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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 02/26/99 -- Vol. 17, No. 35

       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. God grant me

       -- the COURAGE to change the things I can.

       -- the SERENITY to accept the ones I cannot change,

       -- the WISDOM to know the difference,

       -- the OPPORTUNITY to get my hands around the neck of  the  schmuck
       who is causing all these problems,

       -- and the STRENGTH to wring his neck for him.  [-mrl]

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

       2. A while back at work there was a fad--yes I think I can use that
       word--a  fad  for getting lots and lots of feedback on your job and
       how you were doing it.  Rare would be the day at work  we  did  not
       get  a  survey  in  the  mail.   The idea was you should go to your
       customers and find out how they thought you should  be  doing  your
       job and get their suggestions.  The idea was that the more feedback
       you got the better you could do whatever it is  you  do.   I  think
       what  they did not give a whole lot of thought to is that surveying
       people accurately without prejudicing the result is  an  incredibly
       intricate  and  difficult  process.   And  acting on the results of
       surveys is actually fairly perilous.  If you survey your  customers
       and  do  what they suggest to pleast them you can end up pleasing a
       lot fewer of them.  How is this possible?

       Let me give one quick example.  A while back some red dyes in  food
       were  cancer-causing.   Eating some commercial foods that were red-
       colored actually added a little bit of danger of getting  sick.   I
       believe  I  have  heard  that M&Ms candies never used the dangerous
       food  colorings.   But  their  red  M&Ms  were  suspect,  and   not
       surprisingly  they  stopped  making  red  M&Ms.  And I don't really
       suppose that the world was a whole lot worse off for not having red
       M&Ms.   The  candy was a little less festive, but none had alarming
       colors.  This was probably a reasonable business  decision  and  it
       was one made WITHOUT consulting customers.

       Okay, fine.  Time passes.  Food  colorings  became  safer.   A  new
       generation comes along with no fear.  At least no fear of red M&Ms.
       The Mars Candy Company decides it is time to bring back  red  M&Ms.
       And  as  long  as  they  are bringing them back they want to please
       their customers.  They decide to ask what other colors people would
       like.   And what answer came back more--much more--than any others?
       People suggested that there should be blue M&Ms.

       So now Mars has really little choice.  If  people  want  blue  M&Ms
       they  will make them.  There is this problem.  There is a myth that
       there is no blue food.  In fact there are  some.   Blueberries  are
       blue.   There  are  some liqueurs that are blue.  I think they look
       like Windex, but being a non-drinker nobody  asks  me.   There  are
       some  foods  made  from  blue liqueurs, like blue pancakes.  But in
       general and for reasons I am not sure anybody knows, there are very
       few  blue  foods.  Certainly when you make a blue M&M it looks like
       it is covered in glossy truck paint.  So why would so  many  people
       want to have blue M&Ms?

       The answer might be that the survey was flawed.  But how  could  it
       be  if it just asked people what other color they wanted.  They did
       not lead anyone toward any particular answer.  At least they do not
       appear  to  have.  Actually they probably did without realizing it.
       There is a principle of completeness in surveys.  If one item seems
       to  be  missing  from a list, it will be noticed.  Suppose that you
       were making  a  postage  stamp  that  was  a  tribute  to  American
       comedians.   It  had  Shemp  Howard and Larry Fine.  There was room
       left for one more comedian.  You ask people who should it  be.   As
       famous  as  Bob  Hope is, I bet he would get very few votes.  Well,
       first of all he is still  alive,  but  that  is  not  the  problem.
       People would probably pick Moe Howard.  They would want to complete
       the set of the original Three Stooges.

       Now in addition to orange and brown M&Ms you have red, yellow,  and
       green.   You have the bright primary colors of light.  You have two
       of the three primary colors of pigments.  The one that  is  missing
       is  blue.   If  you ask people what color of M&M is missing, a fair
       percentage will say blue.  None of them are even  thinking  what  a
       truly  disgusting color enameled blue is for a piece of candy.  And
       nobody will specifically give feedback that blue is a color do  not
       want.  Who would even think of it as a possibility?

