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Movies Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Movies
The Addams Chronicles: An Altogether Ooky Look at the Addams Family
Published in Paperback by Cumberland House Publishing (1998-10-01)
Author: Stephen Cox
List price: $20.95
Used price: $51.80
Collectible price: $60.00

Average review score:

They're creepy and they're kooky, Part 2
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-20
I loved the first edition of this book so much that I HAD to buy the revised edition! This is a must-have for all Addams Family fans! Stephen Cox makes you feel like you're part of the family!

a really fun book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-14
I really loved the Addams family and this book brought it all back. Great info on what happened to each member after the family ended. If you're a fan it's a must read.

Ooky Is Right
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-29
Will we ever again see a TV show as full of nonconformity, deep dark humor, and head-scratching eccentricity as the Addams Family? I doubt it. This book is a treasure trove of trivia and collector's info for Addams geeks worldwide. Stephen Cox is as knowledgeable an enthusiast as you could hope for, though his writing could use some work. That's usually not a problem in a fun trivia book like this, though when it comes to cultural analysis he does get in over his head sometimes. Examples are his weak attempts to compare the show to the French playwright Moliere, or to explain the deep cultural significance of Gomez's love for cigars. But otherwise, you'll learn some great Addams TV tidbits here, like who played Thing (Ted Cassidy, better known for playing Lurch), and who did Cousin Itt's voice (soundman Tony Magro). You also may not have known that the pig who played Pugsley's frighteningly alive piggy bank also played Arnold on Green Acres. The only real problem with this book is the very quick and rather uninformative biographies of the stars. With the exception of Jackie Coogan (Uncle Fester), most of the actors get bios that are only two or three pages long. But in the end, I'm especially happy to learn that I'm not the only one who thinks that Carolyn Jones as Morticia was quite sexy, rather than creepy. [~doomsdayer520~]

THIS IS THE BABY TO GET
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-10
There's not as much difference between the two Addams Chronicles editions as there is with the two Munsters books. But the added info and color photos make this Addams Chronicles the definate one to own.

Behind The Laughs: A Look Inside The Addams Family
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-28
In the mid sixties (1964-1966), there was a tv show about an unusual family that was a far different bunch than "The Brady Bunch", than the soap-clean "Leave It To Beaver" and "Donna Reed" shows. Although genuinely witty and humorous, it was the Addams Family that first marked the foundation for comic disfunctional families that would come later. The Addams Family were the original Osbournes. Their eccentric personalities, their abnormal tastes and behavior, which they were very comfortable with, seemed strange to "outsiders" with the more conventional and normal 60's home life. Although I did not grow up watching "The Addams Family" or "The Munsters", it is refreshing to look back at the success of this show. Cox and John Astin (who played Gomez) provide us with colorful photos and illustrations, as well as commentary by the cast, and chronicles the Addams, and the behind the scenes magic.

John Astin portrayed Gomez Addams, the father and head of the household. John Astin had already appeared in films in the fifties, including Westside Story, and in the show, provided much of the wit and humor. Gomez was a wealthy lawyer, although dressed in a gangster suite, smoked cigars frequently and indulged in all kinds of oddball activities: he wrecked his electric toy trains, he practiced Zen Yoga standing on his head, he swung on a chandelier, he fenced with Morticia and also danced the tango. He would always become aroused when Morticia spoke a single word of French (and ocassionally a Yiddish word).

Morticia Addams was played by 50's film actress Carolyn Jones, who was ending her marriage to Aaron Spelling during the syndication of the show. Morticia was mysterious, beautiful, vibrant and intellectual. She painted abstract art, dressed in that tight-fitting long, ... black dress, and was quite proud (her nuances included crossing her arms in an Indian-style fashion and speaking with firm authority). She raised two children, Pugsley and Wednesday (Ken Weatherwax and Lisa Loring), who were taught to be secure in their strangeness- Pugsley playe with various dangerous wildlife and Wednesday had the comic lines "It's so nice and gloomy" and was attached to a headless Marie Antoinette doll.

