2190 lines
88 KiB
Plaintext
2190 lines
88 KiB
Plaintext
From cn577@cleveland.Freenet.Edu Ukn Mar 5 21:56:35 1993
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id AA21352; Fri, 5 Mar 93 21:56:28 -0500
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Received: by slc8.INS.CWRU.Edu (5.65b+ida+/CWRU-1.5.3-freenet)
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id AA21263; Fri, 5 Mar 93 21:21:34 -0500 (from cn577 for rlw@beau.atlanta.dg.com)
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Message-Id: <9303060221.AA21263@slc8.INS.CWRU.Edu>
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Date: Fri, 5 Mar 93 21:21:34 -0500
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From: cn577@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Cyberspace Vanguard Magazine)
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To: rlw@beau.atlanta.dg.com, sche7135@mach1.wlu.ca, pat@berry.Cary.NC.US,
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adh@petrel.att.com, pauls@css.itd.umich.edu,
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GILMOUR@BINAH.CC.BRANDEIS.EDU, radioman@leland.stanford.edu,
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horizon@chezrob.pinetree.org
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Subject: CYBERSPACE VANGUARD 1:3
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Reply-To: cn577@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Cyberspace Vanguard Magazine)
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Status: RO
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X-Status:
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CYBERSPACE VANGUARD
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News and Views of the Science Fiction and Fantasy
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Universe
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Volume 1, Issue 3 March 5, 1993
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Copyright 1993, Cyberspace Vanguard
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Is it really the beginning of the month AGAIN?
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Well, we're here, so it must be.
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Big changes are on the way here at CV. For one
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thing, the end of the month just comes too darn
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fast. What it boils down to is this: with the
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staff we have we are faced with a choice. That
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choice is to either cut back on the frequency or the
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quality. We're not willing to compromise on the
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quality, so it's the frequency that get's tampered
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with. Beginning after this issue, we will either
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publish every six weeks, or we will do a full issue
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every TWO months, with an update in the middle
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month. The update would include any news or
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spoilers that need to get out before the next issue,
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any columns our columnists want to do monthly, and
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maybe a few articles submitted for publication. If
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you have a preference, please let us know on the CV
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Response Card.
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Also on the response card, we'll be starting
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our first reader poll. In this case, we'll be
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presenting an opportunity for you to give us your
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opinion on some of the sf television shows showing
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up these days. If you have an idea for a poll, note
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it on the card.
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But that's not the only form of reader
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participation we'll be starting. In our electronic
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pages you'll find an article about conventions, in
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which we invite you to contribute your opinions for
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publication.
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More changes: Since the paper issues will be
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getting bigger, we will be forced to raise the
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subscription rates in order to cover the extra
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postage. HOWEVER. Anybody who is already
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subscribed, or who subscribes by the end of March,
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will still receive a full six issues at the old
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price of $10.50 (US). We won't announce the new
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rates until April 1st, so you still have time to
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sneak in under the deadline.
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Our SNail Mail adress is:
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CYBERSPACE VANGUARD
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PO Box 25704
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Garfield Hts., OH 44125
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USA
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(Though the electronic subscriptions are still free -- just
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drop a note to cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu -- there are
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two disadvantages: a) no pictures, cartoons, etc., and
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b) the issues are running 30 pages now, and are likely to
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get longer. If your access to hardcopy is restricted, it
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might be a good idea to invest in the paper version.)
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In our last issue, there was a little bit of
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confusion about reposting. CV is registered with
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the United States Copyright Office, and we don't
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want you lifting articles, but NEWS items can be
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reposted as long as credit (and our e-mail adress)
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is given. We would also appreciate being told where
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it went. For permission to reprint ARTICLES,
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contact us at
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cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu
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or
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Cyberspace Vanguard@1:157/564
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or at the SNail Mail address above
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All rights revert to the author upon
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publication, so please give us time to contact them.
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Also, as usual, anything without a byline was
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written by me, and the COMPLETE issue may be
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reposted at will.
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We are still desperately seeking both writers
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and correspondents. For writer's guidelines, drop
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us a note at the above address. To become a
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correspondent, send a list of the groups you read
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frequently and consistently to the above address.
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We are, as they say, eager to work with new or
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unpublished writers. If you think you have a good
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article or idea for an article, let us know! The
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same goes for those who have an area of expertise
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that might make a basis for a regular column.
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We are also looking for a new logo. Graphic
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design isn't my strong point, so I'm throwing it out
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to all of you talented people. Got an idea for a
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logo design for the paper version? Send it to the
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SNail Mail adress above. We want something dynamic,
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eye-catching, but not chaotic. If you have an idea
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but not much artistic talent, just describe it to us
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with a sketch. Also indicate if the design is
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computer drafted, and if you can transmit it
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electronically. The winner will have his or her
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logo on the cover of the paper version with full
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credit and a lifetime subscription. (And who knows
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what else ...)
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---!---
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WORLD WATCH: Last time we told you CV was being
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read in the United States, Canada, the United
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Kingdom, Finland, Sweden, Australia, South Africa,
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and the Netherlands. Since then we've been
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contacted by readers in Belgium, Germany, Hong Kong,
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Costa Rica, the Republic of Ireland, and Malta. If
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you're reading this in any other country, please
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drop us a note and let us know.
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---!---
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So what's in this issue? Lots of great stuff. For
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one thing, we are thrilled to bring you a rather
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scholarly article on the genre of science fiction
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itself from CRAWFORD KILIAN. Mr. Killian is the
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author of 10 science fiction and fantasy novels, and
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quite well respected in the field. We also have an
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interview with Howard Berger, one of the men
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responsible for the ARMY OF DARKNESS, and a "pass it
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along" article from J. Michael Straczynski telling
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you what you can expect to see if BABYLON 5 is
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picked up as a series, and what you can do to help.
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Also, Rick's review, and of course all the news
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that's fit to transmit. On with it!
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----------------------------------------------------
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Table of Contents
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--!1!-- Effects Guys Are Bizzarre, or "Isn't that
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Sam Elliot's dead body?" (An interview with
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Howard Berger, effects for ARMY OF DARKNESS)
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--!2!-- On the Past and Future of Science Fiction
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by CRAWFORD KILIAN
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--!3!-- What to Expect From Babylon 5, from
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J. MICHAEL STRACZYNSKI
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--!4!-- Pros and Cons: Your opinions?
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--!5!-- A review of THE GOLDEN, by Lucius
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Shephard
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--!6!-- The Old Comics Curmudgeon
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--!7!-- Anime 101: Coming to America
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--!8!-- All the News that's Fit to Transmit
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--!9!-- Curiousities
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--!10!-- Spoilers Ahoy
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--!11!-- Convention Listings
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--!12!-- Organization Listings
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--!13!-- Gratitude and Opportunity
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----------------------------------------------------
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--!1!--
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----------------------------------------------------
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EFFECTS GUYS ARE BIZZARRE, OR "ISN'T THAT SAM
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ELLIOT'S DEAD BODY?"
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(An interview with Howard Berger, effects for ARMY
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OF DARKNESS)
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Howard Berger, the "B" in K.N.B. EFX Group,
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says that he's no different from any other special
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effects wizard in Hollywood. "Everybody in my
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industry has the same story," he'll tell you. "They
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were just wierd kids who loved monsters, loved
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science fiction, and that's all they did. They
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would put stuff on their face, they would put stuff
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on their siblings faces, just make monsters and go
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crazy with that stuff. Then when we grew up ...
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well, none of us ever grew up ... and were out of
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school, we pursued carreers. That's the whole
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story."
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Mr. Berger was lucky. KNB (For Kurtzman,
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Nicotero and Berger Effects Group -- they decided to
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make their name sound like a law firm), the company
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responsible for all the effects in EVIL DEAD III:
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ARMY OF DARKNESS, is one of only eight or ten
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special effects houses that constantly has a job to
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be working on. But he says there's no bitterness,
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even though many of those who got into the business
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during the boom in the 1980's are starting to drop
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out due to lack of work. "It's all friendly
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competition. There are a few people who are a
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little bit cutthroat, but I'm friends with pretty
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much everybody. There's people whose work I don't
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care for, but I'm still friends with them. I never
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say, 'hey, you suck.' I think it sometimes, though.
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"We all started out together. The big guys, we
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all started out working for Stan Winston, who did
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Terminator and Predator and Aliens, and then we just
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branched off. Now pretty much everybody who worked
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there has their own shop. If I can't figure
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something out I'll just call next door and say 'How
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do you guys do that?' and they'll tell me. Or if
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someone runs out of some material they'll call and
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say, 'We ran out of this, can we come over and
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borrow a gallon?' and we'll say 'Sure.' It's just
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really fun."
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But still, there are the down sides to the job.
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While he loves to do the actual makeup effects, he
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hates to do blood. It's made out of food coloring
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and Karo Syrup, and it gets all over everything.
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"There's no way to avoid it. It just gets all over
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you, and it's all sticky. You'll be driving home,
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sticking to your car, just covered in this fake
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blood. It looks terrible. Then when you get home
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you just want to take all your clothes off and hose
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yourself down before you go inside."
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So why do it? "The big payoff for me is going
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to see the film with a live audience and seeing what
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their reaction is, because that's when you know if
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the stuff works. If they really dig it, then I did
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my job right and I'm in the back going 'YEAH.' I
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have sisters and I drag them to the theater and say,
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'you sit here and tell me what you think.' They're
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good judges because they're used to it. If they
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like it, then I know I did a good job. If they say,
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(whines) 'Well, you know, it kind of looked cheesy,'
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then I know I'm in trouble.
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"When you get a chance to do makeups, it's
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great. Either an old age makeup, or a character
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makeup, it's just cool to see it all come together.
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The whole process of just putting a makeup together
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is interesting, and then the payoff is applying it
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on set to the actor and seeing him change in front
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of you. You do it in a makeup trailer and nobody
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comes in, then he walks out and everybody's like
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'Whoa!' That's kind of your payoff. Those are my
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favorite things to do."
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And ARMY OF DARKNESS is more than just another
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job. "I think I'm proudest of it because there's
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some really great stuff in it. And we were so
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involved with it, it's really a personal project.
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We weren't guns for hire on that show at all. I'm
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really happy the way it turns out." His favorite
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part? "The end sequence. There's this huge battle,
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and that's pretty much where all our stuff works.
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There's these armies of dead fighting live people.
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It's just really wild."
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We caught up with Mr. Berger before a lecture
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at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, OH.
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"It started in 1991 when we did a lecture over
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Halloween. Then in 1992 we got more stuff. Now
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this year, we've got bookings almost every single
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month. We're trying to figure out how we're going
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to work it, because we've got to fit work in there
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somewhere. Greg (Nicotero) and I do the tours, and
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this year in October both of us will be gone, as in
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the past two years, because there's just too many
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bookings for one person to do them." Though a
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college talk is generally about an hour and a half,
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he generally runs over, especially since he makes it
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a point to answer every single question. "It really
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helps that I enjoy what I do and I enjoy showing
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other people how much fun it is. I'm like a kid
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showing off his Christmans toys, saying 'Look at
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this, look what I got!' Only instead it's 'Look at
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this, look at the cool severed head!'"
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And the movie F/X, which was supposedly about
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an effects guy? "Hated it with a passion. It was
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total baloney. I could barely sit through either of
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them. I went to see F/X in the theater, knowing it
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was going to be stupid. I was squirming in my seat
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screaming, 'This is ridiculous.' My wife tried to
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quiet me down and I was like, 'This sucks. Let's
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leave.' It was because it's about something that
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you do, and it's totally incorrect and false. The
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worst thing about that film is that I've had
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producers come in and I tell them, 'Look, it's going
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to take this amount of time,' and they say, 'In F/X
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he did it in a night.' Well that was a total
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baloney movie. I hated it."
