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MT VOID, 05/14/21 -- Vol. 39, No. 46, Whole Number 2171

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evelynchim...@gmail.com

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May 16, 2021, 10:29:56 AM5/16/21
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THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
05/14/21 -- Vol. 39, No. 46, Whole Number 2171

Co-Editor: Mark Leeper, mle...@optonline.net
Co-Editor: Evelyn Leeper, ele...@optonline.net
Sending Address: evelynchim...@gmail.com
All material is the opinion of the author and is copyrighted by the
author unless otherwise noted.
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The latest issue is at <http://www.leepers.us/mtvoid/latest.htm>.
An index with links to the issues of the MT VOID since 1986 is at
<http://leepers.us/mtvoid/back_issues.htm>.

Topics:
Status Update (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
Mini Reviews, Part 16 (MANK, SHIRLEY, THE BLACK EMPEROR OF
BROADWAY, RESISTANCE) (film reviews by Mark R. Leeper)
TOGETHER WE WILL GO, by J. Michael Straczynski (book review
by Joe Karpierz)
This Week's Reading (THE BLACK DEATH) (book comments
by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: Status Update (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

As noted in a separate email last week, I broke my other hip last
Thursday (this was the left; I broke my right hip in 2013). This
delayed the MT VOID by a day, but I am home so everything should be
okay now.

(Last time I broke my hip I was in the hospital five days, and then
moved to a rehab facility for almost three weeks, and in a
wheelchair some of it. This time I was home in two days, and no
wheelchair stage.)

Thanks to all who sent their best wishes. Mark and some friends
are helping out quite a bit, and I will be doing physical therapy
at home, so I hope to be back to mostly normal in a few weeks.
Stay tuned.

As for the email problem, it appears that my smartphone (a T-Mobile
Coolpad) has a different Contacts app pre-installed (which cannot
be un-installed), but if I install the Google Contacts and use
that, there is a workaround that works. I can use the three-dot
menu and click "send mail". Alas, that puts the names in the To:
line of a new draft email, and I have to use the Copy All
Recipients function and paste the recipients into the Bcc: field of
the e-mail I'm really working on.

(To make matters worse, the two Contacts app icons are almost
identical--the Goodle one is a slightly darker blue and has
slightly more rounded shoulders.)

[-ecl]

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

TOPIC: Mini Reviews, Part 16 (film reviews by Mark R. Leeper)

Here is the sixteenth batch of mini-reviews, four biopics.

MANK: David Fincher's retelling of the writing of CITIZEN KANE by
Herman Mankiewicz has striking art direction and cinematography in
monochrome, but in far too many places in the film the faces do not
go with the voices. I like films about Hollywood but at no point
was I on this film's side. Released 12/04/20; available on Netflix
streaming. Rating: 0 (-4 to +4)

SHIRLEY: Elizabeth Moss plays Shirley Jackson in this tedious
biopic, which is more an experiment in style than in entertaining
narrative. It uses a completely fictional young couple to create a
long dull telling of Jackson's personal life. It does have some
odd experimental uses of color, similar at times to Douglas Sirk's.
Released 06/05/20; available on Amazon Prime and others. Rating:
low 0 (-4 to +4)

THE BLACK EMPEROR OF BROADWAY: This film tells the story of Charles
S. Gilpin, the first Black actor to star on Broadway (in the 1920
production of Eugene O'Neill's THE EMPEROR JONES). The story is
the right story, but some of the actors do not have the strength to
carry the characters as written. Shaun Parkes does fine as Gilpin,
but John Hensley in particular needs more power and gravitas in the
role of Eugene O'Neill, which he underplays what is written in this
script. On the whole, this feels like a summer production, and has
difficulty making a play's central issue seem like it's worth the
sound and fury. Released 09/15/20; available on Amazon Prime and on
DVD. Rating: low +1 (-4 to +4)

RESISTANCE: This biopic about a little-known period in Marcel
Marceau's life concentrates on moral decisions such as weighing the
importance of saving Jews versus killing Nazis. It has nice art
design for a low-budget film, as well as some striking camerawork.
Jesse Eisenberg (as Marceau) and Clemence Poesy (of IN BRUGES) give
outstanding performances. Released 04/17/20; available on
Amazon Prime and others and on DVD. Rating: low +3 (-4 to +4)

[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: TOGETHER WE WILL GO, by J. Michael Straczynski (copyright
2021, Gallery/Scout Press, ASIN: B08LDWZHR8, ISBN: 9781982142582,
304pp) (book review by Joe Karpierz)

J. Michael Straczynski, or JMS as he is known to his legion of
fans, is a giant in the science fiction visual media community. He
is best known as the creator of the television series BABYLON 5, as
well as JEREMIAH and SENSE8. He's worked on movie screenplays,
such as THOR, WORLD WAR Z, CHANGELING, and others. He has also
worked extensively in the comics field--to this day I still have
his complete run of Spiderman comics. He recently wrote a gut
wrenching autobiography. But he's not known for writing mainstream
novels--until now.

