THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
08/03/18 -- Vol. 37, No. 5, Whole Number 2026

Co-Editor: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
Co-Editor: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
All material is the opinion of the author and is copyrighted by the
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Topics:
        Sidewise Award for Alternate History Finalists for 2017
        KRONOS (1957) (film retrospective by Mark R. Leeper)
        Museum Thoughts (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
        CURVATURE (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
        PARADISE LOST (letter of comment by Jerry Ryan)
        Heat Wave, Philcon 2013, WAR OF THE SATELLITES,
                MYSTERY IN THE WAX MUSEUM, and PARADISE LOST
                (letter of comment by John Purcell)
        This Week's Reading (FIRE WATCH) (book comments
                by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: Sidewise Award for Alternate History Finalists for 2017

Short Form:

Tom Anderson & Bruno Lombardi, "N'oublions Jamais," ALTERED EUROPA,
        edited by Martin T. Ingham, Martinus Publishing, 2017
Dave D'Alessio, "The Twenty Year Reich," ALTERED EUROPA, edited by
        Martin T. Ingham, Martinus Publishing, 2017
Nisi Shawl, "Sun River," CLOCKWORK CAIRO: STEAMPUNK TALES FROM
        EGYPT, edited by Matthew Bright, Twopenny Books, 2017
Harry Turtledove, "Zigeuner," ASIMOV'S, 9-10/17

Long Form:

Gregory Benford, THE BERLIN PROJECT, Saga Press, 2017
Brent Harris, A TIME OF NEED, Insomnia Publishing, 2017
Elan Mastai, ALL OUR WRONG TODAYS, Dutton, 2017
Alan Smale, "The Clash of Eagles" trilogy (CLASH OF EAGLES, EAGLE
        IN EXILE, EAGLE AND EMPIRE), Del Rey, 2015-2017
Bryce Zabel, ONCE THERE WAS A WAY, Diversion Books, 2017

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

TOPIC: KRONOS (1957) (film retrospective by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: With a film like KRONOS the viewer should not be looking
at how convincing the special effects are but how clever and
efficient they are as they come close to working.  From a distance
KRONOS looks like a fairly spectacular Earth invasion film.  Seen
individually each visual effect seems to give up its secrets quite
readily.  But there are enough visual effects to make the film seem
like a much bigger budget film.  I do not think when it was
released anybody laughed at KRONOS and called it tacky.  And that
is a small victory itself.  Rating: low +2 (-4 to +4) or 7/10

When I was young I considered KRONOS to be one of the better
science fiction films of the 1950s.  Possibly I considered it to be
on par with a film like EARTH VS. THE FLYING SAUCERS.  It never
occurred to me that it was a low-budget film.  In fact it is
something of a pinch-penny production with acceptable special
effects and acceptable script-writing.  Examined today, the script
is horrible as it attempts to counterfeit scientific jargon, but
the special effects are really very clever.

The film opens with a mysterious spacecraft emitting a globe of
light that floats to earth and somehow possesses a truck driver by
flashing into his face.  Under its influence he breaks into Lab
Central, a research establishment where the light jumps from him to
a scientist, Dr. Hubbell Elliot (played by John Emery).  The driver
falls dead and now it is Dr. Elliot who is acting strangely.  Lab
Central is in an uproar over an asteroid that is behaving in an
unusual manner.  In specific, it is changing its course in ways not
predicted by physics.  It seems have changed direction to be on a
collision course with Earth.  Dr. Leslie Gaskell (Jeff Morrow) is
convinced that there is intelligence behind the asteroid's change
in course.  He orders an atomic missile attack to destroy the
asteroid only to have it change course again and plunge into the
Pacific just off the Mexican coast.

Several scientific institutions plan expeditions to visit the site
of the crash, but Gaskell believes that the asteroid is being
controlled by intelligence and that there is no time to lose.
While it is not apparent at first, something is happening.  Alien
forces are constructing an energy accumulator, a hundred-foot-tall
metallic device to suck up energy and in some way not explained it
will send that energy to an alien world.  The accumulator marches
its way north to Los Angeles sucking up energy from power plants
along the way under the command of the possessed Dr. Elliot.

There are few mediocre touches in Kronos.  Where it is good it is
very good and when it gets silly, it is very silly.  By now the
concept of alien possessions were familiar, but perhaps because of
the way it was filmed including the black and white photography,
this one was particularly effective and chilling.  The accumulator
itself, vaguely humanoid and vaguely electronic looks like
something very alien.  It looks a lot like a vertical cylinder
supporting two boxes, one over the other.  At the corners of the
lower box are pistons that look almost like legs and pump as the
thing moves.  At the top is a spherical dome and two antennae.  It
looks almost like some cubist image of a human.  The accumulator
starts a hundred feet high and grows as it collects energy.  If
this machine is to be considered a monster, it is one of the most
intriguing monsters of the Fifties science fiction film.