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So what are effects guys REALLY like? "It's
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funny. Each department in the industry has people
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who are all the same. Like the camera department
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are all really dry and not funny, serious all the
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time. Kind of stuffy. Then the grips are all
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animals. Really. They're just these beasts. Then
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all the makeup effects guys are all big practical
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jokers, always laughing, always making fun of
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people. I think the big thing about being a makeup
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artist is that you have to be able to do voices and
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do charicatures of people. And you have to all
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listen to William Shatner's TRANSPARENT MAN disks
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with him singing. That's the whole mentality: bad
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is good."
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What about all this attention effects are
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getting these days? "It's good, but it's bad,
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because then you slack off on the writing. I'd
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rather see a good peice of storytelling that
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integrates the special effects. It's rare, and
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that's sad."
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What about star ego problems? "The only ego
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problems I deal with are people who aren't stars.
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I've worked with Cathy Bates, Martin Short, Robin
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Williams, all these people, and they were really
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great. No horror stories about actors."
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He does have some horror stories INVOLVING
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actors, though. "I used Sam Elliot in two movies
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and I got into trouble. They were saying, 'Hey,
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that's Sam Elliot.' And I'm saying (mumbles) 'No
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it's not.' I thought I changed it enough, but they
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pegged it!" The two films? He was originally built
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for SIBLING RIVALRY, and then he was used again for
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SEVERED TIES, which is, by the way, out on video.
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"It's got a big close up and everything and I'm
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like, 'oh man, I'm in big trouble.' But I figued
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that Sam Elliot would never SEE SEVERED TIES, so
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it'd be okay."
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----------------------------------------------------
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--!2!--
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----------------------------------------------------
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ON THE PAST AND FUTURE OF SCIENCE FICTION
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by Crawford Kilian
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SF is a hybrid genre with a long history. On
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one side, as Northrop Frye points out, it's
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descended from "Menippean satire." Menippus was a
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3rd Century BC Cynic philosopher, born a slave in
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Palestine, who specialized in ridiculing the follies
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of other philosophers. He inspired Lucian of
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Samosata, who in the 2d Century AD wrote the first
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story of a journey to the moon. Menippean satire,
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also called "anatomy," is a literary form in which a
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single intellectual pattern dominates the story. We
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now call this the "What-if" element. In this kind of
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satire, ideas are vitally important; character is
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less so. The stock figure is the obsessed
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philosopher/mad scientist, who serves as a vehicle
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for the ideas under discussion.
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Among the chief traits of Menippean satire are
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these:
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*An isolated society, on an island or remote
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mountain region, very difficult of access. It is
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often portrayed as the geographical equivalent of a
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womb, which may or may not be an agreeable place.
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Utopia, St. Thomas More tells us, resulted from the
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cutting of a canal across a phallic peninsula,
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creating a uterus-like island: all the major cities
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are on the shores of an inland sea, which travellers
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enter through a narrow and dangerous strait. Samuel
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Butler makes entry to his Utopia, Erewhon, similarly
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difficult, as does Aldous Huxley in Island. In
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Nineteen Eighty-Four, Orwell puts the secrets of
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Oceania in "Room 101," a number which Orwell
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consciously intended as a female genital image.
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*A morally significant language. More's
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Utopians speak a combination of Greek and Latin,
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suggesting they have gone as far as non-Christian
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society can hope to. Orwell's Oceanians are
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gradually learning to speak Newspeak, designed to
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suppress conscious thought.
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In the remarkable 19th-century Canadian novel A
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Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder, James
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De Mille presents an Antarctic dystopia whose
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inhabitants speak Hebrew: they are descendants of
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the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, and their society is
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a grotesque perversion of Judeo-Christian values.
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And in Cat's Cradle, Kurt Vonnegut gives the island
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of San Lorenzo a degraded dialect of English.
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*The importance of documents. Menippean writers
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will shut down their plots at a moment's notice if
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they can introduce a long extract from some
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important written work or other. The long epigraphs
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in Frank Herbert's Dune are an example. The Book of
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Bokonon, in Cat's Cradle, is another. Winston Smith
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spends considerable time reading The Theory and
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Practice of Oligarchical Collectivism, a subversive
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book that explains how Oceania has become what it
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is. Ursula K. Le Guin's Always Coming Home is an
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anthology of such documents, almost entirely
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concealing the plot. Lacking a document, Menippean
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characters will talk endlessly about their society
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and technology.
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*A rationalist/ideological attitude toward sex.
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Brave New World, Nineteen Eighty-Four, Left Hand of
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|
Darkness and many others express and explore this
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attitude. Some approve; some don't. In Yevgeny
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Zamyatin's novel We, which inspired both Huxley and
|
|
Orwell, any citizen can demand sexual services from
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any other citizen. Huxley's young women wear their
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Malthusian belts, while Orwell's belong to the Anti-
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Sex League.
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*An inquisitive outsider. Genly Ai in Left Hand
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|
of Darkness, Gulliver in his Travels, and countless
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|
others serve as lenses through which we observe
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|
societies cast in the mold of a single intellectual
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pattern. Their own cultural biases may influence
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|
their perceptions, but they often see that the
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culture they are studying is in some way only their
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own with some aspect exaggerated or diminished. (In
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some cases, as with Gulliver, we may understand this
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better than the narrator.)
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Menippean satire was never a "popular" genre,
|
|
but writers soon found they could use elements from
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|
it in romance--which had always been fond of
|
|
monsters, strange kingdoms, and exotic locales.
|
|
Romance gave us an intrepid hero (often aristocratic
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but reared in obscurity), wise old men, evil
|
|
usurpers, perilous quests, and an essentially
|
|
conservative political agenda: the hero's job is
|
|
usually to preserve or restore an idealized feudal
|
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society.
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|
Shakespeare's The Tempest is an early success
|
|
in the hybrid form. De Bergerac, Swift, Voltaire and
|
|
others exploited the hybrid as well.
|
|
So what we often consider the dawn of SF--the
|
|
age of Verne and Wells--was really the high noon of
|
|
a long-established genre. The contribution of Verne
|
|
and Wells was to define the major subgenres; I'm not
|
|
sure if anyone since has actually created a new kind
|
|
of SF story that owes nothing to them.
|
|
Those of us writing SF a century later face a
|
|
serious problem: we find it hard to say anything new
|
|
in a genre that relies for its impact on the novelty
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of its ideas. Moreover, it is now a genre so market-
|
|
driven that genuine originality is likely to
|
|
languish in the slush pile.
|
|
At the same time we realize that SF is really
|
|
about the present, not the future: the Foundation
|
|
Series, for example, is really about the
|
|
uncertainties of the post-World War II international
|
|
order. The Left Hand of Darkness is largely about
|
|
the changing sexual mores of the 1960s. Given the
|
|
current pace of events, however, it's hard to find a
|
|
"present" that isn't ancient history by the time
|
|
we've dealt with it in print. (Try using the
|
|
Russians now as a serious 21st-century menace!)
|
|
SF writers therefore face an awkward choice:
|
|
Accept the conventions of this or that subgenre
|
|
(military SF, time-travelling police, space opera,
|
|
cyberpunk) and write more or less academic exercises
|
|
on their themes. This is like devoting a genetic-
|
|
engineering lab to the production of salted peanuts.
|
|
Or we can try to turn those subgenres on their
|
|
heads. For example, Gordon Dickson has written a
|
|
series of novels about the Dorsai, humans who have
|
|
developed an economy based on providing highly
|
|
skilled soldiers to other societies. He never tells
|
|
us what the taxpayers on Dorsai think of the status
|
|
quo. Do they ever start peace movements?
|
|
Satirizing the genre can work up to a point,
|
|
but it's also a sign that the original genre has run
|
|
out of energy. Poking fun at the Atreides or Dominic
|
|
Flandry soon wears thin. And part of SF's appeal is
|
|
that old reliable, the sense of wonder. We want the
|
|
elation and excitement of romance as well as the
|
|
intellectual amusement of satire.
|
|
I suspect that future SF will find most scope
|
|
in two divergent directions.
|
|
The first of these will be super-realism, or
|
|
"bottom-line" SF. It will explore economically
|
|
viable societies and the uses they make of science
|
|
and technology. So no more Star Wars stories unless
|
|
the authors show how you can pay for interstellar
|
|
warfare--and what its benefits are. No more
|
|
societies ruled by megacorporations unless you can
|
|
show how such groups develop a genuine advantage
|
|
over public institutions. By showing how economic
|
|
principles rule future societies, we can examine how
|
|
those principles rule our own.
|
|
Bottom-line SF will demand of its authors a
|
|
firm grasp of economics, technology and political
|
|
science. We have neglected these areas, which is one
|
|
reason why we completely failed to foresee the
|
|
impact, for example, of the personal computer in the
|
|
1980s.
|
|
The second direction might be called anti-
|
|
realism or (to coin a pompous lit.crit. term)
|
|
"mythotropic" SF. Arthur C. Clarke has argued that
|
|
technology, if advanced enough, is indistinguishable
|
|
from magic. So in such fiction we assume a Clarkean
|
|
level of technology that, by becoming magic, enables
|
|
its users to act out whatever their inmost desires
|
|
might be--to behave, in effect, like gods or demons.
|
|
Just as myth enables us to humanize the world we
|
|
encounter, mythotropic SF would enable us to explore
|
|
our own psyches on a grand scale.
|
|
Both kinds of SF would still, of course, be
|
|
about ourselves in the late 20th century. But if we
|
|
can see the essential pattern in technological
|
|
change, our fiction will survive the obsolescence of
|
|
our gadgets. And if we can find real insights into
|
|
our minds through mythotropic SF, readers of the
|
|
future will turn to us just as we turn to Swift or
|
|
Butler, Zamyatin or Orwell.
|
|
|
|
CRAWFORD KILIAN is the author of ten SF and fantasy
|
|
novels, most recently Greenmagic. His is now working
|
|
on a sequel, Redmagic.
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
--!3!--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
[Editor's Note: The following was NOT submitted to
|
|
CV by Mr. Straczynski, but was posted with the
|
|
(included) request that it be reposted on other
|
|
BBS's. We are including it in this issue in order
|
|
to give it the widest distribution we could, and you
|
|
are free to repost it to any BBS you feel it is
|
|
appropriate, as is stated in the article. We have
|
|
not edited the post in any way, except to add a
|
|
title. -- Ed.]
|
|
|
|
WHAT TO EXPECT FROM BABYLON 5
|
|
from J. Michael Straczynski, creator, writer and
|
|
producer
|
|
|
|
|
|
The following is uploaded with the request
|
|
that, if you support what appears below, it be
|
|
further uploaded to other BBSs...local, regional,
|
|
national...relay nets and networks.
|
|
First, a brief aside:
|
|
It's generally recognized that there would not
|
|
have been a third season of the original Trek series
|
|
had it not been for the action of science fiction
|
|
fans across the country who, seeing in that program
|
|
something they liked, wrote to the network to keep
|
|
the show on the air. Their voices were heard, and
|
|
the show stayed on the air for one more season.
|
|
That's the part everyone knows. What's not
|
|
generally considered outside the Television Industry
|
|
are all of the ramifications of that action.
|
|
At two seasons, a little over 50 episodes,
|
|
there were not nearly enough episodes to go into
|
|
general syndication. At two seasons, the show would
|
|
have been bought as a package by fewer stations,
|
|
would have popped up far less often on television
|
|
sets subsequent to the original series'
|
|
cancellation. It's altogether possible that it
|
|
might not have shown up at all, and been consigned
|
|
to the NBC vaults on the grounds of insufficient
|
|
episodes for syndication marketing. (It happens;
|
|
how many episodes of Captain Nice have you seen
|
|
lately?)