Lurch, the zombie-like, seven feet something butler, was portrayed by Ted Cassidy. He was striking, Frankenstein-like and had a deep, "throat" voice (You rang ?) and would always intimidate house guests. Although seemingly devoid of personality, Lurch had his moments- i.e. the episode in which he becomes the head of the household to impress his visiting mother, and the episode in which he becomes a recording artist and sings like a Beatles rock star. Uncle Fester was played by Jackie Coogan. Fester was a lonely, lovestruck balding man with a taste for pain (he would sleep in a bed of needles) and could light up a light bulb in his mouth. Others in the family were Thing, a severed hand that was alwayst "at hand" for small favors- answering the phone, getting the mail, opening up a bottle of champagne, etc. And then there was Cousin Itt, a hairy, shapeless creature with an incomprehensible language and funny high voice.

The Addams was a fun show to watch, keeping a generation of audiences full of laughter, perhaps making people forget the troubles that the 60's brought. It would still be fun to watch today- recently, a "New Addams" family show was given for a small run on cable tv and of course, the old series inspired the movies starring Raul Julia, Angelica Houston and Christina Ricci.

Movies
The American Cinema: Directors and Directions 1929-1968
Published in Paperback by Univ of Chicago Pr (T) (1986-03)
Author: Andrew Sarris
List price: $11.95
Used price: $3.00

Average review score:

The bible of film criticism...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-20
If you don't know this book, buy it immediately. It takes American film criticism up to about 1970 and coincides with the time Sarris was involved with the (real) Village Voice, Jonas Mekas, American Cahiers,and the founding of the NY Film Festival and the national society of film critics. It took me about five years of reading his reviews until I finally got it - Sarris had understood that the most profound thoughts and themes were played out with style and panache by genre filmmakers with personal obsessions and ideas that did not require Western Union to spell it out.

There's some things to quibble about (I never could see why he thought so highly of Blake Edwards, but I keep trying because I trust his insight. Even Sarris can change his mind as he did on Billy Wilder a few years back).

If you are a film buff and have not discovered his work (also recommended:
Confessions of a Cultist; The John Ford Mystery Book; You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet are among the best) start here. That goes double if you experience guilty pleasure and see things no one else does in people like Anthony Mann, Michael Powell, Sam Fuller, Max Ophuls, Budd Boetticher or James Whale. I have often given this book as a gift to film loving friends. It opens a world of discovery and rapport when a friends "gets it" and suddenly, you both have a shared sensibility and frame of reference.
Also, check out his website for yearly top ten lists and also the work of his wife Molly Haskell (especially good on Howard Hawks).

Infuriating and Indispensable.
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-29
This volume parses the good guys from the bad guys, tells you whom you should love and why, and summarily dismisses the ones not worth taking seriously. In other words, for good or bad, it arms you, as will no other film book ever written, with a set of eloquently-stated prejudices that may seal off certain directors from your serious consideration for all time. (It would be too glib to say that this is the books best and worst point.) Suffice to say, it has taken years for me to tear down the wall Sarris built between me, as a budding cinephile, and William Wyler, Billy Wilder, John Huston and even John Frankenheimer, for that matter. (These are just a few of the ones I think he was, or may have been, wrong about.)

But I love this book and always find it worth picking up to reread a few entries, for two or three reasons that never grow old:

1) Sarris IS an absolutely remarkable writer. His prose bristles with alternately apt and acid phrases and insights. The parallel between Ambrose Bierce and Sarris has grown on me through the years. (I think it was Sarris who brought currency to the word "pretentious"-- possibly THE serious put-down word from the 70s to the 90s, possibly to the present-- by the way. He used it with unerring surgical delicacy, as a bludgeon.)

2) He is hard to argue with in his negative evaluation of certain other respected directors. Thirty-five years ago, Sarris renounced Kubrick, noting, in typical form, that the very fact that he made one film every 5 years seemed to be all the proof his advocates needed of his integrity. Ouch! And he said that Kubrick is the director of the best coming attractions in the business.

This last is highly prophetic of the present general situation, when Hollywood has made a sort of science of over-selling weak films with absurdly hyperbolic trailers that often have little to do with the tone or experience of the films they advertise. This comment indicates also how much of Sarris is audaciously arguable, and out of synch with conservative academia re Kubrick and just about everything else. --Not a bad thing, as far as I am concerned.) And I think he was also decades ahead of the curve in recognizing Keaton as Chaplin's better.

3) He has been, for decades, an antidote to Pauline Kael. Period.

