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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 10/09/98 -- Vol. 17, No. 15

       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 2E-537  732-957-6330 robmitchell@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
       201-447-3652 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://us.imdb.com/Columns/Stump/.    The
       Internet  Movie  Database's  "Stump  The  Staff," featuring someone
       familiar to you all.  [-ecl]

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

       2. Men are from Mars.  Women are from Venus.   Computers  are  from
       Pluto.  PCs are from Xargght.  [-mrl]

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

       3. You may have seen McArthur's Universal  Corrective  Map  of  the
       World.   This  is the new politically correct map of the world that
       places the South at the top.  How corrective  is  this  politically
       correct  map?   Well  it is just a standard Mercator Projection map
       turned upside-down.  They do not correct land size like some recent
       maps  of the world.  McArthur, who claims to be correcting matters,
       chose to correct only the matters important to McArthur.  Political
       correctness bothers to correct only that which is political.

       And not everybody will be happy with the correction.   I  can  name
       you  two  countries  that would object to this map.  First there is
       Canada.  Canada has always known that there is  no  special  cachet
       associated  with being at the top of the map.  They are there above
       the United States and you don't find people getting  excited  about
       the  thrilling  and  romantic  place  that  is  Canada.   Even most
       Canadians I have  met  have  a  hard  time  working  up  a  lot  of
       enthusiasm about being Canadian.

       The other country that probably  does  not  like  the  new  map  is
       Australia.    You  see  the  map  has  revealed  the  secret  about
       Australia.  Even most Australians may not have realized the  secret
       of Australia.  But the new map makes it painfully obvious.  You see
       a lot of countries actually have  shapes  that  are  suggestive  of
       things.  Italy looks like a boot kicking Sicily around.  This is an
       image that may have even appealed to Italy.  They will lose that on
       the  new  map.   But  Australia  comes  out even worse.  On the new
       politically correct map Australia looks--and you can check this out
       be  looking  at  Australia  upside-down  on  any standard map--like
       nothing so much as an over-fed chicken.

       But what is it that makes a place seem romantic?  And I don't  mean
       amorous.   I mean what does it take about a place to make the blood
       race when one thinks about it.  United States has  that  something.
       England  has  that something.  Canada doesn't.  Italy does.  Sweden
       has it only slightly more than Canada.  So what is it?  Is McArthur
       right and it really is how high you are on a map?  And if so why is
       Italy so much more romantic than Sweden?  OK, now I am at the point
       where  most  writers  who  have  looked  at this phenomenon turn to
       cheese.  I have heard this question discussed before  and  this  is
       where it falls dead.  Most writers seem to want to just say that it
       is an indefinable something.  And that is a load of duck tires.   I
       can  tell  you  what gives a country cachet.  I am ready to divulge
       what makes a country (or a city) romantic in the eyes of the world.
       It  has  been  asked  by  a  lot of people and yet the answer is so
       simple people will ask why am I even bothering to say it.

       What gives charisma to a region?  There are  two  things  required.
       You  need  a  history  of  conflict.   And  you  need  an  exciting
       literature to romanticize that conflict.  The literature  need  not
       come  from  that country and it can include film, poetry, anything.
       Now this should be a simple and obvious thing to say.   To  capture
       people's  imagination  all  that  is  necessary is that you capture
       people's imagination.  Canada has been mostly peaceful and where it
       wasn't,  nobody  has  written  any epics to interest people in what
       conflict there was.  We  have  never  had  a  great  epic  film  of
       Canadian  conflict.   Not  much  up there captures our imagination.
       Belgium has had the conflict, but not enough people to write  about
       it.   Switzerland  has  had  its  share  of educated people but not
       enough conflict to  enthuse  anyone.   England  has  had  a  fairly
       ordinary  set  of  struggles for political power, probably far less
       than most Central American banana  republics,  but  they  have  had
       people  to  make  those  conflicts  come  alive  for the reader and
       viewer.  Bingo!  And what about the United States?   If  the  truth
       were known our history has been pretty bland.  We have had only two
       major threats to our country as a whole.  Once was when the British
       burned our Capitol and once when some of the states went to war for
       the right to leave the Union.  Beyond that we have had  some  minor
       fringe   conflicts.    These  are  small  compared  to  most  other
       countries.  But there were Penny Dreadful  writers  who  glamorized
       the  minor  conflicts  on  the  Western  frontier.   They started a
       tradition so strong and entertaining that a century later  Italians
       for  gosh sake were able to get rich making films about that period
       in American history using those same conventions.

