Showing posts with label film guides. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film guides. Show all posts

The Scarecrow Video Movie Guide Review

The Scarecrow Video Movie Guide
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The Scarecrow Video Movie Guide ReviewThe Greatest Video Store in the World has released THE SCARECROW VIDEO MOVIE GUIDE. The Scarecrow Video Store is a true mecca for movie lovers located in Seattle Washington's University District. This 808 page celebration of film is written by the friends and workers of the store. They bring to the concept of Movie Guide Books exactly what they bring to Video Store--obsessive passionate iconiclastic eclectisism. After an introduction the book starts with a section on
14 Chapters categorize the movies in a unique way.
In Chapter 1: DIRECTORS you'll find movies listed according to the last names of the fine folks who directed them.So this section starts out with 3 movies by drive in trash maestro, Al Adamson: Black Heat, Mean Mother and Satan's Sadists. No, they don't include all of Adamson's film (and skip over perhaps his best known Dracula Versus Frankenstein) but the idea seems to be to travel down roads not as well traveled as other movie guidebooks. So what movies do they include of Woody and Altman and Richard Lester and Herschell Gordon Lewis? Who did they leave out of the director's section that they should have in there (Doris Wishman, Richard Rush, Ted V. Mikels perhaps?)
Then there's 13 more chapters and you get nearly 4,000 capsule reviews from a variety of perspectives and some mini-essays on diverse filmmakers from Anthony Mann, and Les Blanc to Silent Film-maker Nell Shipman. There's bonus lists like 'Movies We Wish Were on DVD', 'The Most Depressing Movies Ever Made' and 'Best Musical Documentaries Ever Made.'
If you're confused by how this book is organized there are 3 indexes that will help sort it out for you.
Also readable is what amounts to the Scarecrow Video Store story which opens the book. George Latsios (and Rebecca) started the world famous store with little more than George's passionate obsession with movies both very good and very bad. They built a remarkable rentable collection that includes many impossible to find treasures. Brain cancer took George from us, but there were two saviors who wanted to preserve and take further what George did with Scarecrow Video.
Do I really believe that a Movie Guide book that actually features a good review for the awful Bond movie A VIEW TO A KILL can possibly be worth buying and treasuring. Yes, I sure do.
The capsule reviews are not written by professionals but by a large group of knowledgeable movie nuts, most of who work, or use to work, at Scarecrow Video Store.
You see most of us who are likely to read from cover to cover a movie guide like this already know that A View to a Kill is the last Roger Moore Bond movie and it feels so tired and forced that even Christopher Walken's somewhat restrained performance and Grace Jones' outrageous fashion can't help overcome how awful the film is or how annoying Tanya Roberts and her many many "Oh James" exclamations truly are.So the review really sticks out as something so completely wrong and out of touch that it is... well. . . worth reading. Yeah that also meant you'll have to pay attention when this reviewer: N.J. aka Nathan Jensen recommends a movie you don't know anything about because perhaps his taste meter is on a completely different scale than yours. You'll also find a few minor research errors like the one in the listing for 1983's Octopussy, N.J. writes "It's little wonder Moore quit after this film." Moore's last Bond film was of course 1985's A View to a Kill. Oops. Might want to fix that one for the Second Printing.
Please Note: Scarecrow founder George Latsios. would have expected nothing less of me than to find a few mistakes and to nit-pick about a few things in this book. After all I'm the guy who embarrassed him about not having a copy of THE GLORY STOMPERS in Scarecrow several years ago as well as many other... uh memorable films. (And of course TGS is NOT in the guide book! As Dennis Hopper might say: "Man, that's just not cool, man." )
Every once in a while a movie gets two reviews. Sometimes this is a necessary like say with Wes Craven's Last House on the Left. Sometimes both reviews say about the same thing like for 1985's Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins so you wonder why two reviews were necessary.
There are plenty of examples of worthless movies getting their due in this guide too. You'll find 1997's Spice World appropriately dissected as a movie not bad enough to be good and not good enough to watch. And I don't know what bet "N.H." lost that he got to review King Kong Lives, but at least he got to have his say about Posession elsewhere in the guide.Yeah this thing might drive you a little crazy. (I mean where are reviews forBad Girls Go to Hell,Girl with Gold Boots and did I mention Glory Stompers? But that's a good thing that it engages you and gets you passionate about movies again isn't it? Sure it is.
I mean I think there's something wonderfully subversive that you review a few Oliver Stone movies and completely ignore Platoon and Wall Street.
What else can I say about a book that features reviews that embrace Brewster McCloud, el Topo, Oscar (! With Stallone!!!) and understands the appeal of Rudy Ray Moore movies, pays tribute to Les Blanc, gives a thumbs up review to A View to a Kill and wonderfully insists Amityville Horror is a ridiculous boring movie?Read with pleasure what is written in the reviews of all the Texas Chainsaw Massacre Movies (the re-make and Leatherface too)!!! Discover Poland's Sargossa Manuscript, Sweden's The Man on the Roof, Thailand's Killer Tattoo, Iran's Secret Ballot and The Circle, Germany's Tuvalu, Videograms of a Revolution and much more.
Sure you might get frustrated when a list tells you one of the best Musical documentaries is something called Inside Bjork but you won't find a review of it anywhere in the book. (Gee, guess you'll have to get to Scarecrow Video in Seattle and rent the thing yourself, huh?). Feel utterly vindicated when 1998's Armageddon and Michael Bay are torn new ones by the kind of capsule review you wished a published critic would have written and then read a review of the same flick in which it is declared a wonderful guilty pleasure of a movie!!! Ah one man's rotting bile is another's junk food pig-out. Throw up your hands, dance the Watusi and read the book some more.
If you liked Michael Weldon's Psychotronic books you'll do flips over this one. If you want the guide-book with the most accurate running times and release dates of movies then buy Leonard Maltin's book. If you want a mostly accurate and exhaustive listing of lots of movies rated with dog bones by a team of reviewers whose tastes run the full gamut of all genre but are fairly predictable and mainstream-then be sure to get your copy of the Videohound's Golden Movie Retriever Book. However if you want an alternately brilliant and frustrating guide to movies-many of which aren't found in other guides-then buy The Scarecrow Video Movie Guide ASAP. It may be-- or is that, maybe-- the best guide of them all.Christopher J. Jarmick co-wrote the critically acclaimed mystery suspense novel: The Glass Cocoon
Copyright© Christopher J. Jarmick 2004
The Scarecrow Video Movie Guide OverviewScarecrow is to video stores as The Elliott Bay Book Co. is to bookstores: independent, iconoclastic, and obsessed. With more than 60,000 titles in a single outlet, it's a paradise frequented by serious movie lovers — including Bernardo Bertolucci, John Woo, and Quentin Tarantino — and staffed by movie freaks. Loaded with a deep appreciation and understanding of movies, these fanatics have assembled one of the most eclectic movie lists to date. This is a unique list of essential, cool, funny, laughable, important, fluffy, outrageous, you-just-gotta-see videos for anyone interested in the art (both high and low) of moviemaking. Featuring reviews of nearly 4,000 films, organized by category and genre, this book easily satisfies every reader's personal penchant. Includes the best of the best and the worst of the worst in biker flicks, documentaries, foreign films, psychotronics, action, experimental, kids, film noir, murder mysteries, gay and lesbian, music, anime, and more.

