• MT VOID, 10/22/21 -- Vol. 40, No. 17, Whole Number 2194

    From evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 24 07:11:15 2021
    THE MT VOID
    Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
    10/22/21 -- Vol. 40, No. 17, Whole Number 2194

    Co-Editor: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
    Co-Editor: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
    Sending Address: evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com
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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:
    Bond Songs (Part 6) (LICENSE TO KILL, GOLDENEYE,
    TOMORROW NEVER DIES) (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
    NEEDLE IN A TIMESTACK (film review by Mark R. Leeper and
    Evelyn C. Leeper)
    "The Living Dead" Saga, James Bond Films and Songs, and the
    MT VOID (letter of comment by Guy Lillian III)
    This Week's Reading (Hugo Award novella finalists)
    (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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

    TOPIC: Bond Songs (Part 6) (LICENSE TO KILL, GOLDENEYE, TOMORROW
    NEVER DIES) (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

    If you are just coming in on this, I am making comments on the
    title songs from the Bond films.

    Next up is LICENCE TO KILL.

    Ooooh
    Ah-aaah
    I need, I need, I've got to hold on to your love

    {Just what part of his anatomy was she holding onto?}

    Ooooh

    {Ooooh.}

    Hey baby, thought you were the one who tried to run away
    Oh, baby, wasn't I the one who made you want to stay?
    Please don't bet that you'll ever escape me

    {What must this woman look like?}

    Once I get my sights on you
    I got a licence to kill (to kill)
    And you know I'm going straight for your heart

    {I think I see why you are running running away. This
    sounds like a case for the police.}

    (Got a licence to kill)
    Got a licence to kill (to kill)
    Anyone who tries to tear us apart

    {This is getting scary,}

    (Got a licence to kill)
    Licence to kill
    Hey baby, think you need a friend to stand here by your side?

    {To do what? Ride shotgun?}

    Yes you do (Your side)
    Ooh, baby, now you can depend on me to make things right
    (things right)

    Please don't bet that you'll ever escape me (Ooh)
    Once I get my sights on you
    I got a licence to kill (to kill)
    And you know I'm going straight for your heart
    (Got a licence to kill)
    Got a licence to kill (to kill)
    Anyone who tries to tear us apart
    (Got a licence to kill)
    Say that somebody tries to make a move on you
    In the blink of an eye, I'll be there too
    And they'd better know why I'm gonna make them pay
    'Till their dying day

    'Till their dying day
    'Till their dying day
    Got a licence to kill (to kill)
    And you know I'm going straight for your heart
    (Got a licence to kill)
    Got a licence to kill (to kill)
    Anyone who tries to tear us apart
    (Got a licence to kill)
    Licence to kill
    Gotta hold onto your loving
    Licence to kill
    Ooohooo!
    Kill

    {This is why we need stricter gun control. Ooohooo, Kill}

    Next is GOLDENEYE.

    See reflections on the water
    More than darkness in the depths

    {Sorry, I'm not seeing it.}

    See him surface in every shadow
    On the wind I feel his breath

    {Phew! Dead fish!}

    Goldeneye I found his weakness
    Goldeneye he'll do what I please

    {Introduce him to soap. Have him to take a bath.}

    Goldeneye no time for sweetness
    But a bitter kiss will bring him to his knees

    {I it would also fell an ox.}

    You'll never know how I watched you
    From the shadows as a child

    {She has been stalking him for years.}

    You'll never know how it feels to be the one
    Who's left behind
    You'll never know the days, the nights
    The tears, the tears I've cried
    But now my time has come
    And trust me time is not on your side

    {Neither is the wind.}

    See him move through smoke and mirrors
    Feel his presence in the crowd
    Other girls they gather around him
    If I had him I wouldn't let him out
    Goldeneye not lace or leather
    Golden chains take him to the spot
    Goldeneye I'll show him forever
    It'll take forever to see
    What I've got
    You'll never know how I watched you
    and bedenied
    You'll never know how it feels to get so close
    and be denied

    {This is getting seriously creepy.}

    It's a gold and honey trap
    I've got for you tonight
    Revenge it's a kiss, this time I won't miss
    Now I've got you in my sight
    With a Goldeneye, golden, goldeneye
    With a goldeneye, goldeneye.