If you know the directors covered well enough to take it all with a grain of salt where needed, this book is probably the best read on movies and their directors from the second and third quarters of the 20th Century that will ever be written. THE great mapping out of this seminal period by the auteur theorys chief surveyor-- and a fun and drolly amusing place to pick up your snazzy-looking anti-philistine, anti-pretentious attitude off-the-rack.

The American Cinema: Directors and Direction 1929-1968
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-26
There are few books on cinema that are more important than this title. To any serious student of film this book is perhaps the only book that you will refer to as long as you watch films.

Indispensable
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-29
Extolling the virtues of The American Cinema would be too hard. Beside being an invaluable reference for cinema between 1929-1968, it also contains wonderful peices of film theory. Because of this The American Cinema can be read a few pages at a time or you can completely dwelve into the material. No matter the method, Sarris will engage you in a meaningful dialogue of film. Film literature is rarely able to be this give and take. Those with an above average inclination toward cinema should purchase.

The single most important book of American film criticism.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-05
When it first appeared in the late '60s, Sarris' book was literally memorized by critics, students and teachers. It provided a root approach to discussing film, quickly absorbed, and readily shaped to one's personal tastes. A beautiful combination of reference and aesthetic, it ushered in the era of "the director as superstar," and was completely absorbed by everyone in film. Unfortunately, its absorption was so complete, the author, Mr. Sarris, was for the most part uncredited and unrewarded.

Movies
The Beaver Papers: The Story of the Lost Season
Published in Paperback by Crown Publishers (1983-09-20)
Authors: Will Jacobs and Gerard Jones
List price: $1.00
New price: $23.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

Made me want to read Crime and Punishment
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-26
My boyfriend bought this book for me 22 years ago and it has followed me around through seven changes of address. I can honestly say that but for this book, I don't think I would have read Crime and Punishment or The Grapes of Wrath. I wanted to be sure I was getting all the jokes. It was funny in 1984 and it is still funny.

Save the Beave!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-26
To save the Cleavers from the network axe, past and contemporary literary giants pour forth their own "episodes" for the Beave and crew. Everyone's character --including Eddie Haskell--gets fleshed out in ways you'll never see on Nickelodeon. Personal favorites include Tennessee William's turn on Miss Landers and June. Brilliant and absurdly funny blend of high prose and Americana 50's schmaltz. Made me laugh out loud at every read.

Hey, Wally, why is our book out of print?
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-23
When I first read the Dostoevsky episode ("Hey, Wally, do you think it's OK to kill an old lady?" "I don't know, Beav. We haven't gotten that far in civics."), I was in convulsions. This is the funniest book in the history of Western Civilization, even funnier than "The Lazlo Letters," and that's saying something. That it is out of print is some kind of culture crime.

"And Thus Spake Beaver"
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-03
In an attempt to save "Leave It To Beaver" from going off the air in 1963, famous authors submit scripts hoping their influence will persuade the network from dumping the show. Scripts include "Lady Cleaver's Beaver" by D. H. Lawrence, "Beavermorphosis" by Franz Kafka (where Theodore actually transforms into a giant beaver), and my personal favorite "And Thus Spake Beaver" by Nietzche ... "And Beaver descended alone from the house encountering no one, and all at once there stood before him Larry Mondello who bit into an apple. And thus spake Beaver unto Larry Mondello, 'Shared cookies make a friend, not getting in trouble together', and he punched Larry Mondello in the stomach." If you love the Beave and love Literary Parodies, you'll love this book.

One of the funniest books ever
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-12
Wow -- it's nice to see that there are other people out there who have read this book and loved it as much as I did. I bought the book when it first came out in 1985 and I was in college. I almost peed my pants reading it in the bookstore, so I figured I'd better buy it before they threw me out. I still have it on my shelf, and it's provided countless hours of amusement ever since. About the only books I would consider funnier than this one are George Ade's "Fables in Slang" and "More Fables in Slang", which are sadly almost unknown today. They should really reprint this, because it's as hilarious today as it was almost 15 years ago.

Movies
Betty Garrett and Other Songs: A Life on Stage and Screen
Published in Hardcover by Madison Books (1997-11-01)
Authors: Betty Garrett and Ron Rapoport
List price: $23.95
New price: $4.00
Used price: $0.47
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-07
I like Betty Garrett very much! From Laverne & Shirley, All In The Family-very funny! I like that the book is her autobiography! I can't wait to read all about the life & times of the lovely Betty Garrett! I also have David L. Lander's autobiography & the unofficial Penny Marshall book! Any one who's a fan of "Laverne & Shirley" e-mail me @: tiff_lisatony7@yahoo.com. We can chat about Betty, Penny, David, Cindy, Michael, Phil, & evrything else related to "Laverne & Shirley".