|
|
With that third season, there were finally
|
|
enough episodes on hand to go into general
|
|
syndication.
|
|
And it was in syndication that Star Trek
|
|
gradually built up the viewership and the
|
|
popularity that led to conventions, that resulted
|
|
in a generation of viewers to whom the term
|
|
"klingon" was not some obscure reference but a part
|
|
of American popular culture. Without that third
|
|
season, the Star Trek phenomenon would never have
|
|
had a chance to grow.
|
|
There would have been no new novels, no
|
|
animated series, no role playing games, no Star Trek
|
|
I, II, III, IV, V or VI. There would have been no
|
|
Next Generation or any other subsequent series.
|
|
All of that...ALL of that...happened because
|
|
concerned viewers took a moment to voice their
|
|
opinions to those who were in a position to
|
|
listen, and to act upon those opinions.
|
|
Now...what does this have to do with Babylon 5?
|
|
Some of you have seen it. Many more of you are
|
|
about to see it. Throughout the year-plus that I've
|
|
been talking about this show at conventions and on
|
|
the computer nets, I've emphasized a number of
|
|
agendas: our desire to Get It Right; to avoid
|
|
shilling and lying to fans, as is so often done by
|
|
producers eager to cash in on *SCI-FI*; and our
|
|
intention to do intelligent stories with
|
|
interesting characters.
|
|
And there's one other item: I've said, time and
|
|
again, not to believe any of the hype, but rather
|
|
to trust to your own considered instincts. And it
|
|
is that subject which is the point of this essay.
|
|
You now have the opportunity to judge our efforts
|
|
for yourself.
|
|
Babylon 5, as it stands in its present form, as
|
|
a pilot, is the first time that the crew, the cast,
|
|
the director and others have come together. Four
|
|
weeks of shooting, two days of rehearsal, and a
|
|
budget roughly *ONE- FOURTH* that of DS9's pilot.
|
|
As has been stated from the very beginning, it has
|
|
all the flaws you would expect of a new project, in
|
|
which people have to act together for the first
|
|
time, sets may or may not be all perfect, and the
|
|
bugs are still being worked out. That's what a
|
|
pilot is for, to try things, see what works, adjust,
|
|
and move on.
|
|
The fundamental question behind Babylon 5 comes
|
|
down to this: do you like what you see? Does it
|
|
make you want to see more? Have we kept our promise
|
|
as far as what was actually *delivered* in the
|
|
pilot?
|
|
Because there *is* more to come. There has
|
|
always been a plan for a series to follow. If
|
|
anything, that was the point of the entire
|
|
exercise...to tell a story. To create a novel for
|
|
TV that would span five years, for which the pilot
|
|
is the opening chapter. Having now seen, or about
|
|
to see the foundation for that story, and before
|
|
being asked to lend support to that series, you have
|
|
a right to some sense of what that series would
|
|
entail, and what you're being asked to support. One
|
|
should never sign a blank check on the bank of one's
|
|
conscience. So here's a preview.
|
|
You will find out what happened to Sinclair,
|
|
for starters, during the Earth/Minbari war. For
|
|
nearly 10 years, Sinclair has worked to convince
|
|
himself that nothing happened to him on the Line
|
|
other than what seems to be the case: that he
|
|
blacked out for 24 hours. He's just managed to
|
|
convince himself of this. Now, suddenly, someone
|
|
comes into his life and with seven words -- you'll
|
|
know them when you hear them -- completely unravels
|
|
the self- deception. He knows then that something
|
|
DID happen to him, that someone DID mess with his
|
|
mind...and he is going to find out who, and why.
|
|
The ramifications of that discovery will have a
|
|
major influence on the series, on his relationships,
|
|
and the future of not only his character but many
|
|
others.
|
|
You will see what a Vorlon is...and what it
|
|
represents. And what it may have to do with our own
|
|
saga, and a hidden relationship to some of our other
|
|
characters (watch the reception scene carefully).
|
|
We'll discover that there are MANY players in this
|
|
game. You'll find out what happened to Babylon 4,
|
|
and it will call into question what is real, what is
|
|
not, and the ending of that episode is one that you
|
|
have not seen before on television.
|
|
We'll find that most every major character is
|
|
running to, or away from something in their hearts,
|
|
or their pasts, or their careers. Garibaldi's
|
|
checkered past will catch up with him in a way that
|
|
will affect his role and make him a very different
|
|
character for as much as a full season, and have
|
|
lasting effects thereafter. Lyta will take part in
|
|
a voyage of discovery that will very much change her
|
|
character. She will be caught up in a web of
|
|
intrigue and forced to betray the very people she
|
|
has come to care for.
|
|
We will see wheels within wheels, discover the
|
|
secret groups behind the Earth and Minbari
|
|
governments who suspect, with good reason, that one
|
|
of the B5 crew may be a traitor, who sold out Earth
|
|
during the Earth/Minbari war.
|
|
Some of the established empires in the pilot
|
|
will fall. Some will rise unexpectedly. Hopes and
|
|
fortunes will be alternately made or destroyed. At
|
|
least one major race not yet known even to EXIST
|
|
will make its presence known, but only gradually.
|
|
Some characters will fall from grace. Others will
|
|
make bargains whose full price they do not
|
|
understand...but will eventually come to realize,
|
|
and regret.
|
|
At the end of the first season, one character
|
|
will undergo a MAJOR change, which will start the
|
|
show spinning on a very different axis. The first
|
|
season will have some fairly conventional stories,
|
|
but others will start the show gradually moving
|
|
toward where I want it to go. One has to set these
|
|
things up gradually. Events in the story -- which
|
|
is very much the story of Jeffrey Sinclair -- will
|
|
speed up in each subsequent season.
|
|
Someone he considers a friend will betray him.
|
|
Another will prove to be the exact opposite of what
|
|
Sinclair believes to be true. Some will live. Some
|
|
will die. He will be put through a crucible of
|
|
terrible force, that will change him, and alter his
|
|
destiny in a profound and terrible way...if he goes
|
|
one way, or the other, it will determine not only
|
|
his own fate, but that of millions of others. He
|
|
will grow, and become stronger, better, wiser...or
|
|
be destroyed by what fate is bringing his way. In
|
|
sum, it is a story of hope against terrible
|
|
adversity and overwhelming odds.
|
|
Each of our characters will be tempted in a
|
|
different way to ally with a dark force determined
|
|
to once and for all destroy the peace. Some will
|
|
fall prey to the temptation, others will not, and
|
|
pay the price for their resistance.
|
|
The homeworld of one of our major characters
|
|
will be decimated. War will become inevitable. And
|
|
when it comes, Babylon 5 will be forever changed.
|
|
That, in broad brush strokes, is a little of
|
|
what I plan to do with the series. It is, as
|
|
stated, a novel for television, with a definite
|
|
beginning, middle and end. The point being this:
|
|
If you genuinely approve of what you see in
|
|
Babylon 5, if what we promised is what we
|
|
delivered, if having seen the prologue to the five
|
|
year story that is Babylon 5 you now wish to see
|
|
the rest of the story...if, in short, we haven't
|
|
lied to you, and you like what you see...then I ask
|
|
that you voice your opinions. Space Rangers has
|
|
been canceled; the fate of other SF shows is in
|
|
question because studios and networks just aren't
|
|
sure that there's a market for another SF series.
|
|
How can you help? By the following:
|
|
1) Write or fax the program director of your
|
|
local TV station, the one that aired Babylon 5,
|
|
telling them that you want to see the series which
|
|
follows Babylon 5, and why.
|
|
2) Send another letter, or a a copy of that
|
|
letter to Dick Robertson, Sr. Vice President,
|
|
Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution, 4000
|
|
Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, 91522.
|
|
If, on the other hand, you think we blew
|
|
it...then let the show go the way of the trilobite.
|
|
I've railed more than once against the idea that
|
|
"Bad SF is better than no SF," and won't back off
|
|
of that now that it's my own child on the railroad
|
|
ties, waiting to see if a Mountie will untie it
|
|
before the incoming train does its grisly business.
|
|
It's your choice, and your voice. And if you
|
|
don't think one voice matters, think of the long
|
|
history of a certain other show that would have
|
|
long ago been consigned to the vaults of television
|
|
history had it not been for involved and interested
|
|
viewers.
|
|
We made the show, and did the very best that we
|
|
could. Now it's in your hands....
|
|
|
|
End of quoted material ...
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
--!4!--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
PROS AND CONS -- WHAT DO YOU THINK?
|
|
|
|
About 13 years ago, a friend of mind who was
|
|
particularly more knowledgable than I about things
|
|
fannish dragged me from my nice cozy den in the
|
|
suburbs to the Waldorf Astoria in New York City to
|
|
my first science fiction convention. I think it was
|
|
David Prowse and Isaac Asimov, but that might have
|
|
been a little later.
|
|
I remember being amazed that there were so many
|
|
people who liked science fiction, and who took it as
|
|
seriously as I did -- and I took it VERY seriously.
|
|
It was a ... a professionally run convention.
|
|
(Let's just say that the company's still in the con
|
|
business.) Still, it was huge. I had never
|
|
imagined so many dealers in the same place. Plus,
|
|
up on a floor higher than I'd imagined in a hotel,
|
|
there were videos showing clips of things I'd never
|
|
seen and things nobody had ever seen.
|
|
It was a wondrous experience.
|
|
A few years and conventions later, I went off
|
|
to college in the Midwest of America. I found a new
|
|
group of friends who took it even more seriously
|
|
than I did. The introduced me to an even greater
|
|
wonder: fan run cons.
|
|
At that first fan-con, there were really no
|
|
guests. Well, no-one of consequence, anyway. We
|
|
had a ball. A WONDERFUL time. I felt a comraderie
|
|
I had never felt before. Even without Big Names, it
|
|
was better, hands down. Between the (more friendly)
|
|
dealers' room, the video reoom, the various and
|
|
sundry panels, I was never at a loss for something
|
|
to do.
|
|
I loved these adventures. I even traveled as
|
|
far as 600 miles to go to a couple. (Though I
|
|
couldn't beat the 2000 mile trek my friends had made
|
|
to Panopticon shortly before I met them.)
|
|
Perhaps I was spoiled.
|
|
The prospect of attending another con run by
|
|
that company that had introduced me to them no
|
|
longer appealed to me. I had come to the
|
|
realization that I had been treated like cattle,
|
|
that the entire thing had been quite impersonal.
|
|
Then I began running cons -- or helping to,
|
|
anyway. I lived through the experience of learning
|
|
-- after the fact -- that the "professional" who had
|
|
brought Peter Davison into town to do a con with us
|
|
had lied when he said he had rented the ballroom
|
|
until 9 pm. He had, in fact, only paid for the room
|
|
until 6. The management had let us stay as a favor
|
|
to my partner. The hotel staff had been forced to
|
|
stay until almost midnight to prepare for a brunch
|
|
the next day.
|
|
I began to lose faith in the concept.
|
|
The company that had led me to the Waldorf
|
|
began to develop a nasty habit of scheduling
|
|
conventions within a week or two of a fan-con with a
|
|
lesser guest -- in the same city.
|
|
I began to get disgusted.
|
|
Then another company popped up. They weren't
|
|
like that OTHER comapny, they said. The were for
|
|
the fans. In fact, they even did cons WITH local
|
|
clubs on occasion, booking a bigger guest than the
|
|
club would have been able to get on their own. That
|
|
made them the good guys, right?
|
|
There was just one problem. They really AREN'T
|
|
all that different from that OTHER company -- except
|
|
that perhaps the first company runs a better con.
|
|
I began this article in disgust and
|
|
disillusionment as we waited for the guest at one of
|
|
this new company's cons, whose plane had been
|
|
delayed by snow. The tickets had been $30 at the
|
|
door, and to tell the truth, I only went because I
|
|
won four of them on the radio.