As expected for cheap science fiction films of the Fifties, there
is plenty of stock footage.  This time the footage is of V-2
launches (or whatever the V-2 was called when the United States
Army tested with it).

When we find out what is going on there is a basic problem with the
idea that the aliens are collecting energy to turn it into matter.
By Einstein's famous E=MC-squared equation a lot of energy turns
into not very much matter.  That is what the C-squared says.  To
have the aliens soak up the energy of the exploding H-bomb, they
will get back only the mass of the original bomb or less-probably
considerably less.  That is just not enough mass to do them much
good.  They refer to this change as "anthropic conversion."  Nobody
in physics has ever heard of "anthropic conversion."  Nor does it
make sense in the finale to say that omega particles will reverse
the polarity of the accumulator.  But all this silly talk is part
of the fun.  I think the audience gives the story the same sort of
latitude we give "Star Trek" to invent a little science as needed.

The score for Kronos was written by Paul Sawtell and Bert Shefter.
The sound is big and brassy and at the same time tense and
exciting.  For a particularly weird effect it uses theremin
squeals.

In spite of the places where the visual effects contradict the
script, most of the visuals are highly effective in spite of the
low budget.  The proportions of the accumulator device do seem to
change in minor ways depending on the scene.  And it might have
been advisable to find a way to show the accumulator move without
animating the legs in cartoonish fashion.  Still, many of the
effects are done on a small budget and yet work surprisingly well.
I was always impressed by a scene of the huge dome of the
accumulator melting.  The scene is rendered very believably but on
close examination it appears to be just a light bulb dipped in wax.
When the bulb is turned on, the wax covering melts down revealing
the bulb beneath.  There are odd effects like a sort of electronic
hemorrhage.   The movie has a title that says it was filmed in
Regalscope.  When Fox filmed in black and white but widescreen in a
format that would otherwise be Cinemascope, that was called
Regalscope.

In spite of low budget touches and some silly dialogue, this film
still has a lot to offer.  I rate it a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.

Film Credits: 

What others are saying: 

[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Museum Thoughts (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

We went to the Princeton Art Museum the other day.  If you live in
the area, and haven't visited it, you probably should.  They have a
fairly impressive collection, including several Impressionists and
post-Impressionists (including a Van Gogh).
But we started with the "non-Western" art: Asia, Africa, and pre-
Columbian American art.  One doesn't know quite how to describe the
  category of European art after 1400 or so and American art after
1607 or so.  It seems to be lumped together, and is often displayed
together, while everything else is displayed in a separate part of
most museums.  The problem is that "American" could include pre-
Columbian art, which in turn seems to be applied to Latin America
rather than including Mississippian or Northwest indigenous art.

Anyway, the museum had nice displays of Chinese art, Japanese art,
African art, and pre-Columbian art.  They were a little light on
Indian art.  What I noticed was that they had a lot of Chinese
paintings with text written along one side, and Japanese screens
with calligraphy, but they did not provide any translations.  I can
understand how they might not have translated it fifty years ago,
but one would think by now that they would realize that the text
was as much of the art of the piece as the painting.

The Mississippian and Northwest pieces are all recent to this
museum (acquired within the last twenty-five years).  And they seem
to have been acquired from (or on loan from) the Department of
Geology and Geophysical Sciences.  ?!  Well, that department used
to have a museum called the Museum of Geology and Archaeology, and
it held all these items.  That is now the Museum of Natural
History, and probably because of the push over the last several
decades, items from non-Western cultures that are arguably art have
been moved from natural history museums to art museums.  [-ecl]

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

TOPIC: CURVATURE (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: A woman wakes up in bed and realizes that a recent chunk
of her life, the time since she went to bed, is now missing.  Then
she discovers through the magic of time travel that she had killed
someone--and really that is not like her--and since then has been
trying to send messages through time to stop herself from
committing the murder.  Mexican filmmaker Diego Hallivis directs
his second film after GAME TIME.  The story is not really new, but
it has enough science fiction to satisfy viewers tired of
superheroes.  Much of this story is a somewhat humdrum chase that
does not really need the science fiction element.  Rating: high +1
(-4 to +4) or 6/10

While some people hear "science fiction" and think "STAR WARS
battle", CURVATURE shows how to make a decent science fiction film
on a mid-range budget like science fiction films were in the old
days.  Familiar actors in the film are Linda Hamilton of the
"Terminator" series and Lyndsy Fonseca of KICK-ASS.