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Castle Films: A Hobbyist's Guide Review

Castle Films: A Hobbyist's Guide
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Castle Films: A Hobbyist's Guide ReviewAmazon delivered my copy of the new book, "Castle Films - A Hobbyist's Guide" on Monday. I've been happily traveling down Memory Lane and enjoyed learning of the marketing & sales history of the Home Movie industry that was very much a part of my life until not so long ago. It is very hard to put this book down. Mr MacGillivray has provided a very entertaining look at a company that touched so many lives and should not be forgotten. The reference and cross referencing of the entire Castle Library must have been an enormous task. The descriptions of the products brought me back to an innocent time when I would marvel at the boxes at the local camera shop - unable to clearly choose just one title. Thanks for a great book.Castle Films: A Hobbyist's Guide OverviewDo you remember the first movie you ever owned? It was probably a product of Castle Films. Before home video, Castle Films made every living room a screening room.

For four decades the 16mm and 8mm film products of Castle Films were sold in every department store and hobby shop. Castle had big-screen movies for everybody: comedies with Abbott & Costello, The Marx Brothers, and W. C. Fields...monster movies with Frankenstein, Dracula, and the Wolfman...cartoons with Woody Woodpecker, Chilly Willy, and Mighty Mouse...westerns with Clint Eastwood, John Wayne, and James Stewart...travelogues of the world's picturesque places...newsreels of major headline stories...musicals with top singers and bandleaders.

Collectors have always wanted a reference book detailing the total output of Castle Films. Here it is. Castle Films: A Hobbyist's Guide is a complete filmography of every title printed between 1937 and 1977. For handy reference, there are separate indexes by title, subject, and serial number, a listing of Castle's color film releases, and a special section "decoding" Castle's various pseudonym titles and disclosing the "true identities" of many films.

Castle Films: A Hobbyist's Guide is a fascinating, nostalgic look at one of the pioneers of home entertainment.