|
|
But most people didn't. What did they get for
|
|
$30? Not enough chairs for one thing. There had to
|
|
be several hundred people standing -- including
|
|
families of four and five. (That's $150, folks.)
|
|
They also got a dealer's room that was so small you
|
|
could barely move, much less browse. According to
|
|
the dealers, the prices for tables had been jacked
|
|
up as well because of the popularity of the single
|
|
guest. And if you waited, afraid you would lose
|
|
your seat if you went to the dealers' room before
|
|
the guest's presentation, you missed out. It was
|
|
closed at 5pm, before he even arrived.
|
|
What the fans DIDN'T get for $30 was an
|
|
autograph. That is, of course, unless you were one
|
|
of the 36 people to buy one on a book or videotape
|
|
the guest had sent on ahead for the fans.
|
|
They also didn't get a chance to videotape the
|
|
guest. This is becoming quite a disgusting trend at
|
|
professional cons. Now, I can forgive that if the
|
|
guest requests it. HOWEVER, there was a camera
|
|
going. It belonged to a semi-Big Name Fan, who
|
|
shall not be named at this point. Suffice it to say
|
|
that we knew who he was, and that he IS a fan.
|
|
We'll just call him CB.
|
|
Why did CB get to tape it? "Because he's a
|
|
professional," we were told by the management.
|
|
Funny, my friend the professional videographer was
|
|
refused permission. I wonder why. Could it have
|
|
been the fact that CB was making major money SELLING
|
|
such tapes (at a table that did NOT close at 5, BTW)
|
|
and "donating" a percentage to the company?
|
|
What the fans also didn't get were a video room
|
|
and panels (unless you count a presentation by the
|
|
editor of an SF magazine. I don't.)
|
|
Oh, and by the way, that $30 was for a ONE DAY
|
|
TICKET.
|
|
Now, I have no idea what the convention scene
|
|
is like outside the United States. It might not
|
|
have these problems.
|
|
But we are caught in a dilemma. Fan-cons are
|
|
being strangled by the pros, but there might be some
|
|
truth to the claim that without the pros, many of us
|
|
might never have discovered fandom.
|
|
So we invite your comments. Tell us about your
|
|
experiences, your complaints, your suggestions,
|
|
especially outside the United States. We'll take
|
|
your comments and digest them into an article in a
|
|
future issue.
|
|
Send your comments ONLY to
|
|
xx133@cleveland.freenet.edu. Other correspondence
|
|
should still go to cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu, or
|
|
of course you can use the SNail Mail address for
|
|
either.
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
--!5!--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The Golden
|
|
by Lucius Shephard
|
|
Mark V. Ziesing Books
|
|
ISBN 0-929480-73-2
|
|
250 pages;$29.95
|
|
|
|
A review by Rick Kleffel
|
|
|
|
The vampire, that most human of horror's
|
|
imaginary beings, unsurprisingly remains its most
|
|
popular. In "The Golden", science fiction author
|
|
Lucius Shepard uses the vampire archetype to build
|
|
an elaborate castle of beautiful prose, a labyrinth
|
|
of mysery, mysticism, murder and horror from which
|
|
readers will not want to escape. Shepard's seductive
|
|
language evokes worlds both inside and outside of
|
|
the readers, drawing them into a framework which is
|
|
beautiful, menacing and always entertaining.
|
|
Shephard sets his vampire novel in the Castle
|
|
Banat, high in the Carpathians, in the year 186-, at
|
|
a convocation of vampires known as "The Family".
|
|
They are there to celebrate the the Decanting, a
|
|
ritual that concludes the 300 year breeding program
|
|
designed to produce a rare vintage of human blood --
|
|
the Golden. But before the ceremony can take place,
|
|
the Golden is murdered, and Michael Beheim, once a
|
|
detective in Paris, now a young and ineffectual
|
|
vampire, is asked to solve the crime. As Beheim
|
|
conducts his investigation, factions within the
|
|
Family vie for power though his actions, leading him
|
|
into a labyrinth of treachery and deceit mirrored by
|
|
Shepard's descriptions of the Castle Banat: "The
|
|
most curious of these conceits, however, covered the
|
|
floor of the chamber, which lay some twenty feet
|
|
below and had been sculpted into a representation of
|
|
thousands upon thousands of bleached, twisted
|
|
undernourished bodies with agonized
|
|
features....indeed they were in motion, they were
|
|
not stone, but flesh, alive in some measure..."
|
|
Shepard's poetic prose transforms the Castle from a
|
|
mere setting into god-like character, whose quiet
|
|
facade harbors both beauty and terror. But Shepard
|
|
does not confine his Castle to inactivity; in one
|
|
cyberpunk-tinged scene, Beheim finds a robot-like
|
|
contraption, powered by flywheels and infernal
|
|
devices, that very nearly kills him.
|
|
But Beheim, who was once human, is now a
|
|
vampire, and thus rather difficult to dispatch. In
|
|
his reflections on the difference between Beheim's
|
|
past and present states, Shephard's prose shines
|
|
with an eerie unreality reminiscent of Philip K.
|
|
Dick or William Burroughs. "He was no longer
|
|
governed by rules of evidence or the necessity for
|
|
supporting witnesses. He was in effect a Columbus
|
|
of the daylight, a voyager in uncharted seas...He
|
|
forced himself to take a final look at the sun,
|
|
holding on to the idea that this was the world he
|
|
would someday inhabit, that he would have to learn
|
|
to bear whatever horrors it presented....It seemed
|
|
to hurtle toward him again, but he did not cower
|
|
from it this time....He wondered if there was truly
|
|
any beauty here...Had all previous seeing been
|
|
blighted by a lovely curse, the world's coarse truth
|
|
hidden from mortal eyes? Could he ever learn to
|
|
resurrect those old perceptions?" Shepard's prose
|
|
stylings answer this question with an undiluted
|
|
affirmative.
|
|
But there's more than just pretty words
|
|
describing surreal scenes in this novel. Shepard
|
|
uses his murder-mystery and horror icons to examine
|
|
just exactly what a human being is. Some vampires
|
|
are conscienceless killers; others are scientists;
|
|
still others are mad, and some are very nearly gods.
|
|
Revealing what makes a vampire more than just a
|
|
bloodsucker, Shepard reveals what makes humans more
|
|
than hairless apes, and he does so in a unique
|
|
fashion, throwing the question into his own
|
|
imaginative perspective. "The Golden" is a novel
|
|
that good enough to practically demand re-reading
|
|
before you've finished it, and upon doing so, you
|
|
may like Michael Beheim, give "a cry of shock and
|
|
bewilderment, an expression so terrifying in itself
|
|
that it abolished fear and reminded him that he was
|
|
first among all the terrors of this world."
|
|
|
|
Copyright 1993, Rick Kleffel
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
--!6!--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
THE OLD COMIC CURMUDGEON
|
|
A comics column by Bill Henley
|
|
|
|
The dictionary defines "curmudgeon" as an
|
|
"irascible old man, the sort that bores everyone by
|
|
complaining about how much better everything was
|
|
when he was younger. At age 39, I'm not quite ready
|
|
to classify myself as "old," but as I look at the
|
|
world of comic books -- which I've been reading and
|
|
collecting since childhood -- I'm feeling
|
|
increasingly curmudgeonly. Comics really were
|
|
better when I was younger (even just five or 10
|
|
years younger) than they are now. And the editors
|
|
of CV have offered me the opportunity to bore you
|
|
all by complaining about it on a regular basis.
|
|
But I think I will start this column off by
|
|
mentioning a new comic which I am fairly happy with
|
|
-- if only because it seems to be an effort by DC
|
|
Comics to repair some of the damage already done to
|
|
one of their classic series. LEGIONNAIRES #1, by
|
|
scripters Tom & Mary Bierbaum and artist Chris
|
|
Sprouse, is a spinoff series from LEGION OF SUPER-
|
|
HEROES which attempts to recapture the feel and
|
|
spirit of the old Legion, from long before Keith
|
|
Giffen's drastic and bizarre revamping.
|
|
I stopped reading the Legion regularly soon
|
|
after the "Giffen- ized" version began. I could
|
|
have dealt with the idea of the Legion disbanding
|
|
and reforming five years later as an adult, non-
|
|
costumed super-team. But I couldn't deal with
|
|
Giffen's muddy and distorted art style, or his
|
|
twisting of the personalities of many of the Legion
|
|
members, or especially with the wiping out of huge
|
|
chunks of the Legion's past history by "retroactive
|
|
continuity." Look, DC, I don't care what you're
|
|
saying these days; Superboy WAS a member of the
|
|
Legion, and so was Mon-El (not "Valor"). I've got
|
|
the comic books right here to prove it.
|
|
Now Giffen seems to have departed, and in
|
|
addition to continuing his version of the Legion, DC
|
|
has launched the LEGIONNAIRES spinoff. It features
|
|
a group of teenage heroes, most of whom are
|
|
apparently clones of the original teen Legion
|
|
members. They have mostly new superheroic code
|
|
names, and new costumes (which are actually quite
|
|
well designed by artist Sprouse). And they're
|
|
played as being more young, naive and carefree than
|
|
the original Legionnaires ever were (they almost
|
|
remind me more of Marvel's Power Pack or New Mutants
|
|
than the Legion). It's hard to imagine that a bunch
|
|
of kids who have learned that they are (probably)
|
|
clones of themselves, who have fought in a war and
|
|
seen some of their group killed, and then seen the
|
|
planet Earth destroyed (one of Giffen's "brilliant"
|
|
ideas in the parent Legion series; we certainly
|
|
can't have even one comic book series present a
|
|
hopeful or optimistic view of Earth's future) would
|
|
end up this cheerful.
|
|
But for all that, this group is more like the
|
|
Legion I've been reading since ADVENTURE COMICS #300
|
|
in 1963, than the "real" Legion of the past few
|
|
years. The Bierbaums provide an entertaining script
|
|
for issue #1, with some nice nostalgic touches like
|
|
an old-fashioned Legion leader election and the
|
|
return of a classic Legion villain. A good job is
|
|
done developing the personalities of the
|
|
Legionnaires (though Lightning Lad aka Live Wire was
|
|
never this much of a jerk, even before he "died" and
|
|
-- according to more loony Giffen rewriting -- was
|
|
replaced by an alien shape-changer). And I find
|
|
Sprouse's anime-influenced art style to be
|
|
appealing and appropriate for this book, even if he
|
|
overdoes the big eyes and gleaming teeth.
|
|
I enjoyed the book (and the Legionnaires
|
|
preview in LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES #41) and look
|
|
forward to future issues. I recommend that other
|
|
curmudgeonly old Legion fans who have been unhappy
|
|
with recent years' developments give it a try.
