Directors Books


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Animation-->Artists-->Directors-->40
Related Subjects: Jones, Chuck Freleng, Friz Clampett, Robert McKimson, Robert Davis, Arthur Tashlin, Frank Avery, Tex Bird, Brad Timm, Bruce Bakshi, Ralph Bluth, Don Svankmajer, Jan
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Directors Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Directors
Advertising: 11 Insights from Creative Directors
Published in Digital by Amazon (2006-11-10)
Author: Robin Landa
List price: $0.49
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Average review score:

An enjoyable pithy collection of insights
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-15
Not only are the insights into advertising extremely useful, this article was thoroughly entertaining. And there were definitely more than 11 insights.

Directors
Alfred H. Barr, Jr. and the Intellectual Origins of the Museum of Modern Art
Published in Hardcover by The MIT Press (2001-11-01)
Author: Sybil Gordon Kantor
List price: $45.00
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Average review score:

Alfred Barr Jr. and the intellectual origins of MOMA
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-13
This book is amust for anyone interested in Modern and Contemporary Art and the birth of modern museums. Contemporary museum architecture, in America, starts with MOMA.

Directors
Altman on Altman
Published in Paperback by Faber & Faber (2006-04-04)
Author: David Thompson
List price: $17.00
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Average review score:

A Fascinating Career
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-13
When I thought of Robert Altman before reading this book, I typically thought of him as a "Seventies" director who had had a few hits in recent years.

This book shows how limited that view of Altman was. It is a wide-ranging interview that covers Altman's career from his stint as an extra in "Secret Life of Walter Mitty" (!!!) to directing "The Company." He talks about his involvement with the classic TV series "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" and "Combat" as well as directing Broadway plays and a couple operas.

And, of course, he talks about his films, the classics that everyone remembers and those that got buried by the critics. From it all, Altman emerges as a fascinating character who pursued his own vision and took advantage of changes in the media to be relatively successful.

Essential reading for anyone interested in recent American film.

Directors
Always an Updraft: A Writer Remembers
Published in Hardcover by Penumbra Press (2006-07-30)
Author: Munroe Scott
List price: $34.95
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Average review score:

A Terrific Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-12
Munroe Scott is the embodiment of the best of Canadian writing talent of all time. From modest roots as a "PK" (preacher's kid) in the Ottawa Valley, he has travelled the world as a biographer, documentary film maker, playwright and as an astute observer of the best and worst of human behavior. This book will transport you to the times and places that have made Munroe's journey a very special one. The story is told with modesty and humor. This is one of those books I wanted to read as slowly as possible and savor every word.

Directors
Amazing Bible Race: Law, Genesis-Deuteronomy: Directors Manual Leg 1 (Amazing Bible Race)
Published in CD-ROM by Abingdon Press (2007-05-15)
Author:
List price: $30.00
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Average review score:

Amazing Bible Race
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-29
We have just started the second book in this series. This is a fantastic tool to study the Bible. We have learned so much and we are just beginning. The challenges make youth group more interesting. The online quizes really test your knowledge!!

Directors
American Racist: The Life and Films of Thomas Dixon
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (2004-09-10)
Author: Anthony Slide
List price: $35.00
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Average review score:

A Scholarly Analysis of a very Complex Figure
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-11
I initially wrote this review for a film journal which shall remain nameless. It insisted that I slant my review by casting insinuations of racism on an author who is a very distinguished film scholar and a fine human being who has a track record of publications for the past thirty years and more. While CINEASTE saw no problem in publishing an objective review, this nameless journal did. I will not engage in such scurrillous activities merely to gain another publication credit and present my review for readers as follows.

During the early 1980s I acquired a copy of THE CLANSMAN (1905) by Thomas Dixon. Familiar with D.W. Griffith's feature film version THE BIRTH OF A NATION (1915), I scanned the opening pages with some interest but the purple nature of its prose and a virulent racism far exceeding anything found in the notorious film version prevented any further excavation on my part. The book is now missing since my move across the Atlantic and until I read this recent biography I believed both Dixon and his works worthy of consignment to oblivion. However, this is a misguided judgement. If Anthony Slide neither wishes to praise Dixon nor to bury him, he has instead provided a highly insightful study into an author whose ideology requires appropriate undersdtanding rather than immediate rejection.

Slide's book places Dixon's work in a relevant socio-historical context necessary to understand a writer who, though promoting repugnant ideals, often reflected certain dominant ideas of his era. Dixon was also a lawyer, minister, playwright, and contemporary auteur responsible for the production of some eighteen feature films between 1914 and 1937, the most famous being THE BIRTH OF A NATION. Yet his racism was contradictory. Although sharing views similar to those of Leni Riefenstahl concerning African-Americans, he never deigrated Jews and he respected Native Americans. He never supported the Southern cause in the Civil War but espoused reconciliation and union instead. However, like Griffith, Dixon was influenced by the dark myth of Reconstruction and feared the supposed Negro threat to American life. But, as Slide shows, these views differed little from those held by Abraham Lincoln and Woodrow Wilson. They would certainly not receive unqualified approval from today's Aryan Nation since Dixon's ideology contained several contradictions that Slide analyzes throughout his study.

