All posts by Keith Braithwaite

Post 5 of 6 : Big Bug Movies!

Welcome to Post 5 of 6 this afternoon!

9) EIGHT “BIG BUG” MOVIES!

It’s summer and that means fun, sun, sand, swimming, boating, backyard barbecues, and quaffing a cold one in the heat to refresh! This summer especially, assuming everyone is double-dosed, it’s a welcome pleasure to be able to enjoy these summertime doings with family and friends in person!

But setting the lingering pandemic aside for a moment, summer also brings with it another, rather less pleasant thing: bugs! Ants to ruin a picnic, beetles to chew their way through our vegetable gardens, dock spiders to spin a web of fear for anyone who suffers from arachnophobia—and many of us do, at some level—stinging bees to blitz a barbecue, and as any Canadian hiker or camper knows all too well, black flies and mosquitos to buzz, bite, and annoy! Many of us are, at best, hands-off and at worst, actively loath and stomp on these frisson-inducing creepy-crawlies.

Our innate uneasiness with and for some, fear of insects and other bugs is not lost on sci-fi/horror film producers, who play on the discomfort we have with insects, arachnids, and slimy worms to script a cavalcade of fright films in which bugs serve as the scary monster. A subset of the bug-as-monster movie is the giant-bug-as-monster movie!

In the 1950s, as the nuclear age dawned and atomic radiation became a ready explanation for all manner of terrifying mutation, sci-fi scriptwriters imagined proximity to atom-bomb test sites, or the consumption of radio-active waste of some kind would be sufficient to transform the tiniest bugs into titanic beasts slavering for human flesh! That tradition continues to this day, only now with genetic engineering or toxic pharmaceuticals or climate change as the MacGuffin.

Here are eight “Big Bug Movies” of interest, most of them from the 1950s, the decade which pioneered and produced probably the best—and worst!—of the subgenre.

THEM! (Warner Bros., 1954; B&W): James Whitmore, Edmund Gwenn, Joan Weldon, James Arness, Onslow Stevens, Sean McClory, Sandy Descher, Fess Parker; Gordon Douglas, director

Ants, mutated by residual radiation from the first atomic bomb test in the New Mexican desert nine years earlier, have grown to enormous size and are soon terrorizing the area, and beyond!

First of the “Big-Bug” pictures of the 1950s and the template for its many imitators, Them! was initially to be shot in colour and 3-D, but test footage proved unsatisfactory and further, a malfunctioning 3-D camera rig prompted the studio to scrap its original plans for the production. Studio chief Jack Warner was not particularly enthusiastic about the project and the A-level production was unceremoniously downgraded to something more closely resembling a B-movie, albeit with more of a budget than most such fare. Retained perhaps as a nod to the earlier vision was a vivid red-and-blue title card, now set against a black-and-white desert landscape.

The film opens as state troopers find a little girl wandering in the desert, in shock and apparently rendered mute by some traumatic experience. The officers trace her steps back to a nearby vacation trailer which has been ripped open like a tin of sardines. Blood stains at the scene are ascertained to have been made no more than a half-day ago and a mysterious print in the sand confounds the policemen, one of whom finds sugar cubes among the debris. Suddenly, a weird chirping sound is heard, leaving the troopers to wonder if the wind is playing tricks with their hearing. With the frightened girl dispatched to hospital, the policemen seek possible witnesses to whatever event it was that has so upset the child. They find a local country store in shambles, demolished just like the trailer. A barrel of sugar has been overturned and the store’s proprietor is found dead, his shotgun twisted out of shape and, we will soon learn, his body laced with formic acid. One of the officers remains on site to watch over the scene until a forensics team arrives. When he hears again that uncanny chirping noise, he steps off-camera to investigate and meets his end, screaming in terror as he discharges his sidearm.

Half mystery thriller, half sci-fi fantasy, and featuring a collection of well-drawn protagonists, Them!’s superb screenplay is measured in its pacing, progressively unveiling clues to the conundrum presented in the opening scenes, until we first cast eyes on one of the colossal ants in an unforgettable encounter in the dust-blown wastelands. Thereafter, it’s man versus giant ant as the authorities mobilize across the region, racing to destroy these mutant monstrosities, lest humankind face certain annihilation.

A laudable cast of character actors approach their roles with proper import, eliciting empathy from the audience and lending a level of credence to what is, after all, a pretty outlandish story. Terrific dialogue is compellingly voiced under first-rate direction, and seasoned with just the right pinch of tension-relieving humour.

Regrettably, the large mechanically operated ants, of which two principal and a few secondary models were built for the production, move a little too robotically in some shots, falling a tad short of the film’s otherwise top-notch production values. Maybe this was the reason 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea bested Them! in the 1954 Oscar competition for special effects.

Them! is fittingly regarded as an originator of the atom-age monster movie and unquestionably, a sci-fi classic.

THE BLACK SCORPION (Warner Bros., 1957; B&W): Richard Denning, Mara Corday, Carlos Rivas, Mario Navarro; Edward Ludwig, director; Willis O’Brien, special effects supervisor

Colossally huge scorpions unleashed from an underground cavern by a volcanic eruption ravage the Mexican countryside before the largest and most aggressive of the brutes, the titular Black Scorpion, kills the others and soon threatens Mexico City. The military rig some kind of oversized taser to take the creature down.

While hardly a classic, this effort benefits from the involvement of stop-motion pioneer Willis O’Brien, who famously oversaw the special effects for the original King Kong (1933). O’Brien’s assistant on the project, Pete Peterson, was responsible for most of the animation, here. A large dressing room at the Mexico City studio at which this American/Mexican co-production was shot was repurposed for O’Brien and Peterson’s special effects work, which had to be completed in Peterson’s garage in Encino, California, when funds began running short.

Script, direction, and acting are adequate, but the best parts of the movie are those scenes featuring the giant bugs wreaking havoc. A model scorpion’s head used in repeated close-up shots showing the creatures drooling, however, is jarringly cheesy in comparison to the stop-motion work. This puppet was constructed by designer/prop- and model-maker Wah Chang, whose credits include the TV series Star Trek (1966-’68) and Land of the Lost (1974-’76), and the films The Time Machine (1960) and Planet of the Apes (1968).

Between action sequences, audiences are treated to often melodramatic performances, uninspired dialogue, and a romantic storyline typical of such fare, here between American geologist Hank Scott and local rancher Theresa Alvarez, played by leads Richard Denning and Mara Corday.

The film, finally, should appeal at least to fans of old-school monster flicks.

THE DEADLY MANTIS (Universal-International, 1957; B&W): Craig Stevens, William Hopper, Alix Talton, Pat Conway, Donald Randolph, Florenz Ames; Nathan Juran, director

A volcano erupts on an island near the South Pole and this “action”, intones a narrator, has the effect of causing a “reaction”—Arctic ice breaks up and melts! This in turn frees a gargantuan praying mantis that has been frozen in the ice for millions of years. The titanic insect soon descends on a remote DEW Line station in Northern Canada and destroys the outpost. When Colonel Joe Parkman investigates, he finds total devastation and strange furrows carved into the snow. Shortly thereafter the deadly mantis brings down an aircraft in flight and Parkman again investigates, finding the same furrows in the snow, and additionally, a five-foot long organic appendage embedded in the plane’s wrecked fuselage.

