol. 29, No. 10, Whole Number 1613


 C3PO: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
 R2D2: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
All material is copyrighted by author unless otherwise noted.
All comments sent will be assumed authorized for inclusion
unless otherwise noted.

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Topics:        
        Science Fiction (and Other) Discussion Groups (NJ)
        Semper Floss (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
        My Picks for Turner Classic Movies for September (comments
                by Mark R. Leeper)
        YOO-HOO, MRS. GOLDBERG: The DVD (DVD review
                by Mark R. Leeper)
        MY DOG TULIP (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
        Fort Collins (letters of comment by Kip Williams
                and Keith Lynch)
        This Week's Reading (TWILIGHT AT THE WORLD OF TOMORROW)
                (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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


TOPIC: Science Fiction (and Other) Discussion Groups (NJ)

September 9 (Thu): [no meeting], Middletown (NJ) Public Library
September 23 (Thu): THE DISPOSSESSED by Ursula K. LeGuin,
        Old Bridge (NJ) Public Library, 7PM
October 14 (Thu): INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS by Jack Finney,
        Middletown (NJ) Public Library, 1956 film at 5:30PM,
        discussion of film and book         after film
October 21 (Thu): EVER SINCE DARWIN by Stephen Jay Gould,
        Old Bridge (NJ) Public Library, 7PM

[The Middletown Public Library is doing their annual counts of
their discussion groups in September and October, so if you want
to see this group continue, please try to attend the October
meeting.  -ecl]

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


TOPIC: Semper Floss (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

I found out that in college my dentist was a member of the dental
fraternity Iota Kappa Tooth.  [-mrl]

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


TOPIC: My Picks for Turner Classic Movies for September (comments
by Mark R. Leeper)

I guess it is time for my monthly summary of my picks for what to
look for on Turner Classic Movies.  In September TCM does not seem
to have much that is particularly rare and unusual.  Most of the
films have played before on TCM.  All times below are EST.)

A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH (aka STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN, 1946)

This is an unusual fantasy written by Michael Powell and Emeric
Pressburger, the team who called themselves "the Archers."  They
made a whole string of highly respected films and then blew it all
making the psychological horror film PEEPING TOM (1960).  David
Niven plays RAF pilot Peter Carter who suffers a fatal drop from
his wrecked airplane, yet somehow is unharmed.  He meets and falls
in love with June (Kim Hunter who would later be Dr. Zira in PLANET
OF THE APES).  Suddenly an angelic envoy from Heaven tells him that
he was supposed to have been killed in the fall and must now die.
He objects that it would have been OK to take him at the time of
the fall, but since he has fallen in love, it is no longer fair to
take him.  This becomes in a lawsuit in a huge celestial court.
Very nicely presented.  Somehow this ends up in a conflict of
Americans vs. Britons.  You won't see a stranger film that whole
week.  It has a good mostly-British cast of the time including
Richard Attenborough, Robert Coote, and (Canadian) Raymond Massey.
(Tuesday, September 7, 2:45 pm - 4:30 pm)

WAIT UNTIL DARK (1967) and DIAL M FOR MURDER (1954)

True story: I saw WAIT UNTIL DARK a couple of years ago after not
having seen it since it came out in 1967.  I had not remembered,
but it is an extremely well written and intricate plot.  I thought
to myself really if I were to compare it to any other murder plot I
would choose what I consider the best-written murder play and film
DIAL M FOR MURDER by Frederick Knott.  Only then did I go to look
up who wrote WAIT UNTIL DARK.  The same Frederick Knott wrote it as
a stage play.  Until then I never associated the two films.  DIAL M
FOR MURDER, which was filmed in 1954--in 3D incidentally--by Alfred
Hitchcock remains the best and most intricately plotted murder
stage play I know of, but WAIT UNTIL DARK is up there also.  TCM is
showing the two back to back.  Alan Arkin, who is known almost
exclusively for comic roles, plays a psychotic killer.  He uses
this sort of singsong voice like he is talking to a second-grader.
Director Terence Young was not happy with it.  Arkin convinced him
to go with it.  As soon as Arkin took out his knife and started
being menacing using the same patronizing voice Young realized this
guy really makes your flesh crawl.  These are two very good films.
WAIT UNTIL DARK is a little more horrific; DIAL M FOR MURDER is
more a cold exercise in logic.  Both are very good.  (WUD: Sunday
September 19, 8:00 pm - 10:00 pm; DMfM: September 19, 10:00 pm -
11:45 pm)

