@@@@@ @ @ @@@@@ @ @ @@@@@@@ @ @ @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @@@@@ @@@@ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @@@@@ @ @ @ @ @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@ Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society Club Notice - 10/16/98 -- Vol. 17, No. 16 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://www.evolve.com/~drseuss/seuss/seuss.parody.html. Dr. Seuss Parody Page (including "If Dr. Seuss wrote Shakespeare" and other classics). [-ecl] =================================================================== 2. Fact: In New Jersey the vast majority of men have an above average number of arms. [-mrl] =================================================================== 3. Well, it is that time of year again when we are getting ready for Halloween. This was always my favorite holiday as I was growing up. Of course it did not get a lot of competition. There were non-religious holidays and there were religious ones. Non- religious holidays are usually some sort of political pay-off that some politician used to get votes. Labor Day was to get American workers' votes. Memorial Day was the same for veterans. Veterans' Day was the same target, but a different politician needed votes, I suppose. Oh, I admit I liked Memorial Day as a kid. That was the start of summer. Thanksgiving was nice, I suppose because we had a good meal. Fourth of July brought fireworks. But on the whole neither gave me anything that I really couldn't have done without. I know that is a selfish point of view, but I was just a kid, remember. Kids are supposed to be selfish. It is part of the whole kid thing. Then there were the religious holidays, and let's say I was less than fond of those. I may talk about that in a week coming up. So when I was a kid, the holiday that I liked the most was Halloween. Look how Halloween is celebrated for kids. The three ingredients are monsters, masks, and munchies. Most kids love all three and I was no exception. One of the dates etched in my memory was October 31, 1959. That was the one Halloween that I remember the best. We were in Akron, visiting my grandparents. It was a Saturday night. A local TV station was advertising that they would have a monster triple feature. They would have SON OF FRANKENSTEIN, THE MUMMY'S GHOST, and MAN-MADE MONSTER. This for me was one of the major events of the year. First of all I had never seen a Frankenstein movie. I had seen pictures of the Frankenstein monster in Mad Magazine and had heard about Frankenstein ever since I was young. For me the Frankenstein monster was like an old friend. But there never was much opportunity to see the films on Dayton, Ohio television. It was in the early sixties that TV stations first could show the old Universal Pictures monster films and discovered that there was really a market out there. Within just a few years most cities had one or maybe two TV stations showing a science fiction or horror movie as the late show on Saturday night. Things were getting better for fantasy fans. While Dayton did not get a lot of horror films on TV, some local town must have. TV Guide would list some stations we did not get and someplace nearby had a TV station listed in our TV Guide that would have the most tempting films. I would see films listed like THE WOLF MAN and I was ready to pack my bags and move. It was frustrating to know that these horror films were playing so nearby and I did not get a crack at them. But here I was, sort of cheating. I was in Akron and here the TV stations did play horror films. And three were going to be on in one night. Things were definitely getting better. Four weeks and a day earlier a new weekly TV series started on CBS and already the high point of most weeks was when The Twilight Zone was on. A new fantasy story every week was a real big addition to my entertainment. But that was new stuff. SON OF FRANKENSTEIN was a classic from the old days. To put it in perspective, SON OF FRANKENSTEIN actually then was one year younger than STAR WARS is today. But at that time anything that was more than twice as old as I was, was pretty ancient. So I stayed up late. Not just me, both my parents and both my grandparents watched also. Now even today I am not sure why everybody was there. It goes without saying that I was the most enthusiastic about seeing these films. But whoever was second was a very distant second. I don't know where I got my love of fantasy, but it certainly was not from my parents. My mother saw THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN when she was growing up and right there decided that horror films were just too stupid to watch. Well, now she was watching the sequel. Or perhaps she was watching me watching the sequel. So this is a story with not much of an ending. I watched and immensely enjoyed the first two films. I can still remember the plot of the first two films, and though I had seen each multiple times since, I think I am remembering them from that Saturday night. SON OF FRANKENSTEIN was the last good Frankenstein film that Universal made. After that they got a little threadbare. Lon Chaney Jr. made three mummy movies and I still consider THE MUMMY'S GHOST to be the best of the three, though that is not a lot of distinction. And as for MAN-MADE MONSTER, my mother convinced me at what must have been 2:30 in the morning