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
--!7!--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
ANIME 101: COMING TO AMERICA
|
|
by Dee Ann Latona
|
|
|
|
When American companies or individuals purchase
|
|
the rights to anime shows, interesting things can
|
|
occur. Sometimes, the company or individual will
|
|
directly translate and either subtitle or dub the
|
|
show. More often, the show itself is changed to fit
|
|
some person's conceptions of what the American
|
|
audience really wants. This alteration is sometimes
|
|
simply the removal of "risque" scenes and of the
|
|
worst violence so that the show can be aimed at a
|
|
younger audience here than it was originally
|
|
intended for, and it can result in drastic changes
|
|
in the plot and feel of the show.
|
|
An extreme example of the alterations a show
|
|
can undergo between the American version and the
|
|
original Japanese is what happened to the show
|
|
originally titled "Gatchaman". This show was
|
|
released in Japan in the early seventies, and then
|
|
it was altered by Sandy Frank, becoming "Battle of
|
|
the Planets". This show was recently re-translated
|
|
and changed from the original Japanese by Ted Turner
|
|
and named "G-Force". Here's an example of the
|
|
leeway that's sometimes taken with the plot and feel
|
|
of anime when it's being prepared for American TV.
|
|
|
|
Gatchaman:
|
|
|
|
"Gatchaman" is a show focusing on five
|
|
teenagers who were raised and trained by a scientist
|
|
who had foreseen the need for a fighting force to
|
|
combat a growing crime organization called
|
|
"Galactor," which rose from the ashes of the Italian
|
|
Mob. The series begins with Galactor making it's
|
|
first open attack on a major target, after which
|
|
Doctor Nambu, the team's mentor, reveals their
|
|
existence to the United Nations and sends them off
|
|
for their first real battle.
|
|
This show is far from a comedy. On many
|
|
occasions, Galactor manages to destroy, or nearly
|
|
destroy, major metropolitan areas, and we see people
|
|
caught in flames or being washed away by floods.
|
|
Such are the tragedies of war, and unlike in series
|
|
such as "GI Joe," the viewer is not pampered by
|
|
people always managing to eject or escape at the
|
|
last minute.
|
|
The Gatchaman team, while not insensitive to
|
|
the destruction, are not the "nice" kind of heroes
|
|
that the kind and gentle "Thundercats" are. They
|
|
waste Galactor goons right and left, with occasional
|
|
grisly death scenes. Some people have described all
|
|
five of the team members as psychotic. While this
|
|
label might be a bit extreme, it cannot be discarded
|
|
easily. At the end of the series the second in
|
|
command is killed by Galactor, and the team
|
|
commander states that he doesn't care if they're
|
|
"coughing up blood," they are not to stop until the
|
|
mission is accomplished.
|
|
Galactor itself is run by two beings: an alien
|
|
sent to Earth to observe it named Sosai X, and a
|
|
hermaphrodite created by Sosai from a set of boy and
|
|
girl twins, named Berg Katse. Katse is brilliant,
|
|
but self-centered and lacking in common sense.
|
|
He/She runs the organization emphasizing that every
|
|
member should look out for themselves. On several
|
|
occasions, one sees Katse punish guards for stopping
|
|
to help one another when they're under a deadline.
|
|
By the end of the series, Sosai has gone a bit funny
|
|
in the head and has decided to destroy the planet
|
|
entirely. Katse goes along with the plan mostly
|
|
because Sosai has promised that Galactor will rule
|
|
the world after the plan is complete. When the
|
|
Gatchaman team corners Katse and it is revealed that
|
|
Sosai is really just trying to destroy the entire
|
|
planet, Katse finally loses it and jumps off a cliff
|
|
into the boiling lava below. The team stops the
|
|
machine and all is happy with the world (though
|
|
their second in command is dead) and the series ends
|
|
with them not being able to find the second's body.
|
|
|
|
Battle of the Planets:
|
|
|
|
"Battle of the Planets" is also a show focusing
|
|
around five teenagers who were raised and trained by
|
|
a scientist to protect the people of the world.
|
|
However, the people they have to fight are called
|
|
Spectrans, and come from the planet Spectra, far far
|
|
away. The team's mentor, Security Chief Anderson
|
|
(was Doctor Nambu) reveals G-Force's existence
|
|
during Spectra's first attack.
|
|
The team is also guided by a robot who resides
|
|
in their headquarters. This robot, 7-Zark-7, serves
|
|
as a narrator for the show, constantly stating the
|
|
obvious and warning the team about things at the
|
|
last minute that they should have been able to
|
|
figure out for themselves. Also, thanks to Zark,
|
|
huge cities managed to evacuate at moment's notice,
|
|
with no one being hurt by Spectran attacks! Zark,
|
|
and his sidekick 1-Rover-1 (a small and stupid
|
|
looking robot dog) were created to take up the large
|
|
gaps in time caused by cutting out large acts of
|
|
violence. Sometimes, even touching plot exposition
|
|
or really cool car chases are cut.
|
|
G-Force are a kindly group of kids. They never
|
|
actually kill anyone -- their weapons all have stun
|
|
features. Must have filed down the razor edges from
|
|
the Gatchaman show. Suddenly, the female member of
|
|
the team talks more cutely, and is a less capable
|
|
fighter. As some fellow female Gatchaman fans once
|
|
said that when they were little and played G-Force,
|
|
their mothers got upset because they always
|
|
pretended to be the commander and his second, who
|
|
were both boys. It never occurred to them to be the
|
|
girl because she was too useless. Now if they'd seen
|
|
the original show, they'd have both pretended to be
|
|
the girl.
|
|
However, they have every right to be annoyed if
|
|
you look at the treatment of their names. The
|
|
original Gatchaman team's names were the following,
|
|
in order of rank: Ken, Joe, Jun, Jinpei, and Ryu.
|
|
Now, Jun, Jinpei, and Ryu are not exactly American
|
|
sounding names, and since the show was being adapted
|
|
for children it's sort of understandable that they'd
|
|
give them names children would be used to. What
|
|
would make sense would be to make Jun into June,
|
|
Jinpei into Jim, and Ryu into Roy, or something like
|
|
that. But instead, here are the names of the
|
|
Americanized G-Force team: Mark, Jason, Princess,
|
|
Cheop (pronounced Key-op), and Tiny. Ugh.
|
|
Spectra is also run by two beings. Sosai X is
|
|
now a computer who Zoltar (Berg Katse) calls, "O
|
|
Luminous One," since he looks like a diamond-shaped
|
|
floating bit of energy. Apparently, Zoltar built
|
|
this computer to make his men feel that he was
|
|
guided by a higher power. Also, instead of Zoltar
|
|
being a hermaphrodite and being able to change sex,
|
|
he is simply a master of disguise.
|
|
Now, what about the ending to this series?
|
|
There really wasn't one. The ending of Gatchaman
|
|
was pretty bloody. But, after all, we can't have a
|
|
member of the team dying. It's too depressing. So,
|
|
Battle of the Planets just trails off, with no
|
|
conclusion, leaving the viewer to wonder if the G-
|
|
Force team ever actually won.
|
|
|
|
Now, keep in mind that this is an extreme case
|
|
of what can happen to a show when it's altered to
|
|
fit an American instead of a Japanese audience.
|
|
Also, remember that this was in the 1970's. The bell
|
|
bottomed pants and the punch tape coming out of all
|
|
of the computers makes this self-evident. However,
|
|
it's a good example of what can happen when someone
|
|
tries to alter a show to fit not only another age
|
|
group, but another culture.
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
--!8!--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
ALL THE NEWS THAT'S FIT TO TRANSMIT
|
|
|
|
Talk about trying to generate interest... One
|
|
of the most common questions we get asked is "Is THE
|
|
YOUNG INDIANA JONES CHRONICLES ever going to be on
|
|
again?" Well, you probably know by now that the
|
|
answer is yes, but you might not know that Lucasfilm
|
|
is pulling out all the stops to generate viewer
|
|
interest. Not only will the show be returning to
|
|
ABC on March 13th with a second two hour premeire,
|
|
it will have very special guest star: HARRISON
|
|
FORD, who orginated the role in three enormously
|
|
successful movies. While CORY CARRIER is the pre-
|
|
adolescent Indy, SEAN PATRICK FLANNERY is the
|
|
teenage Indy, and GEORGE HALL is the old Indy, Ford
|
|
will be the "middle aged" Indy. Unfortunately, he
|
|
will NOT actually have the adventure, but according
|
|
to Lucasfilm he will be doing the "bookend" role
|
|
usually performed by Hall, who will be back the
|
|
following week. The "50 year old Indy" will be
|
|
snowbound looking for an American Indian Pipe when a
|
|
saxophone reminds him of learning to play in the
|
|
1920's.
|
|
(For minor spoilers for upcoming episodes, see
|
|
SPOILERS AHOY!)
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
First Disney gave us the Disney Store. Now Warner
|
|
Brothers will be adding 35 new retail stores to the
|
|
21 it already has in operation. Five of the stores,
|
|
which sell clothing and gifts relating to the
|
|
studio's characters and films, will be in the United
|
|
Kingdom, and one will be at the tourist heaven of
|
|
Fifth Avenue and 57th Street in New York City.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
KIM BASINGER will be appearing in a remake of THE
|
|
GETAWAY (1972) as ALEC BALDWIN's bank-robbing
|
|
partner.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Shakespeare's MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING, which opens
|
|
May 14th, seems to have attracted quite a cast.
|
|
Directed by KENNETH BRANNAGH (DEAD AGAIN), who also
|
|
stars as Benedick opposite EMMA THOMPSON's Beatrice,
|
|
the comedy will also star KEANU REEVES (DRACULA,
|
|
BILL AND TED), DENZEL WASHINGTON, and MICHEAL KEATON
|
|
(BATMAN, BEETLEJUICE) as Dogberry.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
And there are yet MORE awards on the way. (Does
|
|
this ever stop?)
|
|
|
|
Nominations for the Academy Awards, to be given out
|
|
March 29 at the Los Angeles Music Center include:
|
|
|
|
Best Acress: MICHELLE PFEIFFER (Love Field),
|
|
SUSAN SARANDON (Lorenzon's Oil)
|
|
Supporting Actor: JACK NICHOLSON (A Few Good
|
|
Men)
|
|
Original Screenplay: JOHN SAYLES (Passion
|
|
Fish)
|
|
Original Score: ALAN MENKEN (ALADDIN)
|
|
Original Song: FRIEND LIKE ME, music by ALAN
|
|
MENKEN, lyrics by HOWARD ASHMAN; WHOLE NEW
|
|
WORLD, music by ALAN MENKEN, lyrics by TIM
|
|
RICE. (Both are from ALADDIN.)
|
|
Animated Shorts: Peter Lord, AMEN; Joan C.
|
|
Gratz, MONA LISA DESCENDING A STAIRCASE;
|
|
Michaela Pavlatova, RECI, RECI, RECI; Paul
|
|
Berry THE SANDMAN; Barry J.C. Purves,
|
|
SCREEN PLAY
|
|
Art Direction: Thomas Sanders and Garrett
|
|
Lewis, BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA; Ferdinando
|
|
Scarfiotti and Linda Descenna, TOYS
|
|
Costume Design: Eiko Ishioka, BRAM STOKER'S
|
|
DRACULA; Albert Wolsky, TOYS
|
|
Makeup: Ve Nielle, Ronnie Specter, and Stan
|
|
Winston, BATMAN RETURNS; Gerg Cannom,
|
|
Michele Burk and Matthew W. Mungle, BRAM
|
|
STOKER'S DRACULA; Ve Neill, Greg Cannom
|
|
and John Blake, HOFFA
|
|
Sound: Terry porter, Mel Metcalfe, David J.
|
|
Hudson and Doc Kane, ALADDIN, Chris
|
|
Jenkins, Doug Hemphill, Mark Smithand
|
|
Simon Faye THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS; Don
|
|
Mitchell, Frank A. Montano, Rick Hart and
|
|
Scott Smith, UNDER SEIGE
|
|
Sound Effects Editing: Mark Mangini, ALADDIN;
|
|
Tom C. McCarthy and David E. Stone, BRAM
|
|
STOKER'S DRACULA; John Leveque and Bruce
|
|
Stambler, UNDER SEIGE
|
|
Visual Effects: Richard Edlund, Alec Gillis,
|
|
Tom Woodruff Jr. and George Gibbs, ALIEN3;
|
|
Michael Fink, Craig Barron, John Bruno,
|
|
and Dennis Skotak, BATMAN RETURNS, Ken
|
|
Ralston, Doug Chiang, Doug Smithe, and Tom
|
|
Woodruff, DEATH BECOMES HER
|
|
And, for those of you outside the United
|
|
States, the nominees for Foreign Language
|
|
Film are: INDOCHINE (France), CLOSE TO
|
|
EDEN (Russia), DAENS (Belgium), and
|
|
SCHTONK (Germany). Why only four? Well,
|
|
after the nominations were announced it
|
|
was discovered that the fifth film,
|
|
Uruguay's A PLACE IN THE SUN, was actually
|
|
made almost entirely by Argentinians, and
|
|
since Argentina had already submitted the
|
|
single film allowed for consideration, it
|
|
was disqualified.