Paleontologist Dr. Ned Jackson is called upon by armed forces authorities to examine the appendage and concludes that it’s a spur from the forelimb of a giant prehistoric praying mantis. Before too long, the military are tracking the mantis as it makes its way south, eventually alighting atop the Washington Monument in the American Capital, a shot achieved by positioning a real praying mantis on a miniature model of the D.C. landmark.
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Soon airborne again, the mantis heads towards New York City and Parkman pilots one of the fighter jets scrambled to intercept the creature, but loses sight of it in the clouds. Abruptly, the mantis looms ahead of Parkman’s plane and crashes into the aircraft. Parkman bails out safely but the mantis has been injured by the collision and seeks shelter in the Manhattan Tunnel, where the movie’s final act plays out.

The film’s decidedly asinine science, dull plotting, banal dialogue, and abundant use of tired giant-monster-movie tropes is offset somewhat by casting as the monster perhaps the most terrifyingly menacing of predatory insects, providing audiences with a number of satisfying scenes of suspense and destruction, including the towering creature’s fog-shrouded assault on a bus and that closing act in the tunnel. Notable, too, are the mantis’ early attacks on humanity, in which the sound alone of the giant insect’s wings beating at supersonic speed is most effective at portending impending danger. But shots of the creature in flight look far too fake and director Juran wisely kept his monster obscured by darkness or fog in most other sequences so as to mask the fact that the mantis puppet and miniature work, overall, are really only convincing in a tabletop-model-train-layout sort of way. All rather quaint by modern standards, but still fun to watch!

ATTACK OF THE GIANT LEECHES (American International Pictures, 1959; B&W): Ken ClarkYvette Vickers, Jan Shepard, Michael Emmet, Tyler McVey; Bernard L. Kowalski, director; Gene Corman, producer

Giant, intelligent leeches are living in an underwater cavern in the Florida Everglades and preying upon the townspeople, capturing their hapless victims and slowly draining them of blood. Femme fatale Vickers, the town vixen, is one such victim and when the local game warden sets out to investigate the disappearances, his girlfriend and her father, a doctor, aiding in the effort, he discovers the leeches’ underwater den. With a few state troopers pitching in, dynamite is employed to blow up the cave, and the leeches, real good!

Produced on a shoestring budget by Roger Corman’s brother, the film’s production values clearly reflect that budget. Limited by what could be affordably staged, there’s not really a lot of action, here; mostly people standing in rooms, or by the swamp, melodramatically delivering dialogue!

BEGINNING OF THE END (Republic Pictures, 1957; B&W): Peter Graves, Peggie Castle, Morris Ankrum, Thomas B. Henry, Than Wyenn, Richard Benedict, James Seay; Bert I. Gordon, producer/director/special effects

At a government experimental farm, agricultural scientist Dr. Ed Wainwright is employing nuclear radiation as a means of growing oversized fruits and vegetables in a well-intentioned bid to end world hunger. But when ordinary grasshoppers get into a silo and consume the radioactive grain stored therein, Wainwright’s tests prove the inadvertent cause of a plague of locomotive-sized locusts that raze rural Illinois before descending on Chicago!

Produced on a shoestring budget by well-known B-movie mogul Bert I. Gordon, this film was a modest success upon release but was then, as today, slammed by critics as derivative, ludicrous, bottom-of-the-barrel sci-fi rubbish, and a dreadfully poor example of the big-bug monster-movie subgenre. Production values were decried as shoddy and the quality of the acting sub-standard.

There’s really no arguing with these assessments, and yet the movie has a charm all its own. In fairness to a few of the principal actors, if not award-winning, their efforts are at least earnest. And some of Gordon’s quick-and-easy special effects shots are to be appreciated for their inventiveness, if nothing else. While many of these are less than believable—particularly the process shots of real grasshoppers magnified and sloppily combined with live-action footage—a few are quite cleverly conceived and, shall we say, almost convincing.

Photographs of cityscapes were used as backdrops, against which real grasshoppers were filmed. Foreground elements, like city buses, were tiny close-cut photos stood up on miniature tabletop sets, around which the grasshoppers swarmed. The signature shots of the giant locusts climbing up the façade of a skyscraper were achieved by simply placing the real grasshoppers on a photo of the edifice and prompting the bugs to crawl “up the building” by lightly blowing on them. The result is surprisingly convincing until one of the insects ambles over a part of the photo the perspective of which immediately gives away the trick. Also, instances of grasshoppers stepping off the “building” into the “sky” just a tick before the end of the shot could have been precluded with tighter editing. So a smart, simple, inexpensive effect might have looked a lot more realistic had greater care been taken in the execution. Still kind of nifty, though!

MONSTER FROM GREEN HELL (Distributors Corporation of America, 1958; B&W): Jim Davis, Barbara Turner, Robert E. Griffin; Joel Fluellen, Eduardo Ciannelli, Vladimir Sokoloff; Kenneth G. Crane, director; Wah Chang, designer, stop-motion models (uncredited); Gene Warren, stop-motion animation (uncredited)

Lifting footage from the Spencer Tracy adventure film Stanley and Livingstone (1939), producers splashed a little red-tinted colour into this black-and-white B-movie when lava flows onto the screen.

As preparations for a first manned rocket flight into space proceed, American scientists have been sending up a variety of insects and animals in test rockets to gauge endurance. When a payload of wasps is lost due to a malfunction, estimates are that the missile will likely crash somewhere off the coast of Africa.

Sometime later, one of the scientists reads a newspaper article about natives in a remote part of Africa known as Green Hell coming under attack from some kind of gigantic monster. He surmises that the lost payload of wasps may have been exposed to a massive measure of cosmic radiation and crash-landed in the jungle. He and his associate travel to Africa to investigate, where they discover that indeed, their wasps have grown to colossal size and threaten to swarm across all of Africa! The wasps are finally vanquished when a volcano erupts and lava wipes them out.

THE FLY (20th Century Fox, 1958; Colour): Al Hedison, Patricia Owens, Vincent Price, Herbert Marshall, Charles Marshall, Kathleen Freeman; Kurt Neumann, director

Based on a 1957 short story of the same name by George Langelaan, The Fly is a first-rate sci-fi/horror hybrid that easily qualifies as a classic of the genre. Set in our own Ville de Montréal, the story centers on an experiment in teleportation that goes horribly wrong when a common house fly accidentally gets into the works.

