Post 6 of 6: Wrap-Up

This is Post 6 of 6 this afternoon and will bring to a close our June 2021 virtual meeting. If you are just now joining us, scroll back to today’s Post 1 of 6 to enjoy the whole meeting, start to finish.

12) POST 1’S TRIVIA CHALLENGE: OUR LIST OF 25 “WINTER” SF/F MOVIES!

How many genre movies did you list that take place, at least in part, on an ice planet or during winter? Here, in no particular order, is our list of 25 such films for you to compare to your own:

1) The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms (1953), the opening 15 minutes of which takes place above the Arctic Circle, where an atomic bomb test unleashes from its eons-long icy repose Ray Harryhausen’s prehistoric Rhedosaurus, the titular beast that promptly heads south to rampage through New York City.

Refrigerated Rhedosaurus!

2) Snowpiercer (2013) is a dystopian tale that takes place in the context of a future Ice Age brought about by failed attempts at climate engineering in order to halt global warming. Endlessly circumnavigating the globe is the Snowpiercer, a train aboard which ride the remnants of humanity, segregated into elites, who live in the luxury coaches at the head of the train, and commoners, who are housed in the squalor of the tail cars.

3) The Colony (2013), a Canadian production, is another dystopian story of a frozen future. Weather machines deployed to quell global warming break down when it begins snowing one day and doesn’t stop! To shelter from the resultant bitter cold, mankind must retreat to underground bunkers and live in these colonies. Finding a means of producing enough food and controlling disease becomes a preoccupation but eventually, cannibalism breaks out in one bunker while in another, a ruthless individual vies to depose his leader and rule the colony himself.

4) The Abominable Snowman (1957) is a British film scripted by Quatermass creator Nigel Kneale about scientists on a Himalayan expedition to find the fabled Yeti. One of the scientists, a glory-seeking American, hopes to capture a living Yeti and present the beast to the world’s press. His British counterpart is driven simply by scientific curiosity and a desire to learn more about the so-called Abominable Snowman, and later determines that Yetis appear to be intelligent creatures bidding their time until they may inherit the Earth after mankind has destroyed himself.

5) Snowbeast (1977), savaged by critics, this is an NBC made-for-television movie about a Sasquatch that terrorizes a ski resort in the Colorado Rockies.

6) Snow Beast (2011) follows a wildlife researcher and his team, along with his daughter and a couple of local rangers, as they investigate the recent disappearances of a number of tourists near a ski lodge in the Canadian wilderness. They discover that a huge Yeti has been stalking and killing vacationers on the slopes and in the forest.

What’s a Himalayan Yeti doing in Canada, anyway? And upon arrival, did he quarantine at a government-approved hotel for two weeks at his own expense?

7) Yeti: Curse of the Snow Demon (2008) was produced for the SyFy Channel. When a college football team’s plane crashes in the Himalayas, the survivors must find food and fend off the legendary Yeti lest the bloodthirsty monster make a meal of them!

8) Snow Shark: Ancient Snow Beast (2012). Don’t even ask!

We’re going to need a bigger toboggan!

9) 30 Days of Night (2007) is a vampire flick based on a comic-book series. Barrow, Alaska, situated north of the Arctic Circle, is a town that endures month-long “polar nights” during the winter, the opposite of the “midnight sun” phenomenon experienced during the summer. A group of vampires cuts off the town’s communication and transportation links with the outside world before taking advantage of this extended night to feast on the townspeople in an uninterrupted orgy of blood. The town’s sheriff and a handful of others manage to evade the slaughter by hiding in the concealed attic of a boarded-up house. They must hold out until the sun rises again and disperses the vampires.

It’s going to be a long night!

10) The Empire Strikes Back (1980), sequel to Star Wars and the fifth chapter in the chronology, opens on the ice world Hoth and features Luke’s encounter with an ape-like Wampa snow monster, as well as an assault on the Rebel’s secret Echo Base by an imposing phalanx of Imperial Walkers.

“Hey, Rebel scum! We’re walkin’, here!”

11) Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991), in which Kirk and McCoy, convicted of assassinating the Klingon Chancellor just as peace talks are about to begin between the Klingon Empire and the Federation, are sentenced to imprisonment at a Klingon penal colony on the frozen planetoid Rura Penthe.

Snow Trek!

12) The X-Files: Fight the Future (1998), the first X-Files feature film, includes Mulder’s climatic rescue of Scully from an underground Antarctic facility, and the break-out from beneath the ice and departure skyward of an enormous flying saucer.