Although Griffith's film revived the fortunes of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s, Dixon never supported its rebirth and even condemned it as his 1907 novel THE TRAITOR and his last screen credit NATION AFLAME (1937) show. Like Griffith, he idealized a remove historical image of an organization that was actually disbanded by its creator Nathan Bedford Forrest two years after its foundation in 1867 as John Wyeth mentions in his still classic study THAT DEVIL FORREST (1899). Slide's chapters emphasize that "Dixon is a complex character, and while his on-screen commentary on race, on miscegenation, on women's uffrage, on socialism, and on communism may appear outmoded, one should never doubt Dixon's integrity or his supreme faith in his Southern philosophy." (7) He saw the South as being representative of any American state espousing common conservative values against elements felt to be alien such as the Negro, feminism, and socialism. In other words, Dixon had much in common with the contemporary ideas examined by Richard Slotkin in THE FATAL ENVIRONMENT: THE MYTH OF CUSTER IN THE AGE OF INDUSTRIALIZATION, 1800-1890 (1988)

Like Griffith, Dixon saw motion pictures not just as entertainment but more as a means for promoting serious ideas. Thus Slide concentrates on Dixon in terms of his role as a member of the contemporary film community rather than as a literary figure. The first four chapters place Dixon within the necessary historical context to understand his beliefs as well as his reproductions of Southern history on print, stage, and film. After THE BIRTH OF A NATION, Dixon concentrated more on cinema. But, despite his racial views, he was often ahead of his time on other issues such as supporting animal rights (like Jack London in his posthumous 1917 novel MICHAEL, BROTHER OF JERRY, opposing capital punishment, and protesting against scientific involvement in manufacturing weapons of mass destruction as his unproduced one-act play THE HOPE OF THE WORLD (1924) reveals. Yet despite espousing segregation and opposing miscegenation, Dixon never held any personal animosity against blacks like later twentieth century racists; instead Dixon believed in separate development allowing the race to follow its own particular cultural and historical destiny as he saw it, one that could never match the achievements of white civilization. However, in the opening chapters, Slide suggests that Dixon may have struggled against repressed sexual feelings involving black males and white females manifesting themselves in badly written purple prose passages in novels such as THE LEOPARD'S SPOTS (1902) and THE CLANSMAN (1905). Slide cites a telephone conversation he had with James Zebulon Wright during 2003 concerning Dixon's first sexual experience with his black friend Dick (33). In 1996, Wright wrote an unpublished doctoral dissertation on Dixon and had access to many of the author's private papers which his widow later destroyed. In his 1984 study, THE CRUCIBLE OF RACE, Joel Williamson states that Dixon wrote THE LEOPARD'S SPOTS believing that his mother has been sexually molested when a child by a black man. Slide also reveals that Dixon entered into negotations for a Kinemacolor version of THE CLANSMAN in 1911 but it is unlikely that any footage was shot. But THE BIRTH OF A NATION boosted the status of both Dixon and Griffith leading to the former directing THE FALL OF A NATION the following year. The film encouraged a developing pro-war mood in America. and doing quite well at the box-office. Since the film (like other Dixon collaborations)has not survived, it is difficult to judge the quality of this work. These missing films result in Slide undertaking a necessary, but problematic, reconstruction by secondary sources which often hinder the necessity of having complete access to all the relevant evidence needed to evaluate fully the historical implications of the material.

Dixon's views on female emancipation were also antiquated as Slide shows in his comparison of the two film versions of THE FOOLISH VIRGIN (1916, 1924). Socialism was also a threat to the fabric of American society as Dixon's second novel THE ONE WOMAN (1903) and its 1918 film version reveals. But although Dixon shared contemporary anti-Red sentiments displayed in his novels COMRADES (1909) and THE ROOT OF EVIL (1911), contradictory elements also appear in the text especially in the latter work. Slide believes that this book "is better identified as an attack on capitalism, and there are many passages that might well be regarded as appopriate to the early years of the twenty-first century rather than the early years of the twentieth." (127) Dixon also attacks slavery in this novel which Slide argues "almost compensates for the worst excesses of racism to be found elsewhere in Dixon's writings." (130)

Slide also shows that the 1920s represented Dixon's most productive period as a journeyman scenarist before the Wall Street Crash. Dixon later failed to change with the times despite his early support for the New Deal and he tended to repeat formulas. However, Dixon contributed storylines to four contemporary Westerns and several melodramas. He also returned to directing and scripting THE MARK OF THE BEAST (1924), one of the first American films to deal with psychoanalysis long before LADY IN THE DARK (1944) and SPELLBOUND (1945. The con cluding chapters deal with the last adaptation of Dixon's anti-Klan novel NATION AFLAME (1937), the final obscure years before his death in 1946, and Raymond Rohauer's attempts to gain exclusive copyright of THE BIRTH OF A NATION.