       Growing up I was pretty bored with the French and Indian  Wars.   I
       could  not  imagine  them  very  well.  They could have been taking
       place on another planet.  Now I find that I am fairly interested in
       that  period of history.  What made the difference?  I saw the film
       THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS.  That did it for me.   All  of  a  sudden
       upper  New  York State is more than a woody set of suburbs.  Now it
       is a place where tall settlers and Indians shot very long rifles at
       each  other and clobbered each other with tomahawks.  It is a place
       where loud cannons were lit and exploded firing over the  walls  of
       forts.

       So if Canada really wants to be part of the  public  consciousness,
       the  thing  to do is find a good war that took place in Canada, and
       yes there were some, and fund some  young  would-be  Canadian  John
       Ford  to make some gut-rattling thriller about it.  I would say you
       could write novels, but I suspect that cinema is  the  medium  that
       will  capture  imaginations best these days.  Do it quick while you
       still have a dollar to do it with.  [-mrl]

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

       4. The 1998 Toronto International Film Festival (film  reviews  and
       commentary by Mark R. Leeper) (part 1 of 6)

       Films Seen:

         1.  23 (German)

         2.  AFTER LIFE (Japanese with subtitles)

         3.  ANOTHER DAY IN PARADISE (United States)

         4.  ANTZ (United States)

         5.  APRIL STORY (Japanese with subtitles)

         6.  APT PUPIL (United States)

         7.  AT SACHEM FARM (United States)

         8.  BUTTONERS, THE (Czech, in Czech and English)

         9.  CASCADOR-THE AMBER CHAMBER (German)

        10.  CLAY PIGEONS (United States)

        11.  CRUISE, THE (United States)

        12.  CURE (Japanese with subtitles)

        13.  DANCING AT LUGHNASA (US/Irish)

        14.  DOG PARK (Canadian)

        15.  ELIZABETH (British-Indian)

        16.  EVE-OLVE (Canadian shorts)

        17.  EXTRAORDINARY VISITOR, THE (Canadian)

        18.  FINDING GRACELAND (United States)

        19.  FLOWERS OF SHANGHAI (Hong Kong)

        20.  FULL MOON (Russian, in Russian with subtitles)

        21.  GIRAFFE,  THE  (German/Swiss,  In  English  and  German  with
             subtitles)

        22.  GOD SAID "HA!" (United States)

        23.  HOLE, THE (Taiwan/French with subtitles)

        24.  HOME FRIES (United States)

        25.  I WOKE UP EARLY THE DAY I DIED (United States)

        26.  IKINAI (Japanese with subtitles)

        27.  IMPOSTERS, THE (United States)

        28.  IN THE WINTER DARK (Australian)

        29.  J'AIMERAIS PAS CREVER UN DIMANCH (French with subtitles)

        30.  JEANNE AND THE PERFECT GUY (French with English Subtitles)

        31.  JERRY AND TOM (United States)

        32.  LAST NIGHT (Canadian)

        33.  LOVERS OF THE ARCTIC CIRCLE (Spanish with subtitles)

        34.  MAN WITH RAIN IN HIS SHOES, THE (United Kingdom)

        35.  MIGHTY PEKING MAN (Hong Kong)

        36.  NIGHT TRAIN (United Kingdom)

        37.  PERDITA  DURANGO  (Spanish,  in  English  and  Spanish   with
             subtitles)

        38.  PLEASANTVILLE (United States)

        39.  RETURN TO PARADISE (United States)

        40.  RUSHMORE (United States)

        41.  SHATTERED IMAGE, THE (United States)

        42.  SIX-STRING SAMURAI (United States)

        43.  SLEEPWALKER, THE (Argentina with subtitles)

        44.  SMOKE SIGNALS (United States)

        45.  SWEETY BARRETT (Ireland)

        46.  THIS IS MY FATHER (Canadian/Irish)

        47.  TRAFFIC (Portuguese/French with subtitles)

        48.  TRANCE (United States)

        49.  VERY BAD THINGS (United States)

        50.  WELCOME BACK MR. MCDONALD (Japan with subtitles)

       09/09/98

       Well, I am not going to drive myself crazy  this  trip  keeping  an
       activity  by  activity log the way I do when we travel for the sake
       of travel.  We are off to the Toronto International Film  Festival.
       It  is  about  5:12  PM.  So what is the story so far.  This is our
       third major film festival, having been  to  the  Montreal  and  the
       Edinburgh.   This  is one of the four largest film festivals in the
