MT VOID, 10/18/24 -- Vol. 43, No. 16, Whole Number 2350 [a little late]

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Sujet : MT VOID, 10/18/24 -- Vol. 43, No. 16, Whole Number 2350 [a little late]
De : evelynchimelisleeper (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Evelyn C. Leeper)
Groupes : rec.arts.sf.fandom
Date : 28. Oct 2024, 17:56:11
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THE MT VOID
10/18/24 -- Vol. 43, No. 16, Whole Number 2350
Co-Editor: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
Co-Editor: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
Sending Address: evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com
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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:
         The Great Courses: "A Historian Goes to the Movies:
                 Ancient Rome" (Part 4: The Revival) (GLADIATOR,
                 ROME (HBO), CENTURION, THE EAGLE) (comments
                 by Evelyn C. Leeper)
         Hammer Versus Universal DVD Releases (comments
                 by Evelyn C. Leeper)
         ALIEN CLAY by Adrian Tchaikovsky (book review
                 by Joe Karpierz)
         AGE OF REVOLUTIONS (letter of comment by Gary McGath)
         This Week's Reading (CHINA DREAMS: GROWING UP JEWISH
                 IN TIENTSIN, "Historia Augusta", A.D. 69:
                 EMPERORS, ARMIES & ANARCHY) (book comments
                 by Evelyn C. Leeper)
===================================================================
TOPIC: The Great Courses: "A Historian Goes to the Movies: Ancient
Rome" (Part 4: The Revival) (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
GLADIATOR (2000):
The nano-summary is that it was very popular, very profitable, and
very inaccurate.  The state of the Germanic wars at the beginning
is wrong, the idea that Marcus Aurelius was promoting someone
other than Commodus as his successor is wrong(*), the brevity of
Commodus's reign is wrong, and the implication of the return of
the Republic at the end is definitely wrong.
(*) Whatever Commodus's flaws were--and they were many--and
whether Marcus Aurelius was aware of them, he really only had
three choices: name his son Commodus as his successor, name
someone else and pretty much guarantee a civil ware after he died,
or kill Commodus.  Stoic he may have been, but not *that* Stoic.
On finer details, the film gets Marcus Aurelius's appearance with
a beard correct, along with his philosophy, but not his age or
health.  Commodus's psychological state was correct, but his
appearance all wrong.
While they did pretty well on the Colosseum, the training of
gladiators, as well as their costumes, weapons, and fighting
styles were wrong, as were the army's battle tactics, armor, and
weapons.
In fact, the professor hired as a historical advisor for the film
asked to have her name removed from the credits when she
discovered that her function was to provide support for what the
filmmakers wanted to do (e.g., have female gladiators who fought
with razor blades on their nipples) rather than to help them get
the film to be accurate.
In summary, GLADIATOR was more true to the stereotypes of ancient
Rome than to actual history.
ROME (HBO) (2005):
Aldrete began by saying that the first few episodes of HBO's
"Rome" are the best depiction of ancient Rome on screen.  Yes, it
takes liberties and has anachronisms, but it is still the best at
depicting religion, slavery, politics, and all aspects of Roman
life, Especially for the non-elite.
For example, "Rome" depicts Roman religion as a transactional
relationship ("I'll give you a sacrifice; you give me what I am
asking for"), not a request for altruism (as in Christianity).
It's also a part of everyday life, with various gods for various
purposes, and goes along with ancestral masks, divination, and
curse tablets, all of which Aldrete says are accurately portrayed.
Slaves are not treated empathetically by masters as they often are
in other films, but more as furniture.  Yes, slaves could wield
power, but they were also treated inhumanely.  Also, the line
between free and slave was permeable, as shown by the character of
Posca.
Women are accurately portrayed as being used as tools in politics;
other tools include rumor and slander (graffiti).  (Although
taking a hint from Livia in I, CLAUDIUS, the filmmakers have *two*
scheming women.)
"Rome" also showed the collegia (which Aldrete described as a
combination of trade organization and proto-mafia--sounds like
some of the trade unions here, at least at one point), and the
patron/client relationship,
Aldrete also thought that the characterizations of Antony and the
teenaged Octavian were good, although with too much sex and
violence.  And there is no evidence that the Romans used opium or
hemp as recreational drugs.
In short, "Rome" presents a grungy Rome that, as someone described
to Aldrete, was "not accurate, but authentic."
CENTURION (2010):
Both this and THE EAGLE deal with the legend of the lost Ninth
Legion in Britain.  (There was a third, THE LAST LEGION (2007),
but it was more of a fantasy film about Arthurian legend.)
In terms of the historical incident, all three films are more
inspired by 1954 Rosemary Sutcliffe YA novel THE EAGLE OF THE
NINTH than my historical records.  Theodor Mommsen pretty much
started the legend by combining the disappearance of the Ninth
from historical records and a report of a large number of Romans
having been killed by the Britons.  But there seem to be records
of the Ninth in the Netherlands after this slaying, so it is more
likely that it became undermanned and was disbanded.
