THE MT VOID
03/14/25 -- Vol. 43, No. 37, Whole Number 2371
Editor: Evelyn Leeper,
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Topics:
Mini Reviews, Part 6 (COWARDS BEND THE KNEE,
THE DRAGON PAINTER, THE TONG MAN) (film reviews
by Evelyn C. Leeper)
DESTINATION: VOID by Frank Herbert (audio book review
by Joe Karpierz)
Bell Works/Bell Labs Holmdel (pointer to article)
Baseball (letters of comment by Gary McGath
and Paul Dormer)
THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING (letter of comment
by Tom Russell)
This Week's Reading (A WALK IN THE PARK) (book comments
by Evelyn C. Leeper)
===================================================================
TOPIC: Mini Reviews, Part 6 (film reviews by Evelyn C. Leeper)
Three silent films:
COWARDS BEND THE KNEE (2003): COWARDS BEND THE KNEE is a film by
Guy Maddin, which says it all. You either like Guy Maddin films,
or you don't. We were first introduced to his films through "The
Heart of the World", a science fiction film done in the style of
Russian constructivism, and was shown at the 2000 Toronto
International Film Festival. Both "The Heart of the World" and
COWARDS BEND THE KNEE are silent films, and both use rapid cutting
("The Heart of the World" supposedly averages two shots per
second).
The film is in ten chapters. The first uses a hockey game as a
symbol for sex, and scoring a goal as conception. The whole thing
reminded me of the sperm sequence in Woody Allen's EVERYTHING YOU
ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX ("BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK"). The
entire film is said to be based somewhat on "Medea" by Euripides,
though it looks more like THE HANDS OF ORLAC by Maurice Renard to
me (with a dash of FIELD OF DREAMS).
(Am I the only one who watches JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS and doesn't
see the happy, romantic ending as anything but a lead-in for the
horrific actions of Medea in their future?) [-ecl]
Released theatrically 11 August 2004.
Film Credits:
<
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0346800/reference>
What others are saying:
<
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/cowards_bend_the_knee>
THE DRAGON PAINTER (1919): This is an early film of Sessue
Hayakawa's. (Side note: Why is it "an early film of Sessue
Hayakawa's' rather than "an early film of Sessue Hayakawa"? Both
"of" and the possessive form for Haykawa seem redundant. Then
again, we say "of mine" rather than "of me" so I guess it's
consistent.)
Anyway, back to the movie. Hayakawa is best known as the camp
commander in THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI (1957). He made 109
films in all, but 90% of them predated KWAI. Almost half were
before THE DRAGON PAINTER (1919). Clearly Hayakawa's career was
somewhat uneven, due in part to his strong accent which affected
his casting after sound came in.
Hayakawa plays a painter who is obsessed with the legend of a
princess turned in a dragon. Indara, a master painter, takes him
under his wing, and has him marry Indara's daughter, claiming she
is the reincarnation of the original princess. This has
unexpected consequences.
One line that is accurate to the time and culture is when Indara,
who has no sons, looks at a painting his daughter has done and
says it is good for a woman, but he really wishes he had a son.
One revealing goof is the waterfall, which appears in several
scenes in the background, and was done in rear projection. Back
when this film was made, cameras were hand-cranked, and although
cameramen were trained to crank at a given speed and evenly(*),
apparently the camera for the waterfall footage was cranked faster
than the camera for the main action. The result is that when the
two are projected together, the water in the waterfall falls
slower than it would in Earth's gravity. Maybe it was
intentional, to give the waterfall an eerie, almost supernatural
look. Or maybe the second unit cameraman just cranked faster.
Another revealing goof is that in one scene when we seen the house
and the sky above it, the sky has two vertical lines, which were
the seams where the background was placed in the studio. [-ecl]
Released theatrically 27 September 1919.
Film Credits:
<
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0150388/reference>
What others are saying:
<
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/dragon_painter>
THE TONG MAN (1919): This was shown on Turner Classic Movies along
with THE DRAGON PAINTER (reviewed in the FINDME issue of the MT
VOID). Both starred Sessue Hayakawa, but in this one he plays a
Chinese character, rather than a Japanese one. According to the
IMDb, Hayakawa did not want to contribute to the negative views of
the Japanese, so tried to avoid playing Japanese villains, and
instead playing Chinese or other Asian villains. All this did,
though, was to lump all Asians in the minds of the viewers.
In addition to the Japanese Hayakawa playing a Chinese villain,
two other principal (Chinese) characters were played by
Caucasians, and two more were played by Japanese actors. It's
possible there was a Chinese extra in there somewhere, but not
credited. [-ecl]
Released theatrically 14 December 1919.
