Showing posts with label motion pictures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label motion pictures. Show all posts

Friday, February 16, 2024

Music Book Review: The Needle and the Lens - Pop Goes to the Movies - From Rock and Roll to Synthwave by Nate Patrin

The Needle and the Lens: Pop Goes to the Movies: From Rock and Roll to Synthwave
by Nate Patrin (Music 781.542 Pat)

 

I think it’s safe to say that music and movies are like peanut butter and jelly — most folks like them both on their own, but they’re even better together! The history of film has always been linked to music, too: when movies were still silent movies, most theaters had an organist or pianist who played along with the films, adding another layer of dramatic or narrative interest to the otherwise quiet on-screen action. Once it was possible to reproduce sound with film, music remained an important part of film production, often simmering in the background to set the desired mood, or bursting into the foreground at dramatic peaks for emphasis.

 

There is a long tradition of scoring music for film, writing custom music that compliments the unique visuals, dialogue, and settings for each movie. But directors also turn to familiar music frequently, too. There are a variety of reasons for this: music familiar to the audience can be a shortcut to a particular kind of mood. Sometimes it helps to establish a scene as diegetic music, or music that’s being experienced by the actors on-film. Sometimes it’s both! Music writer Nate Patrin has a fascinating new book called The Needle and the Lens: Pop Goes to the Movies: From Rock and Roll to Synthwave which discusses some well-known uses of pop music in film, and also makes the argument that having such music in film has helped to legitimize the music itself as art to be appreciated on a serious level.

 

The ”needle” Patrin refers to in the title is a record player needle, of course, and in the film industry, the diegetic music I mentioned earlier is often referred to as a “needle drop,” when a character in the film would perhaps put on a record for their own listening, and we hear it with them, or they turn on the radio, or they go to a concert, etc. For the most part, these kinds of contexts are where pop music first started to appear in films, while conventionally scored soundtracks continued to underscore other parts of films. In his introduction, he points out how these pop music moments in film can add so much meaning to a scene, including establishment of a time period, revealing more about a character’s personality, or even adding another emotional cue for the audience, as so many of us have our own unique connections with songs. The idea became so important to the film industry that the role of “music supervisor” was created to help select music, organize it, and secure rights to use it.

 

The book focuses on 16 songs used in 16 films, selected as being particularly influential or memorable, or furthering the art of filmmaking. They’re arranged by the release date of each film, ranging from “Scorpio Rising” in 1964 to “Drive” in 2011. Considering that being influential is one of the criteria for inclusion, most of the films are older, from the 60s to the 90s, with one representative from the Oughts and the aforementioned “Drive” from the Teens. Jumping right into the 60s with “Scorpio Rising,” we find a film that was regarded as borderline obscene at the time of its release in the height of the Hays Code, but already somewhat quaint by the standards of the 1970s. As an early film in the “biker” genre, it arrived after the era of James Dean, but before the era of classic rock biker anthems, and the music choices reflect that fascinating interstitial moment when defining biker culture with rebellion was somewhat more open to interpretation. Patrin focuses on director Kenneth Anger’s choice of the song “He’s a Rebel” as performed by The Crystals as representative of this vaguely liminal space, in which his unique blend of a documentary approach with edits that represent his own interpretation of the culture are well represented in the music. It was also one of the earliest cinematic examples of contemporary pop music being placed in a film, which was influential for aspiring filmmakers like Martin Scorsese.

 

Next, Patrin discusses the use of music by Simon & Garfunkel in the 1967 film “The Graduate,” and in particular “The Sounds of Silence,” which frames several important scenes. This music would have been very familiar to audiences at the time this film premiered, and it was unusual to have such familiar music used extensively in a film both as diegetic music and underscore. While the plan had been to have Simon & Garfunkel write original songs for the film, they were delayed in delivering them, and in the meantime, the director and producer fell in love with existing album cuts they had laid into the film as temporary tracks while editing the final cut. While it was an unorthodox move at the time to leave them in, it turned out to be a huge success: the film was extremely well-received, as was its soundtrack.