       Now it may be that people who dye their hair  day-glow  colors  and
       put  safety pins through their lips may want blue M&Ms, but to most
       people they are a little disgusting.   The  Mars  people  recognize
       this and there are very few blue M&Ms in a bag.  But they are stuck
       with the color because their survey indicated this  was  what  they
       had  to do to please the customer.  And my suggestion of what to do
       if you get a blue M&M?  As you pop it in your mouth.  And as you do
       it, close your eyes and think of England.  [-mrl]

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

       3. OCTOBER SKY (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: In Coalwood, West Virginia, 1957 a boy
                 uses  model  rocketry  to  escape the fate of a
                 career digging coal.  With the  inspiration  of
                 one high school teacher and the drive to follow
                 his curiosity and vision, he  resists  all  the
                 pressures  of  the town, and especially his own
                 father, to work for  a  dying  mining  company.
                 While  parts  of the story seem contrived, this
                 is a true story.  It is based on a book by  the
                 main  character  is  riveting.  Rating: 8 (0 to
                 10), low +3 (-4 to +4)

       It is October  1957  in  Coalwood,  West  Virginia  and  there  are
       virtually two different worlds--worlds that never touch each other.
       One world is the town's coal mine.  The Olga  Mining  Company  runs
       that  and  it  is  the town.  Most boys know from an early age that
       when they get old enough they will go down in  the  mine  to  work.
       The other world is what they read about in the papers.  It is where
       amazingly the Soviets just put a satellite called Sputnik in  orbit
       around  the  whole  planet.   And for nearly the first time the two
       worlds touch.  There right over Coalwood is a light shooting across
       the  sky.   Homer  Hickam, Jr. (played by Jake Gyllenhaal) sees the
       satellite go overhead, and nothing will ever be the same  for  him.
       There  overhead  is  a  piece  of  the  outer world, put there by a
       rocket.  Homer gets some of his buddies together  with  the  school
       nerd  and  they  decide  that  they  are  going  to build their own
       rockets.

       This is the story of the  four  boys  who  dedicate  themselves  to
       building  and launching their own rockets.  Naming the rockets Auks
       after flightless birds they soon find that  launching  rockets  not
       only  can  be  the ticket to get them out of town, it really has to
       get them out of town.  The town is owned by Olga and they  are  not
       allowed  to  fly rockets from Olga's property.  Instead they find a
       slate hilltop eight  miles  from  town  and  set  it  up  as  their
       launching  base.   They  begin  to get the materials and money they
       need by any means, fair or foul.   This  includes  stealing  spikes
       from  abandoned  railroad  tracks  and  selling them.  But there is
       tremendous resistence in the town to doing anything as  strange  as
       building  rockets and they come into conflict with the school, with
       the police, but most of all Homer Jr. comes in  conflict  with  his
       father,  Homer  Sr.,  superintendent  of  the Olga mine.  [Note: to
       avoid confusion, Homer  Sr.'s  name  is  changed  to  John  in  the
       screenplay.]

       "John" is played by Chris Cooper in an  ironic  piece  of  casting.
       Cooper  is  most  familiar  for  his  role  as  the coal mine union
       organizer in MATEWAN.  In this film he is cursing that same  union.
       But  the  conflict  between Homer and his father forms the dramatic
       core of the film.  It is  in  the  love-hate  relationship  between
       Homer  and  his  father that the film gets its strongest resonance.
       Homer's relationship with an inspiring teacher, Miss  Riley  (Laura
       Dern), while also strong, falls into more familiar territory.

       OCTOBER SKY is directed by Joe Johnston who directed THE  ROCKETEER
       and  JUMANJI.  The screenplay is by Louis Colick, based on the book
       ROCKET BOYS by Homer Hickam, Jr.  Hickam claims to be pleased  with
       the  adaptation of his book and even points out that the two titles
       are anagrams.  For acting credit, the honors  go  mostly  to  Chris
       Cooper  as Homer's father.  Laura Dern and Jake Gyllenhaal are just
       a little too good-looking for their roles as films of the  original
       people  demonstrate at the end the film.  However, Coalwood, filmed
       in a Tennessee coal town really  does  capture  the  look  of  West
       Virginia in the 50s.  [I say this as someone lived in West Virginia
       for a while in the 1950s.  Okay, I was  very  young,  but  I  still
       remember the look of coal country.]