that it was not the time to start watching a third film. I obliged her. Then into the 60s our local station showed SON OF FRANKENSTEIN and THE MUMMY'S GHOST, but did not get around to showing MAN-MADE MONSTER for many years to come. Of course these days I could set up the triple feature and watch it on TV commercial-free any time I want. There is some question on whether I could keep myself awake, but the films are all available. But I don't think I could ever reproduce that night. And that is why I like Halloween. I have given some thought to what films I would put together if I were to make a Halloween triple feature. This year I think I am going to do that. I intend to use the magic of video to show the triple feature I wish I could have seen at that time. I will show it the Thursday night before Halloween. Details will be in next week's issue. [-mrl] =================================================================== 4. ETERNAL LOVECRAFT edited by Jim Turner (Golden Gryphon, ISBN 0- 9655901-7-8, 1998, 411pp, US$25.95) (a book review by Evelyn C. Leeper): This anthology is divided into three sections. The first is three stories which either have Lovecraft as a character or are expressly set in Lovecraft's "universe." The second set is eleven stories with some allusions to Lovecraft, but no direct connection. The third is four stories with "implied" Lovecraft connections. Though called ETERNAL LOVECRAFT, the connections between the stories and things Lovecraft seems at times tenuous, at least to me. (If you are more familiar with Lovecraft than I, then the connections may seem more obvious.) This is the third book from Golden Gryphon, the first two being collections by James Patrick Kelly and R. Garcia y Robertson. As with the previous volumes, this is a well-produced, well-crafted book with a wonderful wrap-around dust jacket (by Nicholas Jainschigg). Unfortunately, I found the contents less interesting. But as I said, if you are a Lovecraft aficionado, your reaction will probably differ, and I certainly recommend you at least investigate this. (This has nothing to do with this book, but I would like to commend my public library, which has the Kelly and Garcia y Robertson volumes. It is unusual for a public library to track the small press arena, and I'm quite pleased that my library does so.) [- ecl] =================================================================== 5. The 1998 Toronto International Film Festival (film reviews and commentary by Mark R. Leeper) (part 2 of 6) 09/11/98 I slept late for me, past 8am, but then we don't have a film until 11:30. We went to a restaurant called Fran's and I had steak and eggs, a rarity for me but there will be no time for lunch. Evelyn is planning for Kate how she can go to every bookstore in the area in a sort of biblio-blitz of titanic proportions. It is not enough that she is seeing 40-some films. After a walk up Yonge Street, stopping at a bookstore, Evelyn and I lined up at the Uptown and talked to the couple behind us about travel. While we were standing there there was a large commotion in the street. Apparently it is a local tradition is to have the incoming freshmen parade through the street. It is a raucous annual event. It takes 15 or 20 minutes for the parade to go by. It was a huge turnout of college kids. FLOWERS OF SHANGHAI (Taiwan/Japanese, language: Chinese with subtitles) CAPSULE: Static and dull story set in Shanghai brothels of the 1880s. The camerawork of this film is minimal and we basically have a stage play in which almost all of the action is offstage. Nice historic recreations of room decor cannot make this film interesting to audiences. Rating: 3 (0 to 10) -1 (-4 to +4) - Directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien. - 124 minutes, but seems a lot longer. - Film constructed of long sequences set in beautifully appointed rooms. Long pauses between dialog. Camera just shifts to the character speaking so whole scene appears shot in one take. - 1880s Shanghai brothels. Character names like Crimson and Jade. To Western eyes may be hard to tell major characters apart. - Music sounds like done on one-string instrument. Very downbeat. - Early scenes in heavy sepia tone though later ones seem to use more natural colors. - Characters seem to be forever eating, drinking tea, smoking, and gossiping. - Every scene ends in slow fade to black. - Only two scenes have any action beyond talk. - Very much like a stage play. - Some sort of numbers game repeatedly played over banquets, but not clear what the rules are. It looks something like our Evens and Odds. - Women seem to be involved with little but jealousy, hatred, and greed. - Style reminiscent of Fassbinder's EFFIE BRIEST. - Shown in a large theater, but many people walking out. - Better knowledge of Chinese culture might have helped. Over to the Cumberland for... APRIL STORY (Japanese with subtitles) CAPSULE: A pleasant slice-of-life about a woman from Hokkaido adapting to life at a Tokyo University. Toward the end there is a twist and the viewer discovers the plot has been developing all along. Rating: 6 (0 to 10), high +1 (-4 to +4) - Directed by Shunji Iwai - Young woman leaving Hokkaido to go to Musashino University in Tokyo. - Slice-of-life style just shows what life is like adjusting to her tiny dorm room, her nervousness about meeting new classmates, We also see her recreation