|
|
|
|
BILLY CRYSTAL will host the Academy Awards again
|
|
this year, but how can he top last year's
|
|
performance? Not only did he keep the VERY long
|
|
show moving with continuous "updates" on JACK
|
|
PALANCE, he did it all with pneumonia, frequently
|
|
collapsing between his appearances onstage. Now
|
|
THAT'S dedication.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The American Comedy Awards will be given out
|
|
February 28 and televised in the United States at 9
|
|
pm on March 3. Genre actors nominated are:
|
|
|
|
Funniest female lead performer in a TV series:
|
|
KIRSTIE ALLEY
|
|
Funniest female performer in a TV special:
|
|
WHOOPI GOLDBERG
|
|
Funniest male performer in a TV special: BILLY
|
|
CRYSTAL, ROBIN WILLIAMS
|
|
Funniest lead actress in a motion picture:
|
|
WHOOPI GOLDBERG
|
|
Funniest actor in a motion picture: BILLY
|
|
CRYSTAL
|
|
Funniest supporting female in a motion picture:
|
|
WHOOPI GOLDBERG
|
|
Funniest supporting male in a motion picture:
|
|
TIM CURRY, FRED GWYNNE, JON LOVITZ
|
|
|
|
WHOOPI GOLDBERG was also honored as Woman of the
|
|
Year by Harvard University's Hasty Pudding
|
|
Theatricals. CHEVY CHASE (MEMOIRS OF AN INVISIBLE
|
|
MAN) received the Man of the Year Award, and will be
|
|
joining Whoopi as one of the many late-night talk
|
|
show hosts later this year on the Fox Network.
|
|
|
|
The National Association of Theater Owners has named
|
|
MEL GIBSON the male star of the year for his role in
|
|
LETHAL WEAPON 3 and FOREVER YOUNG, which took in
|
|
$200 million in 1992. Later this year he will be
|
|
directing MAN WITHOUT A FACE for Warner Brothers.
|
|
|
|
The Writers Guild of America has chosen PASSION
|
|
FISH, by JOHN SAYLES (BROTHER FROM ANOTHER PLANET)
|
|
as one of 10 screenplays competing in the 45th
|
|
annual awards ceremony. Winners will be announced
|
|
March 22.
|
|
|
|
Then there's the Berlin Film Festival, where
|
|
MICHELLE PFEIFFER won the Silver Bear, the Best
|
|
Actress award for her role in LOVE FIELD.
|
|
|
|
And of course there's the Razzies, awards for the
|
|
worst performances and films of the year. KIM
|
|
BASINGER was nominted for Worst Actress for her
|
|
roles in COOL WORLD and FINAL ANALYSIS. For Worst
|
|
Director, we have DANNY DEVITO for HOFFA and BARRY
|
|
LEVINSON for TOYS. Of course, getting nominted for
|
|
a Razzie doesn't mean it's going to bomb. The Worst
|
|
Movie of the Year was THE BODYGUARD, which has
|
|
grossed more than $100 million. The Razzies will be
|
|
annouced March 28, one day before the Oscars.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Since science fiction is so rooted in space and the
|
|
unimaginable wonders it holds, (and because our
|
|
editor has a basis in physics and education) we
|
|
thought we'd let you know about an upcoming series
|
|
from The Learning Channel. It's called THE
|
|
PRACTICAL GUIDE TO THE UNIVERSE, and it's a 10 part
|
|
production beginning March 31. It will air
|
|
Wednesdays from 8:30 to 9:00 pm. Exploring subjects
|
|
from quarks to aliens, it will be hosted by TOM
|
|
SELLECK.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
LAST CHANCE TO SAVE QUANTUM LEAP!!! Very soon, the
|
|
decision whether to renew QUANTUM LEAP will be made.
|
|
If the show is not renewed, it is unlikely that a
|
|
write-in campaign will be able to do much to change
|
|
that. The time to act is NOW!
|
|
|
|
Excerpted from a fax from Belisarius:
|
|
|
|
"We know you're all supporting the show ... but
|
|
unfortunately it's not reflected in the Nielsens.
|
|
We think it's time to let NBC know how we feel about
|
|
the time slot: we want the old one back!
|
|
|
|
"It's time to write to: Warren Littlefield,
|
|
President
|
|
NBC Television
|
|
3000 W. Alameda Ave.
|
|
Burbank, CA 91523
|
|
|
|
"A letter or card with the words: LEAP US BACK TO
|
|
WEDNESDAYS AT TEN, signed with your name and address
|
|
should do it.
|
|
|
|
"On behalf of our cast, staff, and crew: Thanks for
|
|
taking the Leap!"
|
|
|
|
Sally Smith also suggests and Don Belisario agreed
|
|
that it was a good idea to write to Don Ohlmeyer,
|
|
President, NBC West, at the same address. He has
|
|
commented that the ratings of I'LL FLY AWAY, which
|
|
are comparable to QUANTUM LEAP, put it in serious
|
|
danger of cancellation.
|
|
|
|
On a more cheerful note, for those of you who didn't
|
|
catch on early enough to tape the pilot episode, you
|
|
may be able to buy a copy in the United States this
|
|
June, when Universal releases the first five videos
|
|
in a series, not necessarily in order. The decision
|
|
hasn't been made yet, but according to Sally they
|
|
will be chosen from this list: Original Version
|
|
Pilot, The Leap Home/Vietnam, MIA, Jimmy, The Color
|
|
of Truth, What Price Gloria, and Pool Hall Blues.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
GEORGE LUCAS: HEROES, MYTHS AND MAGIC will begin
|
|
airing Tuesday, March 9 at 9 pm on PBS. Check your
|
|
local lisitngs. This, the first documentary on
|
|
Lucas himself, was written, directed, and produced
|
|
by Jane Paley and Larry Price in accociation with
|
|
Thirteen/WNET in New York, as an American Masters
|
|
special. For the first time, cameras will be
|
|
allowed inside ILM and the Skywalker Ranch, and
|
|
associates of Mr. Lucas, including STEVEN SPIELBERG
|
|
and his wife(!) KATE CAPSHAW, FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA,
|
|
RON HOWARD, LARRY KASDAN, and STAR WARS and INDIANA
|
|
JONES actors HARRISON FORD and CARRIE FISHER.
|
|
Perhaps the most anticipated part, however, is the
|
|
annoucement from Lucas himself as to his plans for
|
|
the STAR WARS series.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
There will defintely be a STAR TREK VII. As if
|
|
there was really any doubt, right? The official
|
|
word has come down from Sherry Lansing, who replaced
|
|
Brandon Tartikoff as head of Paramount's Motion
|
|
Picture division. Will the Next Generation crew be
|
|
involved? Well, let's recount our sources: Majel
|
|
Barrett Roddenberry: Yes. Gates McFadden: Maybe,
|
|
if they have enough money. LeVar Burton: Movies
|
|
are planned for AFTER TNG is finished. Leonard
|
|
Nimoy: It's a good possibility. The icing on this
|
|
cake, though, is the fact that Rick Berman, producer
|
|
of both ST:TNG and ST:DSN, is "very much involved,"
|
|
according to a New York Daily News talk with
|
|
Lansing. So you can take that for what it's worth.
|
|
Let's just hope they decide to call it Star
|
|
Trek VIII and avoid the "odd number jinx."
|
|
Which brings us to the Editor's Choice for
|
|
"Best Star Trek Rumor Floating Around Right Now."
|
|
(That's not to say there's any truth to it, it's
|
|
just that it gave us a lot of laughs.)
|
|
Picard is re-Borgified in an attempt to cement
|
|
an alliace with the Borg against a new threat from
|
|
the Gamma Quadrant, which, in the cliffhangers of
|
|
TNG and DSN, approaches at a speed that they don't
|
|
NEED the wormhole. Picard is a Borg too long and
|
|
while he can't be assimilated because of his
|
|
experience as Camin, he can't be un-Borgified,
|
|
either. Crusher is kidnapped during the
|
|
cliffhanger, Dax is transported and changes,
|
|
Cristian Slater is an Admiral (!), Kirstie Alley
|
|
comes back as Saavik, and the Invaders turn out to
|
|
be Odo's people. They take the form of a crew
|
|
missing since STVII, and Sulu will show up in the
|
|
Enterprise B to be rescued at the last minute. No
|
|
word on by whom, but word is that Shatner, having
|
|
had his script for VII turned down, will bow out
|
|
after rescuing them.
|
|
The icing on the cake: The voice of the Borg
|
|
"Overmind" will by Charlton Heston, who said in an
|
|
interview on CNN that it is more a slave to the Borg
|
|
than a controller.
|
|
Now. Obviously, we haven't got any
|
|
confirmation on this. We didn't even see the
|
|
alleged CNN interview, and we don't know how much of
|
|
this posting had been tongue-in-cheek. Take it for
|
|
what it's worth, and enjoy it.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
If you thought the set of YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN looked
|
|
familiar, you were right, according to Marshall D.
|
|
Gardner, chairman of Designs International. He's
|
|
the man who owns what he claims to be the original
|
|
1931 set for FRANKENSTEIN, and he says it was used
|
|
in BUCK ROGERS, ALIEN, THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH,
|
|
the TERMINATOR pictures, and the aforementioned
|
|
Young Frankenstein. The collection of objects is up
|
|
for sale, with a "reserve bid of $1 million" already
|
|
in place. He also says that everything works, and
|
|
that it can "create over one-million man-made
|
|
volts."
|
|
He did NOT say, however, how he got his hands on it.
|
|
Perhaps a little grave digging ...
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
MARVEL COMICS and SHOGAKUKAN PRODUCTIONS of Japan
|
|
have reportedly formed some sort of business
|
|
alliance.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
JAMES DOOHAN mentioned at a convention that he,
|
|
NICHELLE NICHOLS, GEORGE TAKEI, and WALTER KEONIG
|
|
would be "coming out with something in a little bit.
|
|
Watch for it."
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Rumors are flying that TERRY GILLIAM (MONTY PYTHON,
|
|
TIME BANDITS, BRAZIL, (need we go on?)) will by
|
|
directing TriStar's version of GODZILLA, but his
|
|
agent is denying that he's even been approached
|
|
about it. Meanwhile, back in Japan, GOJIRA VS
|
|
MOSURA has become the highest grossing Godzilla film
|
|
ever. Rumor also has it that TriStar will start
|
|
with Godzilla fighting another monster, possibly in
|
|
New York. According to reports, they only have the
|
|
rights to use characters from films before 1985.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
TIM BURTON, won't be directing GODZILLA either, but
|
|
he WILL be directing a film on the life of the
|
|
director of such notables as GLEN OR GLYNDA and PLAN
|
|
NINE FROM OUTER SPACE. The movie ED WOOD is more
|
|
than a rumor. JOHNNY DEPP is confirmed as a member
|
|
of the cast. The film, written by SCOTT ALEXANDER
|
|
and LARRY KARASZEWSKI, will start shooting in mid-
|
|
April.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
On a more somber note, SHARON DISNEY LUND, daughter
|
|
of the late WALT DISNEY, has lost her battle with
|
|
cancer. The 56-year-old had been a director of The
|
|
Walt Disney Company, a trustee of the California
|
|
Insitute of the Arts, and an officer of Retlaw
|
|
Enterprises, Inc., owned and organized by the Disney
|
|
family to take care of Walt Disney's personal
|
|
business.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Ted Haworth, an art director on BATTERIES NOT
|
|
INCLUDED and more than 50 other movies has died of
|
|
heart failure at 75.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
HARVEY KURTZMAN, who created MAD MAGAZINE with
|
|
William Gaines, is dead of liver cancer at the age
|
|
of 68.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
PETER DAVID has left X-FACTOR, citing management and
|
|
artist problems.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Apparently there isn't any hostility between
|
|
orchestras in Boston. Seiji Ozawa, conductor of the
|
|
Boston Symphony Orchestra, bestowed a heck of a
|
|
birthday present on composer and Boston Pops
|
|
conductor JOHN WILLIAMS. For birthday number 61,
|
|
Williams received an autographed baseball from Red
|
|
Sox pitcher Roger Clemens, tickets to the Red Sox
|
|
home opener (he says he's taking Ozawa), and a
|
|
special rendition of "The Flying Theme" from ET
|
|
performed by the BSO. There was also a piano-shaped
|
|
cake, brought onstage while R2D2 whistled "Happy
|
|
Birthday."
