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From: "Evelyn C. Leeper" <evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.fandom
Subject: MT VOID, 03/15/24 -- Vol. 42, No. 37, Whole Number 2319
Date: Sun, 17 Mar 2024 11:20:45 -0400
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THE MT VOID
03/15/24 -- Vol. 42, No. 37, Whole Number 2319

Co-Editor: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
Co-Editor: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
Sending Address: evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com
All material is the opinion of the author and is copyrighted by the
author unless otherwise noted.
All comments sent or posted will be assumed authorized for
inclusion unless otherwise noted.

To subscribe or unsubscribe, send mail to eleeper@optonline.net
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:
         Mini Reviews, Part 21 (INDIANA JONES AND THE DIAL OF
                 DESTINY, THESE FINAL HOURS, SPACEMAN) (film reviews
                 by Mark R. Leeper and Evelyn C. Leeper)
         THE ATROCITY ARCHIVES by Charles Stross (audio book review
                 by Joe Karpierz)
         ALEXANDER and Alexandria (letter of comment by Hal Heydt)
         This Week's Reading (MAO TSE-TUNG ON GUERRILLA WARFARE)
                 (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: Mini Reviews, Part 21 (film reviews by Mark R. Leeper and
Evelyn C. Leeper)

This is twenty-first batch of mini-reviews.

INDIANA JONES AND THE DIAL OF DESTINY (2023): INDIANA JONES AND THE
DIAL OF DESTINY is the fifth (and please, God, the last) in the
Indiana Jones series.  It's not that it is absolutely terrible, but
between the callbacks of now-elderly stars (Karen Allen, John
Rhys-Davies) for the sake of re-creating the characters of their
youth, to re-hashing old jokes and tropes (the whip versus guns,
eels as watery snakes, a young boy "sidekick", etc.), to actually
turning into a true alternate history (in our world Indiana Jones
did not ride a horse through the New York Apollo 11 parade), this
was made more to cash in on the fan base than because anyone had a
good idea for the film.  [SPOILERS]  Adding time travel to the mix
just makes it into something it never was.  (And the concern about
changing history seems to come a bit too late, since apparently
there was already a change.)

It is perhaps not a coincidence that this is also the first
"Indiana Jones" film not involving George Lucas as a writer or
Steven Spielberg as the director.

As I said, not absolutely terrible, but not up to the first and
third of the series.  (Perhaps the less said about INDIANA JONES
AND THE TEMPLE OF DOOM, the better.)  [-ecl]

Released theatrically 14 June 2023.  Rating: high +1 (-4 to +4), or
6/10.

Film Credits:
<https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1462764/reference>

What others are saying:
<https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/
indiana_jones_and_the_dial_of_destiny>

THESE FINAL HOURS (2013): The end-of-the-world film THESE FINAL
HOURS is basically an Australian take on the Canadian film LAST
NIGHT.  It is set in Perth rather than Toronto, and in THESE FINAL
HOURS we are told what the cause of the end of the world is.  (In
LAST NIGHT, we never find out what the disaster is, although it
seems to make daylight last until midnight.)

But I suppose that LAST NIGHT in turn was based on, or at least
inspired by, ON THE BEACH, which of course was set in Australia.
What goes around comes around.  (I will note I am not the only
person to see these connections.)

One way the Canadians and Australians differ is that (SPOILER) they
don't plant a nuke in the asteroid/create a virus for an alien
spaceship/plant a nuke in the Earth's core/create a giant space
ark/move into mine shafts/...  This was often given as the
difference between American (U.S.) science fiction and British
science fiction: the former was basically optimistic, the latter
pessimistic.  This may be less true now, and there is also a lot
more to even just Anglophone science fiction than that dichotomy.

I can't say this is anything special, but it will appeal to fans of
the apocalypse sub-genre.  [-ecl]

Released theatrically in the U.S. 6 March 2015.  Rating: +1 (-4 to
+4), or 6/10.

