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         @   @   @ @        @ @ @ @    @       @     @   @   @   @   @  @
         @   @@@@@ @@@@     @  @  @    @        @   @    @   @   @   @   @
         @   @   @ @        @     @    @         @ @     @   @   @   @  @
         @   @   @ @@@@@    @     @    @          @      @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@

                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 04/29/94 -- Vol. 12, No. 44


       MEETINGS UPCOMING:

       Unless otherwise stated, all meetings are in Middletown 1R-400C
            Wednesdays at noon.

         _D_A_T_E                    _T_O_P_I_C

       05/11  BEGGARS IN SPAIN by Nancy Kress (Hugo Nominee)
       06/01  GREEN MARS by Kim Stanley Robinson (Hugo Nominee)
       06/22  Hugo-nominated short stories
       07/13  MOVING MARS by Greg Bear (Hugo Nominee)
       08/03  GLORY SEASON by David Brin (Hugo Nominee)
       08/24  VIRTUAL LIGHT by William Gibson (Hugo Nominee)

       Outside events:
       The Science Fiction Association of Bergen County meets on the second
       Saturday of every month in Upper Saddle River; call 201-933-2724 for
       details.  The New Jersey Science Fiction Society meets on the third
       Saturday of every month in Belleville; call 201-432-5965 for details.


       HO Chair:     John Jetzt        MT 2G-432  908-957-5087 j.j.jetzt@att.com
       LZ Chair:     Rob Mitchell      HO 1C-523  908-834-1267 j.j.jetzt@att.com
       MT Chair:     Mark Leeper       MT 3D-441  908-957-5619 m.r.leeper@att.com
       HO Librarian: Nick Sauer        HO 4F-427  908-949-7076 n.j.sauer@att.com
       LZ Librarian: Lance Larsen      HO 2C-318  908-949-4156 l.f.larsen@att.com
       MT Librarian: Mark Leeper       MT 3D-441  908-957-5619 m.r.leeper@att.com
       Factotum:     Evelyn Leeper     MT 1F-329  908-957-2070 e.c.leeper@att.com
       All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

       1. Note on upcoming meetings: _B_e_g_g_a_r_s _i_n _S_p_a_i_n is first because  it
       is  now  available  in  mass-market  paperback.   _G_r_e_e_n _M_a_r_s is now
       available in trade paperback.  The remaining  three  are  available
       only   in   hardback   (I   will   check  about  planned  paperback
       publication), so are scheduled later to allow seeking them out from
       friends,  libraries, etc.  _G_l_o_r_y _S_e_a_s_o_n, _V_i_r_t_u_a_l _L_i_g_h_t, and _B_e_g_g_a_r_s
       _i_n _S_p_a_i_n are available from the Monmouth County Library.  [-ecl]


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












       THE MT VOID                                                  Page 2



       2. Some of you have complained that last issue the article  we  ran
       seemed familiar to you.  A few have even suggested that the article
       as an out-and-out rerun.  In fact, what you have observed is one of
       Nature's  rarest  phenomena  in action.  To understand exactly what
       happened, you have to perform this little experiment for  yourself.
       Take  a  piece  of  paper  and draw two X's about six inches apart.
       Now take a ruler and connect the two centers  of  the  X's  with  a
       straight  line.   Now  we all learned in geometry that the shortest
       distance between two points is a straight line.  That is  certainly
       true  in  the  Newtonian universe.  But Einstein added a wrinkle to
       the whole procedure.  Now assume that the sheet  of  paper  is  the
       fabric  of  space.  Gravitation actually bends space.  Take the two
       X's and fold the paper so that the X's are right over  each  other.
       Now  the  shortest  distance between the two points is much shorter
       than the straight line.  This is a wormhole in space.