as she goes to a movie, becomes a regular at a local bookstore, makes a few friends, joins a school fishing club. Her life seems very lonely. - Story could have taken place in England, US, Canada, etc. - Dorms in Japan seem very depressing. Tiny rooms, rundown walls, rust on metal. - Appears to be snowing when she leaves Hokkaido and when she arrives in Tokyo. You realize in Tokyo it is actually not snow but apple blossoms falling. There is a pleasant musical theme as the score. It seems to be played on a single piano. - Film is short, about 67 minutes. Seems like it could be an afternoon TV program for high school girls. We had dinner at a place called FORKCHOPS that offered Japanese style bowls of soup. It seemed to go with the film and soup is a filling dinner. AFTER LIFE (Japanese with subtitles) CAPSULE: The recently dead must each choose the most memorable moment of their lives to have them filmed. Once this process is complete they can continue on to heaven. The film combines documentary footage with interviews with dramatic storytelling. A little slow at times, but worthwhile over all. Rating: 6 (0 to 10), high +1 (-4 to +4) - Directed by Hirokazu Kore-Eda. - When one dies, according to the premise of this film, each person must choose the best moment of his life to have it recreated on film, then to live it for eternity. One gets a week complete with advisors to get this accomplished. This is the story of one week in this odd purgatory. - The building used for this purpose seems to be some sort of old school building. It is one much in needing of a repainting. There is a staff of advisors, many with their own problems, trying to help the dead in their task by counseling them on what moment to choose and then helping them to get it filmed. - Much of the film is real documentary footage of people choosing and talking about the most significant moment in their lives. Actors hired for the film and when possible they talked about moments from their lives. Only the actors who had scripted key moments were those who were needed for the story. This use of interview material reminiscent of some Aardman animated films. - Not clear why the moments chosen by the dead had to be filmed by them except that the director had the facilities. Only one or two moments are seen being filmed. VERY BAD THINGS (United States) CAPSULE: Five friends at a stag party are involved in the accidental killing of a prostitute. The cover-up attempt becomes a monster that eats up the friends, two wives and several innocent bystanders. This was a real audience pleaser at Toronto, but it did not do much for me. Rating: 4 (0 to 10), low 0 (-4 to +4) - Directed by Peter Berg who acted in THE LAST SEDUCTION and COPLAND. - Five buddies go on a stag outing to Las Vegas while Cameron Diaz works through the logistics of her upcoming wedding to one of them. One of the buddies accidentally kills a prostitute. - Several people with no moral compass. They started out with a simple, innocent little cocaine party (!) and by accident look what happened. They have one moral person among them (Daniel Stern), and one totally amoral person (Christian Slater). It is more selfish to let the amoral lead, so they do. - This film is strange, but not really funny or biting. Black comedy should actually be funny as well as strange. There should be some element of satire. The satire is missing here. I did not find myself laughing here either. What we have is a strange crime tale. - One just does not care what happens to these people. - The same idea of people just getting themselves in deeper and deeper has been done frequently. If this film is popular it is just bringing a familiar plot to a new generation. - It begins like DINER (particularly with Daniel Stern) and ends up like an extended horror/crime comic book. - There are several logical holes in script. If a security man goes to investigate a complaint and disappears, wouldn't the guests he was investigating be the first suspects? Someone framed for a crime in the way shown would be judged innocent after minimal forensic detective work. (I am desperately trying to avoid making this a spoiler.) - Popular and situation ethics get a real slamming. - Some acting of grief is hammy and overdone. More yelling than humor. I left the theater by the back way since I was late to line up for the next film. There were a bunch of limousines waiting for celebrities. The limousines were all decorated with "Just Married" to fool people. How many people you know have a fancy marriage with limousines at 10:00 at night? PERDITA DURANGO (Spanish, in English and Spanish with subtitles) CAPSULE: Lots of gunplay, some humor. The further adventures from one of the characters from WILD AT HEART. The title character runs into a sexy Mexican Santeria priest and they decide to kidnap some bland Americans and eat them. Pretty weird stuff. Rating: 4 (0 to 10), 0 (-4 to +4) - Directed by Alex de la Iglesia. - Rosie Perez in an obviously very counter-culture film. Javier Bardem also stars as the killer and Santeria priest Romeo Doloroso. Screamin' Jay Hawkins also appears. Perez plays Perdita Durango, the same character played by Isabella Rossellini in David Lynch's WILD AT HEART. - No characters to identify with. Main character wants to kidnap and eat people to make a statement. - Lots of running gags, explosions, gunplay, running gags, cars hitting people, and running gags. - A little of John Waters-like take on American culture. - Colorful but overly long. - Obviously a film that got a budget but it is not clear the intended audience besides hip midnight crowds. - Possibly lost on Canadian or American audience: Romeo robs a bank disguised as Santo, a Mexican movie hero and professional wrestler. - Simon Boswell's musical score is very dramatic. The film got over about 2:20 and got back to the room about 2:50 and we were asleep by 3:10, enough time to get some sleep before our 9 AM film. But not enough. 