 

We’ll skip ahead a little to the film “American Graffiti” in 1973, which got to demonstrate another great use of pop music in film: nostalgia. Here we have a period piece, set roughly 10 years before the debut of the film, and director George Lucas opted to emphasize the time period in part through musical choices. As so much of the action revolves around driving, the music of the film is entirely diegetic, presented through the car radios of its characters, and the music they’re cruising to is mostly from the 50s. Ostensibly, Patrin focuses on the original 1958 Bobby Freeman version of “Do You Want to Dance?” here as the main song, but the whole soundtrack—41 songs that were already becoming vintage at the time of the film—work together to set the mood and the time. It turned out that lots of people were already nostalgic for the innocence and fun represented by the “jukebox” selected for the film, as the soundtrack went triple platinum, spent 41 weeks on the Billboard charts, and essentially launched the era of classic rock compilation albums.

 

Establishing a time period while evoking some nostalgia turned out to work beautifully in the war film genre, too. In 1979, “Apocalypse Now” opened with The Doors’ “The End,” powerfully evoking the Vietnam War era with a focus on the personal rather than the universal, something that would have been difficult to achieve with a more heavy-handed approach such as any of the many war protest songs of the time. It turns out that the whole opening scene of the film, which combines the Doors song with footage of a helicopter dropping napalm on a tree grove and then dissolves to the character Captain Willard suffering alone in a small room, was conceived of toward the end of production. While finding this footage and combining it with this music was essentially accidental, it became an important element of the film, changing its structure and setting its tone. Much like “American Graffiti” did for 50s nostalgia, “Apocalypse Now” marked the beginning of a Doors revival that carried on for several years.

 

These moments of collective reconsideration of familiar music are the basis for Patrin’s underlying thesis in the book, a notion that these pop music hits became more seriously regarded after their second lives through film. These songs contributed transformative moments on screen, and they were themselves transformed in the process. In some specific cases laid out in the book, I agree with this assessment. Take the use of Roy Orbison’s “In Dreams” for David Lynch’s “Blue Velvet” film, for example: the impact of the film on the song, the song on the film, and the subsequent Orbison reassessment that followed, did feel like an elevation of Orbison’s song and work more generally. And the appearance of Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” in “Wayne’s World” definitely led to critical reassessment and a new generation of fans for that band. But in other examples, I didn’t find his case to be quite as strong, such as the Delfonics being featured in Quentin Tarantino’s “Jackie Brown,” or the several entries that featured songs contemporaneous with the films they were featured in. Even the “American Graffiti” soundtrack felt more like pure nostalgia than a subtle or nuanced reassessment. These relationships between song and screen are fascinating no matter how transcendent they may or may not be, though.

 

If you haven’t had enough by the time you reach the end of the 16 main chapters and their songs/films, there is an “outro” chapter that adds an additional 24 examples to the mix. These are covered with just a paragraph on each, but the additions definitely add to the richness of the book. Who can forget the song “Tequila” as featured in “Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure,” for example, or the surprising juxtaposition of Huey Lewis and the News’ “Hip to be Square” in “American Psycho?” There are some great songs and great movies to think about here.

 

This book isn’t just for music fans, by the way. Describing these relationships between films and songs requires a lot of description of the films, and movie buffs will find lots to like here. In most cases, you’ll find more detailed analysis of the films than the songs! This makes sense, though, as the films in this context are the macro-structure art form at the heart of the discussion, and the songs are just playing a role within them. It’s interesting to note that the supermajority of the songs featured are considerably older than the films they’re featured in, by at least a decade. I think this speaks to the notion that we have complicated relationships with pop music in our culture: we hear it, internalize it as part of our memories, associate with a particular time and place, and then all of those associations come rushing outward when we hear it placed into a new context like a movie. Music is a powerful way to express and share emotions, and also a robust way to store those feelings in our memories for detailed recollection later.