13) Alien vs Predator (2004), bringing together two popular sci-fi/horror franchises, is set on glacial Bouvet Island near Antarctica, where explorers discover an ancient pyramid buried beneath the ice in which Predators test their mettle in Coliseum-like battle against Aliens.

14) The Thing from Another World (1951), Howard Hawks’ classic about Air Force men and scientists at an isolated Arctic research station battling an ambulatory, plant-like alien monster they’ve discovered encased in the ice beside a flying saucer crash-site. Astoundingly, the creature is still alive, even after countless years frozen!

“We’ve found one, fellas! We’ve finally found an Unidentified Frozen Object!”

15) The Thing (1982), John Carpenter’s paranoia-infused remake of the above, the storyline of which follows more closely the source material, John Campbell’s novella “Who Goes There?” The alien, here, is a shape-shifter able to assume the form of any living being with which it comes in contact.
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It’s a dog-absorb-dog world out there!

16) The Thing (2011), a prequel to the Carpenter film.

17) The Thaw (2009) takes place at a remote facility in the Canadian Arctic and is about a research team’s discovery of a lethal prehistoric organism released from the thawing carcass of a Woolly Mammoth. Before too long, almost everyone is infected and dying, with humanity at risk should a survivor manage to get back to civilization carrying the bug!

18) Dreamcatcher (2003) is based on the Stephen King novel of the same name and involves four friends with uncanny telepathic abilities, strangely acquired in childhood, who get together for their annual, mid-winter, deep-woods hunting trip in Maine. A blizzard blows in and they soon find themselves contending with parasitic worms from outer space capable of possessing bodies and minds, and an elite military unit tasked with eradicating these alien invaders, as well as anyone with whom they may have come in contact.

19) The Shining (1980), Stanley Kubrick’s screen adaptation of this well-known Stephen King novel, tells the story of Jack Torrance, a writer and recovering alcoholic who takes a job as the off-season caretaker of the historic and very much haunted Overlook Hotel, a resort in the Colorado Rockies that closes during the snowbound winter months. Staying with him for the duration are his wife and young son, who come under increasing threat when the hotel’s ghosts slowly drive Torrance murderously insane. Kubrick makes good use of a wintery palette, particularly during Torrance’s climatic, homicidal, axe-wielding chase of his family through the resort’s famous hedge maze.

Jack Frost!

20) Dead Snow (2009) is the English-language dub of a Norwegian film, Død snø, inspired by Scandinavian folk tales of the undead draugar, who zealously guard their ill-gotten booty. A group of students partying over the Easter break at a cabin in the snow-covered mountains of Norway find an old, wooden box filled with gold coins and trinkets, and are later attacked by zombies dressed in World War II-era Nazi military uniforms! Seems that during the war, these Nazis terrorized the people of the area and looted the nearby town of its valuables. But the locals rose up and took their revenge, either killing the soldiers or chasing them into the mountains where, presumably, they froze to death before coming back as cursed zombies.

21) Legend (1985) is a fantasy film directed by Ridley Scott in which a dark, icy winter descends upon the land when, at the bidding of the Lord of Darkness, goblins slay a magical unicorn, sever its alicorn, or horn, and deliver it to Darkness. A plucky princess and an assortment of forest-dwellers, including her green-man paramour, a couple of dwarves, an elf, and a fairy are instrumental in retrieving the alicorn so as to reattach it and return the fallen unicorn to life, thus lifting the curse of darkness and winter.

22) Quintet (1979) is a post-apocalyptic science fiction film helmed by non-conformist, satirical director Robert Altman in which a new Ice Age has enveloped Earth and mankind is close to extinction. Quintet is a violent and deadly board game in which people act as the game tokens. It’s played at a gambling resort in a deteriorating metropolis doomed by the relentless advance of a glacier that will eventually crush the city. The film was shot here in Montreal during the frigid winter of 1978 on the site of the Expo 67 World’s Fair, which post-exhibition had been rebranded Man and his World. The fair’s former pavilions and structures looked the part of a crumbling, ice-encased city of the distant future.

23) The Day After Tomorrow (2004), a cautionary but overblown, big-budget disaster movie premised on catastrophic shifts in ocean temperatures triggering extreme weather events. Scientists warn of impending doom, politicians ignore them, and we all know too well the result when that happens! Soon, massive and devastating hurricanes, tornados, tsunamis, and flash-freeze events develop around the world as the northern hemisphere is blanketed in ice and snow, plunging the planet into a new Ice Age. Vast populations migrate to the warmer, equatorial regions of the globe, including droves of Americans fleeing south who illegally cross the border into Mexico!