Helen (played by Lyndsy Fonseca) is still in mourning for her
recently deceased husband.  They were working together on a time
travel machine and having some success.  Then when the device was
almost finished her husband committed suicide.  Helen considers
continuing working alone.  Then her life gets another shock.  She
gets a mysterious phone call from--no, not her husband--but from
her herself.  She finds out that she has been unconscious for
several days.  Now she is getting these phone calls apparently from
herself.  But it is a younger version of herself who is placing
these calls from the days she was conked out.  The younger version
of herself committed murder while Helen was unconscious and now the
older earlier version of herself is trying to prevent the nastiness
from happening.  Are you confused?  Good.  Good science fiction may
do that.  CURVATURE could use a little more of that sort of
confusion.

There are a few cute touches in the script that I felt pulled me
right out of the movie.  In this film about a time machine Helen's
dead husband is named Wells.  Elsewhere is a character named
Griffin (as in THE INVISIBLE MAN, but also may be a nod to film
editor Joel Griffen).  But somehow the plot does not feel very
Wellsian.

As happens all too commonly with the current political correctness
policy, from the first frame in which we see the villain we know he
is going to be the villain.  He is just the right demographic to be
a bad guy.  One more problem: the twists in the plot telegraph
themselves.

CURVATURE has chase scenes that it would well have done without or
with less.  In general in a film chase the characters may be moving
fast, but the plot is standing still.  One way the writing is
unusual is the discussion of an after-life.  Most United States
science fiction films steer clear of religious discussion.

CURVATURE is an uneven piece of science fiction with a few
predictable touches and a few ideas that come as surprises.  I rate
it a high +1 on the -4 to +4 scale or 6/10.  I failed to notice any
place where the story involves curvature of anything.

Film Credits:


What others are saying:


[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: PARADISE LOST (letter of comment by Jerry Ryan)

In response to Evelyn's comments on PARADISE LOST in the 07/27/18
issue of the MT VOID, Jerry Ryan writes:
[Evelyn writes,] " One, what is the deal with the Trinity? Okay,
it's an old question, but I still do not get it. "

As the priests in my high school used to say, "Well, that's the
mystery, isn't it."  [-gwr]

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

TOPIC: Heat Wave, Philcon 2013, WAR OF THE SATELLITES, MYSTERY IN
THE WAX MUSEUM, and PARADISE LOST (letter of comment by John
Purcell)

In response to the 07/27/18 issue of the MT VOID, John Purcell
writes:

Hello, Mark and Evelyn.  I trust you two are fine, and surviving
the current heat wave sweeping across North America.  Over here in
SouthCentralEastern Texas it's the typical daily triple digit highs
and no rain, so we are in the annual burn ban, which never bothers
us since we don't burn trash or anything like that in our yard.
Instead our yard turns into baked brick, and that's about it.  What
a fun place to live!  [-jp]

Mark responds:

Don't trust too strongly that we are fine.  We are starting to get
on in years and the unexpected is expected.  I have Parkinson's and
that is putting some limitation on my activity.  The unexpected is
also expected in the climate.  I think Texas and California may be
paying a heavy price for climate change.  [-mrl]

In response to Evelyn's comments on Philcon 2013 in the same
issue, John writes:

Those Philcon 2013 notes make me a little sad because I see Gardner
Dozois's name listed as a panelist, plus there was that panel
discussion of DANGEROUS VISIONS.  The brief comments about movie
remakes were fun to read, and it is good to see that both of you
were on some of the panels.  I trust you enjoyed attending.  How
many Philcons have there now been?  [-jp]

Mark responds:

Philcon started in 1936.  I am not up on fan history, but I guess
that means there have been 83 Philcons.  [-mrl]

Evelyn replies:

Actually, this year is being called the Philcon 81 (i.e., the
Philcon of the 81st year since they started).  Fancyclopedia says,
"The history of Philcon is unusually vague--Harry Warner, for
instance, mentions that he was unable to find out much for his
histories of the 50s and 60s.  This may be why Philcon does not
label its conventions by number, but instead uses years."  The list
in Fancyclopedia includes only 58 conventions, counting this year.
[-ecl]

In response to Mark's comments on TCM in August in the same
issue, John writes:

Interesting that next Friday--August 3rd--TCM is broadcasting the
1933 movie THE MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM, which just had an
extensive write-up in Robert Jennings' fanzine FADEAWAY #55.  I
would watch it but we will be at ArmadilloCon 40 that weekend, so I
shall set it up to record and watch it when I get the chance.  I
have seen it before, but it's one worth having on file.  [-jp]

Mark replies:

If you are recording MYSTERY IN THE WAX MUSEUM, I assume you know
that DOCTOR X (made the previous year) is very much a companion
piece.  Both were produced by many of the same filmmakers.  Most
noticeable is that both were shot in two-strip Technicolor.  They
just sort of complement each other.  TCM is showing DOCTOR X later
the same night.  [-mrl]

In response to Mark's review of WAR OF THE SATELLITES in the same
issue, John writes:

I truly enjoy watching (and heckling) gawd-awful skiffy movies from
the 1950s and 1960s, and Roger Corman flicks are prime fodder for
practice.  WAR OF THE SATELLITES (1958) is in my DVD collection,
and quite frankly, it ranks right up there with the best of the
worst.  I don't think I would be able to last watching past three
Roger Corman movies in a row for fear of rotting my brain.  That
would be inhumane treatment, and probably is prohibited by the
Geneva Convention.  Yes, I know: that was held three decades
earlier.  My theory is that they were planning ahead.