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try The Music of Counterculture Cinema by Matthew J. Bartkowiak and Yuya Kiuchi or Hollywood Shack Job: Rock Music in Film and On Your Screen by Harvey Kubernik.)


( publisher’s page for The Needle and the Lens )

 

Recommended by Scott S.
Polley Music Library

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?

New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!


Check out this, and all the other great music resources, at the Polley Music Library, located on the 2nd floor of the Bennett Martin Public Library at 14th & "N" St. in downtown Lincoln. You'll find biographies of musicians, books about music history, instructional books, sheet music, CDs, music-related magazines, and much more. Also check out Polley Music Library Picks, the Polley Music Library's e-mail newsletter, and follow them on Facebook!

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

DVD Review: Only in Theaters - a documentary by Raphael Sbarge

Only in Theaters
a documentary by actor/filmmaker Raphael Sbarge (DVD 791.43 Onl)

Fascinating documentary about the Laemmle family (pronounced Lem-lee) and the chain of independent arthouse movie theaters they established in the Los Angeles area. This documentary started filming in 2018/2019 and its focus was going to be on the decline of independent movie theaters, and the Laemmle family facing hard decisions on whether to sell their chain or continue to cater to arthouse movie crowds.

But the documentary was still filming when COVID-19 arrived and movie theaters in California all had to shut down. The documentary focus shifted to how a family-owned-for-80-years business can survive during a period of forced social isolation.

 

I loved the sections of this film, particularly the interviews with film critics and fans (like Leonard Maltin), which dealt with the history of the Laemmle chain and how essential it has been to the film-loving community of Southern California. The interviews with both movie fans and movie makers was absolutely marvelous. While I certainly feel badly for the current generation of Laemmle family leadership on the hard decisions they have had to make in the pandemic era, those portions of the documentary eventually became somewhat repetitive.

 

But I do still recommend this film to cinemaphiles and anyone who loves the experience of seeing movies with a crowd in a movie theater…an experience that continues to become less and less common in an era in which streaming and home theaters continue to replace the actual movie-going tradition.

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try The Last Blockbuster (a documentary on DVD), Going Attractions: The Definitive Story of the Movie Palace by April Wright, American Picture Palaces: The Architecture of Fantasy by David Naylor, Ticket to Paradise: American Movie Theaters and How We Had Fun by John Margolies (Heritage Room only) or The Projectionist by Nicholas Nicolaou.)

 

( Internet Movie Database entry for this 2022 documentary film )

 

See Scott C.’s review of the documentary The Last Blockbuster in the August 2021 Staff Recommendations here on BookGuide!

 

Recommended by Scott C.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you watched this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!


Saturday, December 23, 2023

DVD Review: Jules

Jules
(DVD Jules)

One night Milton (Ben Kingsley) hears loud splintering sounds in his backyard. He goes out to check and finds a space alien has crash landed in his flower beds.

 

Milton (Ben Kingsley) is a retired widower living alone in the family home. He’s having memory issues that are probably developing into some kind of dementia and potentially a loss of his independence. His daughter wants him to move out of the house as she recognizes he needs assistance, but he is refusing to do so, and their relationship is shaky at best. He also doesn’t get along all that well with his senior neighbors.

 

Jules is a sweet, quiet, personal film about three lonely senior citizens who end up banding together to aid a space alien — who is now named Jules. All three seniors are struggling in some way as they become friends while they realize The Government is searching for Jules. They work together to assist the alien in trying to escape from the Men in Black. Low-key yet also poignant and humorous.

 

Academy Award winner Sir Ben Kingsley stars as Milton, with Jane Curtin as Joyce, and Tony Award winner Harriet Harris as Sandy. At only 87 min, this is still a film that will stay with you. An alien film that doesn’t require battles and explosions – more “E.T.” than “Alien.”