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
What's in a name? Plenty, if that name is VC
|
|
ANDREWS. You've probably seen her books on the
|
|
shelves recently. She's been called "the fastest-
|
|
selling author in America." So what's the problem.
|
|
The problem is that she's dead. Has been since
|
|
December 19, 1986.
|
|
But who's been writing the books since then?
|
|
Well, his name is Andrew Neiderman, and an agreement
|
|
for him to write eight books under the name of VC
|
|
Andrews has become a $1 million tax bill for her
|
|
family, which claims that her name was worth no more
|
|
than $140,000 when she died. Citing the $10.4
|
|
million in advances for the eight books, the IRS
|
|
disagrees. The $1 million was above and beyond the
|
|
taxes on the advances and royalties themselves.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Okay, so you're an alien looking for a place to
|
|
land. Where do you go? Why, Waukesha County, of
|
|
course. County Executive Daniel M. Finley, noticing
|
|
an increase in UFO sightings, invited the aliens to
|
|
land at Crites Field, just west of Milwaukee. In a
|
|
(not very serious) letter to the potential visitors,
|
|
Finley tells them they are "the biggest thing to
|
|
happen around these parts since the kangaroo
|
|
sightings a few years ago."
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
LOADED WEAPON 1 seems to be a festival of cameos.
|
|
Starring FREEJACK'S EMILIO ESTEVEZ, it also has
|
|
larger or smaller roles for WILLIAM SHATNER, JAMES
|
|
DOOHAN, TIM CURRY, JOHN LOVITZ, F. MURRAY ABRAHAM,
|
|
RICHARD MOLL, and lots of others. Estevez is
|
|
currently working on STAKEOUT II, with RICHARD
|
|
DREYFUSS, and has finished work on JUDGEMENT NIGHT,
|
|
about four people who get lost on the South Side of
|
|
Chicago.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
BLADERUNNER director RIDLEY SCOTT has signed to
|
|
direct PANCHO'S WAR, about the 1916 Mexican
|
|
Revolution. It will be produced by Scott's Percy
|
|
Mains Productions and distributed by Paramount.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
DARYL HANNAH will be in Minneapolis to make GRUMPY
|
|
OLD MEN with JACK LEMMON, WALTER MATTHAU, and ANN-
|
|
MARGARET. Matthau has just finished work on DENNIS
|
|
THE MENACE.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES III: THE TURTLES ARE
|
|
BACK ... IN TIME will debut March 6 at a benefit for
|
|
four charities: the Arthur Ashe Foundation for the
|
|
defeat of AIDS, the Westside Children's Center,
|
|
Clinica Para Las Americas and Permanent Charities
|
|
Committe of the Entertainment Industries Children's
|
|
Fund. Stars on the benefit committe include LEONARD
|
|
NIMOY, WARREN BEATTY, PIERCE BROSNAN, HENRY WINKLER
|
|
and MARTIN SHORT.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
If you're in England and you missed the April
|
|
showing of A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, you're not likely to
|
|
get another chance anytime soon. The 1971 film has
|
|
been banned from theaters in Britain since 1974,
|
|
when filmmaker STANLEY KUBRICK requested it be
|
|
pulled because of a series of rapes and murders that
|
|
seemed to be inspired by the violence of the film.
|
|
The ban may be lifted after Kubrick's death, but the
|
|
manager of the cinema where it was shown has been
|
|
charged with breaking Britain's copyright law.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
There's another baby Schwartznegger on the way.
|
|
ARNOLD SCHWARTZNEGGER and his wife MARIA SHRIVER are
|
|
expecting their third child in October. They are
|
|
already the parents of Katherine, 3 and Christina,
|
|
18 months.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
More financial dealing for CAROLCO. LIVE
|
|
ENTERTAINMENT INC, which is 49.9 percent owned by
|
|
Carolco, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
|
|
protection. The reorganization plan also filed is
|
|
designed to allow Live to emerge in a few months
|
|
without $70 million in debt. 98% of Live's
|
|
creditors have agreed to the reorganization, so it
|
|
seems that the proceedings won't take long.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
On the upside of the financial swing is Time Warner,
|
|
the parent company of Warner Brothers, which has
|
|
reported net income for the fourth quarter of 1992
|
|
of $68 million (up from $45 million in 1991) on
|
|
revenues of $3.72 billion (up from $3.39 billion on
|
|
1991). Final numbers for 1992: net income of $86
|
|
million on revenues of $13.07 billion.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Looking for something different at Walt Disney
|
|
World? No word on when it will be finished, but
|
|
Disney is planning a new ride called ALIEN
|
|
ENCOUNTER. They will be using a new sound
|
|
technology that allows you to "feel" the aliens and
|
|
other events around you.
|
|
The ride will be replacing the "Carosel of
|
|
Progress" next to Space Mountain. Why? For one
|
|
thing, the attraction, which features animatronics
|
|
explaining the way life was in four separate time
|
|
periods of American history, was rather dated. This,
|
|
in itself, could be overcome. The last section, the
|
|
"present," had been updated, but that wasn't the
|
|
only problem.
|
|
It was also extremely old and plagued with
|
|
mechanical problems. The rotating stage as well as
|
|
the animatronics, exceedingly lifelike robots, were
|
|
constantly breaking down. The final straw, however,
|
|
apparently came the day too much hydraulic fluid
|
|
built up in an animatronic dog and the head blew up.
|
|
Try and explain THAT to your kids.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Majel Barrett Roddenberry accepted NASA's
|
|
Distinguished Public Service Medal on behalf of her
|
|
late husband, Gene Roddenberry. Previously honored
|
|
by NASA's naming of the prototype space shuttle
|
|
after the ENTERPRISE, he was cited as having shown
|
|
the future and space exploration as something
|
|
hopeful to be welcomed instead of feared.
|
|
Roddenberry died in 1991.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
The World Almanac and Book of Facts has a rather
|
|
large obituary section, but one of our readers
|
|
caught the following: "Kent, Clark: journalist
|
|
who, as Superman, fought crime in America since
|
|
1938; 1992." Sadly, it also contained "Shuster,
|
|
Joseph, 78: cartoonist, co-creator of Superman; Los
|
|
Angeles, July 30."
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
We're hearing rumors of a FANTASTIC FOUR movie in
|
|
the works, but in a bizarre twist of fate, we are
|
|
also hearing that the plans are to do a quick and
|
|
cheap version, never release it, and then do a
|
|
quality sequel, because the contract says the sequel
|
|
is free. We have NO confirmation, however.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Coming on Video: UNDER SIEGE, PINOCCHIO, CANDYMAN.
|
|
Already here: SNEAKERS (OK, so it's not sf -- but
|
|
it does figure heavily into cyberspace), IT, DEATH
|
|
BECOMES HER, INNOCENT BLOOD, LITTLE NEMO: ADVENTURES
|
|
IN SLUMBERLAND, COOL WORLD, and DELICATESSEN (a
|
|
bizarre comedy in the tradition of BRAZIL, if the
|
|
reports we've heard are true.)
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
DRACULA trivia: When the 1922 film NOSFERATU was
|
|
released, BRAM STOKER's widow successfully won a
|
|
court order to have it destroyed because it was
|
|
based on her late husband's book. That's why
|
|
although it does turn up, you don't really see it in
|
|
wide release.
|
|
|
|
And from the "take it from what it's worth"
|
|
department: "Health" magazine reportedly says that
|
|
according to its "vampire evaluation census" the
|
|
world is harboring 850 practicing vampires.
|
|
|
|
BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA has now led the European
|
|
market for three straight weeks, pulling in
|
|
surprisingly strong numbers in Germany and the
|
|
United Kingdom. As of February 19, it had earned
|
|
$90 million overseas in just its first five weeks.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
The time loop comedy GROUNDHOG DAY is the big hit in
|
|
the United States, having brought in $26.5 million
|
|
in just its first ten days. Its closest competition
|
|
right now is from ARMY OF DARKNESS, which brought in
|
|
$4.3 million on its first weekend out. ALADDIN has
|
|
now taken in almost $180 million, making it the
|
|
highest grossing movie Disney has ever put out --
|
|
including the live-action smash PRETTY WOMAN, the
|
|
previous record-holder.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
The three hour Director's Cut of THE ABYSS on
|
|
laserdisc has been postponed indefinitely,
|
|
reportedly because 20th Century Fox is planning to
|
|
rerelease it in theaters in Los Angeles and New York
|
|
on March 5.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Will it ever end? Add BEWITCHED to the list of old
|
|
TV shows that Hollywood is "borrowing" to make
|
|
movies out of. PENNY MARSHALL has been mentioned as
|
|
Director and Producer, but we have no firm
|
|
information as yet. No one has yet been cast.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Rumors have it that ABEL FERRARA will be directing a
|
|
remake of INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS to be out
|
|
in the next few months.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
According to Variety, Disney will be dropping GOOF
|
|
TROOP from ABC's Saturday morning, citing rising
|
|
production costs. In addition to the 65 episodes
|
|
produced for syndication, Disney made 13 episodes
|
|
for ABC. THE NEW ADVENTURES OF WINNIE THE POOH and
|
|
DARKWING DUCK will also be leaving ABC after this
|
|
season. Darkwing Duck and Goof Troop will continue
|
|
in the "Disney Afternoon."
