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Accidental Genius features intimate and laugh-out-loud commentary
from The Room cast and crew, including interviews from its star
Greg Sestero. What a story indeed! A rollicking recollection of
experiences from the legendary "so bad it's good" film. This
comprehensively chronicled book offers a fascinating glimpse into
the cultural phenomenon that brings together die-hard fans and
newcomers alike. Everything you could have possibly wondered about
The Room all in one book! Take a look at Tommy Wiseau's infamous
2003 release through the eyes of the people who made it. Get the
low-down on bizarre audition calls, film set antics, and accounts
from the very first fans who experienced The Room at its earliest
screenings. Also including interviews focusing on the aftermath of
the movie: Sestero's The Disaster Artist, where are they now, and
its lasting legacy. Here you will get a glimpse of how it all
began, why it remains popular, and just what audiences still get
out of this unusual film that people love to hate.
American crime novelist Elmore Leonard (1925-2013) has a voice that
is original and immediately recognizable. This collection of
original interviews with fellow authors, filmmakers, collaborators
and critics covers all things Leonard, from analyses of
characterization and dialogue in his writing to his many screen
adaptations. What makes Leonard's work more cinematic than that of
other talented contemporaries is his deceptively simplistic method
of description that still manages to paint a vivid picture in the
reader's mind. The unique perspectives in this collection discuss
many of Leonard's 44 novels, including those that have been adapted
to television and motion pictures like Get Shorty, Out of Sight,
and Jackie Brown.
Joe R. Lansdale (b. 1951), the award-winning author of such novels
as Cold in July (1989) and The Bottoms (2000), as well as the
popular Hap and Leonard series, has been publishing novels since
1981. Lansdale has developed a tremendous cult audience willing to
follow him into any genre he chooses to write in, including horror,
western, crime, adventure, and fantasy. Within these genres, his
stories, novels, and novellas explore friendship, race, and life in
East Texas. His distinctive voice is often funny and always unique,
as characterized by such works as Bubba Ho-Tep (1994), a novella
that centers on Elvis Presley, his friend who believes himself to
be John F. Kennedy, and a soul-sucking ancient mummy. This same
novella won a Bram Stoker Award, one of the ten Bram Stoker Awards
given to Lansdale thus far in his illustrious career. Wielding a
talent that extends beyond the page to the screen, Landsdale has
also written episodes for Batman: The Animated Series and Superman:
The Animated Series. Conversations with Joe R. Lansdale brings
together interviews from newspapers, magazines, and podcasts
conducted throughout the prolific author's career. The collection
includes conversations between Lansdale and other noted peers like
Robert McCammon and James Grady; two podcast transcripts that have
never before appeared in print; and a brand-new interview,
exclusive to the volume. In addition to shedding light on his body
of literary work and process as a writer, this collection also
shares Lansdale's thoughts on comics, atheism, and martial arts.
In 1973, early in their careers, Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro
collaborated for the first time. Over the next few decades, they
worked together on seven more movies, many of which brought them
both acclaim and awards. And while successful director and actor
pairings have occurred throughout the history of film, few have
fashioned so many works of enduring value as these two artists. In
little more than two decades, Scorsese and De Niro produced eight
features, including the classics Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, and
GoodFellas. In The Films of Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro,
Andrew J. Rausch examines the creative output of this remarkable
pair, from their initial offering, Mean Streets, to their most
recent film together, Casino. Rausch looks at their relationship as
individual artists who worked together to create cinematic magic,
as well as the friendship that was forged nearly 40 years ago.
Drawing upon interviews and other sources, Rausch goes behind the
scenes of their eight films, providing insight and analysis on all
their collaborations, including New York, New York, The King of
Comedy, and Cape Fear. A rare glimpse into the moviemaking process
of these two legends, The Films of Martin Scorsese and Robert De
Niro will appeal to both scholars and fans alike.