       Now you might reasonably object at this point that the two articles
       were  not  just  close,  they  were identical.  Well that is what a
       black hole does to space and time.  It crushes it down to a  single
       point.   So  now  I  want you to cut a hole in the paper completely
       removing one of the X's.  Fold the piece of paper so that  you  can
       see  the  remaining X through the hole.  Now take a piece of scotch
       tape and completely cover the hole and placing the X right  in  the
       center of the hole so that the two sheets of paper have in common a
       circle with an X in  it.   Let  this  model  represent  a  wormhole
       through  space  and  time, connecting two issues of the MT VOID.  A
       single article, represented by the X on the piece of paper, sits in
       two  different  issues  of the MT VOID.  But, you might object, are
       you not minus one article because the wormhole in  space  and  time
       has  crushed  together  two  issues  and  they  intersect  into one
       article.  No.  Wake up.  You haven't been listening ... or  reading
       ...  or  thinking about what you read ... whatever.  Class, can any
       of you help out?  Yes, you, Tommy.  That's right.  Did you all hear
       him,  class?  Yes find the piece you cut out of the original paper.
       That's it.  Now look carefully at it.  It has the missing  article.
       But  you  can't  read  the  article,  can  you?  The black hole has
       reduced it to a single point, but  you  have  that  point  for  the
       missing  article.   At  least  you are better off than you are with
       this week's article which anyone can see is totally pointless.  Oh,
       and save a tree.  Stop wasting paper by drawing X's and lines on it
       just because someone tells you they  want  to  show  you  something
       silly about nature or there won't be any nature left.


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

       3. This is to announce that our factotum, Evelyn Leeper, has  again
       been  nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Fan Writer.  This makes
       her fifth nomination....













       THE MT VOID                                                  Page 3



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

       4. ... which brings us to the  announcement  of  this  year's  Hugo
       nominees:

          - Novel

               - _M_o_v_i_n_g _M_a_r_s by Greg Bear (Tor)
               - _G_l_o_r_y _S_e_a_s_o_n by David Brin (Bantam Spectra)
               - _V_i_r_t_u_a_l _L_i_g_h_t by William Gibson (Bantam Spectra)
               - _B_e_g_g_a_r_s _i_n _S_p_a_i_n by Nancy Kress (Morrow AvoNova)
               - _G_r_e_e_n _M_a_r_s by Kim  Stanley  Robinson  (HarperCollins  UK;
                 Bantam Spectra US)

          - Novella

               - "The Night We  Buried  Road  Dog"  by  Jack  Cady  (F&SF,
                 January 1993)
               - "Mefisto in Onyx" by Harlan Ellison (Omni, October  1993;
                 Mark V. Ziesing)
               - "An American Childhood" by Pat  Murphy  (Asimov's,  April
                 1993)
               - "Into the Miranda Rift" by G. David Nordley (Analog, July
                 1993)
               - "Down in the Bottomlands" by  Harry  Turtledove  (Analog,
                 January 1993)
               - "Wall,  Stone,  Craft"  by  Walter  Jon  Williams  (F&SF,
                 October/November 1993; Axolotl)

          - Novelette

               - "The Shadow Knows" by Terry Bisson  (Asimov's,  September
                 1993; Bears Discover Fire (Tor))
               - "The Franchise" by John Kessel (Asimov's, August 1993)
               - "Dancing on Air" by Nancy Kress (Asimov's, July 1993)
               - "Georgia  on  My  Mind"  by  Charles  Sheffield  (Analog,
                 January 1993)
               - "Deep Eddy" by Bruce Sterling (Asimov's, August 1993)

          - Short Story

               - "England Underway" by  Terry  Bisson  (Omni,  July  1993;
                 Bears Discover Fire (Tor))
               - "The Good Pup" by Bridget McKenna (F&SF, March 1993)
               - "Mwalimu  in  the  Squared  Circle"   by   Mike   Resnick
                 (Asimov's, March 1993; Alternate Warriors (Tor))
               - "The Story So Far" by  Martha  Soukup  (Full  Spectrum  4
                 (Bantam Spectra))
               - "Death on the Nile" by  Connie  Willis  (Asimov's,  March
                 1993)