“It’s brick outside, today!”

24) It’s a Wonderful Life (1946), Frank Capra’s heartwarming, perennial Christmas favourite, about a guardian angel’s efforts on Christmas Eve to convince despondent businessman George Bailey of the value of what the suicidal man believes has been his pedestrian and worthless life. The film features a chilling alternate-history sequence in which Bailey is shown how much worse things would have been for his family and friends had he never been born.

“Remember, no fan is a failure who has fen.”

25) Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger (1977), a Ray Harryhausen mythological pastiche in which Sinbad and crew sail to the polar wastelands of Hyperborea. Here, Sinbad hopes to break an evil spell which has turned a prince into a baboon so that said prince may be restored to human form and crowned Caliph of his kingdom.

I think I’ll name him “Paul.”

13) THANK YOU!

We hope you have enjoyed your time with us this afternoon, and we ask all of you to check in regularly here at www.MonSFFA.ca for additional content during this continuing vaccination push/gradual reopening, and for any news as to when the club expects a return to face-to-face meetings. Thank you for your interest and attention, and don’t forget to comment on today’s meeting!

We’d also like to thank Keith Braithwaite, Joe Aspler, and Cathy Palmer-Lister for putting this June 12, 2021 DIY, Virtual MonSFFA e-Meeting together, with a nod, as well, to our supporting contributors today, Brian Knapp, Wayne Glover, and Lindsay Brown.

Until next month, when we will gather virtually once more on July 10, please continue to exercise all recommended safety practices, and get your shots as soon as the vaccination is made available to you! Continued patience and discipline, folks; we’re almost there!

14) A CLOSING SONG BY THE HOLDERNESS FAMILY

We wrap up with this Father’s Day ditty from the zany Holderness Family (www.youtube.com/TheHoldernessFamily):

 

 

Post 5 of 6: Show-and-Tell

This is our fifth post of the afternoon and serves to advise that this portion of the meeting will take place on Zoom.ED can be one of the warning signs of a heart attack, but also the need for a colostomy, emotional stresses order soft cialis can be further compounded, which interferes with manhood, can hit a man hardly. Most of the pills either help you to get fuller erection or increase your appalachianmagazine.com tadalafil online order stamina for the sex, but vigrx plus don’t fail, as it increases sexual desire of women and improves lovemaking performance in bed. Searching simply about any type of physician can be a challenging task. viagra tablet in india view address now Sexual health problems viagra in the uk caused by it can lead to break-up in relationships. height=”403″ />

Join our video-chat (click here) if you haven’t already as our “fancrafters” showcase, show-how, and discuss their current scale-modelling and pyrography (wood-burning) projects over the next hour.

Post 4 of 6: A Science Fiction Writer Walks into a Bar…

This is Post 4 of 6, part of our June 12, 2021, DIY, MonSFFA e-Meeting!

A science fiction writer walks into a bar. Or a tavern or a saloon or a pub or a club or a lounge or a …..

From Lord Dunsany’s tales of Joseph Jorkens to The Prancing Pony in Bree to Ten Forward and Quark’s in the Star Trek Universe, a bar (lounge, tavern, club) is a convivial place to sip your whiskey and soda, quaff your ale, or enjoy your raktajino or blood wine. Listen to the tall tales of hard science fiction, or to the mysteries of magic swords. Have the wisest bartenders in the universe serve you drinks, from Guinan to Mike Callahan. Let Asimov’s alter-egos solve mysteries for you.

But tourists beware! Coming from another land or a parallel universe does not give you immunity to bad food, evil spells, or errant battleaxes.

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Peter Davidson as the Dish of the Day

Mr. Worf discovers prune juice: A Warrior’s Drink

Morn at Quark’s

Data at the comedy lounge  (4:38)

Vic Fontaine

Odo on the piano, accompanying Vic Fontaine (2:59)

Post 3 of 6: Time for a Break!

Get your bhere and chips, enjoy the displays and converse with your friends!

It’s time for the break!

CLUB NEWS

WARP 110 is available for download from our website:
http://www.monsffa.ca/?page_id=6915 Many thanks to Danny Sichel and Valerie Royall for this slick, new look!

 Display Table

The Display Table will be via zoom this week

Participation Prizes

3 or 4 names (depends on how many become involved) will be drawn from a hat. All you have to do is be here! But we really would like you to also leave comments on our website.