CENTURION has a fair number of inaccuracies: flaming arrows in a
night attack (which would be counter-productive and how woudl they
light them anyway?), and giant flaming balls that are shot through
a forest, missing all the trees and hitting all the Romans.
There are many accuracies (or perhaps "authenticities" is better),
many drawn from the actual Battle of Teutoberg Forest over a
hundred years earlier.  Many of the names are homages to real
Romans.  There is no CGI, so everything looks real.  It may be
inaccurate in parts, but Aldrete says it is a solid adventure/war
movie.  The director says one inspiration was Walter Hill's THE
WARRIORS, which in turn was a modern retelling of Xenophon.
THE EAGLE (2011):
THE EAGLE is more closely based on the Sutcliffe novel.  It has
accuracies in the use of the testudo and Roman short swords, and
is perhaps unique in portraying the worship of Mithras, an Eastern
God popular among soldiers.  (Mithraism also shows up in the
alternate history novel A DRAGON WAITING by John M. Ford, about an
England where Byzantium never fell.)
[-ecl]
===================================================================
TOPIC: Hammer Versus Universal DVD Releases (comments by Evelyn
C. Leeper)
When Universal packaged their classic monster series, they first
issued each series as a single boxed set (with some adjustments
for cross-over films).  Then they did a Bluray set of all the
initial films, plus BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (and PHANTOM OF THE
OPERA, otherwise very hard to find at the time).
Hammer, however, had no real plan.  Take the "Frankenstein" films;
here's how we have them:
- CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN: issued as a double feature with TASTE THE
BLOOD OF DRACULA
- THE REVENGE OF FRANKENSTEIN: issued as a stand-alone
- EVIL OF FRANKENSTEIN: issued in the set "Hammer Horror Series"
- FRANKENSTEIN CREATED WOMAN: issued as a double feature with
LEGEND OF THE 7 GOLDEN VAMPIRES and in the "Hammer Feature Film
Set"
- FRANKENSTEIN MUST BE DESTROYED: issued as a stand-alone
- FRANKENSTEIN AND THE MONSTER FROM HELL: issued as a stand-alone
And that isn't even addressing the irregular use of "The" in the
titles.  [-ecl]
===================================================================
TOPIC: ALIEN CLAY by Adrian Tchaikovsky (copyright 2024, Orbit,
$19.99, trade paperback, 388pp, ISBN 978-0-316-57897-4) (book
review by Joe Karpierz)
While I've only started reading Adrian Tchaikovsky within the last
couple of years, I discovered by looking in various bibliographies
that he is prolific.  And then I noticed that every time I looked
up, he was publishing another novel or novella.  His works have
been nominated for the Hugo award, and he seems to be getting a
lot of attention these days.  I did enjoy his series entitled "The
Final Architecture", which was up for the Best Series Hugo this
year, so when I got the chance to get a copy of his latest novel
ALIEN CLAY I jumped on it.
The setting is some unspecified time in Earth's future, although
it is far enough out that humanity has developed space travel.
Earth is something of an authoritarian planet, under the rule that
is known simply as The Mandate.  We don't learn much about the
Mandate, who came up with it, or who enforces it.  What we do know
is that the Mandate dictates how life and the universe exists, and
anyone who rebels against the Mandate is sent off world to one of
the few planets that is known to be able to support macrocellular
life, known as Kiln.  Those who enforce the Mandate do not care
about interplanetary colonization.  Rather, it would like to use
knowledge gained on Kiln to support its view of how the world and
the universe work.  And if what is discovered on Kiln does not
support the Mandate, the discovery is hidden from the masses back
on Earth, or at the very least twisted so that it does support the
dogma of the Mandate.
As you might guess, the Mandate is really just the mechanism to
set up the story on Kiln.  The protagonist is Arton Daghdev, an
ecologist who dared to contradict the mandate and led a small
revolution to boot.  Arton and a bunch of other dissidents--they
aren't the first, and they won't be the last--are sent to work in
Kiln's labor camp to find the answers that will support the
Mandate's definition of the universe and thus that whatever
civilization was on Kiln is not a threat to humanity.
Of course, what Arton and his workmates find does not fit into the
Mandate's definition.  The creatures that are found on Kiln are
nothing like human beings.  They are amalgamations of creatures.
They are not hive minds, but rather a combination of various
animals that work together for the greater good of the whole.  A
creature that was broken open by a weapon would reveal other
creatures inside, and there might be other creatures inside of
those.  It's hard for the Commandant of the camp to accept what he
learns about life on the planet.  There are structures scattered
across the planet that the Commandant--the Mandate's
representative on the planet--believes are indicative of a prior
civilization.  The structures have writing on them, which seems to
support the belief that there was indeed intelligent life on Kiln,
and of course the Commandant wants to know everything about those
structures that he possibly can.