       world along with Venice, Cannes, and Berlin.
       Members of  the  Leeper  Expedition  include  Evelyn  Leeper,  Mark
       Leeper, and Kate Pott.  The latter is an old friend.  I will not go
       over the registration process in detail.  Evelyn managed  that  and
       can  cover it better.  Suffice it to say that the Federal Expressed
       us their list of films and a ticket order form.   We  had  just  an
       evening  to  decide  what we wanted to see.  You send them back the
       forms Federal Express with a list of first and second choice films.
       They then have to make some sort of reasonable selection for us.

       Last night after work  we  drove  to  Amherst,  Massachusetts,  and
       picked  up  Kate.   Of  some  concern  is  the fact that her choice
       closely mirrored our own.  Probably the  films  we  chose  will  be
       popular.   We  may  end up seeing a bunch of films from Kazakhstan.
       We stayed overnight with Kate.

       This morning we left about 8:30, bidding a fond farewell to  Kate's
       two  longhaired  cats.   Kate treats the cats in a very egalitarian
       manner, which means each has an equal vote  on  the  rules  of  the
       apartment.   Unfortunately  the  cats  tend  to vote in a block and
       overrule her in matters  of  whether  the  furniture  looks  better
       intact  or  in ribbons.  Just outside of Stockbridge I quietly spit
       up a small hairball into my handkerchief.

       On the way we had a bit of rain.  We stopped  for  a  comfort  stop
       next  to  the  interstate.   It had a McDonalds, a Pizza Hut, and a
       Mrs. Fields Cookies, but the big draw was  the  restrooms.   Evelyn
       got  coffee, but I didn't get anything.  I thought the place seemed
       too touristy.  We stopped for lunch in a  place  called  Weedsport,
       New  York.   Just  what  is  a  weedsport?   I had a tuna submarine
       sandwich.  Somehow having the fish actually  inside  the  submarine
       and the people on the outside feeds my sense of irony as well as my
       stomach.

       Crossing the border they asked us where we were from and then waved
       us through.

       We also stopped on the way to stare at Niagara Falls.  I  tried  to
       explain  to  our  group  that  some of the molecules going over the
       falls had been over many times.  The elements  keep  shuffling  and
       recombining molecules.  Somehow it did not seem to impress them.

       Well, it was just another couple of hours into Toronto.  The  roads
       into  town were just a bit congested.  I was passenger in the front
       seat reading.  Evelyn slammed on the brakes  and  the  book  I  was
       reading  jumped  out  of  my  hand and ended at Evelyn's feet.  She
       blamed me for not holding onto the  book;  I  blamed  her  for  not
       watching  the  car  ahead  of  her.   Yup.  All systems functioning
       normally.

       It took us a little while to get to our  hotel,  a  Days  Inn.   We
       pulled  into  the  parking  lot  and were told it was full.  No, we
       explained, we were guests.  It is full for everybody.  Well,  there
       is  an overflow lot across the street.  Our room is big by Japanese
       standards.  It may be 2/3 of what you would get at a Motel  6.   In
       the room we did our unpacking.

       We got our car and went to dinner.  The restaurant was Xam Yu.   It
       happened  to be near where we could find a parking space.  Actually
       it wasn't quite that easy since we looked at three restaurants  and
       picked  the  busiest.   We  had hot and sour soup, squid with black
       bean sauce, mango chicken, and fried grouper.  Total cost with  tip
       was  $37 Canadian.  Not a bad price since the Canadian dollar is so
       low.  That is $8 American/person.  I left  stuffed.   I  asked  the
       owner of the restaurant if the name of the restaurant was the three
       carp.  I was close.  It was more general.  It was the  three  fish.
       I  could  recognize  the ideogram for three and the second ideogram
       looked like the symbol for fish, but modified.  Apparently  it  was
       not  so  much  modified  that  it did not mean fish too.  We talked
       about ideograms.  Afterward we returned to the room.

