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From: "Evelyn C. Leeper" <evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.fandom
Subject: MT VOID, 09/06/24 -- Vol. 43, No. 10, Whole Number 2344
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THE MT VOID
09/06/24 -- Vol. 43, No. 10, Whole Number 2344

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
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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:
         Political Films on Turner Classic Movies (comments
                 by Evelyn C. Leeper)
         NEW ADVENTURES IN SPACE OPERA edited by Jonathan Strahan
                 (book review by Joe Karpierz)
         Shazam (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
         AI Running Government (letter of comment by Richie Bielak)
         Tarzan (letters of comment by Keith F. Lynch, Gary McGath,
                 Mike Van Pelt, and Joyce Beeson)
         This Week's Reading (A MYSTERY OF MYSTERIES: THE DEATH AND
                 LIFE OF EDGAR ALLAN POE) (book comments
                 by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: Political Films on Turner Classic Movies (comments by
Evelyn C. Leeper)

When we went to check the October films, we noticed that the
political film festival from October actually started in
September--in fact, tonight.  So here's the September schedule,
with guest presenters (the times are all "TV Guide times"; that
is, early morning films are listed with the previous day's):

Friday, September 6 - Night One
  8:00 PM - The Battle of Algiers (1966) with Michael Tomasky
10:15 PM - All the King’s Men (1949) with Steven Spielberg
12:15 AM - The Great Dictator (1940) with John Turturro
  2:30 AM - Fail Safe (1964)
  4:30 AM - Ivan the Terrible, Part II: The Boyars' Plot (1958)
  6:00 AM - Salt of the Earth (1954)

Friday, September 13 - Night Two
  8:00 PM - Reds (1981) with Bill Maher
11:30 PM - The Parallax View (1974) with Kyle Smith
  1:30 AM - Germany Year Zero (1948) with Alexander Payne
  3:00 AM - Gabriel Over the White House (1933)
  4:30 AM - Battleship Potemkin (1925)
  6:00 AM - The Fog of War (2003)

Friday, September 20 - Night Three
  8:00 PM - Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying
            and Love the Bomb (1964) with Spike Lee
  9:45 PM - Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939) with Stacey Abrams
12:15 AM - Hearts and Minds (1974) with Phil Mattingly
  2:15 AM - The Lives of Others (2006)
  4:45 AM - Born in Flames (1983)
  6:15 AM - Bicycle Thieves (1948)

Friday, September 27 - Night Four
  8:00 PM - Three Days of the Condor (1975) with Maureen Dowd
10:15 PM - I Am Not Your Negro (2016) with Sara Sidner
12:00 AM - The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928) with Melissa Etheridge
  1:30 AM - The Last Hurrah (1958)
  3:45 AM - Night of the Living Dead (1968)
  5:30 AM - The Tin Drum (1979)

Of these, TCM says:

"Politics affects every part of our daily lives. Its reach is
general and wide, dictating everything from the cleanliness of our
water, land and air to more personal and interpersonal affairs.
Though movies can be enjoyed simply as entertainment, film as a
medium is an inherently political tool, a product of a creator’s
unified ideology and assumption about the world we live in. Every
Friday night for 9 weeks beginning September 6, TCM presents a
selection of films featured on the New Republic’s list of the 100
Most Significant Political Films of All Time. TCM host Ben
Mankiewicz will share an open dialogue with politicians,
journalists, film critics, writers, musicians, scholars and
filmmakers across party lines to explore the historical context
and message of each film and their impact on society.

"Making Change traces more than 100 years of cinema, beginning
with the highly controversial THE BIRTH OF A NATION (1915) and
featuring a more contemporary dialogue on politics in the James
Baldwin documentary I AM NOT YOUR NEGRO (2016). The films featured
throughout the 9 weeks run the gamut of documentary (HARLAN COUNTY
U.S.A., HEARTS AND MINDS), fiction (MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON,
ALL THE KING’S MEN), comedy (THE GREAT DICTATOR, BEING THERE),
drama (LINCOLN, I AM A FUGITIVE FROM A CHAIN GANG) and thriller
(THE PARALLAX VIEW, THE BATTLE OF ALGIERS).