In response to Evelyn's comments on PARADISE LOST in the same
issue, John writes:

I had to read both PARADISE LOST and PARADISE REGAINED for a John
Milton seminar course I took for my BA in English back in the mid-
1970s.  One part of the final exam was to write out the first
twenty lines of PARADISE LOST using the original spellings,
grammar, and punctuation.  I don't remember what I earned on that
exam, but I did pass the class with a B+, and I can still recite
the first four lines word for word.  Some things get drilled into
your brain and remain there, whether or not you want to remember.
Those were the days of rote recitation in "academic learning."
[-jp]

Mark replies:

Your PARADISE LOST exam makes my head spin.  I have always had
memory problems.  [-mrl]

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

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

FIRE WATCH, a collection of Connie Willis stories (ISBN 978-0-553-
26045-8), was our book discussion selection this month.

"Fire Watch": I got "temporal whiplash" reading this.  It was
written in 1982, anchored in 2055 (or so), with most of the action
taking place in 1940, and referencing events in 1945, 1951, and
2007.  Oh, and the 2007 events (and hence in some sense the main
character's entire story) are not in our world, but the then-future
world as envisioned by Willis, but which did not come to pass.
(This is the first story that Willis wrote in her "time travel from
Oxford" series, though the mention of Kirvin visiting 1349 may
indicate that she already had the idea for DOOMSDAY BOOK, even
though she would not write that for another ten years.)

"Service for the Burial of the Dead": One almost gets the feeling
that this is a "Schrodinger's cat" sort of story, with the big
scene relying on a wave form collapsing in Dr. Sawyer's office.

"Lost and Found": This might have been more meaningful to me if I
were more steeped in Christian theology (or at least Christian
eschatology).  As it is it stuck me as a sort of "screwball end of
the world" story, but without the humor.

"All My Darling Daughters": I read this a long time ago but skipped
it this time, as being singularly unpleasant.  Willis is often
thought of as the author of light, frivolous stories, but that is
only part of what she writes, and a lot of the stories in this
volume are from the other part.

"The Father of the Bride": I suppose it is an interesting idea to
merge the "person misplaced in time" trope with the "Sleeping
Beauty" trope, but I am not sure it progresses beyond
"interesting".

"A Letter from the Clearys": Willis is very slow in handing out
information in this story.  We figure our early on that we are in a
post-holocaust world, but the causes, the extent, and the
implications of this are very slow in coming.  John Kessel has
pointed out that this is not the traditional "plucky teenage
heroine" story--he thinks Lynn is as much a terrorist as those (the
one?) who started the war.  And her burned hand is not accidentally
burned each (which certainly seemed unlikely), but her way of
concealing the real problem.  His main point was that people did
not realize how bleak this early Willis story was.

"And Come from Miles Around": This is a fairly neat idea.
Unfortunately, Willis's introductory note pretty much gives it all
away, so do not read it until after you read the story.

"The Sidon in the Mirror": Not all Connie Willis stories are
readable.  I somehow couldn't get into this one.

"Daisy, in the Sun": This is a classic, apparently, but it didn't
work for me.

"Mail-Order Clone": My problem with this story is that it is told
from the point of view of a mentally defective narrator, not in a
sympathetic manner, but more in a "let's laugh at how dense the
narrator is" sort of way.

"Samaritan": This is not a new topic, but it may well have been
less familiar forty years ago when Willis wrote this in 1979.  As
it stands, it is merely another version of the idea, in a religious
setting.

"Blued Moon": It is a basic guideline for anthologies and
collections that you start with the strongest story and end with
the second strongest.  "Fire Watch" won both the Nebula and the
Hugo.  "Blued Moon" may not be as "strong" (in some sense) as "All
My Darling Daughters" or "A Letter from the Clearys", but it is
strong in terms of being the sort of story you want to leave in the
readers' minds when they close the book.  It is also the sort of
story that people think of when they think of Connie Willis.

[-ecl]

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

                                           Mark Leeper
mleeper@optonline.net


           For myself I am an optimist--it does not seem to be much
           use being anything else.
                                           ----Winston Churchill