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Shadows (Paperback, 2001 ed.)
Loot Price: R357
Discovery Miles 3 570
You Save: R29
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Shadows (Paperback, 2001 ed.)
Series: BFI Film Classics
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List price R386
Loot Price R357
Discovery Miles 3 570
You Save R29 (8%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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John Cassavetes' "Shadows" is generally regarded as the start of
the independent feature movement in America. Made for $40,000 with
a nonprofessional cast and crew and borrowed equipment, the film
caused a sensation on its London release in 1960. The film traces
the lives of three siblings in an African-American family: Hugh, a
struggling jazz singer, attempting to obtain a job and hold onto
his dignity; Ben, a Beat drifter who goes from one fight and
girlfriend to another; and Lelia, who has a brief love affair with
a white boy who turns on her when he discovers her race. In a
delicate, semi-comic drama of self-discovery, the main characters
are forced to explore who they are and what really matters in their
lives. "Shadows" ends with the title card 'The film you have just
seen was an improvisation,' and for decades was hailed as a
masterpiece of spontaneity, but shortly before Cassavetes' death,
he confessed to Ray Carney something he had never before revealed -
that much of the film was scripted. He told him that it was shot
twice and that the scenes in the second version were written by him
and Robert Alan Aurthur, a professional Hollywood screenwriter. For
Carney, it was Cassavetes' Rosebud. He spent ten years tracking
down the surviving members of the cast and crew, and piecing
together the true story of the making of the film. Carney takes the
reader behind the scenes to follow every step in the making of the
movie - chronicling the hopes and dreams, the struggles and
frustrations, and the ultimate triumph of the collaboration that
resulted in one of the seminal masterworks of American independent
filmmaking. Highlights of the presentation are more than
30illustrations (including the only existing photographs of the
dramatic workshop Cassavetes ran in the late fifties and of the
stage on which much of "Shadows" was shot, and a still showing a
scene from the 'lost' first version of the film); and statements by
many of the film's actors and crew members detailing previously
unknown events during its creation. One of the most interesting and
original aspects of the book is an nine-page Appendix that
'reconstructs' much of the lost first version of the film for the
first time. The Appendix points out more than 100 previously
unrecognized differences between the 1957 and 1959 shoots, all of
which are identified in detail both by the scene and the time at
which they occur in the current print of the movie (so that they
may be easily located on videotape or DVD by anyone viewing the
film). By comparing the two versions, the Appendix allows the
reader to eavesdrop on Cassavetes' process of revision and watch
his mind at work as he re-thought, re-shot, re-edited his movie.
None of this information, which Carney spent more than five years
compiling, has ever appeared in print before (and, as the
presentation reveals, the few studies that have attempted to deal
with this issue prior to this are proved to have been completely
mistaken in their assumptions). The comparison of the versions and
the treatment of Cassavetes' revisionary process is definitive and
final, for all time.
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