The film opens with the discovery by a night watchman of a gruesome murder in an electronics plant; a body lays crumpled on the floor beside a blood-splattered hydraulic press! We soon learn that the body is that of scientist André Delambre and that, incredulously, his wife, Hélene, is responsible. She admits to having killed her husband but calmly refuses to divulge to police what motivated her to commit such an appalling act. Her sudden anxiety at the sound of a house fly buzzing about, and odd preoccupation with capturing a particular fly, suggests that she is likely insane. But the investigating police inspector does not think her so and plans to charge her with murder. When finally persuaded by her sympathetic brother-in-law, François, to tell police what happened, her unbelievable tale, divulged in flashback, is one most strange.

Deftly directed and atmospherically shot, the film’s deliberate pacing masterfully builds mystery and suspense, tantalizing audiences before revealing the terrible results of Andre’s experiment gone wrong. Patricia Owen (Hélene) had not been shown the fly-head mask worn by her co-star before this pivotal scene was shot and the actress’ innate fear of insects prompted her entirely authentic scream! The film’s final, memorable chill is brilliantly delivered in the Delambre family garden.

EIGHT-LEGGED FREAKS (Warner Bros., 2002; Colour): David Arquette, Kari Wuhrer, Scott Terra, Scarlet Johansson, Doug. E. Doug; Ellory Elkayem, writer/director; Dean Devlin, producer

This is a 21st-century horror/comedy entry that pays homage to the Big Bug films of the 1950s.

When a truck driver swerves to avoid hitting a rabbit, a barrel of toxic waste falls off his vehicle into a reservoir frequented by a local breeder of exotic spiders who collects crickets at the site to feed to his arachnids. Having soon ingested these contaminated crickets, the man’s spiders grow in both size and appetite, shortly attacking and devouring him, after which they swell to even larger proportions. A number of pets around town mysteriously disappear and before too long, a horde of ravenous, SUV-sized spiders are dining on townsfolk in a frenzied bloodbath!

The film doesn’t break any new ground with regard to Big Bug movies, but with a likeable cast of characters, it’s a well-made, briskly-paced, piece of entertainment.

Post 1 of 6: Opening and Introduction

This is post 1 of 6 related posts which together make up our August 14, 2021, DIY, MonSFFA e-Meeting!

 

1) ZOOM CHAT OPENS RIGHT NOW!

Welcome to our August 2021 MonSFFA e-Meeting!

We are officially opening today’s Zoom chat right now, at 1:00PM, the exact same moment we’ve put up this first post of the meeting. Our Zoom will run throughout today’s meeting, in parallel to the Web site-based content that will be presented on a roughly hourly schedule throughout the afternoon, and will afford MonSFFen and friends opportunity to catch-up, discuss today’s presentations, and offer opinion on the latest books, movies, and TV shows in sci-fi that they have recently enjoyed.

To join our Zoom session today, click below 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: 885 2213 2905
Passcode: 196580

2) TODAY’S MEETING: INTRODUCTION

As we gather online for this month’s virtual club meeting, we take a moment to encourage all MonSFFen, if they haven’t already, to get themselves vaccinated as soon as possible, and to continue with all necessary precautions in order to keep themselves and others as protected from the virus as can be.

This is our 17th 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 2:00PM, 3:00PM, 3:30PM, and 4:00PM, with a concluding post at 4:30PM. 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.

As we cannot yet, with complete safety for all, assemble in larger numbers indoors, this August 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 chat 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.

3) MEETING AGENDA 

In This Afternoon’s Virtual Meeting:

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

1) Zoom Chat Opens

2) Today’s Meeting: Introduction

3) Meeting Agenda

4) Are You Vaxxed to the Max?

5) August Quiz

2:00PM, Post 2 of 6  (WTF Were They Even Thinking?)

6) Presentation: Invention is a Mother

3:00PM, Post 3 of 6 (Break)

7) Mid-Meeting Break (Display Table, Raffle, Zoom Continues, What Are You Reading?)

3:30PM, Post 5 of 6 (Your Input Wanted!)

8) Programming/Planning Session for Upcoming Months (Zoom Discussion) 

4:00PM, Post 4 of 6 (This One Might Bug You!)

9) 10 “Big Bug” Movies to Watch! 

4:30PM, Post 6 of 6 (Wrap-Up)

10) Answers to August Quiz

11) Thank-You!

12) Membership Renewals

3) ARE YOU VAXXED TO THE MAX?

It’s summer, and we are all enjoying the sunshine, warm weather, and especially, given the last two years or so, the opportunity to again see family and friends in person! Society is reopening, many of the Public Health restrictions we’ve been living with all these months have been eased or lifted altogether, though not all it’s important to note—some social distancing and mask-wearing remains necessary.

A majority of the general public have had their second jab and are now fully vaxxed, which is the good news. But the bad news is that COVID-19 case numbers are beginning to rise again, prompting worries of a fourth wave, although importantly, hospitalizations seem more or less stable, unlike in previous waves, so there’s some good news, then, mixed in with the bad. Also under the heading of “Bad News,” there remains a sufficiently large cohort of the unvaccinated and only partially vaccinated—roughly 30 percent, nationally—keeping us from achieving those herd-immunity levels the experts say are vital to seeing a complete return to normal. Until enough of us are vaxxed to the max, the virus will continue to circulate throughout the population and mutate—as is the nature of viruses—possibly into even more dangerous, vaccine-resistant variants, which is the solemn concern now preoccupying authorities. We are already seeing that this Delta variant seems to cause greater sickness in children, for instance, than did the  original virus of a year ago.

So short of requiring mandatory vaccinations for all, the Quebec government is trying everything the politicians and bureaucrats can think of to convince, pressure, coerce, and finagle folk into getting or completing their regimen of shots. The latest tactic is to wave money in front of people with this month’s Lotto Vax prizes!

Bottom line: if you are still not fully vaccinated, it’s time to get with the program! By holding out any further, you are, frankly, endangering our collective future and contributing to the delay in all of us getting back to the way things were before.

Sermonizing over; on with the meeting:

4) SUMMER QUIZ

Team Canada has won a record 24 medals at the just-concluded Summer Olympics in Tokyo! Congratulations to all of our country’s athletes! In celebration, Keith Braithwaite has devised the following quiz:

Below are listed 24 brief story synopses, one for each of the medals Canada’s Olympians brought home. Represented here are a mix of novels, graphic novels, short fiction, films, and television shows.

Following this first list is a second of science fiction, fantasy, and horror story titles, all of which include the word “summer,” a nod to both the season and the Tokyo Games.

Your challenge is to correctly match each synopsis to its corresponding title!

Team Canada enters the stadium at the Opening Ceremonies, Tokyo Summer Olympics

Answers will be given both live on Zoom just before 2:00PM, and on the club’s Web site (www.MonSFFA.ca) in the meeting’s closing post at 4:30PM.

Good luck!

1) By means of suspended animation and later, time travel, a despondent engineer and inventor travels forward in time and back again in order to alter his own history for the better.

2) A professor reveals that he is a mage from a magical land and draws five University of Toronto students into this realm, where they embark on adventures and discover their destinies amid an epic conflict.