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
More rumor: PAUL VERHOVEN, director of ROBOCOP, and
|
|
TOTAL RECALL, will be directing STARSHIP TROOPERS
|
|
for TriStar.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
For those who keep track of these things, there are
|
|
approximately 10 more new episodes of BATMAN: THE
|
|
ANIMATED SERIES yet to air.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Nobody's talking when it comes to specifics on
|
|
Disney's PRINCESS OF MARS. It's a joint project
|
|
with Synergy, which told us that it was ready to go
|
|
into pre-production last spring, but then decided
|
|
that they weren't happy with the script and had it
|
|
rewritten because "we didn't package it to our
|
|
satisfaction." Right now they have "many scripts,"
|
|
but they haven't even decided whether to update the
|
|
story, which was written decades ago. It will be
|
|
directed by John McTeirnan.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
COLM MEANEY will be missing a couple of episodes of
|
|
STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE. His contract allows him
|
|
to go out and make a movie, so long as he gives the
|
|
studio notice, and he'll be making THE COMMITTMENTS
|
|
2.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Rumors are that Warners is talking about the Riddler
|
|
for BATMAN 3, but TIMOTHY BURTON won't be directing.
|
|
Right now they're looking at RICHARD DONNER.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
PEIRCE BROSNAN has reportedly signed for LAWNMOWER
|
|
MAN II.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
April 29: STEVEN KING'S THE DARK HALF, with TIMOTHY
|
|
HUTTON.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
There will be no ROGER RABBIT 2, but there will be
|
|
more short features like TUMMY TROUBLE. The next
|
|
will be TRAIL MIX-UP -- Roger Rabbit goes west.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Card collectors beware: Topps will be coming out
|
|
with a new series of STAR WARS trading cards. It
|
|
will include at least 140 cards, including lots of
|
|
never-published artwork, including some that are
|
|
specially commissioned.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
INTERVIEW WITH A VAMPIRE will begin filming in May
|
|
or June, reportedly with BRAD PITT and DANIEL DAY
|
|
LEWIS. NEIL GORDAN has signed to write and direct
|
|
the film, which will be made by Warner Brothers.
|
|
|
|
--!--
|
|
|
|
CORRECTI0N: In our last issue, we told you about
|
|
Circlet Press, publishers of erotic science fiction
|
|
and fantasy. Our article was a bit unclear,
|
|
however, and resulted in a few people confusing
|
|
Circlet with Inland, which is the distributor, not
|
|
the publisher. For information about Circlet,
|
|
contact Celcilia Tan at ctan@world.std.com or at
|
|
Circlet Press, P.O. Box 15143, Boston, MA 02215.
|
|
If you're writing for the new titles list, please
|
|
don't forget to include a SASE.
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
--!8!--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
CURIOUSITIES
|
|
|
|
How many steps does it take for a Purdue student to
|
|
screw in a light bulb? Twenty six, according to the
|
|
winner of the eleventh annual Rube Goldberg
|
|
competition. The winning team, the Mission
|
|
Impossible Strike Team (MIST) created a device to
|
|
perform those 26 steps in about 30 seconds, screwing
|
|
in a light bulb to pronounce the successful
|
|
completion of their mission, to save the university
|
|
from a missile pointed at it by the evil Big Red.
|
|
They will receive $400, a television, a traveling
|
|
trohpy, and a chance to compete against student
|
|
teams from across the country on March 20.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
EW Scripps Co. has sold Pharos Books and World
|
|
Almanac Education to K-III Communications for $30
|
|
million. Pharos publishes non-fiction and reference
|
|
books (such as the World Almanac).
|
|
|
|
Think you have a hard time keeping your resume up-to-
|
|
date? Try keeping track of the Encyclopedia
|
|
Brittanica. Updates and revisions to this years
|
|
edition involve 3,300 articles and 8,000 pages.
|
|
Among the 64,896 articles by 6,800 authors, however,
|
|
is work by the late ISAAC ASIMOV.
|
|
|
|
Encyclopedia Britannica has announced plans to sell
|
|
Compton's MultiMedia Publishing Group, which puts
|
|
out the more reasonably priced Compton's
|
|
Encyclopedia.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
BARBARA FELDON will be poking a little bit of fun at
|
|
her days as Agent 99 on GET SMART by guest starring
|
|
on MAD ABOUT YOU as the star of a TV spy series.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Retired Army Lt. Colonel STEVEN M. TITUNIK has a
|
|
regular job. The military expert has been spreading
|
|
himself around for years, acting as advisor to
|
|
virutually every Pentagon-related documentary or
|
|
news story, but he has signed an exclusive contract
|
|
with the MILITARY CHANNEL, according to L. DOUGLAS
|
|
KENNEY, president and co-founder of the channel,
|
|
which will focus on aviation and battle histories.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
The Academy of Television Arts and Science had
|
|
announced that the next four Emmy awards ceremonies
|
|
will be televised on ABC instead of Fox or the usual
|
|
annual rotation.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
In a speech at the American Film Market, JACK
|
|
VALENTI, leader of the Motion Picture Association of
|
|
America, commented that the European Community is
|
|
working to put up trade barriers against movies made
|
|
outside the continent, and that the only way
|
|
American producers have to fight restrictions is to
|
|
make more films and TV shows in Europe.
|
|
Approximately 20% of the film industry's $18 billion
|
|
per year revenue comes from Europe.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
There's probably at least one library on every topic
|
|
under the sun, comics included. Ohio State
|
|
University's Cartoon, Graphic, and Photographic Arts
|
|
Research Library has just received 83,034 pieces of
|
|
artwork from United Media, a leading syndicator of
|
|
newspaper comics. The original art, which dates
|
|
from 1931 to 1991, will be called the Robert Roy
|
|
Metz Collection of Cartoon Art, after United Media's
|
|
CEO. Among the characters donated and those already
|
|
at the library are Nancy, Alley Oop, Ferd'nand,
|
|
Steve Canyon, Eb and Flo, Priscilla's Pop, and Walt
|
|
Kelley's Pogo, as well as some editorial cartoons.
|
|
|
|
-!-
|
|
|
|
Think there's no market for your book? There is
|
|
hope. Over the 1992 Christmas season, the book
|
|
publishing industry in the United States posted a 10
|
|
percent increase in annual sales. 63 percent of the
|
|
population either gave or received a book as a gift
|
|
during the holiday season. The strong showing is
|
|
partly attributed to tough economic times.
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
--!10!--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
SPOILERS AHOY!!!
|
|
|
|
|
|
TALES FROM THE CRYPT is back in production, and will
|
|
be for 9 or 10 more weeks. The first episode, which
|
|
will air sometime in September, is called "Death of
|
|
Some Salesman," and stars ED BEGLEY JR. in the title
|
|
role, with TIM CURRY in the triple role of Ma and Pa
|
|
Brackett and their daughter Winona.
|
|
|
|
QUANTUM LEAP: By the time you read this, they
|
|
should be finished filming QL for this season.
|
|
Coming episodes include Sam as a young Elvis about
|
|
to get the break of his career, "Bigfoot," and "The
|
|
Leap Between the States," in which Sam leaps into
|
|
his great grandfather, an officer in the American
|
|
Civil War. Also, the season ender, which has
|
|
finally been named "Mirror Image" (it's been "Season
|
|
Ender" for months) reportedly has Sam "talking to G-
|
|
d." Don Belisario has also promised to "do right by
|
|
Al," and there are hints that we're finally going to
|
|
get a hug between the two of them after all these
|
|
years. Does that mean that Sam finally gets home?
|
|
We don't know. But the ratings aren't reflecting
|
|
the support we know the show has, and Bellisario has
|
|
filmed TWO endings, depending on whether the show is
|
|
renewed or not. If you want to save Quantum Leap,
|
|
now's the time. See the news for details -- but act
|
|
NOW!
|
|
|
|
THE YOUNG INDIANA JONES CHRONICLES: The re-premiere
|
|
and the following week (at 9pm) are "Young Indiana
|
|
Jones and the Mystery of the Blues: Chicago, 1920."
|
|
While working his way through college as a waiter,
|
|
he hooks up with Elliot Ness and Ernest Hemingway to
|
|
solve a murder. The following week, during summer
|
|
vacation from the University of Chicago, he goes to
|
|
New York and gets a job on Broadway as a stage
|
|
manager. The "famous personality of the week" is
|
|
George Gershwin. After that it's Ireland, 1916.
|
|
Remy's back, and Indy witnesses the Easter
|
|
Rebellion. Coming locations are Italy, Florence,
|
|
East Africa, Istanbul, Beesheba, Transylvania (YES,
|
|
he runs into Vlad the Impaler) Berlin, Paris, and
|
|
Prague.
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
--!11!--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
CONVENTION LISTINGS
|
|
|
|
To have your convention listed here, send it to
|
|
xx133@cleveland.freenet.edu or to the mail address
|
|
in the following format:
|
|
NAME;Date;Location;Guests;Rates;Name and address for
|
|
info; Telephone number; email adress. PLEASE send
|
|
all other correspondence to
|
|
cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu, or as usual you can use
|
|
the SNail Mail address.
|
|
|
|
THE FRIENDS OF DOCTOR WHO BIRTHDAY BASH; March 20;
|
|
BWI Airport Marriott, Baltimore, Maryland, USA;
|
|
SYLVESTER MCCOY, SOPHIE ALDRED; $19.95 in advance,
|
|
$24.95 door; FDW Birthday Bash, PO Box 14111,
|
|
Reading, PA 19612-4111; 215-478-9200
|
|
|
|
5CON; March 27-28; Hampshire College, Amherst,
|
|
Massachusetts, USA; JOHN DELANCIE, MAJEL BARRETT;
|
|
(Unconfirmed) MADELINE L'ENGLE, KEVIN EASTMAN, PETER
|
|
DAVID, JANE YOLEN, STEVE BISSETT; $25 weekend
|
|
(special rates available); Jonathan L. Miller, PO
|
|
Box 5001, Amherst MA, 01002-5001 USA; (413) 549-
|
|
4298; jlmiller@hamp.hampshire.edu
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
--!12!--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
ORGANIZATIONS
|
|
|
|
To have your club or organization listed, send a
|
|
BRIEF announcement (15 lines MAXIMUM) to
|
|
xx133@cleveland.freenet.edu or use the SNail Mail
|
|
adress. PLEASE send all other correspondence to
|
|
cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu (or SNail Mail, of
|
|
course).
|
|
|
|
|
|
The National Student Science Fiction Society sees
|
|
itself as an "organisation of societies," bringing
|
|
together student groups for the advancement of all.
|
|
For information: Allan "Sparks" Rennei, 1/L 37
|
|
Rodlea Dr., Dennistoun, Glasgow G31 2QR. Telephone:
|
|
041-556-2045. E-Mail: 906205@psy.glasgow.ac.uk
|
|
|
|
Interested in NEIL GAIMAN, author of SANDMAN? Now
|
|
you can join the MAGIAN LINE, the official Neil
|
|
Gaiman News and Information Transit Authority.
|
|
Membership for 1993 includes a quarterly newsletter
|
|
with news, coming attractions, etc., as well as
|
|
original work from Mr. Gaiman and some of his
|
|
collaborators; annotated bibliography; a previously
|
|
unpublished script from SANDMAN; and for the first
|
|
300 paid members, a signed copy of HELIOGABOLUS, his
|
|
24 hour comic. (*1 membership per person!*) For
|
|
info: Sadie O., 76244.1106@CompuServe.Com. $10 US,
|
|
$12 Canada, $15 overseas, payable to: Magian Line,
|
|
PO Box 170712, San Francisco, CA, 94117.
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
--!13!--
|
|
----------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Special thanks to our correspondents, without whom
|
|
this would be impossible:
|
|
jaguar!cmeli%panther@osi.iunet.it,
|
|
wangc@cpsc.ucalgary.ca, durantdr@cs.aston.ac.uk,
|
|
BOLE@hmivax.humgen.upenn.edu, and science
|
|
correspondent mdm@sparc2.Prime.COM, even though we
|
|
haven't gotten to him yet. Next time!
|
|
|
|
(If I forgot anyone, let me know.)
|
|
|
|
Even more special thanks to our writers, Rick
|
|
Kleffel, Dee Ann Latona, and Bill Henley, and
|
|
especially to Crawford Kilian for supporting us here
|
|
at the beginning.
|
|
|
|
If you want to be a writer for CV, drop a note to
|
|
cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu asking for guidelines.
|
|
To be a correspondent, send us a list of the
|
|
newsgroups you read frequently and regularly.
|
|
|
|
That's it for this month. Thanks for staying with
|
|
us, and we'll see you next time!
|
|
|
|
TJ Goldstein
|
|
Editor
|
|
Cyberspace Vanguard Magazine
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
CYBERSPACE VANGUARD MAGAZINE
|
|
News and Views from the Science Fiction Universe
|
|
TJ Goldstein, Editor | Send submissions, questions, comments to
|
|
tlg4@po.cwru.edu | cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu
|
|
|