Click to enlarge

Mecha Japanese Capsule Toy, donated by Brian Knapp The USS Enterprise, model donated by Brian Knapp Romulan Bird of Prey, a model donated by Brian Knapp
1972 edition, good condition, but my name is cut out of it. Dust jacket a bit torn. Donated by Cathy Grand Prix 2005 de la science-fiction et du fantastique québécois, Prix Boréal 2005, Prix 2006 des lecteurs Radio-Canada A set of hand crafted magic wands in the colours of Hogwarts houses, made and donated by Josée Bellemare
Celestial Charts, Antique Maps of the Heavens by Carole Stott, donated by Cathy because I had two copies. Beautiful, full colour charts. Excellent condition. DVD, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Donated by Joe Aspler The first volume of the Wild Cards series edited by George RR Martin. Good condition, pages a little yellowed, and my name is cut out of it. Donated by Cathy

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Post 2 of 6: Syd Mead—Visual Futurist

This is Post 2 of 6 and part of this afternoon’s MonSFFA e-Meeting. Join us, as well, on Zoom (click here) as we offer a live presentation/discussion of Syd Mead’s career, and an appreciation of his art.

  • Sydney Jay “Syd” Mead
  • Born July 18, 1933, Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA
  • Died at age 86, December 30, 2019, Pasadena, California, USA
  • Industrial Designer/Concept Artist

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Syd Mead’s fascination with the future was sparked in childhood by his father, a Baptist minister himself artistically inclined, who read to his young son Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon science fiction stories published in pulp magazines and encouraged the boy’s artistic pursuits. Mead’s innate artistic talents soon became apparent; he was a natural, drawing as early as age 3. “By the time I was in high school, I could draw the human figure, I could draw animals, and I had a sense of shading to show shape,” he recalled. “I had a very accurate sense of perspective and colouration.” Mead knew by the sixth grade that he was going to make his living drawing pictures. “I could draw them so much better than anybody in my age group.” His father made certain that young Syd had at his disposal an ample supply of drawing papers, pencils, pens, and India ink, and Mead fast became adept at brushwork and various illustration techniques. His early work was rendered using crow-quill ink pens, watercolour washes, and Prismacolour pencils. Gouache, a water-based, matte, opaque paint would, in due course, became his preferred medium.

From these early fundamentals, Mead would go on to a stellar career as an influential industrial designer, noted for his futuristic automobile concepts, and later in the Hollywood arena, for his outstanding design work on Ridley Scott’s acclaimed neo-noir science fiction film Blade Runner (1982), for which Mead is perhaps best known and revered today as the “Grandfather of Concept Art” by practitioners of the trade. He is credited in Blade Runner as “Visual Futurist,” a term which he suggested ad hoc at the behest of producers, and which, serendipitously, is an apt description of the overall body of work for which he is celebrated.

Before we proceed further, a word about industrial design, which is the creative act of determining the features and form of a product to be mass-produced. As an applied art, industrial design seeks to perfectly meld functionality with beauty. Ideally, the intuitive, user-friendly product must operate as intended while at the same time exhibiting an attractive shape for maximum visual appeal. In colloquial terms, it has to work, and it has to look good! Form, however, must remain firmly in the service of function, never the reverse, and a variety of disciplines and considerations are typically applied to industrial design—science and engineering, ergonomics, materials, production processes, aesthetics, prevailing social trends and marketing factors, etc.

Mead’s family moved often throughout his childhood years, finally settling in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he attended and in 1951, graduated high school. His first job was as an animation cell-inker, background artist, and character originator for the Alexander Film Company, a producer of short advertisements/announcements that ran in advance of featured theatrical presentations or during intermissions.

He would one day revisit the animation field, contributing vehicle designs to Disney’s landmark TRON (1982), one of the first motion pictures to significantly employ computer animation. Further, he worked on a few Japanese productions, including Yamato 2520, a mid-’90s, ultimately unfinished OVA (Original Video Animation) and sequel to the popular Space Battleship Yamato series, as well as Turn A Gundam (1999), for which Mead became the first foreigner to design a mecha.

Shortly after his stint at Alexander, Mead enlisted and was stationed on Okinawa with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which saw him first exposed to Asian culture and captivated by what he described as “decorative geometry” and the “stylized depiction of scenario,” such motifs influencing his work thereafter. A month of R&R in Hong Kong before leaving the service later played a role in inspiring his cityscapes for Blade Runner.

Returning to civilian life, Mead designed window displays for women’s wear retailers The Lerner Shoppe before studying at the prestigious Art Center in Los Angeles, later renamed the ArtCenter College of Design, from which he graduated with honours in 1959.

