The New Biographical Dictionary Of Film 5Th Ed
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4.0 • 1 Rating
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- £2.99
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- £2.99
Publisher Description
This book is both more and less than history, a work of imagination in its own right, a piece of movie literature that turns fact into romance.' Gavin Lambert was reviewing the first edition of David Thomson's monumental work in 1975. In the eight years since the third edition was published, careers have waxed and waned, reputations been made and lost, great movies produced, trends set and scorned.
This fourth edition has 200 entirely new entries and every original entry has been re-examined. Thus the roster of directors, actors, producers, screenwriters and cameramen is both historical and contemporary, with old masters reappraised in terms of how their work has lasted.
Each of the 1,000 profiles is a keenly perceptive, provocative critical essay. Striking the perfect balance between personal bias and factual reliability, David Thomson - novelist, critic, biographer and unabashed film addict - has given us an enormously rich reference book, a brilliant reflection on the art and artists of the cinema.
Customer Reviews
fascinating, illuminating, argumentative
Thomson is a real writer. This isn't a book of biographical summaries but a learned, elegant and very opinionated set of essays. If you love film you will probably want to throw it across the room once or twice, but in return you'll get a fascinating, eloquent read from someone who knows film better. There are many omissions (you'll find yours), but there would have to be. On the other hand, there are cool yet emotive essays on some of the true greats: anyone who calls Chris Marker 'maestro' is OK by me. One to get lost in.