Film Credits:
<
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0010791/reference>
What others are saying:
<
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_tong_man_1919>
===================================================================
TOPIC: DESTINATION: VOID by Frank Herbert (copyright 1966 and
1978, Berkley Science Fiction, 276pp, ISBN 0-425-10326-9, 2014,
Blackstone Audio, 9 hours and 42 minutes, narrated by Scott Brick)
(audio book review by Joe Karpierz)
I've always meant to read more Frank Herbert, and by more I mean
something other than Dune and the original five sequels. I seem
to remember having read THE DOSADI EXPERIMENT, but if I did it
would be back before February 17th, 1999, as that is the oldest
one I have in my electronic files. (For those of you who may be
curious, that book was COSM by Greg Benford. But I digress.)
I've had DESTINATION: VOID on my bookshelf since, well, I don't
know when. The printing history of the paperback copy I have
indicates that it is the twenty-sixth printing, dated November
1986. So it's been on my to be read stack for a long time. Why
did I decide to read it now? Audible had a sale and DESTINATION:
VOID was one of those audio book on sale. Since a vast majority
of my reading these days is in the form of audio book, I snapped
it up. Complicating matters to an extent is the fact that the
mass market paperback copy I have is an updated edition. There's
no way of telling which edition of the novel was read for the
audio book, but I think that's okay. The essence of the story is
the same, no matter which edition is being read. So, with that in
mind...
Whenever a group of people--scientists, politicians, educators,
what have you--embark upon a rather large and important endeavor,
said endeavor must always have a pretentious name. In this case,
it's Project Consciousness, in which humanity is attempting to
create artificial intelligence. For those of you who may be
thinking, "well, we've got something like that", by the time you
finish DESTINATION: VOID you'll understand that what we have today
is a child's toy compared to the undertaking in Herbert's novel.
The first attempt was on an island in Puget Sound, and it went
horribly wrong. The experiment ended with mass destruction and the
disappearance of the island.
The project headquarters was moved to the moon, and a series of
space flights manned by clones is made to the Tau Ceti system to
colonize a habitable planet there. The ships are controlled by a
disembodied human brain called the Organic Mental Core. Each ship
is equipped with three OMCs, two of which are backups. The
mission is somewhat of a ruse. There is no habitable planet in
the Tau Ceti system. The mission is designed to put the crew
under high amounts of stress in order to force them to create the
artificial intelligence mentioned earlier. The mission we are
following in the novel is the seventh attempt; the first six
failed.
And while they didn't fail by design, they were set up for
failure. The intent was to make the crew work together in high
stress situations in the hope that their individual talents would
come to the fore and allow them to work together to finally
create, in space, the artificial intelligence that was birthed so
disastrously on earth. To that end, all three OMC's failed. In
order to get to Tau Ceti, the crew had one choice. They had to
develop an artificial intelligence which would guide the ship to
Tau Ceti or face an abort order from Earth. And that would not be
a pleasant thing for any of the crew.
DESTINATION: VOID is not a straightforward story of a spaceship
making the journey from Earth to a far star to begin human
colonization. It is a fascinating study into the nature and
definition of consciousness. There are long stretches of
dissertations of what it means to be conscious, how consciousness
can be attained, and whether a man-made consciousness is truly
conscious, or is it some highly complex computer making decisions
based on a series of rules, learning as it goes?
Frank Herbert displays a fascination with the mind and
consciousness in DESTINATION: VOID that reveals another side to
his writing. But as in Dune and its sequels, DESTINATION: VOID
shows Herbert's talents for writing stories that have layers upon
layers upon layers of meaning. And while this book is the first in
the Pandora Sequence of novels, it stands alone quite nicely, and
it comes complete with a very chilling final line that I presume
sets up the rest of the series. I suspect I'll be adding the
other three books in the sequence to my TBR stack. If they are
anything like this book, they'll be well worth it. [-jak]
===================================================================
TOPIC: Bell Works/Bell Labs Holmdel (pointer to article)
NYTimes: Step Into the Real-Life Lumon Industries, the Breakout
Star of ‘Severance’
<
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/07/realestate/severance-lumon-industries-building-bell-labs.html?smid=nytcore-ios-
share&referringSource=articleShare>
It's a long article, with lots of photos, about how and why Bell
Works/Bell Labs Holmdel was chosen for the series "Severance".