Mead is among the Center’s esteemed alumni, this school having trained foremost artists like Ralph McQuarrie and Ryan Church (Star Wars concept artists), painter James Gurney (Dinotopia illustrated book series), and commercial illustrators Bob Peak and Drew Struzan (designers of numerous science fiction and fantasy movie posters). Automotive stylists Larry Shinoda, known for his work on Chevolet’s iconic Corvette, circa early 1960s, and Ford’s Mustang in the early 1970s, and Frank Stephenson, who beginning in the early 2000s, designed high-end touring and sports cars for European automobile manufacturers Ferrari, Maserati, and McClaren, also attended the school, as did genre film directors Zack Synder (Watchmen, 2009; Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, 2016; Zack Synder’s Justice League, 2021) and Michael Bay (Armageddon, 1998; Transformers film series, 2007-2017).

Ford’s Advanced Styling Studio, circa late-1950s.

After graduating from the Art Center, Mead was recruited by Elwood Engel, head of Ford’s Advanced Styling Studio in Dearborn, Michigan. The Studio encouraged free-thinking, imaginative originality, asking artists to conceive of visionary car and truck concepts for a space-age, Jetsons-come-to-life future. It is here that Mead’s career began in earnest, with automotive transportation quickly becoming a favourite theme of his work.

For full-colour illustrations, Mead limited his palette to about a dozen pigments and placed his gleaming, super-streamlined coupés and limousines in elaborate, fully detailed scenarios, whether at the busy street level or overlooking vast cityscapes and exotic locales. He peopled these vistas with a chic, elegantly, and sometimes rather scantily attired leisure class of “beautiful people,” often depicted arriving for some kind of event amid the stylish, technologically forward constructs of a wonderfully bright, shining future. Thereby was presented a whole picture, a marvelous and complete vision of tomorrow to anticipate with enthusiasm, and in which the automobile plays an integral part.

I have always admired Mead’s expertise as a draughtsman, his understated approach to creating the illusion of precise detail, and a certain flair in his painterly brushwork.

Ford’s Gyron concept car.

Mead was at Ford for a little over two years, contributing during that time to the design of a two-wheeled, gyroscopically balanced concept car dubbed the Gyron, and the sleek Ranger II pick-up truck, which, among other advanced features, sported a passenger compartment that would expand from a two-seater pick-up to a four-seater sedan configuration at the push of a button.

Ford’s futuristic concept for a pick-up truck, the Ranger II.

He left Ford in 1961 to pursue a golden opportunity, becoming partner at a small Chicago PR firm, the Hansen Company, soon to be renamed the Mead-Hansen Company, and receiving a considerable salary boost in the bargain. He enjoyed complete creative freedom at this agency as an illustrator of promotional catalogues for a variety of corporations, including U.S. Steel, for which he produced a number of illustrations that really put him on the map as a designer/illustrator. One of these paintings, depicting an all-terrain cargo transport traversing a winter landscape, later served as the inspiration for Star Wars’ Imperial Walkers.

In 1970, Mead formed his own company and landed several major clients, most notably Philips Electronics. He relocated to Southern California in 1975, opening new avenues in the motion picture industry for the exercise of his skills. In the 1980s he established working relationships with such Japanese companies as Sony, Minolta, Honda, toy manufacturer Bandai, PR/advertising firm Dentsu, and others.

Throughout the 1960s, ’70s, and ’80s, he turned out architectural drawings and paintings, illustrations for the hospitality and consumer electronics sectors, as well as industrial equipment manufacturers. He produced commissions for Playboy magazine, and vehicle designs and concept art for a variety of Hollywood science fiction films. He had also, since 1973’s documenta 6 contemporary art exhibition in Kassel, West Germany, maintained a schedule of one-man shows and lecture appearances across the globe.

In 1983, he was invited by the Chrysler Corporation to lecture on automotive design, leading to other corporate and academic speaking engagements for Disney, universities like Purdue and Carnegie Mellon, and New York City’s Society of Illustrators. He worked with Hollywood’s Gnomon School of Visual Effects in 2004 to produce a four-part tutorial on DVD entitled Techniques of Syd Mead, in which he discussed and demonstrated his process.

Always a supporter of technological advancement, Mead was not resistant to modern digital illustration, as some traditionalists in the art world are, but nonetheless largely refrained from adopting the new technology. “I admire a lot of guys that do beautiful digital work,” he once pronounced. “I know how it’s done. It’s just that for me to learn that technique as well as I know gouache, which I’m very familiar with…just doesn’t strike me as worthwhile.” The artist’s toolkit will always change over time—“the tool has been changing ever since early man scratched pictures of animals on cave walls”—but the instrument utilized is not as important as the knowledge of how to make a good picture. “I put paint on board with animal hairs on the end of a stick,” Mead joked, a method that served him well, and at which he was extraordinarily proficient. But the key to his success, he believed, is that he knew how to get the perspective right and combine that with adroit compositional geometry within the picture frame.