The problem is that if you take a bunch of dissidents from one
location and transport them to another location in order to get
them to work toward a stated goal, they are still dissidents, and
will behave as such.  So those same people plotted a breakout.  It
failed of course, because there is always that one person who
squeals, not unlike people back on Earth who ratted out those who
worked against the Mandate.  This episode underscored that people
don't necessarily change, and they will work together for the
common goal.
This concept of working together for a common goal comes to the
forefront when Arton's work team is stranded out in the forest
because their transport is destroyed.  That team cooperates with
each other, and a growing sense of something else going on brings
them closer with each other and with the planet.
ALIEN CLAY is a cautionary tale of what can happen when an
authoritarian regime controls the thoughts of an entire planet.
But it's also a story of how cooperation and collaboration, not
just within a species but across species, can lead to better
things.  It seems as if ALIEN CLAY is talking about us here on
Earth right now, and the dangers of things like the Mandate can
send humanity down a dark path, and that the only way out is to
band together for the common good, even with people we know
absolutely nothing about.  ALIEN CLAY also shows Tchaikovsky's
outstanding range.  I've read multiple works by him now, and they
are all different in tone, theme, and subject matter.  It's my
opinion that Tchaikovsky is one of the great writers of our day,
and I look forward to reading more of his work.  [-jak]
===================================================================
TOPIC: AGE OF REVOLUTIONS (letter of comment by Gary McGath)
In response to Gregory Frederick's review of AGE OF REVOLUTIONS in
the 10/11/24 issue of the MT VOID, Gary McGath writes:
[Gregory Frederick writes,] "Zakaria's central message is that
successful revolutions occur gradually, rooted in societal
engagement rather than imposed top-down.  His recommendations for
strengthening democracy include fostering family and community
bonds through policies like paid parental leave and national
service, as well as maintaining a balance between freedom and
order."  [-gf]
Where the "balance" consists of forcing people to serve the
government by a top-down requirement.   [-gmg]
===================================================================
TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
CHINA DREAMS: GROWING UP JEWISH IN TIENTSIN by Isabelle Maynard
(University of Iowa Press, ISBN 0-87745-571-6) is Maynard's
anecdotal recounting of her growing up the daughter of Russian
Jews fleeing the revolution in China and later in San Francisco. I
had hoped for an interesting meeting of cultures, but the truth
turned out to be that, as with most other non-Chinese, the
Maynards lived in an isolated compound where their only contact
was with often nameless Chinese servants.  (Maynard knew her
personal "maid" only as "amah".)  Her circle of acquaintances
included non-Jews, but no Chinese.  She learned to speak English
and French in addition to Russian, but not Chinese.  As a result,
the cultures that met were all European, and while this was of
some interest, this is not very different from the stories of
other Jewish refugees in the United States, or England, or
Australia.  Somehow, I was hoping for more.
(This is not to blame Maynard for anything.  It was her parents'
decision, and she could do no more than give a true accounting.)
The "Historia Augusta" (Harvard University/Loeb Classical Library,
three volumes, ISBNs 978-0-674-99744-8, 978-0-674-99745-5,
978-0-674-99746-2; also available on-line, though not in Project
Gutenberg) is a history of the Roman emperors from Hadrian through
Numerian (the predecessor of Diocletian).  There are supposedly
six authors of the various parts, but in fact, it is an elaborate
hoax by a single author, consisting of some truths and a lot of
false information, made-up anecdotes, and many non-existent
characters (including at least one emperor).  Think of it as an
alternate history rather than an accurate retelling.
A.D. 69: EMPERORS, ARMIES & ANARCHY by Nic Fields (Pen and Sword
Military, ISBN 978-1-399-02340-5) is yet another book about the
Year of the Four Emperors.  Fields writes with a modern
sensibility, or rather a tendency to tie the events of 69 to those
of today.  This is unusual, at least in the books I have read.
The only exception might be THE STORM BEFORE THE STORM by Mike
Duncan,  Most authors stick to a more "academic" approach.
However, the proofreading left something to be desired.  One
example: "allusions" instead of "illusions".  [-ecl]
===================================================================
                      Mark Leeper
                      mleeper@optonline.net
           Too often we ... enjoy the comfort of opinion without
           the discomfort of thought.
            --John F. Kennedy

Date Sujet#  Auteur
28 Oct 24 * MT VOID, 10/18/24 -- Vol. 43, No. 16, Whole Number 2350 [a little late]3Evelyn C. Leeper
29 Oct 24 `* Re: MT VOID, 10/18/24 -- Vol. 43, No. 16, Whole Number 2350 [a little late]2Dorothy J Heydt
29 Oct 24  `- Re: MT VOID, 10/18/24 -- Vol. 43, No. 16, Whole Number 2350 [a little late]1Keith F. Lynch

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