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Blacklisted: The Film Lover's Guide to the Hollywood Blacklist Review

Blacklisted: The Film Lover's Guide to the Hollywood Blacklist
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Blacklisted: The Film Lover's Guide to the Hollywood Blacklist ReviewBlacklisted: The Film Lover's Guide To The Hollywood Blacklist is the collaboratively effort of Paul Buhle and Dave Wagner and an alphabetically arranged encyclopedia of entries concerning the films, directors, stars, writers, producers, designers, and others who suffered being blacklisted because of the House Un-American Activities Committee during their infamous Hollywood blacklist era. Over 2000 entries point the reader in the direction of grand works that were covered in shadow during a dangerous time in American history, including films such as "Roman Holiday" and "Bridge on the River Kwai". Blacklisted is a welcome and greatly appreciated contribution to Cinematic Studies reference collections.Blacklisted: The Film Lover's Guide to the Hollywood Blacklist Overview

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Film Noir and the Cinema of Paranoia Review

Film Noir and the Cinema of Paranoia
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Film Noir and the Cinema of Paranoia Reviewmolto interessante. I testi universitari italiani sono decisamente meno dettagliati ed appassionanti come un libro
di narrativaFilm Noir and the Cinema of Paranoia OverviewWheeler Winston Dixon engages readers in an overview of noir and fatalist film from the mid-twentieth century to the present, ending with a discussion of television, the Internet, and dominant commercial cinema. Beginning with the 1940s classics, Film Noir and the Cinema of Paranoia moves to the "Red Scare" and other ominous expressions of the 1950s. The dark cinema of the 1960s reflected the tensions of a society facing a new and, to some, menacing era of social expression.

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Silent Films, 1877-1996: A Critical Guide to 646 Movies Review

Silent Films, 1877-1996: A Critical Guide to 646 Movies
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Silent Films, 1877-1996: A Critical Guide to 646 Movies ReviewAs an amateur film critic and historian, I found this book both accessible and excellently-researched. Although the book would serve well as a film history text, it is so clearly written and organized that one can learn much by simply picking a page and reading. For instance, the chronological presentation helps the novice (like myself) place the film in its historical context, while the criticisms of the films, which are all available on videocassette, highlight the artistic significance of the works, relating them to contemporary films and actors. While it is a comprehensive reference of 119 years of silent film, the abundance of photos throughout the book tell the story of the silents all by themselves. Finally, the index is the place to start if one wants to learn about the early days of so many stars of cinema's Golden Age, who started out in silents.Silent Films, 1877-1996: A Critical Guide to 646 Movies Overview

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Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas Review

Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas
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Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas ReviewLike Duralde's previous book, "101 Must-See Movies for Gay Men," "Have Yourself A Movie Little Christmas" condenses a terrific amount of information and trivia into lively, witty prose that never runs on too long. The author, a seasoned critic and pop culture savant, clearly loves his subject matter - even when he's dealing with a film he expresses dislike for - and that makes this read that much more enjoyable. There are at least two chapters ("They'll Be Scary Ghost Stories: Holiday Horror" and "The Worst Christmas (Movies) Ever: Lumps of Coal in Your Cinema Stocking") so funny and compelling that, despite pressing deadlines and grown-up concerns, I found myself unable to set this book aside till I finished them (thank God that roast didn't burn). The chapter on myriad adaptations of Dickens' "A Christmas Carol" actually made me see the holiday chestnut from surprising new angles, and the thorough appendices open the door to even MORE viewing possibilities. This book make a great gift for any Christmas buff or film fanatic, but make sure to buy two, cuz once you leaf through "Movie Little Christmas," you'll want a copy of your own.Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas OverviewDon't waste another second of your valuable holiday time on another boring Christmas movie. Film critic Alonso Duralde highlights the best - and worst - movies of the Yuletide season with this fun and informative film guide. Whether you're looking for the classics, family favorites, holiday horror, Christmas-themed crime epics, or the most wonderfully awful cinematic lumps of coal, Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas will point you and your rental queue in the right direction. Whether your idea of a holiday classic is White Christmas, Bad Santa, Die Hard, Eyes Wide Shut, or Gremlins, you'll find the right film for you, as well as an exhaustively entertaining breakdown of the various screen Scrooges, from Alistair Sim to Jim Carrey to...Tori Spelling? And get ready to encounter movies you may never have heard of from the gritty noir Christmas Holiday, starring 1930s singing ingenue Deanna Durbin in her first hard-bitten adult role, to the loony Santa Claus, a Mexican kiddie movie in which St. Nick teams up with Merlin to fight the devil! Plot synopses, video availability, and fun facts - did you know the actor cast as Uncle Billy in It's a Wonderful Life was also in the running to play mean old Mr. Potter? - make this a stocking stuffed with information you'll turn to every Christmas season.