Mead announced his retirement shortly before his death in 2019, his designs for the Las Vegas of Canadian director Denis Villeneuve’s Blade Runner sequel, Blade Runner 2049 (2017), having been his last major project. Transportation remained a dominant theme throughout his 60-year career, whether by space-age automobile, luxury yacht, personal travel pod, spacecraft, or his polished, ultramodern Hypervan, which Mead described as a “high-speed, intercity, highway transport.”

After a three-year battle with lymphoma, Syd Mead passed away peacefully at his Pasadena home on December 30, 2019, with husband Roger Servick at his side, surrounded by Christmas decorations and an array of his artwork. “I am done here,” Mead said by way of final words. “They’re coming to take me back.” He was 86.

Post 1 of 6: Introduction, Zoom Opens

This is Post 1 of 6, first of six related posts which together make up our June 12, 2021, DIY, Virtual MonSFFA e-Meeting!

1) ZOOM CHAT OPENS RIGHT NOW!

We officially open today’s Zoom chat now, at 1:00PM, the same moment we’ve put up this first post of the afternoon. Our Zoom will run in parallel to the Web site-based content that will be presented throughout this e-meeting and will afford folk opportunity to catch-up, talk about The Nevers, Jupiter’s Legacy, Army of the Dead, Loki and other recent genre offerings, discuss today’s presentations and ask questions directly of our presenters, and of course, this being Montreal during the playoffs, cheer the Habs on as they pursue a remarkable 25th Stanley Cup! Go, Habs, Go!

To join our Zoom session today, click here and follow the prompts: This Afternoon’s MonSFFA Zoom

If you’re not fully equipped to Zoom by computer, you can also join in by phone (voice only); in the Montreal area, the toll-free number to call is: 1-438-809-7799. If you’re from out of town, find your Zoom call-in number here: International Call-In Numbers

Also, have this information on hand as you may be asked to enter it:

Meeting ID: 880 4618 9993
Passcode: 282522

2) HOPE RECEIVES A SHOT IN THE ARM!

As millions more doses arrive weekly, Canada’s national rollout of vaccines continues apace, and while provinces like Ontario and Manitoba have been facing a sudden stretch of exceedingly high infection rates, the COVID-19 numbers are generally coming down across the country, precipitously so here in Québec! Montreal and Laval having been moved into the less-critical orange category just a few days ago, there are currently no high-alert red zones anywhere in the province—none, nada, zip! In fact, numerous of Québec’s regions have recently been reclassified safer yellow, and even green zones, something we have not seen since late last summer! We also learned this week that in just two days, on Monday, June 14, authorities fully expects to downshift all regions of the province again, into either yellow or green zones! Also, Québec’s unpopular, interminable but apparently effective nightly curfew was finally lifted province-wide at the end of May, much to the joy of a weary populace. Some Public Health-imposed restrictions, too, have cautiously been relaxed as we gingerly edge toward a return to normal.

Most Québecers have, by now, received their initial jab, with first-shot percentages in some age cohorts ranging into the high 80s and 90s! A number of workplace vaccine operations and pop-up clinics have been set up in an effort to jab as soon as possible those who have yet to receive their first shot.

The second shot is ready!

And, officials recently authorized that the second shot be offered sooner than originally scheduled and hopes to have inoculated the majority of citizens by the end of August! Meanwhile, youngsters and teens have been cleared to receive the vaccine and that process is underway with all urgency, the aim being to have school-aged children fully vaxxed by the time classes resume this fall.

Québec’s accelerated rollout of the second vaccine shot is now underway.

At the moment, officials report that Quebec’s population as a whole averages out to between 75 and 80 percent having received their first shot, a significant marker achieved some three weeks ahead of schedule, which has allowed the government to get started in earnest on administering those important second shots to all. In just a week, second-shot numbers have climbed from 5 or 6 percent of the population having received the shot to about 10 percent!

There have been set-backs and missteps. Delays in vaccine shipments earlier in the rollout caused some concern but now seem to be largely behind us. Provinces like Ontario and Alberta had too soon rescinded safety measures and ended lockdowns in order to quickly reopen, leading to the explosive spread of new and considerably more transmissible variants of the virus, a situation which, fortunately, is now slowly abating. Several instances of extremely rare and sometimes fatal blood clots resulted from our use of the Astra-Zeneca shot, fueling the off-the-beam arguments of anti-vaxxers, and poor and contradictory messaging from authorities, not surprisingly, engendered general public mistrust and an avoidance of that vaccine.

