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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 03/13/98 -- Vol. 16, No. 37

       MT Chair/Librarian:
                     Mark Leeper   MT 3E-433  732-957-5619 mleeper@lucent.com
       HO Chair:     John Jetzt    MT 2E-530  732-957-5087 jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian: Nick Sauer    HO 4F-427  732-949-7076 njs@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist:
                     Rob Mitchell  MT 2D-536  732-957-6330 rlmitchell1@lucent.com
       Factotum:     Evelyn Leeper MT 3E-433  732-957-2070 eleeper@lucent.com
       Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/Athens/4824
       All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

       The Science Fiction Association of Bergen County meets on the
       second Saturday of every month in Upper Saddle River; call
       201-933-2724 for details.  The New Jersey Science Fiction Society
       meets irregularly; call 201-652-0534 for details, or check
       http://www.interactive.net/~kat/njsfs.html.  The Denver Area
       Science Fiction Association meets 7:30 PM on the third Saturday of
       every month at Southwest State Bank, 1380 S. Federal Blvd.

       1. URL of the week:
       http://www.geocities.com/Athens/4824/boskon35.htm.  Evelyn Leeper's
       Boskone 35 convention report.  [-ecl]

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

       2. I was talking to a friend about romance  novels  recently.   You
       know  that  romance novels are by far the best-selling genre novels
       in the world.  There are a lot of people, mostly women, who want to
       read  about  romance.  For those who don't want to take the time to
       read, there is even a romance  movie  network  on  the  cable.   My
       friend  said  she  felt sorry for the readers of romance novels and
       said she thought that the the reason  there  are  so  many  romance
       novels  sold  is  that the women who read them lead empty lives and
       had to escape from that into a book.  I had never given a whole lot
       of thought to just what an empty life is and who has empty lives.

       It seems to me that the empty life, like the bad hair  day,  is  an
       affliction of the affluent.  People who are really poor, people who
       really struggle tilling the soil to get enough to eat,  never  have
       bad  hair  days.   This  does  not  mean  that their hair is always
       perfectly combed.  But when you really have to put  everything  you
       have  into  the  ground in the hopes that it will return you enough
       for you to feed your family and for you to survive, I  don't  think
       that  a  lock  of  hair  sticking  out  in  the  wrong direction is
       considered much of a problem.  And what gives your life meaning  is
       your  own  survival  and the survival of those you love.  That is a
       pretty full life, whatever else you can say about it.   People  who
       have  empty  lives must already have a great deal, but perhaps they
       want something more out of life.  And perhaps not.

       Now what is stopping romance novel readers from getting more out of
       life?   Well,  first  of  all  they may not realize they have empty
       lives.  Generally, the empty life is not a self-diagnosed  ailment.
       I  guess  a primary example of someone who could be said to have an
       empty life in a book might be Sinclair Lewis's  Babbitt.   This  is
       someone  who  is  doing  nothing  great  for anyone.  He is leaving
       behind no great accomplishments.  He  is  simply  feeding  his  own
       hungers.   But  I can't believe if you asked him he would say he is
       leading  an  empty  life.   You  could  say  much   the   same   of
       Mrs. Robinson in THE GRADUATE.  She lives in comfort and luxury yet
       from the outside we would say she is leading an  empty  life.   She
       might  not  think  so  herself.   There  are  people  who  diagnose
       themselves as having boredom, but not really having empty lives.

