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Film is Like a Battleground - Sam Fuller's War Movies (Hardcover)
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Film is Like a Battleground - Sam Fuller's War Movies (Hardcover)
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Film is Like a Battleground: Sam Fuller's War Movies is the first
book to focus on the genre that best defined the American
director's career: the war film. It draws on previously unexplored
archival materials, such as Fuller's Federal Bureau of
Investigation files and WWII-era amateur films, to explore the
director's lifelong interest in making challenging,
thought-provoking, and often politically dangerous movies about
war. After establishing the roots of Fuller's cinematographic
schooling in the trenches during World War II, including careful
consideration of his 16mm footage of a Nazi camp at the end of that
war, Film is Like a Battleground explores Fuller's first forays
into hot war representation in Hollywood with the pioneering Korean
conflict films The Steel Helmet (1951) and Fixed Bayonets (1951).
This pair of films introduced Fuller to his first run-ins with the
American political machine when they triggered both FBI and
Department of Defense investigations into his political sympathies
and affiliations. Fuller's cold war films Pickup on South Street
(1953) and, though it veers into hot war territory, Hell and High
Water (1954) are Fuller's responses to the political pressures he
had now personally experienced and resented. A chapter on Fuller's
representation of pre-American-invasion Vietnam in China Gate
(1957) alongside his unrealized Vietnam war screenplay, The Rifle
(ca. late 1960s), illustrates the degree to which Fuller's
representation of war and nation shifted even as he continued to
probe war's impossible contradictions. Film is Like a Battleground
would be incomplete without a thorough exploration of the films
depicting the war Fuller personally experienced and spent a
lifetime contemplating, WWII. Verboten! (1959), Merrill's
Marauder's (1962), and The Big Red One (1980) demonstrate Fuller's
representation of a morally justifiable war. Fuller's 1959 CBS
television pilot-Dogface-offers a glimpse at one of Fuller's failed
attempts to bring his WWII story into American living rooms. The
book concludes with a chapter about a documentary film made late in
the director's life that returns Fuller to the actual site of the
Nazi's Falkenau camp, at which he discusses his experiences there
and that powerful, unforgettable footage he shot in the spring of
1945.
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