But a reasonable evaluation cannot but conclude that Québec’s vaccination program so far has been especially well managed and successful. The key to our ultimate victory over the virus will be to resist the immediate and understandable urge to deconfine, unmask, and gather together again in small groups or large as the warm, sunny weather arrives. We can start to slowly, carefully, one step at a time do just that, but we must always remain mindful of the possibility that moving too quickly and carelessly could open the door to new variants which might be more resistant to the vaccines.

So follow the government’s rules religiously, lest we risk extending our collective misery longer than is necessary!

Globally, wealthier countries like ours will have to help poor countries get the virus fast under control in those jurisdictions so as to prevent humanity from suffering any further from COVID-19. If we vanquish the virus here at home but the contagion continues in India, for example, Canada, the U.S., Europe, and other nations would remain under potential threat. We’ve all experienced first-hand the terrible world-wide consequences a rampant, deadly virus precipitates, and none of us wants to live through another period like the last year-and-a-half!

Finally, of course, we’ve learned some valuable lessons these past many months. In retrospect, we probably should have closed our borders more quickly and completely, and shutdown more thoroughly at the outset. Canada will certainly have to regain the domestic vaccine-production capacity it once had, and rethink its approach to medical research and development. We should also strive to produce in-country our own supply of PPE in future. Canada, and indeed, the whole world should be better prepared for the next pandemic, unfortunately an inevitable eventuality!

3) HAPPY FATHER’S DAY!

Next weekend, on Sunday, June 20, we celebrate Father’s Day! Those of you fortunate enough to still have your dad, give thanks. We are all coming off a particularly grim year during which many of us found ourselves separated from family by safety protocol-driven necessity, so as the pandemic begins to wane, give your dear ol’ dad a big, hearty hug, if that’s at all safe and possible! Otherwise, call to chat and wish him a Happy Father’s Day—he’ll surely appreciate hearing from you. Luke Skywalker exempted.

4) MEMBERSHIP RENEWALS

We remind club members that MonSFFA has resumed the collection of annual membership fees. Note that every active club member has benefitted from a full year of fees-free membership.

For most MonSFFen, our 2020 renewal dates became 2021 renewal dates. So if your annual membership fees were due in June 2020, that’s been bumped up a year to June 2021. If your fees were due last July, they are now due this upcoming July; August 2020 shifts to August 2021, and so on.

But what about those few MonSFFen who had, in fact, paid their fees last year, most prior to pandemic lockdowns going into effect and our suspension of in-person meetings? These folk, having paid last year’s dues, will not miss out on the fees-free year enjoyed by their fellow club members! Those who fall into this category will see their annual fees next become due beginning in 2022.

Of course, we welcome back any former members who may have let lapse their memberships, and we invite to join our ranks any prospective members who may have discovered the club via our virtual meetings.

Note that there is no change to our fee structure. A standard one-year membership is still only $25; the premium Platinum Level membership, $35; a family membership (up to four people, single postal mailing address), $40; and the Platinum Family Level, $50. Make your cheques or money orders out to “MonSFFA” and mail to our new postal mailing address:

 

MonSFFA, c/o

125 Leonard

Châteauguay, Québec, Canada

J6K 1N9

 

To those MonSFFen who have recently renewed their memberships, we thank you for your prompt attention and patronage of this club.
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5) TODAY’S MEETING: INTRODUCTION

As we gather online for this month’s virtual club meeting, we take a moment to encourage all MonSFFen to book their second vaccine shot as soon as the option becomes available to them, and to please continue to take all necessary precautions in order to keep themselves and others as protected from the virus as can be. Even as some are eased, it is important that we not let up quite yet on those recommended safety protocols that remain in place. Summer has begun, the city, province, and country are slowly reopening, and the last thing we want to see is case numbers starting to spike upwards again!

This is our 15th virtual MonSFFA meeting. The afternoon’s get-together will unfold right here on the club’s Web site over the course of the next few hours, beginning with this first post, and followed by subsequent posts at 1:30PM, 2:30PM, 3:00PM, and 4:00PM, with a concluding post at 4:45PM. All content will also be available concurrently on MonSFFA’s Facebook page (www.facebook.com/MonSFFA), however, note that the interface best suited for taking in this meeting is this very Web site.