TOUCH OF EVIL (1958)

If you have not seen this movie, you should.  This is arguably the
most engrossing film that Orson Welles directed.  He also wrote it
and plays a major character.  Really it is an example of a B-movie
that far out-shown most A-movies of the time and is still hypnotic.
The story is gritty and powerful.  Charlton Heston plays Vargas, a
Mexican narcotics chief whose case brings him across the border
into the United States.  There his new wife (Janet Leigh) is
terrorized by Mexican delinquents from the crime family Vargas is
investigating and Vargas has to face down a corrupt American
policeman who plants evidence to get his convictions.  This film is
very atmospheric with really memorable performances.  This is a
superb exercise in tone.  (Thursday September 9, 12:00 am - 2:00
am)

THE MOUSE THAT ROARED (1959)

What did Jack Arnold do AFTER he made his famous string of science
fiction films like CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON?  One thing he
did was make this British satire on international relations.  Grand
Fenwick is a tiny Duchy in Europe that is going bankrupt due to
competition from California wine makers.  They notice that US is
rehabilitating and giving aid to formerly defeated enemies like
Japan and Germany.  Can Grand Fenwick also become a defeated enemy?
They declare war on the United States, a declaration that is
ignored as a joke by the US.  So they send a local--something of a
bungler--to invade the United States and be quickly defeated.
Unfortunately he bungles this task and accidentally wins the war.
Peter Sellers plays three roles.  This is based on Leonard
Wibberley's cold war satire.  The film has not aged well, but it is
amusing.  (Saturday September 25, 9:00 am - 10:30 am)

SOYLENT GREEN (1973)

One science fiction film that has aged surprisingly well,
unfortunately, is SOYLENT GREEN.  It is kind of a dull murder
mystery, but set in a futuristic Earth when overpopulation and
global warming have ruined the environment and food is as we know
it is only for the very rich.  What people are eating is Soylent
Green.  The film is loosely based on a novel by popular science
fiction writer Harry Harrison.  There is nothing like Soylent Green
in the original novel, but the future in the film is still a lot
more believable today than it was in 1973.  (Saturday September 18,
4:00 pm - 5:45 pm)

What is my pick for the month?  If you have not seen TOUCH OF EVIL,
that is the best one to see.  If you have seen it, I would say WAIT
UNTIL DARK and DIAL M FOR MURDER can be viewed over and over.
[-mrl]

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


TOPIC: YOO-HOO, MRS. GOLDBERG: The DVD (DVD review by Mark
R. Leeper)

Gertrude Berg was once one of the five most famous women in the
United States.  Her heyday was a little before my time, though not
by much.  I certainly remember seeing her on her television program
"Mrs. G. Goes to College (a.k.a. "The Gertrude Berg Show") in 1961
and 1962, and I seem to remember that my parents knew all about
her.  At the time I never appreciated who she was and how
influential she really had been in the years before my birth.  Berg
was a star of radio, TV, and the Broadway stage.  But her longest
running contributions and what made her name a household word were
the various radio and television programs that chronicled the
fictional New York Jewish family the Goldbergs.  Berg played the
irrepressible Molly Goldberg with no little part of herself in the
character.  In her time Gertrude Berg was considered the second
most beloved woman in America, just after Eleanor Roosevelt.

Berg had essentially invented the situation comedy or perhaps more
accurately what is now called a "warmedy".  The saga of the
Goldbergs began November 20, 1929, with a fifteen-minute episode of
the radio series "The Rise of the Goldbergs."  And with various
incarnations in different media that saga continued to the 1950s.
Berg, who always wrote the show as well as starred in it, was
writing about issues of intolerance, of settling refugees, raising
a family in the Depression, and of the difficulty of lower middle
class life in general.  It has been mostly forgotten how popular
this program really was.  The show was Jewish, but many ethnic
groups, particularly recent immigrants, could see their own
conditions and problems reflected in those of the characters.