Film Credits:
<https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2268458/reference>

What others are saying:
<https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/these_final_hours>

SPACEMAN (2024): SPACEMAN is an atypical science fiction film,
where the basic plot has nothing science fictional about it.
It takes place in a spaceship, and there's a giant alien
telepathic spider, and there are a lot of dream sequences, but
the central idea seems to be that if the main character loved
his wife so much, he shouldn't have taken a job that requires
him to be away from her for a year at a time.  To those of us
from military families that seems somewhat insulting.  My
father had five tours of duty of a year or more each, and we
didn't have the benefit of Zoom calls or Facetime.  (In the
film, the title character is somewhere out near Jupiter, but
through technobabble, he is able to talk to people on Earth
with no time lag.)  [-ecl]

Released on Netflix in the U.S. 1 March 2024.  Rating: +1 (-4 to
+4), or 6/10.

Film Credits:
<https://www.imdb.com/title/tt11097384/reference>

What others are saying:
<https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/spaceman_2024>

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

TOPIC: THE ATROCITY ARCHIVES by Charles Stross (copyright 2010,
Recorded Books, 10 hours and 56 minutes, ASIN: B0032U8OIA, narrated
by Gideon Emery) (audio book review by Joe Karpierz)

THE ATROCITY ARCHIVES, originally published in 2004, is the first
book in the long-running Laundry Series, and contains two stories:
the short novel "The Atrocity Archive", and the winner of the Hugo
Award in 2005 for Best Novella, "The Concrete Jungle".

"The Atrocity Archive" introduces readers to the main character of
the Laundry series, Bob Howard (which is a pseudonym, since his
real name can be used against him--more on this in a minute), a
former I.T. consultant who ends up as a field agent for the
Laundry, an British agency which deals with occult threats.  If you
think Lovecraftian horror, you're on the right track, although the
stories do not take place in that universe.  Howard got pulled into
the Laundry because he re-discovered mathematical equations that
would allow contact with other worlds, and the Laundry did not want
that running loose in the world.  As various characters discover
throughout the two stories in the volume, the Laundry quite
regularly gains new operatives when they discover people that have
some affinity for the occult or magic.  The reader also learns that
magic, as the Laundry defines it, is a branch of applied
mathematics, and thus computers are used alongside spells to combat
and conquer denizens of the other (or under) world.

Anyway, Howard is charged with finding and protecting one Professor
Mo O'Brien (her name is longer than that, but we don't need to get
into that here), as the Laundry has taken interest in her work for
the usual reasons.  As part of his mission--and this is by no means
all of what happens, but I certainly find it the most
interesting--the two of them get a chance to tour the Atrocity
Archive, a classified record of the efforts made and items used by
the Germans in World War II.  It is one of the most interesting and
disturbing collection of curiosities that I've ever read about in a
book.  We also learn that the Wannsee Conference (the historians
and World War II enthusiasts reading this will recognize the
Conference as something very real) planned to harness the occult
using the mass human sacrifice of the Holocaust (and now we know
what the members of the Conference were really talking about).  In
any event, the upshot of the story is that Mo is captured by a
group of terrorists and sent via a wormhole to an alternate
universe where the Nazis succeeded.  Bob and other members of the
Laundry team infiltrate the alternate universe to rescue Mo, but
not without cost.

"The Concrete Jungle" starts off with the discovery that there are
too many concrete cows in Milton Keynes.  The whole thing started
because a CCTV network that had artificially emulated gorgons
installed in them to fend off a potential attack by the Old Ones (a
direct reference to Lovecraft, of course) was used to turn a cow to
stone.  Of course, an unauthorized use of the gorgon-capable CCTV
network (I'm not sure I believe I actually typed that phrase) could
place the entire country in danger.  The whole affair ends up being
weirdly convoluted but extremely typical of inter-office politics.
It's really kind of tough to delve much deeper into the story
without giving much more away, but rest assured that many of you
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