Today we’ll be celebrating the art and career of “visual futurist” Syd Mead and quaffing Romulan ale or Klingon bloodwine in the bars, lounges, taverns, and saloons of SF/F, served by likes of Star Trek’s Guinan and Spider Robinson’s Mike Callahan. We’ll also talk further on sci-fi scale-modelling projects, and during our Show-and-Tell, demonstrate genre-themed pyrography! All that, and more over the next few hours!

As we cannot yet safely assemble in person indoors, this June virtual meeting has been prepared especially for you, MonSFFA’s membership. Sit back, check out each of the afternoon’s posts, scroll down leisurely through the proffered content, and enjoy! And join our Zoom this afternoon, as well (see first item for details)!

Don’t forget to comment on what we’ve presented. Let us know what you think of specific topics or the meeting overall. Your input helps us to tailor these virtual meetings for maximum interest and enjoyment.

6) MEETING AGENDA

In This Afternoon’s Virtual Meeting:

1:00PM, Post 1 of 6 (Introduction, Zoom Opens)

1) Zoom Chat Opens

2) Hope Receives a Shot in the Arm!

3) Happy Father’s Day

4) Membership Renewals

5) Today’s Meeting: Introduction

6) Meeting Agenda

7) Trivia Challenge!

1:30PM, Post 2 of 6 (Science Fiction Art)

8) Presentation: Syd Mead—Visual Futurist

2:30PM, Post 3 of 6 (Break)

9) Mid-Meeting Break (Display Table, Raffle, Zoom Continues)

3:00PM, Post 4 of 6 (The Saloons of SF/F!)

10) Presentation: A Science Fiction Writer Walks into a Bar… 

4:00PM, Post 5 of 6 (“Fancraft!”)

11) Zoom Chat: Show-and-Tell

4:45PM, Post 6 of 6 (Wrap-Up)

12) Trivia Challenge: Our List of 25 “Winter” SF/F Movies!

13) Thank-You!

14) A Closing Song by the Holderness Family

8) TRIVIA CHALLENGE!

We are well into the Stanley Cup playoffs and the Montreal Canadiens—Nos Glorieux, le Bleu-Blanc-Rouge, les Habitants, or the Habs—are in serious contention, which the storied team has not managed for many years! The last time Lord Stanley’s Cup was hoisted in Montreal was in 1993, the trophy’s centennial year. The Canadiens have won the cup a record 24 times and are in the hunt this year for a 25th championship.

Go, Habs, go!

The team endured a lengthy period of mediocrity beginning in the late 1990s, during which time les boys failed to advance much past the first round, if they made the playoffs at all!

As the pandemic nears an end, a Stanley Cup victory would make for a welcome signal of our return to normal! After all, it was once quite normal for this city to boast of hockey supremacy. We were all thrilled a couple weeks ago by the Habs’ come-from-behind, game-seven series triumph over the heavily favoured Toronto Maple Leafs, our long-time rivals. We followed in short order with a sweep of the Winnipeg Jets! And now it’s on to Las Vegas to face the Golden Knights in the conference championship, with a ticket to the Stanley Cup final as the prize! Finally, after so many years of frustration for Montreal hockey fans, does ultimate victory await?

Go, Habs, go!

All of that to set up a trivia challenge in honour of this city’s famous ice hockey team and the drive for 25! Thus are we tasking sci-fi fans to name 25 science fiction and fantasy movies set, at least in part, on an ice planet or during winter! We’re talking feature films, here, or TV movies, not episodes of an SF/F television series. So Star Trek’s “All Our Yesterdays” or The X-Files’ “Ice” would not qualify. Miniseries do not cut the mustard, either, so John Snow’s exploits beyond the Wall don’t count! Animated cartoon movies, like Disney’s Frozen flicks or the multi-film Ice Age franchise, are also out.

Now, when we say “in part,” we mean that at a minimum, one scene of some substance in the film must be set in icy, snowbound conditions. So a brief shot of snow-capped mountain peaks in the background during a sequence of dialogue or action is not enough. And because, of course, most Christmas-themed movies are set in winter, and the whole Santa Claus thing is, technically, fantasy, and there are a lot of these films, we will allow you to include in your list only one Christmas/seasonal movie.

While many sci-fi films are set in futuristic cities, on barren, rocky planets, or lush, tropical-jungle worlds, there are nevertheless more than 25 “winter” movies in the genre film catalogue, obviously! We’ll post our list of 25 in today’s closing Post 6 of 6 at 4:45PM for you to compare to your own. But as long as you’ve written down 25 SF/F movies that meet the criteria outlined above, you’re good!

Have at it, and go, Habs, go!