       THE MT VOID                                                  Page 4



          - Non-Fiction Book

               - _O_n_c_e _A_r_o_u_n_d _t_h_e _B_l_o_c_h: _A_n _U_n_a_u_t_h_o_r_i_z_e_d  _A_u_t_o_b_i_o_g_r_a_p_h_y  by
                 Robert Bloch (Tor)
               - _T_h_e _E_n_c_y_c_l_o_p_e_d_i_a _o_f _S_c_i_e_n_c_e _F_i_c_t_i_o_n edited by John  Clute
                 and Peter Nicholls (Orbit UK; St. Martin's US)
               - _P_I_T_F_C_S: _P_r_o_c_e_e_d_i_n_g_s _o_f  _t_h_e  _I_n_s_t_i_t_u_t_e  _f_o_r  _T_w_e_n_t_y-_F_i_r_s_t
                 _C_e_n_t_u_r_y _S_t_u_d_i_e_s edited by Theodore R. Cogswell (Advent)
               - _U_n_d_e_r_s_t_a_n_d_i_n_g _C_o_m_i_c_s: _T_h_e _I_n_v_i_s_i_b_l_e _A_r_t by Scott  McCloud
                 (Tundra; Kitchen Sink; Harper Perennial)
               - _T_h_e _A_r_t _o_f  _M_i_c_h_a_e_l  _W_h_e_l_a_n:  _S_c_e_n_e_s/_V_i_s_i_o_n_s  by  Michael
                 Whelan (Bantam Spectra)

          - Dramatic Presentation

               - _A_d_d_a_m_s  _F_a_m_i_l_y  _V_a_l_u_e_s  (Paramount  Pictures);  Producer,
                 Scott  Rudin;  Director,  Barry Sonnenfeld; Screenwriter,
                 Paul Rudnick
               - "The Gathering" (Babylon 5) (Warner Brothers);  Executive
                 producers,  Douglas  Netter  &  J.  Michael  Straczynski;
                 Director, Richard Compton; Writer, J. Michael Straczynski
               - _G_r_o_u_n_d_h_o_g  _D_a_y  (Columbia  Pictures);  Producers,  Trevor
                 Albert   &   Harold   Ramis;   Director,   Harold  Ramis;
                 Screenwriters, Danny Rubin & Harold Ramis
               - _J_u_r_a_s_s_i_c _P_a_r_k (Universal); Producers, Kathleen Kennedy  &
                 Gerald    R.    Malen;    Director,   Steven   Spielberg;
                 Screenwriters, Michael Crichton & David Koepp
               - _T_h_e _N_i_g_h_t_m_a_r_e  _B_e_f_o_r_e  _C_h_r_i_s_t_m_a_s  (Touchstone  Pictures);
                 Producers,  Tim  Burton  & Denise DiNovi; Director, Henry
                 Selick; Screenwriter, Caroline Thompson

          - Professional Editor

               - Ellen Datlow (_O_m_n_i, various anthologies)
               - Gardner Dozois (_A_s_i_m_o_v'_s, various anthologies)
               - Mike Resnick (various anthologies)
               - Kristine Kathryn Rusch (Pulphouse, _F&_S_F)
               - Stanley Schmidt (_A_n_a_l_o_g)

          - Professional Artist

               - Thomas Canty
               - David Cherry
               - Bob Eggleton
               - Don Maitz
               - Michael Whelan

          - Original Artwork

               - Cover of F&SF, October/November 1993  (illustrating  "The
                 Little Things", B. McKenna), by Thomas Canty











       THE MT VOID                                                  Page 5



               - Space Fantasy Commemorative  Stamp  Booklet,  by  Stephen
                 Hickman (U.S. Postal Service)
               - Cover of  Asimov's,  November  1993  (illustrating  "Cold
                 Iron", M. Swanwick), by Keith Parkinson

          - Semi-Prozine

               - _I_n_t_e_r_z_o_n_e edited by David Pringle
               - _L_o_c_u_s edited by Charles N. Brown
               - _T_h_e _N_e_w _Y_o_r_k _R_e_v_i_e_w _o_f _S_c_i_e_n_c_e _F_i_c_t_i_o_n edited by David G.
                 Hartwell,  Donald  G. Keller, Robert K.J. Killheffer, and
                 Gordon Van Gelder
               - _P_u_l_p_h_o_u_s_e edited by Dean Wesley  Smith  and  Jonathan  E.
                 Bond
               - _S_c_i_e_n_c_e _F_i_c_t_i_o_n _C_h_r_o_n_i_c_l_e edited by Andrew Porter
               - _T_o_m_o_r_r_o_w _S_p_e_c_u_l_a_t_i_v_e _F_i_c_t_i_o_n edited by Algis Budrys