Very, very good celebrity autobiography
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-12
If you like reading celebrity autobiographies, and you even have a passing interest in this actress, don't miss this book. It really is a very engrossing read. She speaks of her life in a very honest and forthcoming fashion, and she has had quite an interesting life, the most dramatic part being the blacklisting of her actor husband, Larry Parks, in the 1950's, and her "guilt by association."

Also, if you happen to be a fan of either Lloyd, Beau, and/or Jeff Bridges, you should know that Betty and Larry are/were(Larry is deceased) very close to this family -- Betty is Jeff Bridges' godmother.

So, if you know Betty from her movie work (she tells such a funny story about Frank Sinatra, from when they were filming "On the Town"), her stage work, or her TV work on "All in the Family" and "Laverne and Shirley," I think you will more than appreciate this book.

I hope you read this and enjoy it as much as I did!

betty's the best!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-21
betty garrett was the best in those mgm movies and she could have been so much more famous

Beautifully written.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-17
I have loved the movies of both Betty Garrett and Larry Parks for years, and now feel that I have read their love story. Betty's descriptions of her multi-faceted career and personal life were written with humor, warmth, and love. She and Larry endured the 'unofficial' blacklist and other obstacles together, and showed what "in good times and in bad" really meant. I admire and adore them both even more now. Her book is a wonderful read and her career isn't even over.

Lovely book from a lovely lady!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-26
Betty's wit, wisdom and reflections prove that there's a lot more to her than a pretty face and wise-cracks. Talent, sensitivity and grace make her a beautiful author with something important to say. Show business enthusiasts and historians alike will greatly enjoy her story. And, since her career is enjoying a recent resurgence, we can only hope she'll write a sequel, soon!

Movies
Boy A: Movie Tie-in Edition
Published in Paperback by Serpent's Tail (2008-06-01)
Author: Jonathan Trigell
List price: $14.95
New price: $7.49
Used price: $7.50

Average review score:

A little one-sided
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-09
Well-worth reading for its subject matter, I found the book to be over-manipulative at times. The author obviously feels that 'Jack' should be given a second chance, and tries to make us think the same way.

The one-sidedness of the argument appears is a few places: we are not fully exposed to the victim's horror, or to the loss felt by her family. We never know clearly how Jack feels about what he did, and indeed if he feels guilt or remorse. Infact, since we are not told what happened to the girl, we're not sure whether he's guilty at all.

An example how evil threads through the fabric of individual lives
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-11
Easy to read in spite of some horrible graphic images. Boy A's story exemplifies the harm that parents create for their children when they don't like themselves or don't love each other. Little sins, like little pebbles in a quiet lake making widening circles, become greater sins. Finishing the story led me to think maybe little sins should be dealt with instead of being waved away with a permissive hand.

Superb debut novel
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-14
I couldn't put this book down. Loosely based on the real life James Bulger murder (which was, dare I say it, even more horrific than the crime Boy A has committed) it is both harrowing and thought provoking, and I found myself feeling optimistic for Jack at the end.

Moving and thought provoking
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-01
Jack at twenty four years old has just been released from prison, he is in the company of Terry, his long assigned care officer, ahead he has a new life invented for him; only the name Jack did he choose for himself. But can he make a success of it? He has grown up in juvenile institutions having committee as a child, along with an accomplice, an horrendous crime. All seems to go well, he has work, makes good friends, even a girlfriend who loves him; yet he finds it a struggle to live as this invented person, and of course there are those, including the tabloid press, who cannot forget what happened in the past.

By introducing us to Jack as a young man before we know the extent of his crime, it is easy to accept him without judgement, and he comes across as a friendly, slightly naïve, but very likeable young guy. As we learn more about his unhappy upbringing, for we jump back and forth in time chapter by chapter, we are even more endeared to him. Having so endeared Jack to us, what subsequently transpires is all the more involving, for our heart goes out to the youngster and especially when everything appears to be falling apart for him.

The other characters are well drawn and very believable, including Terry, his devoted carer, his fun loving friends and workmates, and his attractive and slightly voluptuous girlfriend.

