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Favourite bookReview Date: 2003-07-24
As great as the movieReview Date: 2003-07-17
Totally Awsome Book!Review Date: 2003-06-18
this is really cuteReview Date: 2003-05-17
Lizzie's DreamReview Date: 2003-05-23
Lizzie is just about to graduate from junior high and she messes up real bad! Her brother tape records it and sends it to Good Morning America. Then she goes on a class trip to Rome and she tells her best friend Gordo that they need to find adventures. Then Lizzie bumps into pop superstar Paolo and she does find adventures. He tells her that she looks just like Isabella the girl he sings with. He tells her his story and she agrees to help him. She becomes Isabella for a couple of days dodging her new principal while doing so. Gordo covers for her and gets himself in tuns of trouble. Read this wonderful story and find out what happens with Lizzie and her singing career and Gordo and Isabella.
The characters really jump out at you. Lizzie is so clumsy and she seems to always fall down. The characters
were really believable and the story seemed to be real to me. This book is really hard to put down you always want to know
what is going to happen to Lizzie and her friends. You have to pay attention very closely so you aren't lost or confused.
The plot is so interesting and the ending will blow you away. I really believe any girl who reads this would want this to
happen to them.
I loved this book. It is every teenagers dream. This is such an exciting book it really lets you
feel like you are leaving the `dream'. I would recommend this book to teenage girls looking for a good read because they would
enjoy it and keep it as one of there favorites. The book will be enjoyed by all whom read.So read this book and please with
all means `enjoy'!!
-Patricia Harnish 13

Used price: $23.98

Madonna on par with CleopatraReview Date: 2006-07-11
Makes Madonna Make "Postmodern" InterestingReview Date: 2003-01-17
Very Interesting Overview of MadonnaReview Date: 2003-01-07
Final evidence of Madonna's superior intelligenceReview Date: 2002-12-13
A MADONNA BOOK FOR INTELLIGENT FANSReview Date: 2002-11-22

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Spellbinding!!!Review Date: 2002-05-15
Millennium madness is the best!Review Date: 2000-04-10
Madness!Review Date: 2000-10-15
Satisfied-AgainReview Date: 2000-03-19
This was great!Review Date: 2000-03-25

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The complete and deftly written 240-page guide covering every important detail of the movie making businessReview Date: 2006-03-11
How I learned to stop worrying on the film set and love the bombReview Date: 2005-11-18
Unique must read by anyone interested in moviesReview Date: 2005-11-15
FILM SCHOOL VS MOVIE SET 101Review Date: 2005-11-14
Top Notch!Review Date: 2005-11-14

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Road trips/ great reading/ must have if you like road rulesReview Date: 1998-01-16
A wonderful insight into what goes on behind Road RulesReview Date: 1997-12-30
A great insight into the Road RulersReview Date: 1999-11-18
MTV's Road Rules Road TripsReview Date: 2000-07-07
I loved itReview Date: 2000-05-09

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A cozy retreatReview Date: 2004-10-29
still the bestReview Date: 2005-09-03
Jessica is in France with a famous chief.Review Date: 2003-02-23
Murder Most Excellent!Review Date: 2002-05-29
Visit Provence with caution!Review Date: 2002-06-20

Excellent Nightmare on Elm Street reference / memorabilia.Review Date: 2007-11-16
I wish they'd update this and bring into a full-color format with a more modern media-centric look, and add material From New Nightmare and Freddy vs. Jason. As it is, it covers up through Freddy's Dead, the Final Nightmare, and is relatively complete.
It's hard to come by, but is great for the completist if you can get your hands on a copy.
Good book...some minor mistakesReview Date: 2006-12-29
The only real problem I had was, if your a devoted NOES fan like I am, you will notice a lot of minor mistakes throughout the book. For instance, Lisa, from Nightmare 2, is listed as Lisa Poletti, but in the movie her name is Lisa Webber.
Other than the few minor mistakes, this book is definetly worth picking up!
The Ultimate Freddy Krueger book!Review Date: 1998-03-16
EXCELLENTReview Date: 1998-03-28
This is a must with great pictures and biographies of each cast member and a large amount of pictures,charts and biographies on each film from: A Nightmare on Elm St -to- Freddy'd Dead
GREAT for Krueger fans!Review Date: 1998-11-18