          - Fanzine

               - _A_n_s_i_b_l_e edited by Dave Langford
               - _F_i_l_e _7_7_0 edited by Mike Glyer
               - _L_a_n'_s _L_a_n_t_e_r_n edited by George "Lan" Laskowski
               - _M_i_m_o_s_a edited by Dick and Nicki Lynch
               - _S_t_e_t edited by Leah Zeldes Smith and Dick Smith

          - Fan Writer

               - Sharon Farber
               - Mike Glyer
               - Andy Hooper
               - Dave Langford
               - Evelyn C. Leeper

          - Fan Artist

               - Brad W. Foster
               - Teddy Harvia
               - Linda Michaels
               - Peggy Ranson
               - William Rotsler
               - Stu Shiffman

          - John W. Campbell  Award  for  Best  New  Writer  of  1991-1992
            (Sponsored by Dell Magazines)

               - Holly Lisle (2nd year of eligibility)
               - Jack Nimersheim (2nd year of eligibility)
               - Carrie Richerson (2nd year of eligibility)
               - Amy Thomson (1st year of eligibility)
               - Elizabeth Willey (1st year of eligibility)












       THE MT VOID                                                  Page 6



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

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

            Capsule review:  This is  genuinely  a  cutting-edge
            art  house  monster movie.  It is visually striking,
            has  a  real  "what-happens-next?"  plot,  and  some
            intriguing  human relationships.  It has been a long
            time since a new monster movie  has  played  to  art
            film  audiences,  but this one is worth it.  Rating:
            high +2 (-4 to +4)

       Sometime I say "don't trust me on this one because  it  is  not  my
       kind  of  film.   On this one I say don't trust me because it _i_s my
       kind of film.  From an early age I have loved the horror film.  But
       I  have to say that the horror film rarely likes me.  Too often the
       horror film just feeds off films made earlier.  It has sequels that
       are  really  remakes  and even films in which each ten minutes is a
       remake of the last ten minutes.  The  sort  of  thing  you  see  is
       "Another  teenager  is  fooling around for nine minutes, then Jason
       attacks and kills him."  What changes from  film  to  film  is  the
       prosthetic  makeup, the special effects, and very little else.  The
       feeling I most prize in a horror film is not chills but  curiosity.
       There  are  far  too few films that make me wonder what the heck is
       going to happen next.  Horror films that do that  include  _C_a_r_n_i_v_a_l
       _o_f  _S_o_u_l_s, _L_i_f_e_f_o_r_c_e, _T_h_e _D_e_v_i_l _R_i_d_e_s _O_u_t, _T_o _t_h_e _D_e_v_i_l _a _D_a_u_g_h_t_e_r,
       _C_r_o_n_o_s, and not nearly  enough  other  horror  films.   What  makes
       _C_r_o_n_o_s  a  particular  surprise  is  that  it  comes from Mexico, a
       country  whose  horror  films  have  so  often  lacked  style   and
       originality.   Occasionally there will be an atmospheric scene in a
       Mexican vampire film, but by and large there has not been  a  whole
       lot  to  interest foreign markets.  Now Guillermo Del Toro has made
       what may have been for me the most enjoyable  and  creative  horror
       film of the 90s.

       In 1536 an alchemist fleeing the Inquisition came to  Mexico  where
       he  continued his work on immortality until his death in the 1930s.
       The authorities were shocked by what they found in his rooms,  sold
       off  his belongings, and considered the matter closed.  In 1996, an
       antiques dealer, Jesus Gris (played  by  Federico  Luppi)  finds  a
       strange antique clockwork mechanism hidden in the base of a statue.
       It looks like a very large pocket watch, the size of a bar of soap,
       crossed with a mechanical scorpion.  Wind it up and it sprouts legs
       and stings the hand that is holding it.  It is a nasty  trick,  but
       that  is  just  the beginning.  Roughly speaking I will say that it
       does fall into an overly-familiar  horror  genre,  but  it  presses
       buttons that genre rarely approaches.