Last year I was pleased to see and review Aviva Kempner's
documentary YOO-HOO, MRS. GOLDBERG.  Kempner wrote, produced and
directed the documentary chronicling the life and career of
Gertrude Berg.  The review is at http://leepers.us/goldberg.htm.

YOO-HOO, MRS. GOLDBERG has now come to DVD, released August 24,
2010.  The DVD has the 92-minute film, of course, and it has with
it a set of additional special features.

Kempner does a running commentary of the film.  She follows along
with the film broadening and expanding on the material with
historic detail about Berg, the other actors, the writing of the
show, the conflicts with the black list, etc.  A trailer for the
film follows the film and commentary.

The second disk has interview segments of people involved with the
TV series and their families and fans.  These pieces, generally
about 1-5 minutes in length, probably total to more than the length
of the film.  These segments are not really a whole lot different
from the interview segments used in the film.  Some of the actors
of the series are still alive and appear before the cameras.  These
constitute a collection of somewhat scattershot details, but they
give a fuller picture.  There is, however, some overlap among the
film, the commentary, and the interviews.  Expect to hear some
stories two or even three times.

My first viewing of YOO-HOO left me somewhat anxious to see
episodes of the original program.  The film had several short
excerpts from the TV series, but, of course, it could not have
entire episodes.  The DVD comes with three thirty-minute TV
episodes, and a thirty-minute radio segment.  For those who wish to
see or hear more of the episodes, I have created a link to
archive.org's collection of show material for those who have
download facilities.  Go to http://tinyurl.com/The-Goldbergs and
follow the links from there.  There is also a link to the recording
of an interview of Aviva Kemper for New York's WBAI radio station.

Included on the DVD also are recordings of three very different
appearances Gertrude Berg from other television programs.  There is
also some material about Aviva Kemper herself.  In all it makes a
very nice supplement to a very engrossing documentary.  The DVD is
being released by Docurama Films.  [-mrl]

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


TOPIC: MY DOG TULIP (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: This film may sound at first like MARLEY & ME set in
England.  However, it probably is not a film you will want to take
your children to.  Like that film, this film is about a man's
relationship with a difficult dog.  Much of the relationship is
about the dog's excretion of wastes and of the anatomy from which
they come.  To give you and idea, the film has a song and the title
tells a lot: "You Smell My Ass, I Smell Yours".  The story is often
engaging, but do not expect the charm of most dog stories.  Rating:
0 (-4 to +4) or 4/10

I have always been fond of dogs and of stories about dogs.  So when
I was offered a chance to review prior to its release MY DOG TULIP,
an animated film about a man's relationship with his dog, I was
quite anxious to do so.  I knew that the story was about a man who
late in life adopted and abused dog and how he had some problems
getting the dog to behave.  The plot seemed similar to that of John
Grogan's book MARLEY & ME and the film of the same title adapted
from that book.  Both Marley and Tulip were neurotic dogs who have
a hard time adapting to their families.  In both cases the humans
and the canine have to compromise to get along.  I thought the
films would have similar appeal, and MY DOG TULIP would be a good
family film.  The fact that MY DOG TULIP is an animated film makes
it more likely to be family fare.  That is not true.

MY DOG TULIP is based on a novel by J.R. Ackerley, who also happens
to be the main character.  Well, let me be clear about this.  If
there is appeal in MY DOG TULIP it is something the viewer must
find for him/herself.  Tulip is an irritating loud-barking Alsatian
and her master is ignorant of how to raise a dog and to not inflict
the dog's bad habits on other people.  Most of Ackerley's
reminiscences of his dog seem to be related to defecation,
urination, and other bodily functions.  Tulip is a hard dog to like
and Ackerley is a hard human to like.  Admittedly when Ackerley
adopted Tulip she was eighteen months old and had been abused for
much of those eighteen months.  She was left alone all day in a
too-small fenced-in area.  If the dog did anything to alleviate the
boredom she was usually punished.  As I said, this is probably not
a film for the whole family.  As a result, Tulip is insecure and
feels she has to be over-protective of her new master.  That
master, Ackerley (voiced by Christopher Plummer, mostly in
narration), allows the dog to befoul sidewalks--at least once in
front of a grocery--and does not properly clean up.  Perhaps I was
wrong to expect appeal from the film, but I still think there
should have been some charm.