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Judy Stone's "Not Quite A Memoir" is Thoroughly Quite A Life SharedReview Date: 2007-05-23
Not Quite a Memoir: Of Films, Books, the World
Finding Herself Through Conversations with OthersReview Date: 2006-09-01
If you like movies and care about the world, read this book.Review Date: 2006-07-30
In between, she has conducted revealing and intelligent interviews (also in this book) with a startling array of directors, actors, and writers from every corner of the world, often traveling to do so. Stone's impressive body of work has actually been collected in two volumes, "Eye on the World" (1997) and this brand new book, "Not Quite a Memoir."
Stone modestly prefers to call herself a reviewer, not a critic, but if any film reviewer has a knowledge of the world as deep as hers and manages to show how films function in that world, I believe Judy Stone has earned the right to be called a critic.
Keep this book around, and you'll find yourself reading it each day, just because it's so much fun and remains so imformative about our world today.
A feast of a bookReview Date: 2007-02-05
A treasury of insights from the world's leading artistsReview Date: 2006-07-28
Ari Siletz, author "The Mullah with No Legs and other stories."

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A first-rate biography!Review Date: 2007-11-29
A Valentine with VitriolReview Date: 2007-12-23
Preminger's affair with Dorothy Dandridge might equally well have been expanded. Hirsch credits Preminger as a sort of civil rights pioneer, pointing to Avon Long's ooften overlooked turn in CENTENNIAL SUMMER as just the sort of music number which Hollywood should be proud of, instead of apologizing for. For every step forward, however, that Preminger seemed to make--placing Duke Ellington on the piano bench alongside James Stewart, for example, in ANATOMY OF A MURDER, or trying to hire Martin Luther King to play a senator in ADVISE AND CONSENT, he takes two steps back. I suppose he should have encouraged Dandridge to take the part of Tuptim in Walter Lang's THE KING AND I--it might have helped preserve her illusion of serious stardom for more than a minute. And speaking of which, how bad can PORGY AND BESS be? Gershwin estate, release your shroud of silence over this film! It just isn't right to keep it from us, let us judge for ourselves how shrill and self serving Sammy Davis Jr can be, how miscast Sidney Poutier.
Big books could be written on so many chapters here--the supplanting of Lubitsch, the Gene Tierney spiral of madness and deceit; the Gypsy Rose Lee affair that led to the birth of their son, Erik Lee Preminger. The big, serious films of constitutional critique each need more pages than Hirsch can possibly give them, even in the deluxe sort of Knopf movie bio glossy treatment he gets here. For goodness sake, for a Preminger fan, THE CARDINAL all by itself could use a complete encyclopedia, just for the way the man played up his little Viennese starling Romy Schneider, her quickeyed grace so sumptuous and moving against Tom Tryon's need to be bigger, need to blow himself up. Though I must say this is the most complete treatment, in and out, that THE CARDINAL is ever likely to get.
What I dislike is Hirsch's need to have something to say about everyone in his path, and he is often vicious as Clifton Webb, which would be fine if you shared his bile and hated his targets as much as he must. Why the hate for the late Ira Levin (who worked with Preminger on the screenplay for BUNNY LAKE IS MISSING), why dismiss a great novelist as a "mediocre" hack, it's just gratuitous sniping, and it leaves you wondering why--perhaps an ill Levin refused the biographer an interview? Jackie Gleason is "humor-free" here, while Groucho Marx os "gross, uncouth, extremely unpleasant." Kim Cattrall will want to go into hiding after the full scale attach Hirsch mounts on her. Not that I'm a great fan of Kim Cattrall, but still! Give the girl a break! As for Dyan Cannon, well, I wasn't there, but neither was Hirsch and he paints her as worse than Grendel's grandmother. And Romy Schneider? I refuse to believe that "Romy really was an awful person," "highstrung and arrogant," etc and an impossible demon. No way Jose! Even Ursula Andress comes off as a shrew, and there's no evidence Preminger ever spoke to her, so it seems that Hirsch just delights trashing all these women just because it's easy.
Tell All about A True Hollywood GeniusReview Date: 2007-12-07
A great introduction to a complex, fascinating individual...Review Date: 2008-06-08
This book is very well written and researched, and gives you a complex, measured portrayal of a great showman. Whether you like Preminger's work or not, he had a brilliant knack for getting great publicity for his films, and tackling then controversial subjects. He made films like The Moon Is Blue (which had pretty saucy sex talk, especially for 1953), The Man with the Golden Arm (about heroin addiction), Advise and Consent (which had a homosexual plot line in it, which was very bold for its time), and Anatomy of a Murder, which is one of the most riveting, complex courtroom dramas ever made.
The book shows how Otto became one of the biggest powerhouses in Hollywood during his heyday, his shooting methods (he shot very lean and came in under budget, something Hollywood loves), his relationships with actors (he got along wonderfully with Patricia Neal and John Wayne, and was constantly at the throat with Faye Dunaway and Dyan Cannon), and his dedication to family and to liberal politics. Otto helped smash the blacklist by hiring Dalton Trumbo to write the screenplay for Exodus, and insisted on him using his real name. While some of Otto's work is a bit dated and not as shocking as it used to be, it's still extremely well made and head and shoulders above other "message" films of the era (particularly films like Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, which is rather painful to watch nowadays).
The book has none of the intellectual, film professor talk on what his films mean, and that's always welcome. It's an absolutely fascinating portrait of a very complicated, polarising filmmaker, one whose films still invoke strong reactions from people today.
AN OUTSTANDING BIOGRAPHY OF AN OUTSTANDING IMPRESSARIOReview Date: 2007-12-02
If Preminger's reach exceeded his grasp, Foster Hirsch makes the case that he deserves credit for trying. There's also material on Preminger's colorful personal life--his illegitimate son by stripper Gypsy Rose Lee, Dorothy Dandridge's abortion (Otto's fault per Hirsch), his temper tantrums (Dexedrine use may have been a factor), and his interesting relationship with his brother Ingo (talent agent and producer of Robert Altman's MASH) and his parents (father was former Attorney-General of Austria-Hungary). His final marriage, to Hope, seems to have worked out OK--his son became a doctor in New Jersey and his daughter a lawyer who manages the Preminger business today. His son by Gypsy Rose Lee was responsible for some of Preminger's more peculiar films, such as Skiddoo and Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon.
He directed Porgy & Bess, which was pulled from distribution, as well as Carmen Jones. Laura is his most enduring hit. But many others have withstood the test of time. Preminger's last film, The Human Factor, was written by Tom Stoppard. Foster Hirsch says it is worth another look--like many other Preminger productions.
If you are interested in movie history, America in the 1950s and 1960s, or Viennese refugees and their Kultur, this is the book.