09/12/98 Up early and rushing to our first film. I buy a bottle of fruit juice. I will drink it in line and watching the first movie. Also I have stuffed in the pockets of my photovest an individual serving box of cereal. We got a variety pack before we left home for just this purpose. JEANNE AND THE PERFECT GUY (French with English Subtitles) CAPSULE: How do you tell a now fairly familiar love story set in the time of AIDS? The French do it by turning it into a light musical. Virginie Ledoyen is charming as a young woman who finds her new lover is HIV-positive. Rating: 7 (0 to 10), low +2 (-4 to +4) - Directed by Olivier Ducastel and Jacques Martineau - The musical is not my favorite genre of film. Musicals got too big with ornate production numbers in the US and fell apart of their own weight. Woody Allen tried his own hand at the musical with EVERYONE SAYS I LOVE YOU. It just did not work for me. The French have a better approach. They do not build the story around huge production numbers. They just tell their story and at various moments a character will sing a simple song. Perhaps there will be a few dance steps. - Virginie LeDoyen plays a switchboard operator who rarely is lacking a bed-partner. But Jeanne is anxious to find a perfect lover. She finds one, Olivier LaGrange (Mathieu Demy), on the underground, only to find he is HIV positive. Without her realizing it they have a mutual friend, a gay school professor who knows Olivier from ACT-UP, the AIDS activist group. - Hard to imagine Jeanne is this promiscuous and this is the first time she has been touched by AIDS. - Musical numbers seem to start up very naturally. Often they are on unexpected subjects like Tsing-tao Beer or foreign workers singing how they cannot get naturalization papers. - Most of the plot twists are predictable. - Last scene of film very different that what we would have in an American film. After the movie we went to find a place to sit down. A cafe had some chairs they had chained up and they were using so we sat and wrote. Unfortunately I sat under an overhang and a local pigeon used me for target practice. Good shot, dammit. LAST NIGHT (Canadian) CAPSULE: The world will come to an end at midnight. Everyone knows it and must make a final peace with the last hours of their lives. This is an intelligent science fiction film with no special effects, just personalities and ideas. Rating: 8 (0 to 10), high +2 (-4 to +4) - It is the last night of the planet and several different people are reacting each in their own way to the end. The film covers 6 PM to midnight. The main character is Patrick played by David McKellan who also wrote and directed. - Reminiscent of ON THE BEACH. But much more so of a story Richard Matheson wrote, "The Last Day." (P.S. On rereading the 1953 Matheson, this film is almost a loose adaptation of that story. The similarities may be mere coincidence, but they are numerous and they are very striking.) - US release may be problematical. The title is lackluster and non-memorable, though very appropriate when you know about the film. Also provincial Americans may not care about the end of the world coming to Toronto. They probably would feel it would not affect them. Perhaps a PBS release would be possible. - Patrick's family has declared it Christmas and are hurt that the (adult) children will not spend the whole evening with them. - Grocery stores mostly looted. It seems though that one of everything is left. - Some people continue business as usual, some want sex, some react with religion, some riot. Some people are in total denial. - Much comedy, much drama. - Very Canadian cast. - It does not get dark. It is just always daytime. - Radio playing "Last Night I Didn't Get to Sleep At All." How appropriate. - David Cronenberg as a kind of bland functionary manager at the gas company. Genvieve Bujold as French teacher visiting former student. - Science fiction film with no special effects, cost about two million dollars. - The person you have been thrown together with by chance becomes the most important person to you for the rest of your life. - Why would it be so precisely at midnight? What about other time zones? What is the nature of what is destroying the world? We had lunch at an Indian restaurant Mr. Mahaaraja. I had a thali that featured calimari. The sauce was much better than at most Indian restaurants in the US. We talked to two women in a restaurant who were asking about our palmtops. [to be continued] [-mrl] Mark Leeper MT 3E-433 732-957-5619 mleeper@lucent.com Transcendental numbers occupy a position in the field of real or complex numbers much like that of insects in the kingdom of animals. Everybody knows they are, by a large margin, the most abundant class, but few know more than one or two of them by name. -- Donald R. Newman