"The films in our showcase do not represent the best of their kind
nor a definitive 'right or wrong' political message. The messages
of each film also may not reflect the views of TCM or its guests.
Our special programming is merely a representation of how movies
can spark discussion, inspire change, influence thought and alter
the course of history. The goal is not to divide. On the contrary,
we seek to foster an environment for open dialogue that
demonstrates how we the people can engage in softening political
divisions thus recognizing the humanity in one another."  [-tcm]

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

TOPIC: NEW ADVENTURES IN SPACE OPERA edited by Jonathan Strahan
(copyright 2024, Tachyon Publications, $18.95, trade paperback,
315pp, ISBN 978-1-61696-420-7) (book review by Joe Karpierz)

Anyone who has been reading my reviews for any length of time
knows that I love space opera.  This sub-genre of science fiction
is what caused me to fall in love with the field in the first
place, all those years ago.  Space Opera has been around for a
long time, and the term was at one point a derogatory one.  That
has changed, and Space Opera itself has evolved over time.  I'm
not going to go through all of that here.  You can get a good
summary of the evolution of Space Opera from editor Jonathan
Strahan's Introduction.  Strahan knows a thing or two about Space
Opera, having edited THE NEW SPACE OPERA and THE NEW SPACE OPERA 2
with Gardner Dozois in 2007 and 2009, respectively.  This volume
is a reprint anthology, and indeed I've read of few of these
stories in the past.  I liked them then, and I still like them now.

My favorite story is "Belladonna Nights", by Alastair Reynolds.
The story takes place millions of years in the future in the
universe of Reynolds' novel HOUSE OF SUNS.  In the story, lines of
shatterlings make circuits of the galaxy over a span of several
hundred thousand years, then gather at a reunion location (agree
to by all the lines of shatterlings) to insert their memories into
a shared repository of knowledge.  Shaula has returned for one of
the reunions, looking forward to seeing her friend Campion who
seems to be avoiding her.  Campion starts leaving Belladonna
flowers at her doorstep, which turns out to be a reference of a
protocol to abandon one reunion site and selecting another.  This
is a powerful story of loss and grief, and the ending leaves the
reader as sad and Shaula is.

"Metal Like Blood in the Dark", T. Kingfisher's Hugo Award winning
short story, is the story of two man-made machines who grow and
learn, much like children do.  They are eventually captured by a
being who is out for revenge against other members of his race for
something that it perceives as a slight.  Whether it really is a
slight is not the point here.  The story really is about
self-discovery, personal growth, treachery, and loyalty.  Its Hugo
Award was well-deserved.

Two stories that I read previously to the publication of this book
and I found terrific were Karin Tidbeck's "The Last Voyage of
Skidbladnir" and Sam J. Miller's "Planetstuck".  Tidbeck gives us
a tale of ship that isn't a ship.  Rather, it's a ship that is
powered, for lack of a better term, by a living creature inside a
building.  The creature continues to grow, and must find a new
building to occupy before it can fly again.  It's a really
touching story about an alien and the people that come to care for
it.  "Planetstuck" is the story of Aran who travels the galaxy
trading sex for information (and sometimes just as often looking
for a quick tumble with random men) which he sells to interested
parties.  Travel across the galaxy is via portals that are open
between systems, and there is an idiological war brewing between
people who travel via the portals--offworlders--and those who
think it's better to be isolated on a single planet.  It's a
terrific story that in many ways mirrors what's going on in our
country today.

Another couple of terrific stories take place in universes that we
as readers are likely familiar with.  Becky Chambers gives us "A
Good Heretic", a story set within The Wayfarers universe.  The
story follows Mas (a character from THE LONG WAY TO A SMALL ANGRY
PLANET) as she comes of age and goes out among the stars to start
life as a Navigator.  But something is wrong with her Pairing, and
due to her upbringing feels as if she is a heretic and out of
place where she is.  It's a tale of uncertainty and identity, and
whether it's okay to be who you really are.  Another is Yoon Ha
Lee's "Extracurricular Activities", which takes place in the
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