       OCTOBER SKY is a powerful look at a young man's drives to become  a
       scientist.    It   is  also  a  moving  portrait  of  a  father-son
       relationship.  I rate the film an 8 on the 0 to 10 scale and a  low
       +3 on the -4 to +4 scale.

       MINOR SPOILER: There are some odd touches  that  should  have  been
       cleared  up  in the script with some explanation.  Why did the boys
       never look at the object the police were holding until  AFTER  they
       proved it was not theirs?  For that matter why did the police never
       notice that the object they were holding was  professionally  built
       and not made by amateurs.  Also were both younger and older brother
       high school seniors in the same year, as they seemed to  be?   This
       ===================================================================

       4. CENTRAL STATION (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: A retired teacher who works  in  Rio's
                 Central Station and boy who has lost his mother
                 become  mismatched  travel  companions   on   a
                 bittersweet journey through rural Brazil.  That
                 they should go from hating each other to  being
                 friends  is  a dramatic cliche, but the look at
                 the lives of the poor and the pious  of  Brazil
                 makes  this  film worth the trip.  Rating: 6 (0
                 to 10), high +1 (-4 to +4)

       Oscar-nominated Fernanda Montenegro plays  Dora,  a  retire  school
       teacher who earns a modest living working in Rio's Central Station,
       a bus and train station.  She writes letters  for  the  illiterate.
       But  she  rarely if ever mails the letters.  Instead, she cynically
       uses her  position  to  look  into  the  lives  of  her  uneducated
       clientele  to laugh at and despise them.  Hers is one of many dirty
       businesses that prey on people who travel through the station.  One
       day  Dora  sees  one  of  her clients accidentally hit by a bus and
       killed leaving the  client's  son  Josua  (played  by  Vinicius  de
       Oliveira)  homeless.   She  is  initially  untouched  by  the boy's
       plight.  Eventually she is drawn in and decides  to  accompany  the
       boy  on  a  bus  trip  to be sure he finds his father.  Her journey
       takes will take on many meanings as she learn to love first the boy
       and  through  him  the  illiterate  poor of Brazil as she learns to
       understand each better.  Unlike the approach that would  likely  be
       taken with an American or British film the poor are not shown to be
       quirky and humorous.  Director Walter Salles,  Jr.,  gives  them  a
       quiet  and  pious  dignity.   Chance  makes Dora herself one of the
       rural poor, even if only temporarily and from  this  vantage  point
       she sees the poor very differently.  She also will see this journey
       as a sort of last chance to grasp life and a last chance to  escape
       her  cynicism actually feel inspired as she once did.  Salles shows
       us she is in more desperation than the boy she is helping.

       A Frank Capra would have handled the story making the  people  that
       Dora  meets  offbeat. Salles is not quite so subtle.  He floods the
       film with Biblical and religious allusions.  In the United  States,
       religious imagery in film often has a sinister overtone.  Certainly
       American filmmakers are frequently willing to show a sinister  side
       to  religion.   Our films frequently portray fraudulent evangelists
       like Elmer Gantry or vaguely sadistic Catholic schools as we saw in
       THE  SAINT.   Salles  is making a film for a Brazilian audience for
       whom fervent Catholicism  is  an  unquestioned  virtue.   For  that
       reason  frequently  a viewer in the United States will be wondering
       what point Salles may be trying to make when, in fact, he will have
       already  made  his point.  We may wonder at the significance of the
       Biblical names of men in Josua's family, when  the  real  point  is
       Salles does create a definite dichotomy  between  city  people  and
       country  people.   City  people, particularly those who work in the
       station, are soulless people who look dispassionately on death  for
       minor infractions like shoplifting.  The country people, never well
       defined, are simple, pious, and pure.  When  they  use  Dora  as  a
       scribe, they open into their lives a window that is purer and finer
       than what Dora sees in the city people.  Oliveira's acting  as  the
       boy  is simple, but very natural.  But of equal importance with the
       actors is the setting.  We see Brazil with its road stops.  We  see
       people  willing to show Dora small kindness that it is implied they
       would not show her in the city.