       Now, there is great literature that these people could  be  reading
       to  edify  themselves,  and they have every opportunity to read it.
       But they don't.  Maybe the best analogy comes from  George  Bernard
       Shaw's  play  DON  JUAN IN HELL, a smaller piece within his MAN AND
       SUPERMAN.  (I know you are not going to trust me on this  one,  but
       this  really  is a play that is well worth getting ahold of.)  Dona
       Anna is surprised to find people in Hell don't want to go to Heaven
       even though they would be allowed to go.  The Devil explains why by
       analogy.  In England he points out there are racetracks  and  there
       are  concert  halls.  Now it is generally accepted that the concert
       hall is a more elevated form of entertainment than  the  racetrack.
       But the people at the racetracks don't run out to go to the concert
       hall instead.  Dona Anna's father adds that  at  the  concert  hall
       there are rows and rows of people who are bored to tears.  They are
       there not because they enjoy the music, but because they think they
       owe  it to their position to be there.  There are probably a lot of
       people who lead unfulfilled lives because for some reason  that  is
       the  sort  of  life  they  prefer to lead.  If it comes to a choice
       between watching "The Simpsons" or reading Hegel, they will  choose
       watching "The Simpsons" every time.  And they will no say that they
       are leading empty lives because of it.

       It may seem to ungallant of me, but if I have to make a list of for
       whom  I  feel  sorry,  people who read romance novels, who have the
       time to read novels and choose pink-covered bodice-rippers an  inch
       and  a  half  thick,  are going to be low on the list of people who
       receive my sympathy.  [-mrl]

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

       3. A comment from  reader  Avi  Hauser  (somewhat  delayed  in  the
       printing,  sorry).   I  should  point  out that the article this is
       commenting  upon  is  not  so  much  as  disparaging   physics   as
       disparaging  people  who  think  they  are  quoting  the Heisenberg
       Uncertainty Principle when they say you  cannot  observe  something
       without  affecting  it.  My example was observing a star going nova
       probably does not affect the long-dead star.

          I should have known not to keep quiet when the first disparaging
          note  on Physics was sent around.  Now the second treatise about
          Physics is out and reply, I feel,  I  must.   Quantum  Mechanics
          describes  a  non-physical  quantity called the wave function of
          objects.  It gives us equations (usually Schroedinger's equation
          but  there  are other equivalent ones) whose solutions are these
          wave functions. It also tells us about physical quantities  that
          can  be  derived  from  the  wave functions.  It so happens that
          there is a mathematical  inequality  that  shows  that  location
          uncertainty(*)  times  momentum  uncertainty  are  larger than a
          constant (happens to be Planck constant h divided by 4 pi, but I
          am showing off).

          The  interesting  part  about  Quantum  Mechanics  is  that   it
          postulates  measurements  as  operations on these wave functions
          and therefore,  indeed,  measurements  do  affect  the  measured
          entity.   Mark  has  followed  in the footsteps of  other giants
          like Einstein, Podolski and Rosen who  argued  the  same  point:
          Quantum  Mechanics means instantaneous interaction which in turn
          means going against the arrow of time.  The EPR paradox,  as  it
          is  known,  has been shown to be a true prediction of QM and the
          last edition of Physics Today has  an  article  about  two  such
          experiments.   Those  of  us  who work in telecommunication, may
          find  it  amusing  to  see   the   implications   of   EPR   for
          communications.   Indeed,  measurement here can affect something
          else far away, even if it happened before!   Luckily,  we  would
          not have to worry about super novas (novi?).

          A more general note; Human Nature calls  for  understanding  the
          philosophy behind the equations.  I believe no theory would have
          been invented without the prejudice of philosophy,  which  makes
          us  question current lore and helps us become stubborn enough to
          fight the current authority.  Science fiction, which is how this
          e-mail  list  started,  is  another  example where we mix ideas,
          beliefs, philosophy and science to the betterment of all.

          Avi Hauser, a physicist in heart

          (*) uncertainty squared  is  defined  as  the  average  (of  the
          quantity  squared)  minus  the  square of the (average quantity)
          e.g. - 2.  For mathematicians like  Mark  -  it  is  the
          standard deviation of the population.
       I am still unconvinced you can affect the  star  before  the  nova.
       [Mark Leeper, a mathematician at lunch.]