3) Inspired by the urban legend commonly known as “The Hook,” a group of friends harboring a terrible secret are terrorized by of a mysterious rain slicker-clad, hook-wielding maniac.
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4) The continuing adventures of present-day Chicago’s only professional wizard, in which he is tasked with solving a murder and finding a changeling who has gone missing. 

5) A powerful city-state’s economy depends upon a mystical spirit summoned by, then magically tamed and bonded for life to a poet-sorcerer, but this thriving center of commerce and culture is made vulnerable by a cruel scheme hatched in league with a tyrannical rival empire eager to overthrow the world’s last bastion of peace and progress. Only a woman from the slums who rose to prominence and her few cohorts stand between ruin and salvation!

6) An exploration of the consequences that ensue when the strongest, virtually invulnerable member of a righteous, technologically-enhanced team of superheroes kills the President of the United States and several of his advisors after discovering that they have committed war crimes.

7) Married off to an aging, widowed farmer for a tidy price by her greedy father, a teenaged bride must make the best of her situation and a tattered scarecrow becomes for her an imaginary lover. When Wayfarers afford her the chance to see her fantasy become reality, the temptation is too much to resist, but comes with consequences potentially soul-destroying.

8) The day before he and his friends are to start the sixth grade, a young boy who, among other missteps, has embarrassed himself in front of the girl on whom he has a crush, is struck unconscious by a wayward skateboard. He awakens to find himself reliving the day over and over again, until he understands that to escape this weird time anomaly, be must summon the confidence to make his day turn out for the better.

9) As the crew of space station from Earth observes from above, the high summer comes to a planet approaching the point nearest to the great sun around which it completes an orbit every 2000 years. Epic world-building is on display as we examine the grand kingdoms and lesser nations of this world during a time of great technological innovation, religious turmoil, political manoeuvrings, and military engagements occurring across the globe, all set against the backdrop of increasing temperatures and the subsequent effect on the planet’s ecology.

10) A farmer in the Old West rescues a strange and clearly pregnant young woman dressed in curious silver clothing from harassment by a pair of cowboys allied with the local strongman. The farmer had suffered brutal torture and injury in a past tangle with the strongman and his lackeys, prompting him to retreat to his farm and keep his distance, but on this day, against his better judgement, he stepped in to save the woman and offer her refuge on his farm, where she can give birth. He learns that she is under pursuit by the agent of an ancient enemy that has warred with her people for thousands of years. The woman supplies him with a gun from the future and the superior firepower afforded by this weapon might well allow him to best his enemy, and hers.

11) Eerie and terrifying events are unfolding in an old school and five pre-teens must face the many acolytes of a centuries-old evil striving for rebirth in their time, and in their town. The youngsters must band together to thwart this monstrosity, lest it annihilate them, their families, friends, and possibly, the world!

12) A teenaged city girl reluctantly attends summer camp while her parents finalize the details of their divorce. Walking alone in the woods one night, she is attacked and bitten by a werewolf and soon thereafter begins craving raw flesh and experiencing bouts of elevated rage. She meets a mysterious boy who knows a lot about werewolves and together they try to figure out how to stop her lycanthropic transformation. But they only have three months to find a cure, for by the end of summer, she will permanently transform into a monster!

13) On cloudy, rain-drenched Venus, the sun shines for just an hour once every seven years, and a class of students too young to have ever been bathed in sunlight listen while a girl who recently moved to Venus from Earth describes to them the brightness and warmth of the sun. But they disbelieve and antagonize her, and just before the sun comes out, lock her in a closet so that she misses the glorious event. 

14) An alternate-history and sequel to Arthur Conan-Doyle’s The Lost World (1912), in which the events of that early science fiction classic were not fiction, but actually happened. Shortly after World War II, an expedition sets out to return to Conan-Doyle’s famous South American plateau living dinosaurs from the last of the dinosaur circuses. These circuses have fallen out of favour with the public due to a number of unfortunate deaths which resulted when some of the prehistoric beasts escaped their cages. Among this expedition’s compliment are Hollywood filmmakers Willis O’Brien and Ray Harryhausen, whose skills at bringing dinosaurs to life on screen by way of movie special effects was unnecessary in this version of history, and who, here, are simply hoping the plateau will yield interesting subject matter for a film.

15) An imagined account of the philosophical discussions, drug use, mind games, and sexual escapades of leading Romantic poet Lord Byron and the guests he welcomed to a secluded villa he had rented near Lake Geneva, Switzerland, during the incessantly rain-soaked summer of 1816. Byron’s fellow Romantic writer Percy Bysshe Shelley, recent paramour, Claire Claremont, personal physician, John William Polidori, and Claremont’s stepsister, Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin made up the small group, who, when the weather kept them indoors, would amuse themselves with ghost stories, prompting Byron to suggest a contest to see who could write the best gothic horror story. Godwin, shortly to take Shelley’s name in marriage, emerged with what would soon be expanded into her first novel, Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus.

16) Had Jane Austen inserted a touch of magical realism into her fiction, the result might resemble this story, in which magic, or “glamour,” is real in Regency-era England. It is 1816, the historical “Year Without a Summer,” and a husband-and-wife team of master “glamourists,” who manipulate magic to paint with light, creating beautiful visual illusions, have returned from their honeymoon on the continent. While visiting her parents and attractive younger sister in the country, they accept a commission from a prestigious family in London to craft a “glamural,” offering to have the sister travel with them to the city, where the prospects of finding her an available gentlemen suitable for marriage might be improved. There, they soon become involved in the growing unrest surrounding lower class magic workers able to effect thermodynamic transfers of hot and cold air, much as does a refrigerator. These “Coldmongers” are blamed for the unseasonable weather.

17) The lyrical story of a young man who travels far and learns much, forming an oral history of the post-apocalyptic world into which he was born some thousand years after the end of civilization. From his enclave of “Truthful Speakers,” where over the centuries, an exactingly accurate, transparent means of communication has been developed so as to leave no possibility of misunderstanding or deception, he ventures out into the larger world in pursuit of a lost love, discovering the dismal remnants of a civilization only dimly remembered, meeting people simply engaged in living their lives who have forged for themselves in strange and wondrous ways new societies. Ultimately, he becomes a “Saint,” one who speaks not only of his or her own life, but of the human condition.

18) A series of strange occurrences convince counsellors that supernatural evil haunts their seemingly idyllic summer camp.

19) It is revealed to a sixteen-year-old orphan living on the streets that he is the son a Norse god and must retrieve an ancient weapon hidden away, but he dies battling a Fire Giant and is transported to “Hotel Valhalla” by a Valkyrie, where he learns that as an Einherjar—a fallen warrior—he will join others like him in training for Ragnarök. A prophecy, however, confounds matters and with newfound friends, and the enhanced abilities of a demigod, he leaves the hotel to embark on a quest of discovery and adventure, finally returning after successfully restraining the dreaded lupine son of Loki and so thwarting the Water Giant’s plan to hasten the end of the world. Hailed as a hero by Odin, he is offered the chance to return to his mortal life, but declines.