    {I guess revenge is sweet.}

    And finally this week is TOMORROW NEVER DIES.

    Darling I'm kill
    I'm in puddle on the floor
    Waiting for you to return
    Oh what a trill

    {You should have been house-broken.}

    Vacillations good lord
    How to tease
    How you leave me to burn

    {What are you, a pie in the oven?}

    It's so deadly my dear
    The power of wanting you near
    Until the day
    Until the world falls away

    {Now that is one heavy pie.}

    Until you say there will no more good-byes
    I see it in your eyes
    Tomorrow never dies

    {What would you do with a dead tomorrow?}

    Darling you won
    It's no fun
    Martinis, girls, and guns

    {It sounds like a 12-year-old's idea of a good time.}

    It's murder on our love affair
    You bet your life
    Every night
    While you chase every morning die
    You're not the only spy out there
    It's so deadly my dear
    The power of wanting you near
    Until the day...

    {It's getting worse.}

    [-mrl]

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

    TOPIC: NEEDLE IN A TIMESTACK (film review by Mark R. Leeper and
    Evelyn C. Leeper)

    NEEDLE IN A TIMESTACK is based on a story by popular science
    fiction author Robert Silverberg. Though he has been a prolific
    author for the last seventy years(!), little of his work has been
    filmed. The only major exception is THE BICENTENNIAL MAN (based on
    "The Positronic Man").

    This film has a jazzy score and a diverse cast (and a touch of food
    porn), and is divided into three sections, representing three
    timelines, centering on Nick, Janine, and Tom. Each starts in the
    boardroom of a wealthy corporation with somebody is giving a talk
    that sounds like double-talk. In the middle, a "time shift" (or
    "phase"--they seem to use the terms interchangeably) makes reality
    change. Apparently changing timelines is "time crime" but that
    seems to happen anyway. Nick thinks someone is trying to change
    his timeline in specific.

    Throughout the film people's lives get screwed up just the same way
    they have been with time shifts. Things get entangled, and one
    character says, "We can't change the past; we can just clean up the
    future a little bit." (It sounds a bit like relationship
    counseling.) Also, people tend to speak in aphorisms (like that
    one, or "Happiness is the only thing more fleeting than time.")

    Nick signs up for a service called "Past Protect" which presumably
    saves your memories from this timeline in case a time shift changes
    something. Oddly, memories from one timeline last for a few hours
    when the timelines shift, but gradually fade. Past Protect has
    somehow lost most of his memories but he can remember Janine for a
    while. The idea in general creates situations similar to those in
    TOTAL RECALL, though in this film Nick is looking for someone to be
    with him forever in love rather than trying to have an adventure.

    The mechanism for the time travel is not clear, though the body (or
    a body) does go back in time (rather than just inhabit the person's
    earlier body). Not surprisingly, Nick's attempts to "fix" things
    have a somewhat different effect. (One nice touch is a close-up of
    Nick's hand in each segment, revealing his different marital
    statuses.)

    Released in theaters 10/15/21. Rating: high +1 (-4 to +4), or
    6/10.

    [-mrl/ecl]

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

    TOPIC: "The Living Dead" Saga, James Bond Films and Songs, and the
    MT VOID (letter of comment by Guy Lillian III)

    In response to the MT VOID in general and various specific comments
    in the recent issues of the MT VOID, Guy Lillian writes in ZINE
    DUMP #53:

    Since summer, Evelyn and Mark have brought forth the following
    topics in their terrific weekly e-zine: FORBIDDEN PLANET (in LOCs),
    BLACK SUN, THE RELENTLESS MOON, CAPTAIN VIDEO (by a contributor),
    the NPR poll on the decade's best SF/fantasy (including EXHALATION
    and PIRANESI), a genealogy of zombie movies from NIGHT OF THE
    LIVING DEAD on (the linkage should go back to WHITE ZOMBIE and I
    WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE, if not further), weeks of discussion on THE
    FLY (1958), and lots on James Bond films and their theme songs (for
    me, GOLDFINGER is absolutely the best film, "You Only Live Twice"
    the most effective song; ahh, the drive-ins of Contra Costa County)
    ... and that's only part of it. Every week there's more, centered
    on fine reviews from both editors and solid commentary from the
    Chorus and contributors. [-gl]

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

    TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

    Okay, here are (most of) the Hugo Award novella finalists.

    COME TUMBLING DOWN, Seanan McGuire (Tor.com, ISBN 978-0-765-39931-
    1): I gave up on this one.

    THE EMPRESS OF SALT AND FORTUNE, Nghi Vo (Tor.com, ISBN 978-1-250-
    75030-X): This was not available.

    FINNA, Nino Cipri (Tor.com, ISBN 978-1-250-24573-1): This book
    seems to be dedicated to anyone who has ever found themselves stuck
    in an Ikea. (Clearly the store is called "LitenVarld" only to
    avoid a lawsuit.) I've been in one only once, and that was more
    than enough, thank you. The floor plan of an Ikea seems to make
    the wormholes to other universes almost reasonable. In actual
    fact, except for unlabeled doors that provide shortcuts, the
    problem with the Ikea path is that it is a labyrinth, not a maze--
    it is a single path with no branches or dead ends, which are
    characteristics of a maze. So it doesn't have features that would
    be conducive to wormholes. I also found the pronouns confusing--I
    have no problem with using "they/them/their" as singular, but the
    author needs to try to avoid confusing the reader with whether
    these pronouns are referring to a single person or multiple people
    in a given sentence, just as they would be careful to make clear
    which of two women the pronoun "she" is referring to. The story
    itself was reminiscent of classic science fiction, though whether I
    would put it in GALAXY or ANALOG wasn't clear. (I particularly
    liked all the themes for the display rooms, starting with the room
    for the "Pan-Asian Appropriating White Yoga Instructor, complete
    with tatami mats and a statue of Shiva.")

    RING SHOUT, P. Djeli Clark (Tor.com, ISBN 978-1-250-78702-8): This
    was a little harder to read than the other novellas; it is written
    in two dialects: one is (I assume) Black English ("She stay seated
    in her big chair.") and the other is Gullah ("Dem buckrah debbil
    gii hunnuh trouble?"). But the slower reading pace is not a bad
    thing (although given the total length of the works on the Hugo
    Awards ballot, it would not be practical to read everything at this
    pace). This seems to be part of a new literary movement--African-
    American Cthulhu--by authors such as Victor LaValle and Matt Ruff.
    In RING SHOUT, the Ku Klux Klan of 1922 is involved in bringing
    beings from another dimension to our dimension, and the protagonist
    needs to end this invasion.

    RIOT BABY, Tochi Onyebuchi (Tor.com, ISBN 978-1-250-21475-1): I
    read this back in April and honestly cannot remember it.

    UPRIGHT WOMEN WANTED, Sarah Gailey (Tor.com, ISBN 978-1-250-21358-
    7): This is a future dystopia with LGBTQ characters by way of
    Margaret Atwood and Zane Gray. Either that makes you want to read
    it or it doesn't. (One note: "People like us" is, or at least used
    to be, a coded phrase meaning LGBTQ people. It is used in this
    novel and carries that meaning, but I suspect most non-LGBTQ people
    will not recognize it as such.)

    Ranking (of what I read): RING SHOUT, UPRIGHT WOMEN WANTED, FINNA,
    no award, COME TUMBLING DOWN

    And one novel:

    PIRANESI by Susanna Clarke (Bloomsbury, ISBN 978-1-63557-7) is a
    Hugo Award finalist. It sounded fascinating when described on the
    Coode Street Podcast. But when I got it from the library, it
    totally didn't work for me. Obviously, your mileage may vary.