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The Rough Guide to American Independent Film (Rough Guide Reference) Review

The Rough Guide to American Independent Film (Rough Guide Reference)
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The Rough Guide to American Independent Film (Rough Guide Reference) ReviewAnother killersmart addition to the Rough Guide series, this volume manages to be uber-informative and addictively entertaining -- you'll never get off your toilet! hehe... The section on B-Movie Mogul Roger Corman perfectly gets across whats great about even his not-so-greatest films, and the study of Miramax and Sundance is illuminating and demonstrates the enormous and positive influence these 2 entities have had on the medium. After pouring through this book, its impossible not to make a beeline to Netflix and add dozens of finds to your cue. One aspect of history that this book really nails, is the indie roots of stars like Jack Nicholson, Scorsese, etc and its fun reading about their early and raw cinematic adventures... Also, it was nice to see so many genres represented, the horror section full of ghastly gems...The Rough Guide to American Independent Film (Rough Guide Reference) OverviewThe Rough Guide is the essential companion for anyone interested in American Independent, low-budget and maverick filmmaking. The book looks at the deep-reaching history of American ''indie'' cinema in all its guises, from its earliest incarnations in the 60s and 70s to the growth of indie avatars (Sundance & Miramax) and even considers where it is today.It explores the definitions of ''independent'' film in terms of both aesthetics and means of production and comes complete with a canon of the 50 greatest American ''Indie'' films of all time.

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501 Movie Directors: A Comprehensive Guide to the Greatest Filmmakers Review

501 Movie Directors: A Comprehensive Guide to the Greatest Filmmakers
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501 Movie Directors: A Comprehensive Guide to the Greatest Filmmakers ReviewThis is a great book for film students (I bought it for my daughter who is a film major at Syracuse University), film buffs and for us folks who love to watch movies!
As General Editor of this book, Steven Jay Schneider (who also wrote 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die)aptly summarizes, "This book is a love letter to those men and women who have changed our lives as a result of their celluloid dreams." Sit back and imagine the movies you have seen and how they impacted your life... perhaps prompted you to some action whether of the heart or for society? Moved you to tears or laughter? A great director's fine tuning of a writer's vision onto a screen does just that.
This book has colored tabs on the side of the pages for the director's birth year decade - beginning with the man who invented movies, George Melies, born in the 1860's in Paris, France, right through to David Gordon Green, born in the 1970's, writer and director of Southern Gothic coming of age dramas. The first pages of the book is a solid Table of Contents A-Z of all 501 of these great directors. Each director's page(s) has a photo of the director and some have movie stills from his or her films. Some of the diectors included in this great compendium are Alexander Korda (who helped put the British film industry on the map); John Ford (a titan in the industry who even influenced Spielberg when Steven was a runner on the 20th Century studio lot! Steven went into Ford's office and Ford 'taught' Spielberg to really "look at" his landmark sweeping vista shots carefully...'what do you see?'); George Cukor (Dinner at Eight, Grand Hotel, My Fair Lady); George Stevens (who, as the book states, had "A legendary sharp eye for detail that enhanced visual storytelling; rapport with actors produced memorable performances from Hollywood greats." and other such greats as Federico Fellini, Alfred Hitchcock, Martin Scorsese, Margarethe von Trotta and Kathryn Bigelow.
The "Top Takes..." of each director's body of work are listed to the right of each director's description of his/her piece in film history including their backgrounds, their influences...what led them to their signature styles.
My particular book came with no cover which was a disappointment as I really admire Steven Spielberg, but the inside history is 100% readable and enjoyable....and moves me to want to read more about my favority directors and to see works I have not yet screened!
501 Movie Directors: A Comprehensive Guide to the Greatest Filmmakers OverviewA copy of this valuable book is destined to find its way into the home of every true movie fan, cinema scholar, and film critic. It's a chronological compendium that profiles the 501 most important film directors of all time. Entries--augmented with a photo of each director plus movie stills from his or her films--describe such major figures as Sergei Eisenstein, Martin Scorsese, Alfred Hitchcock, Fritz Lang, Leni Riefenstahl, Orson Welles, Federico Fellini, Steven Spielberg, Robert Altman, and many, many others. Written by an expert team of film critics and historians, this book was compiled under the direction of editor Steven J. Schneider, who's 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die has sold a half-million copies worldwide to date. Readers will learn-- Why D. W. Griffith is called the father of filmmaking The details surrounding Martin Scorsese's fascination with New York The truth about Alfred Hitchcock's stunning blondes . . .and much more All filmmakers receive at least a one-page entry, which includes discussion of their work and influences, their complete filmography, and listing of awards they have received. Seventy-five directors of special importance are profiled in larger entries--two-page spreads--while 15 internationally acknowledged master directors are discussed and examined in two double-page spreads. Here is a comprehensive survey of the creative imaginations behind more than a hundred years of filmmaking. It's a wonderful book for browsing, for reference, and for gaining insights into the personalities who directed the most memorable movies ever made.

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