In 1958, Gary Graver moved from his hometown of Portland, Oregon to
Los Angeles, California with dreams of an acting career in
Hollywood. Soon after his arrival, he caught a double bill in a
small theater on Hollywood Boulevard, the lower half of which was
the recently released Touch of Evil. Upon viewing the B classic,
Graver decided he wanted to be a director and spent many years
honing his craft, as both a cinematographer and a director, not to
mention writer, actor, and producer-much like his idol, Orson
Welles. In 1970, when Graver learned that Welles was in town, he
impulsively called up the director and offered him his services as
a cameraman. It was only the second time in Welles's career that he
had received such an offer from a cinematographer, the other being
from Gregg Toland, who worked on one of the greatest films ever,
Citizen Kane. In Making Movies with Orson Welles, Graver recounts
the highs and lows of the moviemaking business as he and one of the
most important and influential directors of all time struggled to
get films produced. The two men collaborated on more than a dozen
projects, including F for Fake, Filming Othello, and the
still-unreleased The Other Side of the Wind. Their close friendship
and creative filmmaking partnership would endure for 15 years,
until Welles' death in 1985. Also including a filmography of works
and 20 photos from Graver's personal collection, this fascinating
memoir recalls what it was like to work with the legendary Welles
and offers advice and tales of caution for future filmmakers.
"What is Hip-Hop?" In order to answer this question, author Andrew
J. Rausch interviewed 24 individuals whose creative expressions are
intimately associated with the world of hip-hop music and culture.
Those interviewed include emcees, DJs, producers, graffiti artists,
poets, and journalists. Topics of these conversations cover the
careers of each of these people and their
contributions/affiliations with hip-hop, as well as their views on
different trends within the music. Intended as a celebration of
hip-hop music and culture, this collection of interviews ranges
from the up-and-coming (Akrobatik, Rob Kelly) to the legendary
(Chuck D, Big Daddy Kane). Also interviewed are Eric B., Black
Sheep Dres, Chip Fu, Michael Cirelli, Daddy-O, DJ JS-1, dream
hampton, Kokane, Kool Keith, Kool Rock Ski, Keith Murray, 9th
Wonder, Paradime, R.A. the Rugged Man, Sadat X, Shock G, Special
Ed, Spinderella, Sticky Fingaz, and Young MC. Because many of these
artists worked and performed in the so-called "golden age" of
hip-hop, they offer insights on the merits and problems of what
hip-hop has grown into today. From their candid observations, the
reader will understand how each of these men and women have
contributed to the culture and how each, in his or her own way, can
rightly answer "I AM hip-hop."
Joe R. Lansdale (b. 1951), the award-winning author of such novels
as Cold in July (1989) and The Bottoms (2000), as well as the
popular Hap and Leonard series, has been publishing novels since
1981. Lansdale has developed a tremendous cult audience willing to
follow him into any genre he chooses to write in, including horror,
western, crime, adventure, and fantasy. Within these genres, his
stories, novels, and novellas explore friendship, race, and life in
East Texas. His distinctive voice is often funny and always unique,
as characterized by such works as Bubba Ho-Tep (1994), a novella
that centers on Elvis Presley, his friend who believes himself to
be John F. Kennedy, and a soul-sucking ancient mummy. This same
novella won a Bram Stoker Award, one of the ten Bram Stoker Awards
given to Lansdale thus far in his illustrious career. Wielding a
talent that extends beyond the page to the screen, Landsdale has
also written episodes for Batman: The Animated Series and Superman:
The Animated Series. Conversations with Joe R. Lansdale brings
together interviews from newspapers, magazines, and podcasts
conducted throughout the prolific author's career. The collection
includes conversations between Lansdale and other noted peers like
Robert McCammon and James Grady; two podcast transcripts that have
never before appeared in print; and a brand-new interview,
exclusive to the volume. In addition to shedding light on his body
of literary work and process as a writer, this collection also
shares Lansdale's thoughts on comics, atheism, and martial arts.
Stephen King is one of the most successful authors in the history
of American literature. His books-including 55 novels, 12 novellas,
nine short story collections and a children's book-have sold 350
million copies worldwide. Over the past five decades his broader
impact on popular culture has been immense. Most of his works have
been adapted for film or television (some of them by King himself)
and he may fairly be credited with single-handedly reinventing
horror, once considered a B movie genre, for mainstream audiences.