 

( Internet Movie Database entry for this film )

 

Recommended by Charlotte M.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you watched this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Sunday, December 10, 2023

New Booklist on BookGuide: "Have Yourself a Merry Hard-Edged Christmas!"

“Is Die Hard a Christmas Movie?”

This has been a common pop-culture question in recent years, especially when the holidays roll around at the end of the year! Whether you believe this classic 1988 action film is a Christmas Movie or not, there’s no question that there have been a lot of action/adventure films set during the Christmas or year-end holiday season.

Becky W.C. compiled a list of those films for a display at the Lincoln City Libraries' Walt Branch Library in December 2023, and submitted her “video” list to be included in the resources of the libraries’ BookGuide readers advisory pages online.

Check out this new video "booklist" on BookGuide at the following link:

If You Like…Die Hard
a.k.a. “Have Yourself a Merry Hard-Edged Christmas!”

Saturday, December 9, 2023

DVD Review: Barbie the Movie

Barbie the Movie
(DVD Barbie)

I imagine you’ve heard that there’s a new movie about Barbie?

 

First, to clarify, this is not one more installment of the animated Barbie remakes of fairy tales. Back in the day when I was babysitting my niece, we would watch Barbie and the Twelve Dancing Princesses nearly every day and I can assure you she loved it, and for me, it was a good nap. Too much sugar!

 

Barbie the Movie does have its fair share of sugar, but it also contains enough spice to make it enjoyable, especially to the over 12 crowd.

 

Imagine a world in which Barbie isn’t just a fashion queen, but instead, stands in for all of the things a female person could be.

 

This “Stereotypical Barbie” believes that Barbies have been teaching young women that they can be anything that they want to be. Doctors, gymnasts, teachers, vets, scientists, space explorers (“Yay, Space!”) — a girl just needs to choose her own path. She can have a job, a house, a car, and even a Ken, if she wants one.


Although I know many people loved the moment when America Ferraro gives a speech about how hard it is to be a woman in today’s world, my favorite moment was after the young Bratz girls knock Barbie down for being a role model for unattainable body shape. Barbie, in tears, says, “She thinks I’m a fascist?  I don’t control the railways or the flow of commerce.” “Stereotypical Barbie” isn’t the blonde ditz that these young women have assumed, even if she is naive in her belief that girls have been empowered by her existence.

 

I highly recommend taking this journey with Barbie. You’ll have amazing side trips like seeing Will Ferrell and his posse of corporate execs chasing Barbie on rollerblades, a mystical moment where Barbie gets to have tea with her creator, poor Ken’s whole story arc, and just enough “stiff like a plastic doll” moments to tickle your funny bone. And yeah, plenty of mother-daughter moments to play on the heartstrings of what I think is the movie’s target audience: Women from ages 35-70. (We can’t help it if we carry some latent Mickey Mouse Club feelings for Ryan Gosling.)

 

Unlike Sandy from Grease, Barbie is not going to re-invent herself to fit Ken’s ideal. Ken (Ryan Gosling) and Ken (Simu Liu) are just going to have to do their Danny Zuko dance battle by themselves. Grease isn’t the only movie that’s referenced. There’s a slough of “Easter Eggs” to spot, and, if you delve online, you can find lists of the movies Greta Gerwig (the director) took as inspiration, including The Umbrellas of Cherbourg and The Red Shoes, The Truman Show, and Splash. You will see nods to Grease, 2001 A Space Odyssey, Wizard of Oz, Singin’ in the Rain, Barbie and the Magic of Pegasus, The Matrix, Swann’s Way, Midnight Cowboy, Playtime, and many more.

 

Maybe Barbie’s mere existence doesn’t solve all women’s problems, but this movie may surprise you with the substance beneath its many layers of fluff. As the song playing as Barbie leaves Barbieland goes: “There’s more than one answer to these questions / pointing me in a crooked line / and the less I seek my source for some definitive / closer I am to fine.” For me, the major theme of the movie is how there aren’t any straightforward answers in life. Reflecting on Barbie’s journey can be as deep or as fluffy as you want it to be. Follow that Pink Brick Road to your own interpretation!