Superb pictorial silent film overview!!Review Date: 2008-06-01
There are literally hundreds of pictures that with each progressive year, guide's the reader to a better understanding of the how's and why's of silent film. How film that moved gave us actor's that moved, expressed feelings, etc., and why film eventually had to talk.
All pictures are in black and white, with expert clarity, and a detailed explaination of who is who, and the many still from films that are sadly no longer available.
To the beginner, or the seasoned reader of silent films, this is an excellent book that will delight, and amaze as each chapter goes year by year to the advent of sound.
hard to find but worth itReview Date: 2007-04-28
they're also a valuable look at something else--but we'll save that for another time.
Awesome Collection of Thousands of Silent Movie Photos Review Date: 2005-11-28
Simply......THE BESTReview Date: 2003-06-12
(This review based on the edition published in 1953, and by Daniel Blum alone.)
Invaluable Photo Reference Guide (Happy Hunting!)Review Date: 2003-11-19
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Lizzie McGuire Movie'. Unluckly, I'm not in US, so I can't
watch the film.I've watch the preview and I like it very
much.This book is full of imagination, it's a bit similar to the
book' The Princess Dairies'. It's the best book for all the
girls who liked to dream(including me) ------being a famous pop
star, having all the clothes and food you want. I like the
ending best, because it is unexpected. I think that it will be
one of the favourtes of the girls who liked to dream !!!
- Lucia Lee, one of the readers of this wonderful book