Jonathan Trigell writes eminently readable prose which captures just the right intimate mood. It is a thought provoking, cleverly yet subtly constructed story, with a touch of irony, and great humanity. Boy A is heart rending tale that could as easily be fact as fiction, and all the more moving for that.

strong character study
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-03
In Luton, England Boy A and Boy B were convicted of murdering a young girl Angela Milton. Being teens there names were suppressed and their sentence relatively short for the heinous crime they committed.

A decade later Boy A is freed and uses Jack Burridge as his new name; a fight in the bar gives him the nickname "Bruiser". His probation officer Uncle Terry arranges a place to live for Jack and finds the young man a job as a map reader. As Boy A, Jack learned how to survive brutal incarceration by fitting in and being amiable with everyone. He is doing well until he begins an affair with a woman at work at the same time the media announces Boy A is free to kill again.

Although the alphabetizing of each subsequent chapter is gimmicky, it works as it accentuates the dilemma of society dealing with violent youths committing crimes. Jack is a fascinating character as he knows he will be insecure for the rest of his life looking back at who will point the finger at Boy A. Readers will see how he got to the situation he is in as Jonathan Trigell takes the audience back through the lead character's life that led to his joining Boy B to commit a homicide. Jack knows first hand that society pretends to rehab convicts, but expects revenge any moment. Fans will appreciate this strong character study of a young man who has no future, lives to barely survive the present, and cannot forget the past as no one (including himself) will ever let that occur.

Harriet Klausner

Movies
Buffy The Vampire Slayer: The Script Book, Season One, Volume 1
Published in Hardcover by Simon Spotlight Entertainment (2000-11-28)
Author: Various Authors
List price: $14.00
New price: $5.97
Used price: $0.88

Average review score:

It's all in the dialogue, Baby!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-29
Of course it's not all in the dialogue. You've got great acting, directing, editing, costuming, etc. HOWEVER, the Buffy writers obviously not only love what they do, but are also very good at it.

The pop culture references mingle freely with the historical. Renaissance Poetry class was never so much fun.

These scripts give you a chance to catch anything you might have missed the first time around. It's peppy. Is Poppy a word? Well, I know it's a word, but is it a word the way I mean it? Anyhow, I would recommend this book for any Buffy fan.

In the beginning of Buffy there were the scripts...
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-25
The good news is that original shooting scripts of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" are available, as in this volume offering up the first six episodes of Season One. But the bad news, relatively speaking, is that we just get the scripts without any extras. The pages are your traditional Courier style font (including the title page), and while the pages are not in blue, pink, green, yellow, goldenrod and salmon to reflect the various revisions, if you follow the revision dates on the top of the pages you can figure that part out. Therefore, while I appreciate having the original scripts in front of my while watching the episodes so I can see what has been deleted/added/changed (these are not transcripts; big difference), I would have really liked to have a bit more such as introductions by the writers talking about the genesis of the script ideas or problems they had to overcoming in putting the script into production, beyond the production notes and stage directions. Certainly some of what I am looking for can be found in "The Watcher's Guide," which covers the show's first two seasons, but given how first-rate the BtVS companion volumes have been I am rather surprised this is a comparatively bare bones effort.

Included in this volume for those of you who do not have the first 100 episodes totally memorized are "Welcome to the Hellmouth" and "The Harvest," both written by series creator Joss Whedon, "Witch" by Dana Reston, "Teacher's Pet" by David Greenwalt, "Never Kill a Boy on the First Date" by Rob Des Hotel and Dean Batali, and "The Pack" by Matt Kiene and Joe Reinkemeyer. After the two-part pilot these other episodes reflect a time when the Buffy mythos was just starting to get organized. After all, Buffy has yet to find out about Angel's true nature and the emphasis is on how high school is a living hell if you are a teenager, but even more so when you are perched on the Hellmouth. Besides, once you get the first half of Season One you have to pick up the second half as well. Then there is Season Two...

language delights of "Buffy"
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-14
Watching "Buffy" T.V. series or cassettes is huge enjoyment already. Reading this script brought pure delight: sharp wit, self-derogatory under-/overstatements, punch and speed - this script is, quite definitely, for lovers of language. Stage directions, as indicated between parts of dialogue,are about as savoury as dialogue itself. I've just one reservation:I suppose, to really relish this book as it should be relished, one should obviously have seen related episodes on either TV or cassette. One then remembers Charisma Carpenter's studied drawl, Sarah Gellar's brisk deadpan humour, and Nicholas Brendon's fantastic "fool's faces". Only then does one realize, not just how good the writing is, but also, how brilliantly the whole cast has done its job. Yes, this definitely does show just how brilliant the whole "Buffy" act was - and still is. Can we PLEASE have scriptbooks of what follows?!...