       This is a film of  stylish  images  and  delightful  subtle  humor.
       Little visual images like the monster walking the streets of Mexico
       in what looks like a tuxedo worn back to  front  (don't  worry,  in











       THE MT VOID                                                  Page 7



       context  it  makes perfect sense) spice the film and make it a pure
       pleasure to watch.  Del Toro, who both wrote and directed,  has  an
       impressive visual sense without ever letting the special effects or
       the makeup take over the film.  Also to be treasured  are  the  few
       looks we get inside the Cronos Device itself.

       Del Toro is a well-known film fan in Latin America having grown  up
       on  United  States  and  British  horror  films,  _O_u_t_e_r _L_i_m_i_t_s, and
       _T_w_i_l_i_g_h_t _Z_o_n_e.  He wrote the definitive Latin American study of the
       works of Alfred Hitchcock (which he calls a 540-page love letter to
       Hitchcock made public).  Now he is making his own horror  films  to
       compete  in Mexico with those made in the United States and if this
       first film is any indication he is  exceeding  his  goal.   Sr. Del
       Toro, please continue to make original films like this one.

       _C_r_o_n_o_s is one of the most enjoyable horror films I have seen  since
       I was a teen, I would rate it a high +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.


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

       6. MAKING BOOK by Teresa  Nielsen  Hayden  (NESFA  Press,  ISBN  0-
       915368-55-2,  1994,  158pp,  US$9.95)  (a  book review by Evelyn C.
       Leeper):

       This collection of fifteen essays  was  one  of  two  Boskone  XXXI
       souvenir   books.   (The  other  was  a  Emma  Bull-Will  Shetterly
       collaboration.)  The essays cover a wide range  of  topics:  Mormon
       theology,  narcolepsy,  what  was  _r_e_a_l_l_y  wrong  with  Bret Easton
       Ellis's _A_m_e_r_i_c_a_n _P_s_y_c_h_o, how academic research works, and the  best
       explanation  for  and example of why the serial comma is needed (at
       least that I've seen).

       The first (Mormon theology) is in "God and I," where, lest  you  be
       misled,  Teresa  Nielsen  Hayden  warns  you  up front that she had
       recently (as of 1980, when it was written) been  excommunicated  by
       the  Church  of  Jesus  Christ  of Latter-Day Saints (the preferred
       term, especially if one is paid by the word--which  of  course  I'm
       not).   Narcolepsy  is  mentioned  or  discussed  in several of the
       essays, since it was the reason for many of the  lifestyle  changes
       Teresa  Nielsen  Hayden  went  through.  What was really wrong with
       _A_m_e_r_i_c_a_n _P_s_y_c_h_o turns out  to  be  everything,  explained  as  only
       Teresa  Nielsen Hayden could explain it.  The problem with academic
       research, she says, is a "sort of scholarly equivalent of Gresham's
       Law  about  bad  money  driving out good," and uses the (one hopes)
       hypothetical Pastafazool Cycle  as  an  example.   And  the  serial
       comma?  That would be telling.

       It has traditionally been difficult to  get  examples  off  fannish
       writing.  Computer networks are changing all that, of course.  Most
       of the people nominated for Hugos for Fan Writer are  on-line  now.











       THE MT VOID                                                  Page 8



       And  indeed,  the  last two essays here are from GEnie.  But if you
       want to see what was written back in the days  of  *gasp*  stencils
       and  mimeographs,  then  NESFA  has  provided  it.   If  your local
       bookstore does have _M_a_k_i_n_g _B_o_o_k, I'm amazed!  But  if  it  doesn't,
       you  can  order  it  from NESFA Press, P. O. Box 809, Framingham MA
       01701-0203.