[-ecl]
===================================================================
TOPIC: Baseball (letters of comment by Gary McGath and Paul Dormer)
In response to Evelyn's comments on baseball and fathers in the
03/07/25 issue of the MT VOID, Gary McGath writes:
[Evelyn's brother wrote,] "Here's an example: we always went to
day games. One game lasted 14 innings. Many years after that
game (in 1969), I looked up the box score on
BaseballReference.com. It lasted 5 hours and 1 minute, at a time
the average 9-game lasted about 2:30. We stayed the entire time
because he knew I wanted to. I think I did understand it then. I
certainly did understand it 'later on' and now." [-ecl]
That reminds me of a Red Sox game in the Sixties that ran into
many extra innings. In those days, commercials were on their own
tapes, or something like that, and the TV crew had packed away all
but two of the commercials, thinking the game would be over soon.
They showed those two commercials over and over. I'll never
forget the carnivorous "Walla Walla" plant, though I don't
remember what it was advertising.
Maybe we're talking about the same game. [-gmg]
Paul Dormer responds:
In the UK, Channel 5 for many years showed games live over night.
It was fronted in London by an American ex-pat and an Englishman.
One year a playoff game went to extra innings. It finished about
seven in the morning in the UK. (My recording stopped long before
the end.) The Englishman was due to front a quiz show in Bristol
that lunchtime. He'd long missed his train, but somehow he got
there and did the show. [-pd]
===================================================================
TOPIC: THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING (letter of comment by Tom Russell)
In response to the comments on THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING in recent
issues of the MT VOID, Tom Russell writes:
The DVD cover does not recognize the actors who played the
translator nor the village leader.
Were all the marchers and fighters played by real on-site extras?
Who provided lunch? [-tr]
Evelyn responds:
The DVD (and in particular the poster on which the cover was
based) was from a time when credits were sparse, both on posters,
and at the end of the movie. [-ecl]
===================================================================
TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
A WALK IN THE PARK: THE TRUE STORY OF A SPECTACULAR MISADVENTURE
IN THE GRAND CANYON by Kevin Fedarko (Scribner, ISBN
978-1-501-18305-8) is A WALK IN THE WOODS: REDISCOVERING AMERICA
ON THE APPALACHIAN TRAIL by Bill Bryson on steroids. (Even the
name hints as much.) Fedarko decided to walk the Grand Canyon
even though he was completely unprepared. He even knew he was
unprepared, as was his friend, but they convinced each other that
they could do this. Luckily some more experienced hikers decided
to accompany them, or they would have died on the first leg--and
as it was, they almost did.
An example of how intense the experienced hikers' preparation is,
not only do they have super-expensive, super-light ground cloths,
while the newbies are planning to carry ordinary tarps, but the
old hands go so far as to cut the labels out of their clothes,
since each one saves about 0.2 ounces.
I mentioned "the first leg" and it's worth noting that they never
intended to do the hike in one go. They would walk a stretch and
then arrange for a pickup at the far end. When they resumed they
would start from the same spot. They also had caches of food and
water stashed along their path. And their path was not a walk
along the river--a lot of it was on the plateaus and mesas along
the river. So in addition to the horizontal distance, there is
also a lot of distance climbing and descending, as well as a lot
of hiking away from and back to the main canyon.
Fedarko was inspired by THE MAN WHO WALKED THROUGH TIME: THE STORY
OF THE FIRST TRIP AFOOT THROUGH THE GRAND CANYON by Colin
Fletcher, but they all go back to John Wesley Powell, who became
the first Euro-American to travel the length of the canyon, but he
did it primarily on the river. Unlike Fedarko, who had detailed
maps of a lot of the route, plus GPS and satellite phones, Powell
had no idea what he would find, and if he reached a rapids that he
couldn't take the boats through, and the water was too fast to go
back, and there wasn't enough flat land along the sides to
portage, and the cliffs were impossible to climb, they would
basically starve to death. Our modern hikers had all that support
and backup, yet they still almost died from heat, from cold, from
lack of water, and from lack of food, not to mention that they
were hiking where falling over the edge was a clear possibility.
Powell may have been the first Euro-American to traverse the
Canyon, but Fedarko's party found conclusive evidence that the
various tribes of that area had inhabited the Canyon for thousands
of years--and not just the parts along the river, but areas far
from easy water and moderate temperatures. Fedarko also recounts
the mis-treatment of these tribes from the times well before
Powell's journey until very recently. And even now, there is a
lot of conflict about the "development" of the Canyon. Some
tribal members feel that is the only way to make the tribe
self-sustaining; others feel it is a betrayal of sacred lands.
I have to say that I found the physical descriptions confusing.
This was partly intentional by Fedarko, because he doesn't want
people to try to use his book as a guidebook, and because he
doesn't want people to visit some of the places he did. The
former is mostly because it was so dangerous, but the latter just
sounds like privilege. [-ecl]
===================================================================
Evelyn C. Leeper
evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com Don't accept your dog's admiration as conclusive
evidence that you are wonderful.
--Ann Landers