This book rocks my world
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-28
It's valuable for fans of Buffy, full of hints and descriptions that make the tv episodes even more enjoyable; it's also a very cool book for anyone interested in writing tv scripts who're curious about the format, or looking for insight into how to blend comedy and suspense and juggle an excellent ensemble cast without shortchanging anyone.

Joss, you are truly brilliant
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-15
This book is one of the ultimate companions to the blockbuster show of the same title.

In a day and age when show creators and producers have gotten into the habit of talking down to their ausiences, Whedon again breaks the mold by sharing the direct scripts with us, the loyal fans.

I remember how happy I was when I heard that BTVS was going to be a television series and this book brought back the early euhphoria that I experienced with the revival. Thank you again Joss for everything.

Movies
Bye-Bye, Pacifier (Golden Naptime Tale)
Published in Board book by Golden Books (1992-02-01)
Authors: Louise Gikow and Tom Cooke
List price: $3.99
New price: $16.78
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.69

Average review score:

pacifier
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-23
My granddaughter was very attached to her "paci" this book seemed to help her put it away.

No more Pacifier!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-03
This book helped my daughter get ready to say "bye bye" to her
pacifier. She still likes to read the book even now that the pacifier is gone.

My daughter tossed her binky after 2 weeks with this book!
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-04
I bought my daughter this book two weeks ago. She is two months shy of 3 years old. She has always been tremendously comforted by her binky. We have been limiting her binky use to naps and bedtime and extreme distress for quite a while now, but have been anxious for her to get rid of it. After a week of reading this book, she turned to me and said, "I'm not ready, Mommy." I told her she'd be ready one day. One week later, yesterday morning, she woke up saying, "Mommy, I'm ready to say Bye Bye Binky!" I am convinced it's because of this book. I asked her what she wanted to do with the binky and she said "Throw it in the trash." And that she did. She was aware that Baby Miss Piggy doesn't throw hers in the trash, but we kind of glossed over that part. My daughter appreciated that the first time Nanny suggests that Baby Piggy is too old for the pacifier, she said she still wanted it and did get it back. I think it helps, too, that the book has a part where Baby Piggy says she feels kind of silly because her friends don't use a pacifier anymore. I know my daughter gave up her binky on her own two months ago at preschool for that very reason. At first I thought this book would be too babyish for my daughter, but it clearly wasn't.

A Big Help From The Library
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-06
Baby Piggy loves her pacifier. She uses it every day. Then, one day, her baby-sitter asks her if she can play without it. Piggy tries to play without it for a few minutes, but she gets upset, so her baby-sitter gives it back. Until one day, Piggy realizes that none of her friends use a pacifier. From that day on, Piggy gave up her pacifier and her baby-sitter took it away. I got this book from our old local library and it helped my sister to say bye-bye to her pacifier.

A big help from Santa
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-13
Santa sent this book to my son when he was three and still using his pacifier. When I read this cute book to my son that Santa sent, he imediatly threw away his pacie and never said anything about it again. I believe he made this decission because the book came from Santa. It was signed in the back of the book, " Dear Tony , you are a big boy now and it is time to say Bye Bye to your pacifier, Love, Santa Clause. Thanks Santa, for a wonderful book that helped solve a little problem.

Movies
Cinema Nirvana: Enlightenment Lessons from the Movies
Published in Paperback by Three Rivers Press (2005-02-22)
Author: Dean Sluyter
List price: $14.00
New price: $8.23
Used price: $6.00
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

cinema nirvana, buddhist movie pearls for all ages
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-23
you don t have to be a buddhist to appreciate this common sense approach
to the movies we know and love...easy to understand but profound at the
same time......nancy

Captivating
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-21
Thoroughly enjoyable capture of the nuggets of dharma illustrated in film. This was a grand gift of a book.

