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The Making and Influence of I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang uses
a complete biography of Robert E. Burns, a World War I veteran who
was coerced into taking part in a petty crime in Atlanta, Georgia.
Sentenced to a harsh sentence on a barbaric chain gang, he twice
escaped and remained on the run for decades, aided only by his
minister-poet brother, Vincent G. Burns. Their collaborative book,
I Am a Fugitive from a Georgia Chain Gang! led to Darryl F. Zanuck
and Mervyn Leroy's hard-hitting film adaptation released by Warner
Bros. in 1932. The book simultaneously traces the making and
influence of the film and the Burns brothers' continuing efforts to
obtain a pardon, which never came. A truly unique volume, it
exposes a shameful miscarriage of justice, while also covering the
powerful Warner Bros. film, starring Paul Muni as Robert Burns,
supported by Glenda Farrell, Allen Jenkins, Preston Foster, and
many other members of the Warners' ""stock company,"" and its
imitators that followed over the coming decades.
As three of the most prominent actors of the early studio system,
James Cagney, Edward G. Robinson, and Humphrey Bogart played an
unparalleled role in the rise of the Warner Brothers Studio. These
"Warners Wiseguys" are now virtually synonymous with the studio's
era of gritty gangster films. This study of their interwoven
studio-contract careers highlights the similarities of their
personalities and their struggles with harsh typecasting. It
details and comments critically on each of their combined 112
Warners films. Complete with commentary from the author and other
film buffs. An appendix provides a filmographic guide to the films
discussed, including lists of primary actors, release dates,
directorial credits, and running times for each film.
Robert Louis Stevenson's cinematic legacy is studied in-depth here,
with a look at his life and his body of work. From The Sire De
Maletroit's Door (1877) to St. Ives (1896), each adapted story and
all relevant film versions are examined, including exhaustive
analyses of the 1931 adaptation of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and the
1945 version of The Body Snatcher. A discussion of the process of
adapting literature for the movies, demonstrating how Stevenson's
stories have been misrepresented for more than 80 years, is also
provided.
The Boys provides new ways to view and evaluate the work of this
famous comedy team. The initial chapter summarizes the critical
reception of the two and compares Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy to
other contemporary comedians. Brief biographies analyze their early
solo films and the development of the team. Special attention is
given to the team's cinematic and comic style, use of camera
techniques, early sound practice, and gag development. The comics'
complex relationship is detailed and analyzed. A complete
filmography, including a rating and an indication of contents,
covers each film. The team's final film, Atoll K (1951), is
discussed in depth. Throughout the text quotes from such persons as
Laurel and Hardy themselves, Buster Keaton, George Stevens, Dick
Van Dyke, and Woody Allen enlighten and entertain. Great stills and
posters.
These were unique, complex, personal and professional relationships
between master director John Ford and his two favorite actors, John
Wayne and Ward Bond. The book provides a biography of each and a
detailed exploration of Ford's work as it was intertwined with the
lives and work of both Wayne and Bond (whose biography here is the
first ever published). The book reveals fascinating accounts of
ingenuity, creativity, toil, perseverance, bravery, debauchery,
futility, abuse, masochism, mayhem, violence, warfare, open- and
closed-mindedness, control and chaos, brilliance and stupidity,
rationality and insanity, friendship and a testing of its limits,
love and hate--all committed by a ""half-genius, half-Irish""
cinematic visionary and his two surrogate sons: Three Bad Men.
From Errol Flynn to Kevin Costner to Daffy Duck, the bandit of
Sherwood Forest has gone through a variety of incarnations on the
way to becoming a cinematic staple. The historic Robin Hood -
actually an amalgam of several outlaws of medieval England - was
continually transformed by oral tradition to become the romantic
and deadly archer-swordsman who ""robbed from the rich to give to
the poor."" This image was reinforced by popular literature, song
and, in the 20th century, cinema.This volume provides in-depth
information on each film based on the immortal hero. In addition,
other historical figures such as Scottish rebel-outlaws Rob Roy
MacGregor and William Wallace are examined. Nollen also explores
nontraditional representations of the legend, such as Frank
Sinatra's Robin and the Seven Hoods and Westerns featuring the
Robin Hood motif. A filmography is provided, including production
information, and the text is highlighted by rare photographs,
advertisements, and illustrations.