    And what have I learned from all this? Even with the extra time
    because of the delayed Worldcon, this took too much time away from
    things I really *did* want to read. So the chances of me doing
    this next year are pretty slim (at least for this many categories).
    [-ecl]

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

    Mark Leeper
    mleeper@optonline.net


    This country has come to feel the same when Congress
    is in session as we do when the baby gets hold of
    a hammer. It's just a question of how much damage
    he can do with it before we take it away from him.
    --Will Rogers

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  • From Gary McGath@21:1/5 to eleeper@optonline.net on Sun Oct 24 15:32:34 2021
    On 10/24/21 10:11 AM, eleeper@optonline.net wrote:
    Got a licence to kill (to kill)
    And you know I'm going straight for your heart
    (Got a licence to kill)
    Got a licence to kill (to kill)
    Anyone who tries to tear us apart
    (Got a licence to kill)
    Licence to kill
    Gotta hold onto your loving
    Licence to kill
    Ooohooo!
    Kill

    {This is why we need stricter gun control. Ooohooo, Kill}


    These days, a license to kill is called qualified immunity in the US. I
    don't know about UK law.

    --
    Gary McGath http://www.mcgath.com

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  • From Keith F. Lynch@21:1/5 to Gary McGath on Tue Oct 26 03:40:12 2021
    Gary McGath <garym@REMOVEmcgathREMOVE.com> wrote:
    These days, a license to kill is called qualified immunity in the US.

    Nitpick: Qualified immunity means that you can't successfully sue a
    cop who had a warrant for a different address who bursts into your
    home at midnight and murders your wife and children and cripples you.
    It doesn't mean that he can't be arrested and convicted of murder.
    It's true he won't be charged with that or any other crime, but not
    because of qualified immunity, but because the prosecutors are part
    of the same gang as him.

    Just this week a federal judge dismissed all charges against a member
    of the federal "Park Police" who murdered Bijan Ghaisar, an innocent
    motorist. That was here in Fairfax County, but the county police had
    no involvement except that one of their cars happened to catch the
    action on its dash cam, proving that the killer cop lied and that the
    killing was totally unjustified.

    ObFandom: It was the same federal judge who sentenced wrongly
    convicted filker Bill Wells for escape twice and for failure to
    register as a sex offender once (despite the sex offense charge having
    been dropped). The latter would have been twice too, if not for an
    affidavit I submitted to that judge at the request of Bill's attorney,
    saying Bill stopped by my apartment to pick up his property and told
    me he intended to leave the area. He was only caught nearby two weeks
    later because he was trapped in the area by a major snowstorm. Due to
    my affidavit, he was freed only a year later. For the third time he
    was required to report to a halfway house, and for the third time he
    took off running instead. This time I was out of town, so I arranged
    for him to pick up his property from a dead drop. He's still a
    fugitive today.

    My belief that my assistance to him both times didn't break any
    law seems to be correct, since otherwise I would have been charged
    for what I said in the affidavit, but I was not. The statute of
    limitations for all federal crimes has long since run out, meaning
    I can no longer be charged with helping him even if it was somehow
    illegal, and he can no longer be charged with escape. Unfortunately,
    he can still be charged with failure to register, since that's
    ongoing, and even if he couldn't, he could still be ordered into a
    halfway house. He would presumably still refuse to go, since he would
    be required to undergo sex offender treatment there which requires him
    to confesses to a crime he didn't commit, and without that confession
    he would be locked up for life. But if he did falsely confess, that
    confession would be used against him in court, and he would be locked
    up for life for that crime.

    As I may have mentioned once or twice, the so-called justice system in
    the US is profoundly broken. For instance in my own burglary case 44
    years ago, I was proven innocent shortly after my release. The courts
    never contested that proof, but just said it was discovered too late.
    (My record remains otherwise perfectly clean before and since.)
    --
    Keith F. Lynch - http://keithlynch.net/
    Please see http://keithlynch.net/email.html before emailing me.

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