Highly recommended
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-04
Reading Cinema Nirvana was an exceptionally gratifying experience. It was hard to put the book down, and every time I tried to do so, I was drawn back to it. The reading of it was a comforting experience, as well as being entertaining and making me laugh. When I poked my head out of its waters, I felt like I had been meditating for quite a while.

But it actually did more than that. Sluyter's life experience and committment to seeking consciousness infuses this book with a clear and cogent energy that passes on to the reader. Not many books have this magic. In the reading of it, I felt something in me unlock, taking me deeper within myself, a priceless experience.

Sluyter's ability to recognize and interpret the presence of spiritual guidance in the movies is amazing. But it is not just this skill, nor just the knowledge imparted, that makes this book shine. It is also his willingness to be real, to share his passion and to bare his heart. I highly recommend it.

A terrific book and a way fun read!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-05
Cinema Nirvana is a terrific book and a way fun read. I want to go over some of it again because it is quite thought provoking for me. I got a non-New-Age-Oh-Wow-How-Cosmic-Dude look at roots of some of my own beliefs and practices. Completely unexpected, and pleasantly surprising.

Blissful
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-22
A lot of spiritual writing succumbs to the platitudes of new-asge mush. Not so with this book. Cinema Nirvana is extraordinarily well written, creative and insightful. Basically, Sluyter does an analysis of cinema in terms of Buddhist teaching. Each analysis made me think again about the movies I had taken at face value - I even ended up reading some of them twice. I have definitely reconsidered the way I approach popular culture as a result of Sluyter's critical technique. I would recommend this book to anyone who has an interest in Buddhist philosophy, wants to steer clear of the new age drivel, and enjoys well wrought, intellectually stimulating critical writing. Even those who don't have much knowledge of buddhist philosophy, but want fresh crticial insight into cinema should give this book a reading.

Movies
Contempt (Film Ink)
Published in Paperback by Prion (1999-07)
Author: Alberto Moravia
List price: $12.00
New price: $6.99
Used price: $2.87

Average review score:

A modern version of an old myth
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-31
A theatre writer, Riccardo Molteni, cannot write anymore because his wife, Emilia, does not love him anymore. Moreover, she despises him, all of a sudden.

The search for the reasons which led to this sudden change of feelings, makes Moravia rewrite a modern versin of Ulyse's myth. In a few words, Penelope did not love Ulyse anymore, though she remained faithful to him even before he left for Troja. Why did she not love him? Because the king's behaviour was not masculine enough towards her admirers at the court.
Therefore, Ulyse wins his wife's contempt and consequently leaves for Troja to free himself in a way. After the war, he postpones sine die his return to Ithaca, obessed by the same thing: Penelope's contempt.

When he finally decides to go back home, he knows he has no other solution but to violently kill all Penelope's admirers, in order to get her admiration and love.

And this is how Homer can be well combined with Freud. The moravian style, vivid and direct, manifests itself in this novel, keeping alive the pleasure of your reading.

I think Alberto Moravia is one of the greatest Italian writers of all times. All his novels deal with important issues our society has to face, problems we all have. Many of us will recognize ourselves in his characters.

It will be a very challenging reading that will make you ask a lot of questions about yourself and your life. Enjoy it!

Faustian Bargain and the Unreliable Narrator
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-26
After a second reading of Contempt, I feel compelled to call the short, tautly written novel a masterpiece. Told from the perspective of a neurotic egotist, the narrator accounts how he "sacrificed" his literary writing career to debase himself in the tawdry task of writing screenplays so that he can afford to lavish his wife with a bigger more opulent living quarters. The narrator convinces himself that not only does his wife not appreciate his "sacrifice," but that she no longer loves him. It's horrifying to read this narcissist's account of his marital disintegration because you begin to realize that he is projecting his own lack of love toward his wife (a pefectly fine, loving woman) and you realize that he is so emotionally arrested that he is incapable of loving anyone. Further, a close reading reveals that the narrator never sacrificed his writing career for his wife's opulent tastes, but rather is debasng his writing talents for his own greedy materialistic acquistion.

Many see Moravia's novel as the quintessential example of "modernism," the movement that emphasizes the human limitation for self-understanding and the understanding of others. Also, the novel explores Freudian themes of projection, paranoia, and the powers of the unconscious.

The novel is fast-paced save for a few chapters where the writer and director indulge in long-winded discussions about the mythical exposition of their film but overall the novel is a real page-turner full of suspense and psychological realism.