Considered one of the finest performers in world cinema, Japanese
actor Takashi Shimura (1905-1982) appeared in more than 300 stage,
film and television roles during his five-decade career. He is best
known for his frequent collaborations with Akira Kurosawa,
including major roles in the landmark classics Rashomon (1950),
Ikiru (1952) and Seven Samurai (1954), and for his memorable
characterizations in Ishiro Honda's Godzilla (1954) and several
Kaiju sequels. This is the first complete English-language account
of Shimura's work. In addition to historical and critical coverage
of Shimura's life and career, it includes an extensive filmography.
Originally formed by singer-songwriter Ian Anderson in psychedelic
1968, the band Hethro Tull has been recording its own kind of rock
and roll and touring the globe for more than three decades. This is
a history of the band through the present, written by a personal
acquaintance of several of its members. The book includes a
chronology of all of the band's recordings and information on all
accompanying tours, with the author's critiques as well as the
band's own reminiscences and opinions of each album. Also included
are previously unpublished interviews with founder Ian Anderson
long-time band member David Pegg, Mick Abrahams, Jeffrey Hammond,
and Doane Perry, and other band members.
This is the first book-length study of the 12 films starring
African American Renaissance man Paul Robeson (1898-1976). Singer,
actor, author, lawyer, athlete, pacifist and civil rights activist,
Robeson was also the first African American to receive top billing
in motion pictures, delivering unforgettable characterizations in
such classics as The Emperor Jones (1933), Sanders of the River
(1935), Show Boat (1936) and The Proud Valley (1940). Original
research is provided from primary materials housed at the Schomburg
Center for Black Culture in Harlem and from Robeson's family and
friends, including his son Paul Robeson Jr. and his godson,
singer-composer Eric Bibb. Two appendices cover Robeson's film work
as offscreen narrator and singer and his many stage appearances.
The prodigious but humble scion of a New York theatrical family,
Chester Morris acted on Broadway as a teenager and earned an
Academy Award nomination for his first role in a Hollywood
"talkie," Alibi (1929). He became leading man to filmdom's top
female stars and starred in the popular series of "Boston Blackie"
mysteries before creating substantial characters in the theater and
the burgeoning medium of television. This first book about Morris
provides a detailed, account of his life and career on stage, film,
radio, and television, and as a celebrated magician. It also
constructs a fascinating record of his previously undocumented
labor activism during the early years of the Screen Actors Guild
and his tireless efforts to aid U.S. troops on the home front
during World War II.
Among Golden Age Hollywood film stars of European heritage known
for playing characters from the East--Chinese, Southeast Asians,
Indians and Middle Easterners--Anglo-Indian actor Boris Karloff had
deep roots there. Based on extensive new research, this biography
and career study of Karloff's "eastern" films provides a critical
examination of 41 features, including many overlooked early roles,
and offers fresh perspective on a cinematic luminary so often
labeled a "horror icon." Films include The Lightning Raider (1919),
14 silent films from the 1920s, The Unholy Night (1929), The Mask
of Fu Manchu (1932), The Mummy (1932), John Ford's The Lost Patrol
(1934), the Mr. Wong series (1938-1940), Targets (1968), and Isle
of the Snake People (1971), one of six titles released
posthumously.
The result of nearly 15 years of research, this comprehensive
analysis of Boris Karloff's life and career, incorporates
criticism, in-depth production information, discussion of major
cinematic themes and characters, and a look at the historical
periods and events depicted in the films. Extensive biographical
and career information is dovetailed with a discussion of the
classic Hollywood era in order to examine Karloff's overall
contribution to American cinema. Each of Karloff's horror films is
examined at length, as well as his contributions to other media.
Over 100 posters, portraits, film scenes and candid photos
illustrate the text, and numerous contemporaries (Evelyn Karloff,
Laurence Olivier, Henry Brandon, Ian Wolfe, Zita Johann, others)
are quoted throughout.
As two of the most popular entertainers of the mid-century film
industry, comic greats Bud Abbott and Lou Costello offered an
essential balm to the American public following the sorrows of the
Great Depression and during the trauma of World War II. This is the
first book to focus in detail on the immensely popular wartime
films of Abbott and Costello, discussing the production, content,
and reception of 18 films within the context of wartime events on
the home front and abroad. The films covered include the service
comedies Buck Privates, In the Navy, and Keep 'Em Flying; more
mainstream comic relief films such as Pardon My Sarong and Who Done
It?; and post-war experiments such as Little Giant and The Time of
Their Lives. More than 120 stills and lobby cards from the author's
personal collection illustrate the text, including many showing
outtakes or deleted scenes.
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