       Central Station is a road picture touching look into the  lives  of
       the  people  of  Brazil.   Perhaps  it  simplifies  them a bit, but
       Fernanda Montenegro gives a solid  performance  as  a  woman  going
       through  unexpected  changes.  Part of what makes her stand out for
       audiences is her worn face, almost like a female  Humphrey  Bogart.
       But  her  performance  is what gives the film what power it has.  I
       rate CENTRAL STATION a 6 on the 0 to 10 scale and a high +1 on  the
       -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

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

                 Capsule: A  woman's  over-powering  personality
                 ruins her own life and the life of her talented
                 daughter.  Brenda  Blethyn  and  Jane  Horrocks
                 give  strong performances in a downbeat look at
                 English lower-middle class life.  Rating: 6  (0
                 to 10), high +1 (-4 to +4)

       A big personality can push out of the way all personalities  around
       it.   Mari  Hoff  (played  by Brenda Blethyn) is a woman with a big
       personality and a big voice.  When she enters a room  she  squeezes
       out  just  about  everybody  else.   Both  her  best friend and her
       daughter are nearly mute in her overpowering and frequently  vulgar
       presence.  It is not that she has any intelligence to spread around
       but she dominates all about her by verbally overpowering them.  One
       of the few people who can get a word in when talking to Mari is Ray
       Say (Michael Caine).  He is an entertainment promoter well past his
       prime,  but  who  denies  the  truth  even to himself.  He promotes
       pointless acts that are more pitiful than entertaining.  Still, Ray
       has  big  plans that obviously are of little value even to Ray.  He
       is convinced he can still strike it big if only he  can  find  some
       great talent right here in his own neighborhood.

       Mari's daughter Laura (Jane Horrocks), living with Mari, has almost
       given up the struggle to talk.  On the rare occasions when she even
       bothers to speak it comes out at a  squeaky  tiny  voice  that  has
       earned  her  the nickname "Little Voice."  Laura has retreated from
       the world dominated by her mother and into a world  of  daydreaming
       of  her  dead father, now nearly elevated to the status of saint in
       her own mind.  She listens over and over to his records of  Marilyn
       Monroe,  Shirley  Bassey,  and especially Judy Garland.  Unknown to
       anyone while Laura has almost no voice of her own  she  can  borrow
       and  even  sing in voices of Garland, Monroe, and Bassey in perfect
       voice impressions.

       One night when Laura is  listening  to  the  beloved  Judy  Garland
       records and Ray is visiting Mari the power goes out.  Ray hears the
       music stop, but strangely Judy Garland's voice continues  to  sing.
       Suddenly Ray realizes that "Little Voice" may have real talent that
       he can exploit to find some real success.  But can he get Laura  to
       come out of her shell?  And if she does come out, can Mari stand to
       see someone else in the family getting attention?

       Jim Herman wrote the screenplay and directs a  film  based  on  the
       play  "The  Rise  and  Fall  of  Little  Voice"  by Jim Cartwright.
       Blethyn and Caine each give performances so earthy one almost feels
       dirty just watching them.  Each is totally self-absorbed.  Caine at
       least is aware enough of how he is perceived that  he  can  control
       himself.  Blethyn's character is so self-absorbed that she does not
       even think of appearances.  Horrocks  is  so  victimized  that  she
       seems  to be retreating into autism.  Ewan McGregor is present as a
       young telephone installer who is the first person since  the  death
       of  Mari's husband who really cares for Laura.  While reminding the
       viewer that there are still normal and decent people in the  world,
       he is a little too good to be true.  It is never clear what he sees
       in Laura whose personality qualifies her for the walking wounded.

       LITTLE VOICE is a  downbeat  look  at  English  lower-middle  class
       standards.   The little neighborhood nightclub, Boo's, is seamy and
       tawdry, even if there is little that we see that is  explicit.   If
       LITTLE  VOICE  really is a comedy, it is a dark one and one full of
       people whom one is happy to be  rid  of  at  the  end  of  its  100
       minutes.   Much of the plotting of LITTLE VOICE is predictable, but
       the performances are raw and realistic.  This is a side of  England
       most  of us would rather do without.  I rate the film 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

            A thing is not necessarily true because a man dies
            for it.
                                          -- Oscar Wilde


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