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

       4. THE BIG LEBOWSKI (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: The Coen Brothers tell their  funniest
                 story  since  RAISING  ARIZONA.   Jeff  Bridges
                 plays an aging, burned-out hippie  pulled  into
                 the  weird goings-on after the wife of a famous
                 multi-millionaire is kidnapped.   The  film  is
                 big-time  funny,  has  a  host  of really weird
                 characters and tremendous  visual  imagination,
                 but  could  have  used  a  stronger  third act.
                 Rating: 8 (0 to 10), high +2 (-4 to +4)

       Now I claim what is going on here is that  a  cowboy  without  much
       respect  for  the sort of people he finds in Los Angeles, spins the
       gull-darnedest yarn about a guy he met in a bar a couple of  times.
       But there will probably be other interpretations.

       Jeff Bridges plays a laid-back aging hippie who happens to have the
       same  name,  Jeff  Lebowski, as a famous philanthropist, though the
       hippie prefers being called The Dude.  That sounds like it could be
       a  good  thing,  but the philanthropist has enemies and some of the
       no-so-bright ones confuse the two and take their  ire  out  on  The
       Dude.   After  discussing  the  situation  with  his  close bowling
       buddies, para-military Walter Sobchak (a hilarious  role  for  John
       Goodman)  and  low-voltage  surfer  Donny (Steve Buscemi), The Dude
       figures there is nothing he can do but face the Big Lebowski (David
       Huddlestone).  The Big Lebowski at first has little use for someone
       with The Dude's marginal life-style, but he finds a  use  when  his
       wife  is  kidnapped  and  he needs someone to drop off the million-
       dollar ransom.  The Dude wants to play  it  straight,  but  Sobchak
       figures  if they play their cards right he and The Dude could split
       the million.

       Only the Coen Brothers could tell a story  this  complicated,  this
       weird,   and   with   so  many  characters  on  so  many  different
       frequencies.  The film is  full  of  weirdoes,  many  of  whom  are
       present  only to add texture.  John Tuturro, missing from films for
       a while, plays the totally superfluous role of Jesus,  the  bowling
       rival  of  our  heroes.   The  over-ripe Jesus practically dances a
       flamenco every time  he  throws  the  ball.   Then  their  are  the
       nihilist  bikers.   And  if  the  script  does not add enough weird
       characters, the character  you  think  you  know  get  weirder  and
       weirder.

       Raymond Chandler used to add a touch of the surreal to his  mystery
       stories  whenever  his  detective  was  knocked  out  by telling us
       Marlowe's dreams while he was unconscious.  But then Philip Marlowe
       was  only  an  amateur  at  hallucinating.  He was not a stoned-out
       hippie like The Dude.  Conk The Dude on the bean and you get  weird
       bowling dreams that are worth the price of admission by themselves.
       The Coen Brothers have incredible visual imagination and tremendous
       good  humor.   Comedies  of  late have been mild smile- along-with-
       Sandra-Bullock sorts of things.  The only recent film that made  me
       laugh  out  loud  recently  was  MIDNIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF GOOD AND
       EVIL.  But it has been a good while since I have laughed as hard as
       I  did  at THE BIG LEBOWSKI.  The only real problem with the script
       is the plot lacks a strong finish.  After a strong first and second
       act,  the  film  has  a  much lower-key third act that resolves the
       mystery but lacks the strength and the humor of the first two.  The
       film  needed  a  wild  finish  and goes soft and sentimental at the
       wrong time.

       This is a film that has great visuals and  has  genuine  laugh-out-
       loud  humor.   If  it  has a weak spot it is only that the story is
       just okay, but that is not really the point.  I rate it 8 on the  0
       to 10 scale and a high +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       5. TWILIGHT (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: Mystery  in  a  minor  key.   A  once-
                 policeman,  once-detective,  Harry  Ross is now
                 unpaid an errand boy and friend for  a  wealthy
                 man.  One errand gets him involved in a murder.
                 Soon the complications involves  blackmail  and
                 the  buried  past.   There is a lot of talk and
                 not a lot of thrills in  this  mystery  set  in
                 modern  Los  Angeles.   Rating: 6 (0 to 10), +1
                 (-4 to +4)