If you enjoy this suspensful novel told from the point of view of an unreliable narrator, I recommend Asylum by Patrick McGrath, Despair by Vladimir Nabokov, and The Horned Man by James Lasdun.

le mepris revisited
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-22
somehow there is a new found celebration for contempt and everything associated with it. a year and a half ago, godard's contempt was finally re-released; a couple of months ago, two new books about casa malaparte allowed us to view the importance of the film's setting, most notably capri and it's culture, but now this new publication of moravia's contempt will allow everyone to view the masterpiece it truly represents.

Moravia At His Creative Peak
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-21
Finally, someone had the common decency to reprint Moravia in translation. And they also picked the best titles. Il Disprezzo (The Contempt) is the best, most honest, unflinching look at the disintegration of a relationship that I have ever read. Last released in the States in the 1950's under the title A Ghost at Noon, this is the same excellent translation by Angus Davidson, who translated almost all of the authors works up until his death in 1990. If you've ever experienced the conclusion of a long-term relationship and for some masochistic reason want to remember what it was like, this is the book for you. I guess that's not a ringing endorsement. But trust me, Moravia's penchant for psychological details is so devastatingly on-point, you'll find yourself nodding nauseatingly at the pathetic delusions and convoluted rationalizations taking place between the couple. It should be noted that this isn't the book's only focus. Quite uncharacteristically, Moravia tackles popular culture and the highbrow-lowbrow dichotomy in a darkly humorous fashion. I haven't seen Godard's film adaptation but I understand that it is an incredible achievement in itself.

opened to the bone
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-11
Moravia's writing which I would not have encountered were it not for these elegant new paperback versions of his work is open to the bone. His honest revelations through his all too human characters are poignant, pointed, and penetrating. To any one interested in looking deep inside themeselves and their relationships: I recommend Contempt. Prepare to squirm.

Movies
CultTVman's Ultimate Modeling Guide to Classic Sci-Fi Movies
Published in Paperback by CultTVman (2002-06)
Authors: Steve Iverson and Anthony Taylor
List price: $19.95
New price: $19.95
Used price: $125.00

Average review score:

Covers some unsual model kit builds...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-30
Everything from a Disney Nautilus to George Pal's Time Machine. Tons of tips and how to do casting, making molds, tricks for better details on models. If you like to scratchbuild, this books is chocked full of good information.

Classic kits, Classic reviews
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-13
I picked up Cult's book at WonderFest with egar anticipation. What was contained in the book did not dissapoint. It was filled with great kits I never knew existed (& now want) as well as great ideas & tips on building them. I can't say enough about this book & how it will help me build a better kit.

Belongs in every Sci Fi Model Library
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-16
Few books devoted to science fiction modelmaking have punctuated the monotonous and predictable landscape of model building related books, and this one is a stand-out! "The Ultimate Modeling Guide..." covers a broad range of science fiction hardware and model making techniques. Excellent photography supports detailed and authoritative text. I've found it to be instructional and inspirational. This book is for anyone interested in modelmaking. And for the sci-fi specific modelmaker, you library is sorely incomplete until you get this book. I highly recommend it!

Kalmbach Publishing should be taking notes...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-12
This is a very slickly produced book, with lots of great, clear photography. This book covers a wide range of classic scifi modeling subjects, with tons of advice and pointers on many different facets of scale modeling. It completely blows away the Trek and Wars books published by Kalmbach, in terms of relevancy to modelers and quality of the publication - not to mention the great looking models produced by the authors of the chapters. If you enjoy science fiction modeling, and are looking to improve your skills and learn new techniques, this book will be a huge asset to your reference material. And keep checking out the CultTVMan web site...

At last, a book for sci fi modelers!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-13
Reference books and how-to books for modelers are a small niche in the market, and they've been almost entirely oriented toward the military modeler. Now at last is an in-depth how-to book for the science fiction kit builder. We're not out in the cold any more! Steve Iverson has gathered a gaggle of the best sci fi modelers from around the CultTVMan internet community, and they've given us step-by-step articles on building and improving such kits as Polar Lights' Robbie the Robot and C-57D spaceship, Lunar Models' Proteus and Discovey, and many other mainstream and garage industry models. The book is capped off with a fascinating history of the filming model of the Starship Enterprise from Star Trek: The Motion Picture through its retirement, with some wonderful reference photos of the ship - worth the price of admission alone!


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