20) A farmer becomes servant to Sir Gawain, renowned Knight of the Round Table, and tells the tale of legendary King Arthur’s ascendancy, of Gawain’s search both for a lost love, and for her forgiveness, and of the shocking discovery that Gawain’s own parents, Morgause and Lot, King and Queen of Orkney, and brother, Mordred, are among the forces gathering to oppose Arthur. The seeds that will ultimately lead to Arthur’s downfall have been planted.

21) A planet’s sentient, dolphin-like beings are hunted to near extinction for the valuable immortality serum in their blood, which is much desired by the off-worlders of the Hegemony, a grouping of seven civilized planets, all that remains of a vast interstellar empire. These aquatic beings prove integral to the maintenance of the fallen empire’s colossal and forgotten network of knowledge as a new ruler strives to unite the Luddite people of this world while advocating against tradition for a technologically advanced society in this multi-layered story of intrigues, betrayals, wonders, secrets, and love.

22) When their parents disappear in the middle of the night, two young sisters set out to find them, following a cryptic clue left by their mother, which leads them to a familiar gate in the woods. But familiar surroundings soon give way to a dark, entirely new world, one of talking birds and an evil Puppeteer Queen. Soon separated, each sister must follow her own heart in the quest to find their parents, vanquish the Puppeteer Queen, and discover the identity of the true Queen of the Birds.

23) Two princes—half-brothers—vie for both a crown and a virginal siren/sorceress born of myth who watches over legendary magical livestock in an enchanted mountain valley and is not averse to a little erotic bathing!

24) An aging Hollywood millionaire striving to discover the secrets of vastly extending one’s natural lifespan finds that an 18th-century English earl has so succeeded, and has been alive for over 200 years! But the method the nobleman employed to extend his life has caused him to devolve, over the years, into an ape-like creature. The millionaire is so desperate to stave off death, however, that he decides to undergo the same treatment regardless.

A) Kingdom of Summer 

B) Summer of the Unicorn

C) Helliconia Summer

D) Six Moon Summer

E) The Sword of Summer 

F) A Shadow in Summer 

G) The Summer Tree 

H) Dinosaur Summer 

I) Engine Summer 

J) Summer Knight

K) Dead of Summer

L) The Summer Witch

M) Without a Summer

N) Skirmish on a Summer Morning

O) Summer and Bird

P) Haunted Summer

Q) The Door into Summer

R) The Summer Queen

S) Summer of Night

T) After Many a Summer

U) Black Summer

V) All Summer in a Day

W) The Last Day of Summer

X) I Know What You Did Last Summer

 

Post 6 of 6: The Wrap!

This is post 6 of 6 this afternoon and will bring to a close our July 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.

10) ANSWERS TO OUR SCI-FI SUMMER QUIZZES!

Summer Sci-Fi QUIZ Number 1

Following are the answers to our first quiz of the afternoon, challenging you to correctly match working titles or production code names with the actual titles of 30 well-known genre films. The answers were given earlier over Zoom during our mid-meeting break, but here they are again, in writing, just in case you missed our live chat.

  1. Monster from Beneath the Sea was the working title of The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953). The original Monster title was abandoned when producers bought the rights to the Ray Bradbury short story upon which the script was loosely based so that they could use Bradbury’s more dynamic Beast title. The author subsequently renamed his famous short story “The Fog Horn.”
  2. Star Beast was the working title for Alien (1979). Screenwriter Dan O’Bannon decided to change the cheesy title, which sounded like that of a cheap B-movie, after reviewing his script and noticing just how many times the word “alien” jumped off the page!
  3. Oliver’s Arrow was the phony title for Inception (2010). This one sounds like a nod to superhero Green Arrow, but the “Oliver” here is director Christopher Nolan’s son. It’s apparently the filmmaker’s habit to use the names of his children as code names for his movies.
  4. A Boy’s Life was, in fact, the Steven Spielberg favourite E. T.: The Extraterrestrial.
  5. Prime Directive was the fake title not of a Star Trek film, but of Michael Bay’s Transformers (2007).
  6. Corporate Headquarters was the fake title of a Star Trek movie, that film being J. J. Abrams’ reboot of the franchise, Star Trek (2009).
  7. Rory’s First Kiss was the code name for The Dark Knight (2008), “Rory,” here, being the oldest of director Christopher Nolan’s sons. The boy appeared briefly in the film.
  8. Magnus Rex was code not for a Jurassic Park movie, but for The Dark Knight Rises (2012), sequel to the aforementioned. This one was named for another of Christopher Nolan’s sons, Magnus.
  9. Changing Seasons was the code name for Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001). To guard against theft, when prints of the movie were delivered to theatres, the film canisters were labelled “Changing Seasons.”
  10. Wimpy was the false title selected by director Alfred Hitchcock for his production, Psycho (1960)! While shooting the thriller, Hitchcock feared that if the actual title became known, audiences might simply read the Robert Block novel of the same name upon which the film was based, and so know how the story ends.
  11. Babysitter Murders was the working title for Halloween (1978), and simply encapsulates the nucleus of this early John Carpenter movie, which inspired many a slasher flick to follow.
  12. House Ghosts was the working title of the fantasy/comedy Beetlejuice (1988). Warner Bros. disliked the title Beetlejuice, strongly favouring the rather pedestrian House Ghosts, much to director Tim Burton’s chagrin. Tongue in cheek, he suggested Scared Sheetless as an alternate, and was mortified when the studio actually gave his suggestion serious consideration! Burton finally put his foot down and the catchy Beetlejuice prevailed.
  13. Rasputin was, in fact, Iron Man 2 (2010). This code name seems to reference history’s infamous “Mad Monk,” who, like the movie’s villain, Ivan Vanko/Whiplash, was Russian.
  14. Frostbite, hinting, perhaps, at the film’s ending, was the code name for Captain America: The First Avenger (2011).
  15. Group Hug was secretly the Marvel superhero team-up The Avengers (2012).
  16. Watch the Skies was the working title for Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977).
  17. Grand Tour was the code name for Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002)
  18. Till Death, For Glory was code for Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003)
  19. Artemis was the code name used for The Hunger Games (2012). In Greek mythology, Artemis is the goddess of the hunt, and is often shown with her bow and arrow, a quiver slung over her shoulder. Similarly depicted was this movie’s heroine, Katniss Everdeen.
  20. Caesar was code for Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011). In the film, Caesar is the name of a laboratory chimpanzee of pharmaceutically enhanced intelligence who leads his fellow apes in revolt against man.
  21. Genre was the code name for Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008). Simple enough!
  22. Autumn Frost was, in fact, Zack Synder’s Man of Steel (2013)
  23. Red Sun was code for Superman Returns (2006), no doubt a riff on the Superman graphic novel Red Son.
  24. Paradox was code for Back to the Future, Part II (1989), referring to a common trope of time travel stories.
  25. Project 880 was, in reality, James Cameron’s bloated sci-fi epic Avatar (2009).
  26. Pacific Air Flight 121 was ever so briefly the studio’s stated title for Snakes on a Plane (2006), which had been the film’s working title throughout much of production. But star Samuel L. Jackson wanted to stick with bluntly descriptive Snakes on a Plane as the final title! “We’re totally changing that back,” he said in an interview at the time of the studio’s pronouncement. “That’s the only reason I took the job: I read the title!”
  27. Incident on 57th Street was the cover name for the first of many Harry Potter sequels, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002). The title was apparently suggested by a Bruce Springsteen song of the same name.
  28. How the Solar System Was Won was, in fact, 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). This code name is a play on the epic Western title How the West Was Won, released a few years prior to Space Odyssey.
  29. Farewell Atlantis was, in actuality, Roland Emmerich’s sci-fi/disaster movie 2012 (2009). John Cusack plays a struggling science fiction writer named Jackson Curtis in the film, and one of his books was entitled Farewell Atlantis.
  30. Yellow Harvest, a wink at the Blue Harvest deception, was really The Simpsons Movie (2007)!
Summer Sci-Fi QUIZ Number 2:

Were you able to correctly match all 24 of the genre films we listed to the works of short fiction upon which they were based? Here are the answers:

1 = X

The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951), adapted for the silver screen from “Farewell to the Master” (novelette, Harry Bates, 1940). This classic SF film was remade in 2008 with Keanu Reeves as alien emissary Klaatu.

2 = Q

Invasion of the Saucer Men (1957), adapted from “The Cosmic Frame” (short story, Paul W. Fairman, 1955). Noted SF fan and memorabilia collector Forrest J Ackerman’s literary agency (Ackerman Science Fiction Agency) handled the sale of the film rights to Fairman’s story. Well-known B-movie special effects technician Paul Blaisdell recalled that the film was initially to have had a serious tone but gradually developed into a hybrid of sci-fi/horror and comedy.

3 = F

Fiend Without a Face (1958), adapted from “The Thought Monster” (short story, Amelia Reynolds Long, 1930). A British independent sci-fi/horror production, the action takes place in the fictional town of Winthrop, Manitoba! Stop-motion animation was employed to bring to life the film’s “brain creatures,” an unusual approach at the time for a low-budget production. Here, too, Forrest J Ackerman served as writer Long’s agent, brokering the sale of her story to the film’s producers.

4 = G

Target Earth (1954), adapted from “Deadly City” (novelette, Paul W. Fairman as Ivar Jorgensen, 1953). A robot army from Venus invades Chicago in this low-budget B-movie. Only one robot suit was fabricated for the production, however—some army! Actor Steve Calvert, who donned the suit during the seven-day shoot, also worked regularly tending bar at the popular Sunset Strip nightclub Ciro’s! Fairman’s story was first published in the March 1953 issue of If magazine under his Ivar Jorgensen pseudonym.

5 = M

Stand by Me (1986), adapted from “The Body” (novella, Stephen King, 1982), featured an outstanding cast of young actors, including future Star Trek star Will Wheaton and teen-aged Indiana Jones River Phoenix.

6 = C

Hellraiser (1987), adapted from “The Hellbound Heart” (novella, Clive Barker, 1986).

7 = R

The 10th Victim (1965), adapted from “Seventh Victim” (short story, Robert Sheckley, 1953), is a sexy, stylish Italian production starring Marcello Mastroianni and Ursula Andress. It was the first movie to feature a televised reality-type killing game and influenced later films of that sub-genre. Andress plays a highly successful “assassin” in a near-future society that satisfies man’s violent tendencies and mitigates war by sponsoring “The Big Hunt,” a globally popular game of stalkers and prey. She has negotiated a lucrative corporate endorsement deal with the Ming Tea Company as she pursues her tenth and final victim. According to comedian Mike Myers, Ming Tea, the groovy ’60s band fronted by Myers’ super-spy Austin Powers in his comedic film series, derived its name from this same company!

8 = V

John Carpenter’s They Live (1988), adapted from “Eight O’Clock in the Morning” (short story, Ray Nelson as Ray Faraday Nelson, 1963).

9 = B

The Beast Must Die (1974), adapted from “There Shall Be No Darkness” (novelette, James Blish, 1950). 

10 = U

Die, Monster, Die! (1965), adapted from “The Colour Out of Space” (short story, H. P. Lovecraft, 1927).

11 = O
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Total Recall (1990), adapted from “We Can Remember It for You Wholesale” (short story, Philip K. Dick, 1966).

12 = S

The Thing from Another World (1951), adapted from “Who Goes There?” (novella, John W. Campbell, Jr. as Don A. Stuart, 1946). Subsequent adaptation The Thing (1982) and its prequel, also entitled The Thing (2011), adhered more closely to the source material than had Howard Hawks’ original classic. 

13 = E

She Devil (1957), adapted from “The Adaptive Ultimate” (short story, Stanley G. Weinbaum, 1935). “They created an inhuman being who destroyed everything she touched!” screamed the tagline advertising this film starring beautiful femme-fatale Mari Blanchard, a B-movie screen siren of the 1950s and early ’60s.

14 = J

Slave Girls From Beyond Infinity (1987), adapted from “The Most Dangerous Game” (short story, Richard Connell, 1924). Considered one of the most popular English-language short stories ever written, this story has been adapted many times over the decades, including as action/thriller, horror/suspense, and science fiction; this particular adaptation is a sci-fi sexploitation schlocker!

15 = K

Arrival (2016), adapted from “Story of Your Life” (novella, Ted Chiang, 1998).

16 = T

The Turning (2020), adapted from “The Turn of the Screw” (novella, Henry James, 1898).

17 = D

Millennium (1989), adapted from “Air Raid” (short story, John Varley, 1977). The story was later expanded as a screenplay, which was eventually released as the novel Millennium (1983); both novel and film are considered based upon the original short story.

18 = L

Death Race 2000 (1975), adapted from “The Racer” (short story, Ib Melchior, 1953). The Roger Corman-produced original was remade as Death Race (2008), spawning a franchise. Corman returned to the concept with Roger Corman’s Death Race 2050, a sequel to his original.

19 = I

A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001), adapted from “Super-Toys Last All Summer Long” (short story, Brian W. Aldiss, 1969).

20 = P

Charly (1968), adapted from “Flowers for Algernon” (short story, Daniel Keyes, 1959). Keyes later expanded his short story into a novel of the same name (1966).

21 = N

The Haunted Palace (1963), adapted from “The Case of Charles Dexter Ward” (novella, H. P. Lovecraft, written 1927, first published, in abridged form, 1941). While considered part of director Roger Corman’s series of films based on the works of Edgar Allan Poe, and marketed as such, the plot is unmistakably taken from the Lovecraft story, despite the film bearing the title of a like-named Poe poem.

22 = H

Maximum Overdrive (1986), adapted from “Trucks” (short story, Stephen King, 1973). King himself directed the film!