       09/10/98

       Well, my day started early.  Whoever was the  last  person  in  the
       room  had left the alarm on.  There are alarms that err on the side
       of being too gentle and risk not waking the  sleeper.   This  is  a
       particularly effective alarm.  I am sure nobody sleeps through this
       one.  It sounded like something  you  would  want  to  warn  people
       either  of  a very bad fire or of a small incoming nuclear missile.
       I guess most hotels have the maids check when  a  guest  leaves  to
       make  sure  that the alarm is off in their normal duties.  Days Inn
       did not.  Oh, well.  It got the day off with a sort of surprise.

       This will probably be a lazy sort of day.  We have only one film to
       see.   If  we understood what was said that would mean we would see
       THE RED VIOLIN.  It is not clear what the instructions  were  about
       getting  tickets for their so-called Gala films.  It is complicated
       and Evelyn and Kate are  laboring  over  the  rules  like  Talmudic
       scholars.   "Depending  on  where  you  put the parentheses in that
       sentence...," Evelyn s----ays.  The radio plays its  third  Strauss
       waltz  and I do about a five-minute schtick about "Vienna bevore de
       Vore" and how "ve shlept till drei und drahnk bier."

       People attending the festival, according to the radio, include  Tom
       Cruise  and  Meryl Streep.  Evelyn goes "whoop-de-doo" and swings a
       finger in the air.  Evelyn is not much impressed by star power.

       Breakfast was at an Indian-run croissant shop.  I had an omelet  on
       croissant  and  a  cup  of  coffee.  I almost never drink coffee at
       home, but I sometimes do when I travel.

       We went to pick up our tickets at a building called "College Park."
       We  had  to  wait  about 20 minutes in line, but then we were there
       early and they opened about five minutes late.  They  returned  our
       order  form and we looked over it to see what of the films we could
       not get tickets for.  We were pretty lucky getting about 36 of  our
       40  or  so  films.  The spaces in our program we quickly looked and
       got films to fill them.  It turned out we could not get tickets for
       THE RED VIOLIN after all.

       Well, from there we scouted to find where  the  theaters  were  and
       went  to  bookstores.  I showed a great deal of reserve and did not
       buy books until I got to Chapters,  a  local  bookstore  along  the
       lines  of  our  Barnes  and  Noble.   They  had British editions of
       Bernard Cornwall's Sharpe novels.  I had been seeing  these  novels
       dramatized  on  Masterpiece  Theater and enjoyed them immensely.  I
       will probably read the novels.

       We tried to find the  Cumberland  Theater.   There  was  a  Lumiere
       Theater  on  Cumberland, but no Cumberland.  I asked directions and
       was pointed in a direction by a woman who said I would see the name
       Cumberland  on  the  marquee.   It had to be the Lumiere.  Well, it
       turns out just starting today the theater will be  called  Lumiere.
       I guess the theater is gone, leaving a Cumberland gap.

       Lunch was at a deli where I had a tuna sandwich and a Lime  Rickey.
       Then another bookstore and back to the room.  I have made a listing
       of each of my films and have the page numbers in the catalog.

       Well, we spent an uneventful afternoon looking at what  films  were
       coming  up.   On  the way up Yonge we scouted possible restaurants.
       At the Varsity things were very confused.  They told Evelyn and  me
       to  line up outside for our 6:45 film and Kate to go inside for her
       6:30 film.  Someone inside sent Kate  back  out.   Kate  was  ping-
       ponged in and out of the theater a couple more times.  Evelyn and I
       are at the head of the line.  Then they let  us  in  and  there  is
       already a line that has formed for the movie inside.  Clearly there
       are problems with crowd control.

       The guy ahead of Evelyn asks her to watch his backpack and he  will
       return.   She  agrees.   I tell her this was not a good idea.  From
       now on we will agree to hold the place, but  the  person  must  not
       leave anything behind.  Just being careful.

       It is a little daunting to take on the responsibility to review  46
       films.   I  will  compromise.  I will make all the comments I would
       have made in a review, but  I  will  not  organize  them  or  write
       surrounding  comments.   I  will  write  just capsule and comments.
       Maybe some people will even prefer my reviews this way.