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, The Red Shoes or Amelie for their similar technicolor esthetic, or any of the referenced movies, like Splash or The Truman Show.)

 

( Internet Movie Database entry for this film ) | ( official Barbie the Movie web site )

 

See Scott C.’s review of the Barbie the Movie: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack in the September 2023 Staff Recommendations here on BookGuide!

 

(Carrie actually gives this a “9.9” but our graphics limit us to giving it a “10” rating)

 

Recommended by Carrie K.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you watched this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Saturday, July 22, 2023

DVD Review: Harry Potter 20th Anniversary: Return to Hogwarts

Harry Potter 20th Anniversary: Return to Hogwarts
(DVD 791.437 Har)

Absolutely charming and nostalgia-filled visit with many of the actors from the Harry Potter films, as they gathered in 2021 for interviews and private conversations to discuss the experience of being part of the Harry Potter film universe on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone‘s 2001 release.

 

To make things even more special, the interviews/conversations were filmed on the standing sets from the films, which have been available for tourists to visit since around 2013. In addition to the interviews/conversations, this documentary features a ton of behind-the-scenes footage from the filming of all 8 movies, as well as “home movie” footage and media-sourced coverage. Most of the primary cast are here — of course Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint, who share what it was like growing up relying on each other’s friendship, but also under the eyes of the worldwide media. Directors Chris Columbus (#1 and #2), Alfonso Cuaron (#3), Mike Newell (#4), and David Yates (#5-8) offer their fascinating takes on the making of the movies. And a huge cast of other significant Harry Potter actor also offer their memories as well — Gary Oldman, Jason Isaacs, Ralph Fiennes, Helena Bonham Carter, Bonnie Wright, Tom Felton, Evanna Lynch, Matthew Lewis, Toby Jones, James and Oliver Phelps, and Robbie Coltrane, in his last on-screen appearance before his passing in 2022. The producers also pay tribute to the many Harry Potter actors who’ve passed away in the intervening years — including Richard Harris, Alan Rickman, John Hurt, Richard Griffiths and Helen McCrory.

 

For anyone who isn’t a Harry Potter fan or who hasn’t seen all the films in the series, this is not for you. But if you grew up on the Potter films and novels, and feel close to the actors and characters, this 102-minute documentary reassures you that these performers all still love each other and realize how important this series of films is to so many people all around the world.

 

I loved this program, and only subtract 1 point from a perfect “10” rating for the unfortunate absence of several of the film actors who weren’t able to participate in the making of the documentary, like Maggie Smith.

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try all of the Harry Potter films in the 8-film series)

 

( Internet Movie Database entry for this documentary )

 

Recommended by Scott C.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you watched this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Book Review: Hollywood: The Oral History by Jeanine Basinger and Sam Wasson

Hollywood: The Oral History

by Jeanine Basinger and Sam Wasson (791.43 Bas)

 

As the authors say, in their introduction, this book is compiled from interviews conducted by the American Film Institute, beginning in 1969, with individuals from across the spectrum of movie-making. Basinger and Wasson were given total and unprecedented access to all of the the AFI’s Harold Lloyd seminars, oral histories, and complete archives, featuring more than 3000 guest speakers and almost 10000 hours of conversation.

 

The authors then pulled quotes and organized them into thematic chapters: Beginnings, Comedy, Silent Directors, Silent Actors, Sound!, Studio Heads, Studio Style, The Studio Workforce (itself broken in ten sub-chapters), The Product, The End of the System, Identity Crisis, New Hollywood, The Creep Up, The Deal, Packaging, Everybody’s Business, and Monsters.