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

       7. SERIAL MOM (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

            Capsule review:  Turner has a great time mugging  as
            a   psychopathic   Donna-Reed-like  housewife  in  a
            particularly   interesting   John    Waters    film.
            Objectively,  this  film is not very good, but it is
            still recommended to fans of Waters.  Rating: 0  (-4
            to +4)

       David Lynch says it by showing a happy American family then panning
       his  camera  to  show  a chaos of worms and insects crawling around
       underground.  Under  the  sterile  and  clean  surface  crawls  and
       slithers the dark, hidden side of the world.  John Waters makes the
       same point, but makes it a lot  more  fun.   Inside  every  Harriet
       Nelson  or  Donna  Reed  is  a  raging,  indignant  Jack the Ripper
       struggling to get out and surgically slice away the  ugliness  from
       life.   The first scene of _S_e_r_i_a_l _M_o_m really tells it all.  It is a
       sunny, spring morning and perky mother Beverly Sutphin  (played  by
       Kathleen  Turner)  is  happily  serving  a  nutritionally  balanced
       breakfast to her family including her  prosperous  dentist  husband
       (Sam Waterston) and children Misty and Chip.  Suddenly the pristine
       sweetness of the morning is invaded by a fly and Beverly goes  into
       action  to  defend  her  territory.   She stalks the interloper and
       mercilessly swats the fly who, in  dying,  seems  to  contain  more
       juice  than  a  blueberry.  Beverly is one of society's antibodies.
       She knows that her world needs rules to maintain order and  she  is
       ready to defend it from people who steal parking spaces, who refuse
       to  recycle,  or  who   cannot   be   bothered   rewinding   rented
       videocassettes.

       Waters has made Beverly Sutphin into everyone who  has  ever  shown
       contempt  for  his films and the lifestyles he depicts.  She is the
       personification of the pristine norms of  society  and  their  less
       than  charitable  defense.   But paradoxically she goes so far that
       she also is placing herself outside the norms of the society she is
       defending.   And  Waters  cannot  resist turning her into a sort of
       hero standing against society.  There is more than a little feel of
       the feel of _F_a_l_l_i_n_g _D_o_w_n here as Beverly channels our own indignant
       anger and takes vengeance for us against the selfish jerks who  are
       making  life  worse for everyone else.  So we have this interesting
       reversal for Waters where he is defending the  precise  people  for











       THE MT VOID                                                  Page 9



       whom through his whole film career he has been showing contempt.

       This is also a very unusual film for Turner.  The script calls  for
       someone  a  little bit frowzy and a little bit overweight.  In fact
       the part could have  even  been  played  by  Waters's  former  star
       Divine.   But  matronly  is  certainly  how  Turner appears.  It is
       difficult to look at her  here  and  see  the  woman  who  was  the
       passionate  attraction  in _B_o_d_y _H_e_a_t.  But time has shown that that
       sort of film is not really where she is best.  Where comedy is hard
       for  most  actors,  it appears to come as naturally to Turner as it
       did to Carol Lombard.

       I am a little unsure what to rate _S_e_r_i_a_l _M_o_m.  If I divorce  myself
       from  all knowledge of John Waters and the films he has made in the
       past and look at the film totally as a stand-alone film  it  is  no
       better  than  cable  fare.  Certainly there is no shortage of films
       that make fun of the clean image  of  the  1950s  situation  comedy
       family.  However, Waters has always made fun of those values so has
       special license to continue.  It is a running gag.  What gives this
       film  its  interest  is that it is a John Waters film.  I guess the
       fair thing to do would be to rate it only a  0  on  the  -4  to  +4
       scale,  but  still  to  urge  fans  of  Waters  and fringe fans (my
       category, by the way) to see the film.   Even  for  them  far  more
       recommended would be the HBO film _T_h_e _P_o_s_i_t_i_v_e_l_y _T_r_u_e _A_d_v_e_n_t_u_r_e_s _o_f
       _t_h_e _A_l_l_e_g_e_d _T_e_x_a_s _C_h_e_e_r_l_e_a_d_e_r-_M_u_r_d_e_r_i_n_g _M_o_m which  does  everything
       this film does and still manages to ring true and be perceptive.