       FULL MOON (Russian, in Russian with subtitles)

       CAPSULE: This is a story-less film told in a series  of  vignettes.
       Each  vignette  is  linked  to  the  next as a background character
       becomes the main character of  the  next.   Diverting  though  very
       little  more  than  the  sum of its parts in spite of some repeated
       themes. Rating: 6 (0 to 10), 1 (-4 to +4)

          - Probably most notable for the many points of view as the  film
            progresses.
          - Directed by Karen Shakhnazarov.
          - I first saw this style of story-telling, or lack thereof, as a
            joke  on  MONTY PYTHON though the subsequent film SLACKER also
            used the technique.  The camera follows one  character,  jumps
            to a passerby, then follows him.  When it is all over you have
            a mosaic of life, but  do  not  know  any  of  the  characters
            particularly well.
          - We see life in modern Russia and  a  little  bit  of  history,
            though we do not actually learn very much.
          - There are some repeated themes.  A high proportion of the  men
            seem to ogle women.  There are repeated references to Mongolia
            and to Genghis Khan.  Three different characters were affected
            by a scene in a restaurant in 1948.
          - At least twice there is sudden and unexpected violence.
          - Much of this film seems to take place almost in real time, but
            there are continuity errors.  We go from evening to the middle
            of the day.  A sunny day is suddenly dismal.
          - There are some well-known Russian actors, but none is  on  the
            screen very long.
          - There is a central mystery about a scene in a restaurant,  but
            we never have even the simplest part of it answered.
          - The most enjoyable vignette puts us in the mind of a dog.
          - There is a minor piece about Pushkin stopping in  Mongolia  on
            his way to fight the Turks.
          - There are a few dream sequences,  though  none  of  any  great
            fantasy value.
          - Winner of several international cinema prizes but  not  likely
            to be seen on the art-house circuit in the US.

       Leaving the theater we  passed  Kate  who  really  enjoyed  UNLUCKY
       MONKEY, a sort of Japanese action movie with a lot of violence.

       We  ate  a  late  dinner  at  a  Thai,  Malaysian,  and  Philippine
       restaurant,  then  went to the Cineplex Odeon to see SMOKE SIGNALS.
       This is not included in the film festival but we have wanted to see
       it.  This may be our last chance.

       SMOKE SIGNALS (United States)

       CAPSULE: An odyssey of two Indians in their early 20s going to pick
       up  the pickup truck of one's deceased father.  This is a film with
       good characters that makes some profound  points.   The  dialog  is
       very good.  Rating: 9 (0 to 10), +3 (-4 to +4 scale)

          - Coeur d'Alene Indians of Idaho.
          - Victor Joseph  is  slightly  stereotypical,  a  tall  handsome
            Indian,  but  bitter  about  his  alcoholic  father  not being
            around.
          - Thomas Builds-a-Fire is an original.  He is a  sort  of  nerdy
            boy  with  braids and glasses.  Rather than playing basketball
            like his friend Victor he watches.  He tells stories, many  of
            which  are  lies.   Victor  looks down on him and derides him.
            Yet where Victor is empty he is full.  His  stories  are  what
            will sustain his people.  They are something that is lasting.
          - The conversations are worth hearing.  (But  they  are  totally
            wrong  about John Wayne's teeth.  The claim that you never see
            John Wayne's teeth in a film is totally misinformation.)
          - In 1976 Victor's father Arnold saved Thomas's life when a fire
            burned down his parents' house.
          - Victor's father was an alcoholic.  He left home  a  few  years
            ago to live near Phoenix.  Took up with Suzy Song.
          - As with CHAMBERMAID ON THE TITANIC, a  good  lie  from  Thomas
            seems  to  do more to heal and to build people up than a harsh
            truth.
          - Local reservation traffic report is more a gossip column.  But
            there is no traffic anyway.
          - Lots of nice little surprises understated.  Many are humorous.
          - Only images of bad Indians on TV.
          - Suzy Song is everything Victor is not.  She embraces life  and
            is not bitter.
          - Tom Skerritt has a small role as a threatening policeman.
          - Based on LONE RANGER AND TONTO HAVE A FISTFIGHT IN  HEAVEN,  a
            short story collection.  This was one of the stories.
          - Really about all fathers and sons.

       Since this was at the theater just down the block from  our  hotel,
       it  was  just  a short walk to return.  That will not happen again.
       All of the theaters that are venues are about a 20-30  minute  walk
       away.

       Kate came back and again was very pleased with the  film  she  saw,
       SPANISH  FLY.  It is a Spanish film about a woman who goes to Spain
       to investigate the myth of Machismo.  I guess that  is  where  they
       make it.

       [to be continued] [-mrl]