23 = A

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), inspired by “The Sentinel” (short story, Arthur C. Clarke, written 1948, first published as “Sentinel of Eternity,” 1951). Clarke’s dissent on the topic aside, the short story is considered by most critics and scholars as the starting point for what became both the film and novel 2001: A Space Odyssey.

24 = W

The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms (1953), adapted from “The Fog Horn” (short story, Ray Bradbury, 1951). Bradbury’s story, first published in the Saturday Evening Post, loosely served as the basis for this film. The short story was originally titled “The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms” and, wishing to capitalize on Bradbury’s name, the film’s producers bought the rights to the story and changed their movie’s working title, Monster From Beneath the Sea, to The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms. Bradbury then changed the title of his story to “The Fog Horn.” His boyhood friend Ray Harryhausen designed and executed the stop-motion special effects for the film. Beast is often cited as the inspiration for Gojira (1954; U.S. title, Godzilla) and other giant monster movies of the atom age.

11) 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 regular, face-to-face meetings. Thank you for your interest and attention, and don’t forget to comment on today’s meeting!

We’d like to thank our special guest speaker this afternoon, François Vigneault, as well as presenters Joe Aspler and Danny Sichel for their contributions this afternoon. A thank-you, also, is due Quiz Master Keith Braithwaite and Meeting Coordinator Cathy Palmer-Lister for putting this July 10, 2021 DIY, Virtual MonSFFA e-Meeting together, with a nod, as well, to our supporting contributors.

Until next month, when we will gather virtually once more on August 14, please continue to exercise all recommended safety practices, and get your shots as soon as possible! The sun has come out, in fact as well as metaphorically, and we’re almost there!

12) MEMBERSHIP RENEWALS

Just a closing reminder to 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 July 2020, that’s been bumped up a year to July 2021. If your fees were due last August, they are now due this upcoming August; September 2020 shifts to September 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.

Post 1 of 6: Introduction

This is post 1 of 6 related posts which together make up our July 10, 2021, DIY, MonSFFA e-Meeting!

1) ZOOM CHAT OPENS RIGHT NOW!

We officially open today’s Zoom chat now, at 1:00PM, the exact 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 latest in sci-fi, discuss today’s presentations and ask questions directly of our presenters.

To join our Zoom session today, click below 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: 831 5550 8837
Passcode: 456227

 

Summer Sci-Fi QUIZ Number 1

Star Wars: Episode VI—Return of the Jedi famously filmed under the title Blue Harvest. Big-budget franchise movies in particular often use a false title or code name while in production so as to deter unwanted attention. Blue Harvest was supposedly a horror movie; fake marketing materials sported the slogan “Horror Beyond Imagination” and the production crew even wore Blue Harvest T-shirts! The idea was to throw off the scent any overly curious fans or nosy entertainment journalists eager to uncover spoilers and let the cat out of the bag. In this modern age of social media, especially, movie studios will go to great lengths in order to keep things a secret until a film is released.

Rival studios looking to pilfer plot twists, rip off a successful franchise and open a competing film first, or swipe a really cool title, are also thus deceived. So are any suppliers only too ready to overcharge when they know they’re dealing with the producers of a big-budget franchise like Star Wars rather than a run-of-the-mill horror movie production called Blue Harvest.

And sometimes, it’s simply that a final title has yet to be selected, and cast and crew labour under a “working title.”

Below is a list of 30 code names or working titles used by the producers of well-known genre movies. Can you name the actual film title to which each refers? We’ll reveal at least some of the answers in our Zoom get-together during the mid-meeting break, and list all of answers in our final post of the afternoon (5:00PM), for anyone who may have missed the live online chat.

  1. Monster from Beneath the Sea
  2. Star Beast
  3. Oliver’s Arrow
  4. A Boy’s Life
  5. Prime Directive
  6. Corporate Headquarters
  7. Rory’s First Kiss
  8. Magnus Rex
  9. Changing Seasons
  10. Wimpy
  11. Babysitter Murders
  12. House Ghosts
  13. Rasputin
  14. Frostbite
  15. Group Hug
  16. Watch the Skies
  17. Grand Tour
  18. Till Death, For Glory
  19. Artemis
  20. Caesar
  21. Genre
  22. Autumn Frost
  23. Red Sun
  24. Paradox
  25. Project 880
  26. Pacific Air Flight 121
  27. Incident on 57th Street
  28. How the Solar System Was Won
  29. Farewell Atlantis
  30. Yellow Harvest

3) TODAY’S MEETING: INTRODUCTION

We’ve got a busy, busy agenda, today, so we’ll get right to it!

Just real quick, suffice it to say that the inoculation programs across the land are unfolding quite successfully, and the country now stands at about 40 percent of Canadians fully vaxxed! Authorities expect to achieve stated vaccination goals well ahead of initial projections. Meanwhile, things are getting back to normal and many of the safety restrictions we’ve all been living with for over a year, now, have been relaxed or lifted.

As we gather online for this month’s virtual club meeting, we take a moment to encourage all MonSFFen, if they haven’t already, to book their second vaccine shot as soon as possible, 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 many restrictions are removed, it is important that we not let up quite yet on those recommended safety protocols that do remain in place. The nasty variants, as always, a still a concern, but seem to be in check at the moment, which is good!

This is our 16th 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 5:00PM. 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 welcome a special guest speaker via Zoom, local sci-fi cartoonist François Vigneault, author of the graphic novel Titan and the monthly comedic series Orcs in Space (click here to visit François’ Web site). We’ll also be looking at the actors who have portrayed Doctor Who over the decades, and talk Shakespeare in SF! All that and more over the next few hours!

As we cannot quite, with complete safety for all, yet assemble in larger numbers indoors, this July 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.

4) MEETING AGENDA

 In This Afternoon’s Virtual Meeting:

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

1) Zoom Chat Opens

2) Summer Sci-Fi Quiz Number 1

3) Today’s Meeting: Introduction

4) Meeting Agenda

5) Summer Sci-Fi Quiz Number 2

1:30PM, Post 2 of 6  (Who’s on First?)

6) Presentation: Doctor Who’s Who: Guide to the Doctors Before Who and After Who!

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

7) Mid-Meeting Break (Display Table, Raffle, Zoom Continues, What Are You Reading?)

3:00PM, Post 4 of 6 (Guest Speaker!)

8) A Zoom Conversation with Local Sci-Fi Cartoonist François Vigneault (Titan, Orcs in Space)! 

4:00PM, Post 5 of 6 (“And Thereby Hangs a Tale…”)

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5:00PM, Post 6 of 6 (Wrap-Up)

10) Answers to Our Summer Sci-Fi Quizzes!

11) Thank-You!

12) Membership Renewals

 

5) Summer Sci-Fi QUIZ Number 2:

 As sci-fi film fans know, Ridley Scott’s 1982 classic Blade Runner was based on Philip K. Dick’s 1968 novel, “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?” Many if not most films are derived from a published work of fiction. And said work is not necessarily a full novel! Often, a short story or other short-form piece is all that’s needed to inspire a producer to make a movie.