This collection of original interviews with fellow authors,
collaborators and critics covers all things King, from analysis of
his best writing to his many screen adaptations to recurring themes
in his stories.
Exploitation filmmaker Herschell Gordon Lewis is credited with
single-handedly creating the gore genre with the 1963 release Blood
Feast. This low-budget shocker would ultimately influence nearly
every horror movie which has followed, as well as "high-brow" films
as varied The Wild Bunch and Reservoir Dogs. Lewis, dubbed "The
Godfather of Gore," crafted more than thirty-five films in his
ongoing career (the exact number varies depending on whom you talk
to). Lewis would ultimately work in a number of genres, including
gothic horror, drama, sexploitation, blaxploitation, and even
musicals, and each of his low-budget productions features a
singular style and vision that cannot be ignored. No matter what
genre Lewis worked in, he remained at the forefront of cinematic
trends and movements. In The Godfather of Gore Speaks: Herschell
Gordon Lewis Discusses His Films, the filmmaker explains his
choices and motivations - from concept to finished product - in
much more detail than ever before. Assisted by noted film historian
Andrew J. Rausch, Lewis shares often hilarious anecdotes and
provides analysis for the thirty-nine films which he either
directed or assisted with direction. "Herschell Gordon Lewis is
known all over the world as 'The Wizard of Gore.' He's a whiz of a
wiz in just about everything else, too, including, but not limited
to, brain surgery, moonshine making, international diplomacy, auto
body work, nuclear physics, and siding sales. He writes textbooks
and does windows, and don't ever challenge him to a game of
Scrabble." --David F. Friedman "Herschell Gordon Lewis is the man
who put red meat into the American cinematic diet. Ultimately
Herschell made Quentin Tarantino possible." --Joe Bob Briggs
Dirty Talk: Conversations with Porn Stars is the result of nearly a
decade of interviews with many of adult cinema's hottest stars.
These candid conversations include such topics as working
conditions in the porn industry, childhood and family life, career
goals, industry trends, and the subjects' views on their work and
on the adult film industry itself. The stars interviewed for this
project include Seymore Butts, Mary Carey, Asia Carrera, Nina
Hartley, Jill Kelly, Hyapatia Lee, Evelyn Lin, Mari Possa, Linda
Roberts, and Kyle Stone.
Stephen King is one of the finest and most successful novelists in
the history of American literature. Here, for the first time, is a
one-of-a-kind collection of quotations by King on subjects as
varied as writing, Hollywood, God and religion, his work, popular
culture, critics, success, money, the supernatural, censorship, and
Stanley Kubrick's film adaptation of The Shining. These bon mots
were culled from hundreds of print and television interviews, as
well as essays and assorted works of nonfiction. Edited by Andrew
J. Rausch, The Wit and Wisdom of Stephen King contains an
entertaining selection of observations both comic and profound.
"Grindhouse" is a term that refers to theaters that primarily
showed exploitation films. There were a handful of these theaters
on 42nd Street in New York City. These theaters showed a variety of
films that generally featured sex, violence, and bizarre subject
matter. These included slasher films, X-rated movies, badly-dubbed
Hong Kong chop socky pictures, blaxploitation, and general
exploitation films. The period most generally associated with these
types of movie houses stretches from the late 1960s to the
mid-1980s. Since the demise of these theaters, and with them
certain types of film, an enthusiasm and appreciation for them has
developed. Hollywood films such as Black Dynamite, Machete, and
Hobo with a Shotgun have since payed homage to them. Gods of
Grindhouse: Interviews with Exploitation Filmmakers contains
conversations with a variety of filmmakers associated with such
films. The book contains interviews with key figures such as Roger
Corman, Herschell Gordon Lewis, Larry Cohen, David F. Friedman,
William Lustig, Ted V. Mikels, and others. It also contains
interviews with Bill Rebane and Russ Meyer that have never appeared
in print before This is a one-of-a-kind collection of interviews
that gets as down and dirty as the films themselves.
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R459
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