Much of the film is about Ackerley's attempts to breed Tulip.  But
after all the effort he of necessity is ready to kill the puppies.
Surely this plan could have been better considered.  That would not
be bad if balanced with stories of things that the dog did that
were endearing or cute, but there is little that is endearing or
cute that Ackerley ever sees in Tulip.  It perhaps says something
of Ackerley's state of mind that he has no anecdotes that explain
his love for the dog.  We just infer that he is getting old and
would be lonely without the troublesome Tulip.  Ackerley is just
too self-absorbed to make a good owner for Tulip.

The film is directed and the screenplay written by Czech-born Paul
and Sandra Fierlinger.  The animation and artwork are very nicely
done shifting among four art styles.  There are realistic scenes to
show Ackerley in the present writing his story; flatter simpler
drawings represent his memories; black and white line art is used
to show his more distant memories; and his more imaginative
thoughts are look like scribbles on a yell notepad.  The jazz score
is initially a bit oppressive, but calms down later.  At its most
interesting the film is illuminated by some philosophizing about
what a dog sees and thinks.

It is rare that one sees a film that takes so realistic a look at
dog ownership, but this film is strong stuff and will be selective
in its appeal.  I would rate MY DOG TULIP a 0 on the -4 to +4 scale
or 4/10.

Film Credits: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0843358/

What others are saying:
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/my-dog-tulip/

[-mrl]

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


TOPIC: Fort Collins (letters of comment by Kip Williams and Keith
Lynch)

In response to Joe Karpierz's review of THE STONEHENGE GATE in the
08/27/10 issue of the MT VOID, Kip Williams writes:

My metaphorical ears perked up when you mentioned Fort Collins, my
true home town. To tie it in with science fiction, I was working in
a comic shop there when L. Neil Smith came by. I think I might have
already read THE PROBABILITY BROACH and enjoyed it (I was trending
towards libertarian in those days), and we got to talking about
maybe collaborating on a libertarian SF comic. But he never came
back.

One reason I read his first book (and, I think, the second as well)
is that it started out in Fort Collins, though it soon switched
over to an alternate-world version of it that I found less
interesting. I couldn't see my house from there.  [-kw]

Keith Lynch responds, "Of course not.  Since the branch point was
in the 1780s, your house certainly wouldn't exist in the other
timeline unless it was built before then, which, in Colorado, isn't
very likely."  [-kfl]

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


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

TWILIGHT AT THE WORLD OF TOMORROW: GENIUS, MADNESS, MURDER, AND THE
1939 WORLD'S FAIR ON THE BRINK OF WAR by James Mauro (ISBN 0-345-
51214-6) covers a lot of material that other World's Fair
historians seem to have overlooked.  For example, considering the
amount of material written about the 1939 New York World's Fair, I
was surprised to discover that there was a terrorist bomb planted
in the British Pavilion on July 4, 1940, that exploded when it was
discovered and removed, killing two policemen.  You would think
that all the various articles, books, plays, and so on might have
mentioned it.

Mauro spends most of the book, in fact, talking about things other
people haven't covered much.  Other people write about all the
"World of Tomorrow" science and technology exhibits, but Mauro
spends more time talking about the various countries' pavilions.
There was no Germany pavilion, for example, and the Austria and
Czechoslovakia pavilions had the dubious distinction of being
country pavilions without a country by the time they opened.  And
the staff of those pavilions, as well as of the Poland pavilion,
apparently ended up as refugees when the fair closed in 1940, as
they had no desire to return to their homelands.

Mauro also talks about the financial aspects a *lot*.  Between
escalating costs and disappointing attendance, the Fair lost money.
(Actually, this seems to be true of most World's Fairs.)  The
profits were supposed to go into developing Flushing Meadows into a
park after the Fair; that never happened.  Oh, and about the Trylon
and Perisphere: people often ask why they were torn down.  The
answer is simple: There was a war on and they and most of the rest
of the iron on the site (20,000 tons total, with 4000 tons from the
Tryon and Perisphere alone) went for the war effort.  [-ecl]

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

                                           Mark Leeper
 mleeper@optonline.net


            Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do
            generally discover everybody's face but their own.
                                           -- Jonathan Swift,
                                              The Battle of the Books