       Considering that TWILIGHT is only 94 minutes long and moves at such
       a slow pace, the plot is surprisingly complex, not to say downright
       confusing.  The three main male characters are in their sixties and
       are  taking  that  fact  rather hard.  Harry Ross (Paul Newman) has
       been a cop and a detective, but these days he is a  houseguest  for
       the  well-off  Jack  and  Catherine  Ames  (Gene  Hackman and Susan
       Sarandon).  Harry pays back his hosts by being a companion for Jack
       and occasionally running errands.  Two years earlier the errand was
       to pick up Jack's daughter who had run off with her boy  friend  to
       Puerto Vallarto.

       Given a private package to deliver to a woman runs Harry into a man
       dying  of a fatal dose of bullets.  The man's last act is to try to
       kill Harry.  Both the police and Harry are  anxious  to  know  why.
       Harry  is able to discover that the dead man was anxious to uncover
       the story, never fully explained, of what happened  to  Catherine's
       first husband before she married Jack.

       Director Robert Benton, director of NOBODY'S  FOOL,  co-wrote  this
       film  trying  for  the  depth of character that film had and at the
       same time the sort of mystery that Newman had with HARPER.  It must
       have  looked  good on paper.  Clearly a lot of good actors had some
       respect for the production and were willing  to  take  non-starring
       roles.   We  see  people like Stockard Channing and James Garner in
       supporting roles.  M. Emmet Walsh appears just long enough  to  die
       on  camera.  It is hard to judge from a script if a mystery will be
       a good one or not.  While the plot complications were convoluted, I
       picked  out  the  killer  early  in the film, never wavered from my
       belief, and I was right.  I suspect many viewers did the same.  The
       film  was  probably  made  with the assumption that audiences would
       want to go along with Newman's easy-going rapport with  his  fellow
       actors,  particularly  James Garner with whom easy rapport does not
       seem like much of an accomplishment.  However, with too much  being
       so  mellow  the  film  robs  itself of a sense of any real tension.
       Hackman tries to give some power to his role, but there is only  so
       much he can do playing a man dying of cancer.

       Of some additional interest is that the Ames mansion was really the
       home  of  Cedric  Gibbons and Delores Del Rio.  Gibbons was the art
       director on films like A NIGHT  AT  THE  OPERA,  THE  BAD  AND  THE
       BEAUTIFUL,  and LUST FOR LIFE.  Del Rio was a fiery Latin beauty in
       films of the 1930s and  1940s.   The  Ames's  other  home  was  one
       actually built by Frank Lloyd Wright, though never completed.

       The aptly named TWILIGHT seems full of characters in  the  twilight
       of  their  lives  and  reaching  a  point where they think and talk
       rather than act.  The point is carefully driven home that  Newman's
       character  is  still  a  lover,  but  the  viewer  has reason to be
       skeptical.  The actors give the feel of people  going  gently  into
       that good night.  I rate TWILIGHT a 6 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +1
       on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       6. MRS. DALLOWAY (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule:  The  title  character  has  spent   a
                 lifetime  of  taking  the  easy route, choosing
                 comfort over making her life  meaningful.   Now
                 her big concern is that her party is a success.
                 Contrasting, we  see  the  story  of  a  shell-
                 shocked  WWI  veteran  haunted  by memories and
                 self-accusation.   Virginia  Woolf's   cat-like
                 claw  takes a swipe at the British upper-class.
                 Rating: 6 (0 to 10), high +1 (-4 to +4)