AMERICAN RACIST is a pioneering work. In many ways, it illustrates important issues of character complexity and tensions affecting certain historical eras that also appear in Maureen 0'Hara's TIS HERSELF (2004)and Julie Gottlieb's 2000 study FEMININE FASCISTS. 0'Hara discusses dark Ford's contradictory and his hidden bi-sexuality while Gottlieb traces the role of former suffragettes in Oswald Mosely's British Union of Fascists in the 1930s. People and historical events are often not as monologic as politically correct academics, attempting to control information and silence alternative voices in ways resembling totalitarian governments, wish. Anthony Slide's book is a welcome addition to the many informed and scholarly studies written outside the mainstream that this particular press has encouraged. It stands shoulder-to-shoulder alongside Stephen Youngkin's exellent biography of Peter Lorre, THE LOST ONE (2005). The long awaited Orson Welles biography by Joseph McBride will soon add to the prestigious list of publications that this company has issued over the past ten years.

Directors
And the Show Goes On
Published in Hardcover by Limelight Editions (2004-08-01)
Author: Sheldon Leonard
List price: $25.00
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Average review score:

Satisfying read of Major Hollywood actor, Producer
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-30
This is an enjoyable read written by Sheldon Leonard. Sharing memories of his 5 plus decades in motion pictures, radio, and his ultimate success in TV. He has been a major contributor to television comedy beginning with the Danny Thomas Show followed by such greats as Andy Griffith, Gomer Pyle,Dick van Dyke,I Spy, and many others. From his telling he was quite a pioneer in equal opportunity, giving a fairly unknown Bill Cosby his first tv break in an industry still very closed toward black actors. Very interesting reading. Highly recommend to all interested in Entertainment personalities!

Directors
Andrei Tarkovsky (Pocket Essential series)
Published in Paperback by Pocket Essentials (2005-09-01)
Author: Sean Martin
List price: $8.95
New price: $4.62
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Average review score:

Great for Tark Fans but Needs Better Edition
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-09
This is great summary of the life and works of Tarkovsky. His life, thoughts about film, and summaries of his movies are included in separate chapters as well as few useful appendices.

I only wish it wasn't a cheap mass market paperback. This is the kind of book you want to have around for years. Too bad it will probably yellow and fall off the spine in 10 years like most cheap editions.

Directors
Angel After the Fall Director's Cut #1
Published in Comic by IDW Publishing (2008)
Author: Brian Lynch
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New price: $3.99

Average review score:

Change Gon' Come
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
The Book: It's beautiful. Not only does this have one of my favorite covers, but it's all glossed up with the title and author names in gold and foily glory. The book itself is bound like a trade paperback, much like the Spike one-shots IDW put out in 2006.

The Changes: There aren't many changes to the comic. Gunn's hoodie has been changed to red. This was a good decision, I think, because a lot of fans couldn't tell that it was Gunn on the last page. However, I'd argue that said fans weren't paying attention at all if they couldn't recognize Gunn in the regular edition, but that's neither here nor there. It was a good change. However, I was shocked to see that the "Big Ol' Mistake" in this issue wasn't changed. When the issue first came out, everyone wondered what the heck Uk-Ca is. Brian came out and said it was supposed to say Uk-La. As in Kr'ph mispronouncing UCLA. Well... it's kinda still there. Which was surprising, because that was an actual error while the thing that was changed (Gunn's hoodie) wasn't.

The Script: If the cover didn't convince you to buy this, the addition of Brian's script should. On it's own, the script is a good read, but it's even better when you're flipping back to the actual pages of the comic to see where things have changed.

The commentary: For the sake of length, the commentary of this issue is placed in the borders of the script. This is good because you can read the script of the page and then just look to the side and see the commentary. As far as substance, I was hoping for a little more insight into how Joss and Brian collaborated on this, but Brian's notes are--as always--an entertaining read. I especially liked the sections where Brian talked about how certain characters were originally supposed to do different things. Betta George was supposed to be chilling with a certain British someone, someone else was supposed to kill Kr'ph, and the end of the issue was originally supposed to be very, very different. Great commentary.

Overall: Overall, this is a great buy. Page quality is high, binding is good, and it's just a book you need to have in your collection. IDW and Brian Lynch are extremely generous in how they're treating Angel fans, and this is a prime example of that.

The story: 10/10 Classic
The presentation: 9/10

Directors
Anglican Spiritual Direction (Spiritual Directors International) (Spiritual Directors International)
Published in Paperback by Morehouse Publishing (2007-04-01)
Author: Peter Ball
List price: $22.00
New price: $13.40
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Average review score:

A Very Good Overview
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
Peter Ball gives us a very comprehensive overview of Spiritual Direction from an Anglican perspective. He looks primarily on the different schools and their contributions. This book is not about technique, but about the values, attitudes and pastoral perspective that Anglicans have contributed to the work of Spiritual Direction. It is a helpful tool for those who wish to know more about this important work.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Animation-->Artists-->Directors-->40
Related Subjects: Jones, Chuck Freleng, Friz Clampett, Robert McKimson, Robert Davis, Arthur Tashlin, Frank Avery, Tex Bird, Brad Timm, Bruce Bakshi, Ralph Bluth, Don Svankmajer, Jan
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