I was curious about the book, not sure if I was really interested
in it, or was I just a fan of JMS wanting to read everything he
writes. Well, I'm not the latter in the sense that I haven't read
everything he's written. But I was curious, given the subject
matter of the book.

The high-level elevator pitch is that a man named Mark Antonelli,
who has not succeeded in his chosen career path--that of being
an author--has decided to put together an east coast to west coast
road trip like none other. He buys an old and rickety tour bus,
and hires an army veteran to drive it. He then puts out an ad,
recruiting people for the trip. The people have one thing in
common: they've been beaten down and are discouraged with life, and
are on the trip to end it all. At the end of the trip in San
Francisco, "they will find a cliff with an amazing view of the
ocean at sunset, hit the gas, and drive out of this world."

Of course, it really never is that simple. Sure, you put a dozen
or so people on a bus with a common goal: commit suicide (I
should point out that the bus driver is only along to drive. He's
not in it for the ending of things.), but as these things go,
people develop relationships, become close--even lovers--and things
change. And of course, because there is no story without
conflict, events result in the bus being chased by the authorities,
and folks start thinking about why it is they are on the trip
and whether the end of it all is really what they want.

TOGETHER WE WILL GO has all the hallmarks of a typical Straczynski
story: well-developed and complex characters, a deeply moving
story about those characters, and of course there's always
something that the reader (or viewer) isn't expecting--and it
doesn't always happen at the end of the narrative (yes, that's a
close to a spoiler as I'm going to provide). As with other
Straczynski stories, we come to care about some, if not all of the
characters, no matter what their backstory really is.

One of the things we are repeatedly told that life is a journey,
and the end of that journey isn't always what we expect it to be.
TOGETHER WE WILL GO really is the story about the journey of the
characters with a common goal--not the end. As it should be.
[-jak]

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

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

I'm reading THE BLACK DEATH: A PERSONAL HISTORY by John Hatcher (Da
Capo Press, ISBN 978-0-306-81792-2. This is sort of the
counterpoint to Truman Capote's description of IN COLD BLOOD as a
"non-fiction novel"; this is what Josephine Tey would call
"history-with-conversation", and I definitely recommend it. It is
certainly similar to Connie Willis's DOOMSDAY BOOK, but without the
time travel and modern characters, and based much more closely on
actual records of the time.

One of the effects of the Black Death that Hatcher describes is
that due to the much smaller population trying to manage the same
amount of land and animals, it was impossible to find laborers who
would work for the previous wages, or indeed often for any wages at
all. Previously an extended family might have five households
managing fifteen acres amongst them; after the Black Death there
might be only one household left, and they had no extra time to
work for minimal pay, or for that matter to do the work they were
legally obliged to provide for their lord for free.

Clearly our current situation is not so dire. But restaurants have
announced (temporary) closures because they are unable to find
staff. Why? Workers are being asked to contend with similar
strained circumstances, exposing themselves to working in close
quarters and with patrons who often care little about caution. And
at home they may have more work to do because family members are
sick or have died. The kitchen staff wants more than what they
were being paid before, and the wait staff wants more to make up
for the lower tips due to lower occupancy. All this makes the
question of wages similar, even taking into account the restaurants
that have closed, leaving their staff available.

None of this is surprising. I have noticed prices at a couple of
my favorite restaurants going up 20% even before indoor dining came
back. The push for a $15 minimum wage is just going to exacerbate
this, so we need to be prepared for higher prices all around.
[-ecl]

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

Mark Leeper
mle...@optonline.net


One dog barks at something, the rest bark at him.
--Chinese Proverb

Gary McGath

unread,
May 16, 2021, 2:44:51 PM5/16/21
to
On 5/16/21 10:29 AM, ele...@optonline.net wrote:

>
> TOPIC: Status Update (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
>
> As noted in a separate email last week, I broke my other hip last
> Thursday (this was the left; I broke my right hip in 2013). This
> delayed the MT VOID by a day, but I am home so everything should be
> okay now.
>
> (Last time I broke my hip I was in the hospital five days, and then
> moved to a rehab facility for almost three weeks, and in a
> wheelchair some of it. This time I was home in two days, and no
> wheelchair stage.)
>
> Thanks to all who sent their best wishes. Mark and some friends
> are helping out quite a bit, and I will be doing physical therapy
> at home, so I hope to be back to mostly normal in a few weeks.
> Stay tuned.

If you mentioned it here before, I missed it. In any case, best wishes
now, and I'm glad the medical ordeal wasn't worse.



--
Gary McGath http://www.mcgath.com
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