 

This book makes for absolutely fascinating reading but it is also a bit stop-and-go. Anyone who is interested in the history of movie-making here in the United States should find much of the content of this volume essential reading. However, at the same time, it doesn’t make for fast-flowing reading, as the voices jump back and forth between people you recognize and people from the industry that you may never have heard of.

 

I ended up loving Hollywood: The Oral History, while at the same time wishing that it was a video documentary, so I could have actually seen the individuals as they were being interviewed. None-the-less, a marvelous book on Hollywood and film-making history! Nearly every page has some nugget of information I never heard about before!

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try It Happened on Broadway: An Oral History of the Great White Way by Myrna Frommer, though it deals with stage productions rather than film.)

 

( publisher’s official Hollywood: The Oral History web site ) | ( Wikipedia page for Jeannine Basinger )

 

Recommended by Scott C.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Monday, February 27, 2023

Book Review: The Motion Picture Teller by Colin Cotterill

The Motion Picture Teller

by Colin Cotterill (Cotterill)


I was fortunate enough to luck into an Advance Readers Copy of this title several months ago, prior to its official January 2023 release. Having enjoyed the Colin Cotterill “series” titles I’ve previously read (see review link below), I was excited to dive into this stand-alone novel.

 

The Motion Picture Teller is set in 1996 in Bangkok, Thailand. Supot is a somewhat lackadaisical postal delivery man, just going through the motions of life. The one bright spot in an otherwise bland world, is the time he spends with his friend Ali, who runs a video rental store (and tinkers with being a screenwriter). The two men are obsessed with films — especially foreign films, and the exotic women who star in them. They have a small viewing area at the back of the store, where they regularly spend hours upon hours viewing videotapes. When they discover a previously unknown film, entitled “Bangkok 2010”, mixed in with a box of VHS tapes they purchased from a scrounger, they watch it and and are stunned to realize it is a masterpiece — perhaps the greatest Thai-made movie of all time — but nobody has ever heard of it and it was apparently never released.

 

Supot becomes obsessed with finding the makers of this film, and with meeting the beautiful female star of the film, Siriluk, whom he develops a crush on. The majority of this novel features Supot’s efforts to uncover the film’s mysterious origins, which takes him to the backwoods of Thailand, and a commune full of people that have many secrets to hide.

 

This book was absolutely charming — it is a mystery novel, without a crime having been committed, and Supot and Ali are fabulous characters. But they’re not the only ones — every single supporting character is fully realized, colorful and intriguing. The dialog is humorous, sharp and snappy. The plot is complex. And the setting, in various different parts of Thailand is exotic and distinct. I really enjoyed this one, and strongly recommend it for fellow cinephiles! And I love what the title of the book refers to — Supot verbally telling the stories of motion pictures, from memory, to a rapt audience — an intriguing twist on the traditional “storyteller”.

 

(Author Colin Cotterill has lived in Thailand for many years, and has had two long-running mystery series set there — those featuring Dr. Siri Paiboun (a series which ended with a 15th entry in 2020), and those featuring Jimm Juree (2011-2019). Those are all worth sampling if you can track them down! I’ve particularly enjoyed the three Jimm Juree entries the libraries have as audiobooks.

 

I also recommend the film Be Kind Rewind, which also features somewhat quirky characters who inhabit a video rental store.)

 

( publisher’s official The Motion Picture Teller web page ) | ( official Colin Cotterill web site )

 

See Scott C.’s review of the audiobook of Killed at the Whim of a Hat by Cotterill, in the June 2020 Staff Recommendations here on BookGuide!

 

Recommended by Scott C.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Thursday, April 21, 2022

Audiobook Review: The Boys: A Memoir of Hollywood and Family, written and read by Ron Howard and Clint Howard

The Boys: A Memoir of Hollywood and Family

by Ron Howard and Clint Howard (Compact Disc Biography Howard)

 

This is an absolutely charming autobiography of the Howard boys — both Ron and Clint — and the influence their parents, Rance and Jean Howard had over their lives. Told roughly in chronological order, after a framing sequence in which Ron and Clint remember going through their parents’ home following the passing of Rance, the Howards share stories about what their lives were like during their childhoods, when Ron was appearing on The Andy Griffith Show and Clint was starring in Gentle Ben. Ron shares memories of the making of Happy Days, and his relationships with his fellow castmates on that legendary sitcom, particular his friendship with Henry Winkler, and Ron’s efforts to move behind the camera to become a director.