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

       8. RED ROCK WEST (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

            Capsule review:  Newcomer filmmakers John  and  Rick
            Dahl  have the knack of really holding an audience's
            attention.   This  is  a  tense  and  twisty   crime
            thriller  worthy  of  Jim  Thompson.  Catch it quick
            because it is getting only  a  very  short  release.
            Rating: +2 (-4 to +4)

       The Coen Brothers, Joel and Ethan,  introduced  themselves  to  the
       world  of  cinema  with  _B_l_o_o_d  _S_i_m_p_l_e, an inexpensively made crime
       thriller set in Texas.  Their next  film  was  the  comedy  _R_a_i_s_i_n_g
       _A_r_i_z_o_n_a  and  they never returned to their original style.  Now two
       more brothers, John and Rick Dahl, have  come  on  the  scene  with
       their  own  tightly-written  crime thriller, and you can be certain
       these brothers will be around for a while.   _R_e_d  _R_o_c_k  _W_e_s_t  is  a
       tense,  edge-of-the-seat  sort  of  crime film that could easily be
       taken for some Coen Brothers lost second film.

       The action takes place entirely in or near  the  fly-speck  Wyoming
       town  of the title.  Michael (nicely under-played by Nicholas Cage)











       THE MT VOID                                                 Page 10



       comes to this area all the way from Texas for a promised  job  that
       evaporates  when  he  is too honest about a knee injured during his
       time in the Marines.  Out of luck and totally out of money he  goes
       into  Red  Rock  to  see if he can get any kind of a job.  There he
       meets Wayne (J. T. Walsh).  Wayne has hired someone named Lyle from
       Texas  for  a job.  Wayne sees Michael's license plates and assumes
       this is Lyle.  Michael decides to pretend to be Lyle  and  grab  up
       the  job first.  Then Michael finds out what the job is.  He has to
       murder Wayne's wife Suzanne (Lara  Flynn  Boyle).   Then  the  plot
       twists start coming.  And they keep on coming.  In fact, except for
       one sex scene there  isn't  a  five-minute  section  of  film  that
       doesn't  have  some  sort  of  radical  plot twist.  Michael is one
       innocent and honest man who finds  himself  in  a  nest  of  biting
       vipers.   He  has  just the one wish: to get out of Red Rock.  That
       sounds simple, but time and again events drag him  into  the  town.
       As  he  gets  more  and  more  deeply  involved his chances of just
       staying alive become smaller and smaller.  One of the marks of  how
       suspenseful  this  film  is was the nervous laughter in audience as
       twists are revealed.  The film is  plotted  so  that  nearly  every
       apparent  loose  end  attaches someplace else, much like Scorsese's
       _A_f_t_e_r _H_o_u_r_s.

       After Cage's over-the-top performances in films like _V_a_m_p_i_r_e'_s _K_i_s_s
       it  is nice to see him underplaying a little.  Walsh also is nicely
       menacing.  Only Dennis Hopper seems insufficiently restrained as  a
       fellow ex-Marine who runs into Michael almost literally.

       _R_e_d _R_o_c_k _W_e_s_t is a tidy little film noir thriller and an auspicious
       debut  for  the  Brothers  Dahl.   The  film has gotten only a very
       modest theatrical release and simultaneously is being  released  to
       video.   Apparently no major distributor wanted to take a chance on
       it.  With the reviews it has been getting there are going to  be  a
       lot  of distribution executives looking for work in places like Red
       Rock, Wyoming.  They should remember to find out what the  new  job
       is before they accept it.

       Welcome to the film game, John and Rick.  Stick  around.   I  think
       you're  gonna  make  it.  I give _R_e_d _R_o_c_k _W_e_s_t a +2 on the -4 to +4
       scale.


                                          Mark Leeper
                                          MT 3D-441 908-957-5619
                                          m.r.leeper@att.com




            The United States, to my eye, is incomparably the greatest
            show on earth ... we have clowns among us who are as far
            above the clowns of any other great state as Jack Dempsey is
            above the paralytic--and not a few dozen or score of them,
            but whole droves and herds.
                                         -- H. L. Mencken