The films of Jonathan Demme (b. 1944) reflect his ebullient
personality and are often infused with his love for Caribbean
culture, pop music, fashion, and characters who reveal offbeat
tastes and depths. He emerged from the 1970s American Renaissance
that produced Robert Altman, Francis Ford Coppola, Steven
Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, Brian De Palma, and others. His movies
are funny, humane, and often unclassifiable by genre.
With conversations from the 1970s to the present, "Jonathan
Demme: Interviews" focuses on Demme's artistry, on his filmmaking
philosophy, and especially on his progressive social and political
concerns and how these have influenced the subject matter he has
chosen to film.
Although best known for his Oscar-winning dramas "The Silence of
the Lambs" and "Philadelphia," Demme has also achieved acclaim for
comedies ("Married to the Mob"; "Something Wild"), documentaries
("The Agronomist"; "My Cousin Bobby"; "Jimmy Carter: Man from
Plains"), and concert performance films ("Stop Making Sense"; "Neil
Young: Heart of Gold"). In this volume, he discusses his troubles
with studios, his need to balance documentaries with fiction films,
his early work as a critic and publicist, and his apprenticeship
with Roger Corman working on "B" movies.
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