       Virginia Woolf wrote  MRS. DALLOWAY  as  a  stream-of-consciousness
       novel  taking  place  in  the  title  character's mind.  Now Eileen
       Atkins has adapted the story as  a  somewhat  non-linear  narrative
       jumping  forward  and backward in time.  There are two story lines,
       tangent at many points but never really converging  into  a  single
       story.   We  have  a  view  of  Clarissa  Dalloway as a young woman
       (played by Natascha  McElhone)  and  as  an  older  woman  (Vanessa
       Redgrave),  and  we have the story of Septimus Warren Smith (Rupert
       Graves).  More on his story later.  Even as a young woman  Clarissa
       could not commit to anything but comfort and ease.  Now as an older
       woman she has attained comfort and ease and her big concerns at the
       moment  we  see her all over the success of one of her own parties.
       She is an empty shell woman inside whom thoughts bounce around  un-
       weighted  by  any  real profundity.  She is nostalgic for a past in
       which she consistently chose the path of least resistance in  spite
       of  frequent  temptations  to show a little character.  As an adult
       she is an antique and a relic of a dying way of  life  with  little
       inkling how irrelevant she is outside of a small circle of friends.
       She has little understanding of the hard world outside that circle.

       Nearby and yet so far away is Septimus  Smith  who  fought  in  the
       Great  War  and  saw a close friend blown to pieces by a land mine.
       Already in shock from the war, he felt nothing at seeing his friend
       die so horribly.  Now he is coming out of the initial shock and the
       meaning of what he has seen is haunting him.  He blames himself for
       feeling nothing at the death of a friend.  And he hates his doctors
       who seem as out of touch  with  the  harsh  realities  of  life  as
       Mrs. Dalloway.   They  cannot  even understand Smith's painful howl
       and instead pallidly prescribe a rest cure at an asylum.  They  see
       Smith  as  insane when the pain he feels is more real than anything
       in Mrs. Dalloway's entire useless life.

       The theme of the two worlds  is  curiously  reminiscent  of  Sidney
       Lumet's  THE PAWNBROKER with Holocaust survivor Rod Steiger telling
       well-meaning do-gooder Geraldine Fitzgerald that he  comes  from  a
       whole world that she knows nothing about and whose people are of an
       entirely different species.  MRS. DALLOWAY is  in  some  ways  very
       much  like  THE  PAWNBROKER  told from the viewpoint of the genteel
       Fitzgerald character.

       Mrs. Dalloway's friends and, in fact, her whole class  seem  to  be
       out  of  touch  with  harsh  reality.   In  a  particularly telling
       sequence, a friend of Dalloway's decides that the  best  thing  for
       England  would  be  to take all the returning WWI veterans who have
       been unable to find work on their own and effectively exile them to
       Canada.   Her friends who know a little more decide to humor her in
       spite of the foolishness and probable illegality of the plan.

       Virginia Woolf's MRS. DALLOWAY must have been a difficult novel  to
       adapt (by all accounts, I have not read it) and the script has some
       technical problems  made  worst  by  some  casting  problems.   The
       telling drifts from present into the past with little signal and it
       is not always obvious that it has happened.  It is  very  difficult
       in  the  flashback  sequences  to  match  the  younger  versions of
       characters to the older ones since the  characters  are  played  by
       different  actors  who  often  are physically quite different.  The
       young Clarissa and her friend Sally are nearly the same  height  in
       their  20s  and  considerably  different in height what is probably
       their 50s.  We are led to assume that having children has shortened
       Sally  by  what must be six inches.  It might well have been better
       to use only young actors and age them much  as  Orson  Welles  aged
       himself  in  CITIZEN  KANE.  But for these problems in the casting,
       most of the roles seem well-played with veteran British  actors  in
       several of the roles.

       This film is for the most part gentle, but deep-down there seems to
       be  a lot of anger in the telling, perhaps more than one would find
       in even an E. M. Forster or John Galsworthy  story.   It  would  be
       interesting  to read the novel to see if Woolf has the same disdain
       for  the  characters  that  the  film  seems  to  have.    I   rate
       MRS. DALLOWAY  a  6 on the 0 to 10 scale and a high +1 on the -4 to
       +4 scale.  [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          MT 3E-433 732-957-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com

            Most people would die sooner than think; in fact they do so.
                                          -- Bertrand Russell