 

But despite all the tales of Hollywood, The Boys: A Memoir of Hollywood and Family is also a very personal chronicle of the very ordinary lives they lived in the Howard family home — a modest suburban tract where actor Rance Howard and his wife Jean were success in imparting a set of good values in their two boys. Rance and Jean both had dreams of striking it big in film and TV, but it was ultimately the boys who found that success. But the elder Howards proved to be the stable rocks in the family, shepherding the boys between film gigs, serving as sharers of worldly wisdom and more.

 

I particularly enjoyed the audiobook (on CD) version of this, which is personally narrated by Ron and Clint, and has an audio introduction by Ron’s daughter, Bryce Dallas Howard. You can clearly hear the sincerity in both Howard boys’ voices as they recall their formative years, and Clint matter-of-factly addresses his substance abuse issues and the fact that his parents stood by him even in his darkest years. This was a truly special audiobook — I highly recommend it, for anyone wanting a peek behind the scenes on the production of TV series and movies, anyone who grew up on Ron and Clint’s performances, and anyone who loves to hear about close-knit families working together to get through tough times.

 

(This book will inspire you to re-watch many of the TV shows and films that the Howard boys appeared in. Fortunately, the libraries have many of them, including multiple seasons of The Andy Griffith Show, and most of the films Ron Howard has directed, as well as a few of Clint’s cult movies — and don’t forget his appearance as “Balok” in the season one episode of classic Star Trek!.)

 

( Publisher’s official The Boys web site ) | ( Ron Howard and Clint Howard Wikipedia entries )

 

Recommended by Scott C.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Sunday, February 13, 2022

New Booktalk Booklist: Questioning Our Realities and Recontextualizing Our Fictions with Jasmine P.


In January 2022, as part of our South Branch BooksTalks on Zoom, Jasmine P., from the Gere Branch, presented a fascinating online talk on the topic "Questioning Our Realities and Recontextualizing Our Fictions: Using Films to Speak to Our Innermost Selves" -- featuring ten movies available in the libraries' DVD collection.

Check out Jasmine's list of recommended films, in this booktalk booklist on BookGuide at the following link:

Questioning Our Realities and Recontextualizing Our Fictions

Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Book Review: Lon Chaney Speaks by Pat Dorian

Lon Chaney Speaks
by Pat Dorian (741.5 Dor)

 

This was a fascinating graphic novel format biography of the legendary silent movie actor Lon Chaney, master of transforming himself into other people via early cinematic make-up effects and the way he held his own body. As the author/artist says, Chaney “chose to keep his personal life hidden, he rarely gave interviews, preferred not to be photographed without [character] makeup”. Therefore, the biographical elements of this short, intriguing work are, in part, supposition on Dorian’s part.

 

Dorian intersperses chapters in Lon Chaney Speaks dealing with Chaney’s childhood and early vaudeville career, then his superstar motion picture career, with side chapters focused on the films he’s best known for, including Shadows, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, and the Phantom of the Opera, among others. Each “movie” chapter goes into detail describing the work Chaney had to do to create his distinctive and memorable characters.

 

This was a fascinating read, and the “cartoon”-like illustrations don’t take away from the serious story of Chaney’s life. I’ll have to admit, I really didn’t know much about him, beyond his famous roles, and this book gave me a good picture of the hard, sometimes difficult and complicated life, he led. Highly recommended!

[ Lon Chaney on: Wikipedia & Internet Movie Database ] | [ official Pat Dorian web site 

 

Recommended by Scott C.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

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