Our second challenge to those of you joining us for this afternoon’s MonSFFA e-meeting is to correctly match the genre film (Blue List) to the work of short fiction upon which it was based (Beige List). Answers will be published later this afternoon, in the meeting’s closing post (5:00PM).

  1. The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951)
  2. Invasion of the Saucer Men (1957)
  3. Fiend Without a Face (1958)
  4. Target Earth (1954)
  5. Stand by Me (1986)
  6. Hellraiser (1987)
  7. The 10th Victim (1965)
  8. John Carpenter’s They Live (1988)
  9. The Beast Must Die (1974)
  10. Die, Monster, Die! (1965)
  11. Total Recall (1990)
  12. The Thing from Another World (1951)
  13. She Devil (1957)
  14. Slave Girls From Beyond Infinity (1987)
  15. Arrival (2016)
  16. The Turning (2020)
  17. Millennium (1989)
  18. Death Race 2000 (1975)
  19. A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001)
  20. Charly (1968)
  21. The Haunted Palace (1963)
  22. Maximum Overdrive (1986)
  23. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
  24. The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms (1953)

A) “The Sentinel” (short story, Arthur C. Clarke, written 1948, first published as “Sentinel of Eternity,” 1951)

B) “There Shall Be No Darkness” (novelette, James Blish, 1950)

C) “The Hellbound Heart” (novella, Clive Barker, 1986)

D) “Air Raid” (short story, John Varley, 1977)

E) “The Adaptive Ultimate” (short story, Stanley G. Weinbaum, 1935)

F) “The Thought Monster” (short story, Amelia Reynolds Long, 1930)

G) “Deadly City” (novelette, Paul W. Fairman as Ivar Jorgensen, 1953)

H) “Trucks” (short story, Stephen King, 1973)

I) “Super-Toys Last All Summer Long” (short story, Brian W. Aldiss, 1969)

J) “The Most Dangerous Game” (short story, Richard Connell, 1924)

K) “Story of Your Life” (novella, Ted Chiang, 1998)

L) “The Racer” (short story, Ib Melchior, 1953)

M) “The Body” (novella, Stephen King, 1982)

N) “The Case of Charles Dexter Ward” (novella, H. P. Lovecraft, written 1927, first published, in abridged form, 1941)

O) “We Can Remember It for You Wholesale” (short story, Philip K. Dick, 1966)

P) “Flowers for Algernon” (short story, Daniel Keyes, 1959)

Q) “The Cosmic Frame” (short story, Paul W. Fairman, 1955)

R) “Seventh Victim” (short story, Robert Sheckley, 1953)

S) “Who Goes There?” (novella, John W. Campbell, Jr. as Don A. Stuart, 1946)

T) “The Turn of the Screw” (novella, Henry James, 1898)

U) “The Colour Out of Space” (short story, H. P. Lovecraft, 1927)

V) “Eight O’Clock in the Morning” (short story, Ray Nelson as Ray Faraday Nelson, 1963)

W) “The Fog Horn” (short story, Ray Bradbury, 1951)

X) “Farewell to the Master” (novelette, Harry Bates, 1940)

 

 

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

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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 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!

MonSFFA e-Meeting This Saturday!

MonSFFA’s next virtual meeting will take place this Saturday, June 12, beginning at 1:00PM, and you are invited to check it out!

As always, we’ll be posting on the club’s Web site throughout the afternoon a variety of interesting and entertaining presentations. In tandem, we’ll also host a Zoom get-together throughout the course of the afternoon so that folk may chat and discuss with, or ask questions of our presenters directly on the agenda topics!

Our June 2021 meeting will offer as principal programming first an overview of the career of foremost “visual futurist” Syd Mead, and an appreciation of his artwork!

Mead is regarded as one of the most influential industrial designers and concept artists of the modern age. He has been described as “the artist who illustrates the future,” and for some 60 years beginning in the late 1950s, his outstanding design work, architectural drawings, and striking concept illustrations for the automotive, consumer electronics, and steel industries, as well as for some of Hollywood’s most prominent science fiction films, have been termed “reality ahead of schedule.” Mead’s sleek, ultramodern styling has defined a technological future that continues to influence contemporary designers and filmmakers.

We’ll also have some fun with an exploration of the bars, taverns, lounges, and saloons of SF/F, from The Prancing Pony in Bree to Callahan’s Place to Star Trek’s Ten Forward to that seedy cantina on Tatooine!

These establishments are convivial places for an adventurer, space-farer, swordsman, or warrior to sip a whiskey and soda, quaff some ale, enjoy warm blood wine, or an iced raktajino! So raise a glass of your favourite and come hear tales of hard science fiction, or of the mysteries of magic swords; tales that might begin with “A science fiction writer walks into a bar…”

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And don’t forget to tip your bartender, Barliman Butterbur, Mike Callahan, Guinan, and especially Quark!

We’ve also booked a couple of our sci-fi scale model-builders for a Show-and-Tell, and arranged for a live “fancrafting” demonstration of pyrography!

Be advised that at this point in the meeting, we will be allowing Linzi to wield a red-hot metal poker! What could possibly go wrong?

All of that, and more…

So don’t miss MonSFFA’s June 12, 2021 e-Meeting, beginning 1:00PM this Saturday at: www.MonSFFA.ca

 

Post 6 of 6: Wrap-Up

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

12) MORE STAR WARS DAD JOKES!

Here’s another baker’s-dozen of cheesy Star Wars dad jokes!

1) Darth Vader walks into a vegetarian restaurant, seats himself, and peruses the menu. He calls a waiter over and says, “I find your lack of steak disturbing!”

2) Biology question: what is the internal temperature of a Tauntaun?… Lukewarm!

3) How long has Anakin Skywalker been evil?… Since the Sith grade!

4) How did Darth Vader know what he was getting for Christmas?… He felt his presents!

5) Does R2D2 have any brothers?… No, just transistors!

6) Is BB hungry?… No, BB-8!

7) Darth Vader cheats at poker! He always wins because he alters the deal!

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9) What is Chewbacca’s favourite Web site?… Wookieeleaks!

10) What is Jabba the Hutt’s middle name?… The!

11) What do you call a droid that takes the long way around?… R2 Detour!

12) Darth Vader and the Emperor attend a Star Wars collectibles auction. Vader turns to the Emperor and asks, “What is thy bidding, my master?”

13) Why did Chapters 4, 5, and 6 come out before Chapters 1, 2, and 3?… Because in charge of the release schedule Yoda was!

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 pandemic, 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 offerings!

We’d also like to thank Joe Aspler, Keith Braithwaite, and Cathy Palmer-Lister for putting this May 8, 2021 DIY, Virtual MonSFFA Meeting together, with a nod, as well, to our supporting contributors today.

Until next month, when we will gather virtually once again, please continue to exercise all recommended safety practises, and get your shots as soon as the vaccination is made available to you! Continued patience, discipline, and emotional fortitude is key to seeing us all safely through these final months of the pandemic. Stay strong!