Conversations at the American Film Institute with the Great Moviemakers: The Next Generation
分類: 图书,进口原版,Arts & Photography(艺术与摄影),
品牌: George Stevens Jr.
基本信息出版社:Knopf (2012年4月3日)精装:768页正文语种:英语ISBN:0307273474条形码:9780307273475商品尺寸:16.9 x 4.7 x 24.1 cm商品重量:1.1 KgASIN:0307273474商品描述内容简介A companion volume to George Stevens, Jr.’s, much admired book of American Film Institute seminars with the great pioneering moviemakers (“Invaluable”—Martin Scorsese).
Those represented here—directors, producers, writers, actors, cameramen, composers, editors—are men and women working in pictures, beginning in 1950, when the studio system was collapsing and people could no longer depend on, or were bound by, the structure of studio life to make movies.
Here also are those who began to work long after the studio days were over—Robert Altman, David Lynch, Steven Spielberg, among them—who talk about how they came to make movies on their own. Some—like Peter Bogdanovich, Nora Ephron, Sydney Pollack, François Truffaut—talk about how they were influenced by the iconic pictures of the great pioneer filmmakers. Others talk about how they set out to forge their own paths—John Sayles, Roger Corman, George Lucas, et al.
In this series of conversations held at the American Film Institute, all aspects of their work are discussed. Here is Arthur Penn, who began in the early 1950s in New York with live TV, directing people like Kim Stanley and such live shows asPlayhouse 90, and on Broadway, directingTwo for the SeesawandThe Miracle Worker,before going on to Hollywood and directingMickey OneandBonnie and Clyde,among other pictures, talking about working within the system. (“When we finishedBonnie and Clyde,” says Penn, “the film was characterized rather elegantly by one of the leading Warner executives as a 'piece of shit' . . . It wasn’t until the picture had an identity and a life of its own that the studio acknowledged it was a legitimate child of the Warner Bros. operation.”)
Here in conversation is Sidney Poitier, who grew up on an island without paved roads, stores, or telephones, and who was later taught English without a Caribbean accent by a Jewish waiter, talking about working as a janitor at the American Negro Theater in exchange for acting lessons and about Hollywood: It “never really had much of a conscience . . . This town never was infected by that kind of goodness.”
Here, too, is Meryl Streep, America’s premier actress, who began her career inJuliain 1977, and thirty odd years later, at sixty, was staring inThe Iron Lady,defying all the rules about “term limits” and a filmmaking climate tyrannized by the male adolescent demographic . . . Streep on making her first picture, and how Jane Fonda took her under her wing (“That little line on the floor,” Fonda warned Streep, “don’t look at it, that’s where your toes are supposed to be. And that’s how you’ll be in the movie. If they’re not there, you won’t be in the movie”). Streep on the characters she chooses to play: “I like to defend characters that would otherwise be misconstrued or misunderstood.”
The Next Generationis a fascinating revelation of the art of making pictures.
作者简介GEORGE STEVENS, JR., is a writer, director, producer, and founder of the American Film Institute. He is the author of the playThurgood,whichran on Broadway and was filmed for HBO. He has received fifteen Emmys, two Peabody Awards, the Humanitas Prize, and seven Writers Guild Awards for his television productions, including the annualKennedy Center Honors, Separate but Equal,The Murder of Mary Phagan,andWe Are One: The Obama Inaugural Celebration at the Lincoln Memorial.His productionThe Thin Red Linewas nominated for seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture. In 2009 President Obama named him co-chairman of the President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities. Stevens started out working with his father, George Stevens, onShane, Giant,andThe Diary of Anne Frankand in 1962 was named head of the United States Information Agency’s motion picture division by Edward R. Murrow. He lives in Washington, D.C.