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A Problem with Fear
Mark sits down for this latest SF movie and discovers a quirky
science fiction film with some odd approaches, including a man-made
'fear storm'.
A PROBLEM WITH FEAR (film review
by Mark R. Leeper): Rating: +1 (-4 to +4)
This
is a quirky science fiction film with some odd approaches. The viewer
never knows what is going on. Something is being done to the people
in a major Canadian city.
We know who is responsible for the strange things
we are seeing but not how they are doing it or even what it is they
are doing. What is happening is a man-made "fear storm." People
are letting their fears - any kind of fears - get the better of
them.
There are strange incidents of bad luck and they
become front-page news. The phobic Laurie Harding (played by Paulo
Constanzo) is the center of this fear storm. Listing Laurie's fears
could go on for a long time. He fears escalators, pasta with red
sauces, elevators, just about everything.
He is the perfect customer for Global Security
Corporation, a corporation that monitors their customers, predicts
accidents, and dispatches police where needed. The system is called
Early Warning System 2. It has made Global Security a powerful international
corporation. The fear storm is not a chance event.
It is all a plot. Global Security is secretly producing
the fear storm to boost sales. And Laurie is somehow the eye of
the storm and we follow him and his insecure girlfriend Dot (Emily
Hampshire), a sociology student, to whom he is afraid to commit.
Laurie is protected by his security system, but
it seems to distribute bad luck to all those around him. And there
is a strange man who seems to know Laurie is doing this and is chasing
Laurie, trying to convince him to kill himself.
The city is paralyzed with strange fear and the
stock market is crashing. Newspapers are taking freak accidents
and turning them into banner headlines. When one high school girl
get the hiccups, it becomes an epidemic of mass hysteria. So much
is unexplained the film has aspects of both weird comedy and horror.
Certainly the acting and characterizations are
in a tongue-in-cheek style to keep the nightmarish potential in
check. So what is this all about? The director says it is about
people dominated by fears. Perhaps it is making a statement about
the post-9/11 United States, but the film's incoherence gets in
its way.
It is more a set of strange off-the-wall sketches.
Director Gary Burns shot a large part of the film in a shopping
mall, much like his WAYDOWNTOWN.
This is a film with some interesting ideas but
the film's elliptical approach limits its appeal. (Although this
film supposedly is set in Canada, the local TV station is KPYT,
call letters that would be assigned only to a station in the United
States.)
Mark R. Leeper
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OTHER CONTENT - March 2004
Jensen Intercepted Author Jane Jensen on her near-future thriller, Dante's Equation. With clever science, baffling Torah code, devious secret agents and just a little bit of romance, what more could you want from a book? (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
Embracing the Zahn Side Author Timothy Zahn interviewed on creating alien characters and races, his returning to the Star Wars universe, and his new young-adult Dragonback series ... that's fantasy you know, if the title wasn't a bit of a giveaway. (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
The Troubles of Time Travel Anne Groell, senior editor at the Bantam Spectra publishing imprint, ruminates on the time in every science fiction editor's life when one has to edit the dread 'Time Travel' novel. Yikes, move over, Terminator ... (COMMENT)
Finding Philcon Evelyn drops by Philcon 2003, and finds the answers to some thorny questions at the convention. Like why hasn't Lovecraft spawned a good movie yet, and just why do conventional SFF publishers miss so much of the good stuff? (CONVENTION REPORTS)
The Offworld Report March 04: Science Fiction and Fantasy Interviews with authors Spider Robinson, Jack McDevitt, Rob Grant, Gene Wolfe, Robert Holdstock, is Asimov's magazine really full of stories that make minors quake and parents faint, and Robert Silverberg take a sophisticated look at Sophocles of Athens in, err, that old razz mag Asimovs? (NEWS)
The Offworld Report March 04: Weird Science Is Europa corrosive, Black hole found ripping a star apart, a prescription for fixing NASA, the first robot Humvee (hello Mr Knight) and why the Pentagon is preparing for a war in space. (NEWS)
Re-thinking Re-imagining (or B.S. Galactica) Joseph Nanni on why re-imagining classic SFF television series is enough to shrivel the soul of any true fan. Hmmm. Battlestar Galactica anyone? (COMMENT)
A Problem with Fear Mark sits down for this latest SF movie and discovers a quirky science fiction film with some odd approaches, including a man-made 'fear storm'. (FILM REVIEWS)
Code 46 In this movie Mark finds a very odd piece of science fiction; it is a film with some very nice material that tries some interesting ideas, but ultimately Code 46 fails to capture the viewer. (FILM REVIEWS)
Six Lost Worlds: The Dramatic Adaptations of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Novel Mark imagines a place so isolated from the world that it was beyond the reach even of the forces of evolution ... where on one plateau deep in the Amazon rain forest there is a land that has withstood the ravages of time. Bring on those dinosaurs and prehistoric proto-humans. (FILM REVIEWS)
Open Letter to an Open Enemy Scots SFF author Ken MacLeod has written science fiction novels which make frequent passing reference to the Soviet Union, Lenin, Trotsky, and communism. But he does not regard Lenin as a mass murderer, any more than he regards Cromwell, Napoleon, Lincoln, Roosevelt or Churchill as mass murderers. Read why here ... (COMMENT)
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