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Pictures at a Revolution: Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood
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Pictures at a Revolution: Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood

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An epic account of how the revolution hit Hollywood, told through the stories of the five films nominated for the 1967 Academy Awards

The year is 1963. The studios are churning out westerns, war movies, prudish sex comedies and overblown historical epics, but audiences whose interests have been piqued by an influx of innovative films from abroad are hungering for something more, something new. At Esquire, two young writers hatch a plan to create a movie treatment that they hope will attract the director Franois Truffaut: the story of the gangsters Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow. Mike Nichols, an improvisatory comedian turned neophyte theater director, gets his hands on an obscure first novel called The Graduate and wonders if he's ready to make the jump to Hollywood. Warren Beatty, just 26 years old and struggling through a series of flops after the success of Splendor in the Grass, decides to take his career into his own hands, but can't seem to settle on his next move. Dustin Hoffman, sleeping on friends' floors and scrounging for temp work in New York, struggles just to get an off-Broadway audition. Sidney Poitier, after two dozen movies, still yearns for something that seems completely unattainable: a good role. And 20th Century Fox, on the brink of financial catastrophe, puts all its hopes in a genre-the family musical-that will revitalize the company and then nearly destroy it again.

Pictures at a Revolution tracks five movies-the milestones Bonnie and Clyde and The Graduate, the popular hits Guess Who's Coming To Dinner and In the Heat of the Night, and the big-budget disaster Doctor Dolittle-on their five-year journey to Oscar night in the spring of 1968. It follows their fortunes through the last days of the studio system and the first sparks of a cultural upheaval that would launch maverick new stars and directors, topple more than one industry titan from his pedestal, and redefine what American movies could be. In 1967, moviegoers witnessed the arrival of taboo-shattering sex and violence on screen, the debuts of Dustin Hoffman and Faye Dunaway, the return of Katharine Hepburn and the poignant farewell of Spencer Tracy, the audacious risks taken by Warren Beatty, Arthur Penn, Mike Nichols and Norman Jewison, and Hollywood's agonized attempt to grapple with an incendiary moment in American race relations, with results that would change Sidney Poitier's career forever.

By tracing the gambles, the stumbles, the clashes and the creative partnerships that produced these films, Mark Harris captures both the twilight of old Hollywood and the dawn of a new golden age in studio filmmaking. Based on unprecedented access to the actors, directors, screenwriters, producers and executives whose movies defined the era, as well a wealth of previously unexplored archival material, Pictures at a Revolution is an utterly original, revealing, and entertaining history of a true cultural watershed.

Features:
  • ISBN13: 9781594201523

  • Condition: NEW

  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Details:
Author: Mark Harris
Hardcover: 496 pages
Publisher: Penguin Press HC, The
Publication Date: February 14, 2008
Language: English
ISBN: 1594201528
Package Length: 9.6 inches
Package Width: 6.1 inches
Package Height: 1.5 inches
Package Weight: 1.45 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 40 reviews
 
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.5
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1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5The start of modern Hollywood  Feb 26, 2010
It's common these days to look back on the old studio system with nostalgia. This book is about the year it crashed and burned. Five Pictures at a Revolution is the story of how new independent directors competed with some of the old hands in 1967. As the author aptly puts it, "Warren Beatty who looked like a movie star, was a producer. Dustin Hoffman who looked like a producer, had become a movie star." "Sidney Poitier, who looked like no movie star had ever looked," was the biggest box office in history, and Hollywood didn't know what to do with him.

If you are old enough to remember the sputtering end of "old Hollywood," you might remember some of the dreadful movies it produced in those final years. Restricted by censorship, the system went crazy producing big budget musicals, James Bond spy films and Bible epics. Movie executives were out of touch with the mood of the country--which was mired in an unpopular war, the civil rights movement and a host of other causes. Despite huge dissatifaction within American society, Hollywood movies reflected little change. Then, in 1967 Dr. Doolittle competed with In the Heat of the Night, The Graduate, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner and Bonnie and Clyde for Best Picture. What a year.

Mark Harris had access to many of the folks who worked on the five movies and he's a gifted storyteller and journalist. This is a great book for someone who wants to find out about how movies went from apolitical musicals, epics, thrillers and dramas to irreverent works by Woody Allen, Stephen Spielberg, Nora Ephron etc.





5AUDIO CD UNABRIDGED IS PERFECT FOR IPODS!  Dec 15, 2009
This is a product review for the Audio Book Unabridged version of Mark Harris's Pictures at a Revolution: Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood. I greatly enjoyed the voice of the Lloyd James reading the book. His diction was excellent and his voice was pleasant on the ears. The story itself was well written and engaging. I especially enjoyed the analysis of the Sydney Poitier movies vis-a-vis the Civil Rights movement. But I want to tell potential buyers something about the actual CD's themselves. I sold this product used on Amazon and now I'm having to do a refund because the buyer says he is unable to play the CD's. So I returned to the actual listing and sure enough the Amazon listing for the product does not tell you what it says on the package. The audio CD's are "MP3 PLAYER READY" (I think the package may actually say IPOD READY. They do not play in regular stereo or walkman CD players. They are meant to be placed in a computer and ripped by Itunes for upload to one's IPOD. There are two CDs which have multiple duplicate files of the audio book on them. One file format is MP3, another is the file format used by Sony's PSP (I think), and another is for the file format used by ZUNE (I think). NONE of the file formats are WAVE formats, which is the format played by regular stereo CD players. The listing really should state this fact but since it does not I am putting it in the review. I hope this review assists people in making a decision about whether or not buying this very well written book in audio format is the best for them.

5Thanks for your help  Dec 01, 2009
Thanks for your help-I can't wait to give this fascinating book as a Christmas present to my sister-in-law, a real film buff.

5Pictures at a revolution  Nov 18, 2009
I bought this book for my son who writes and reviews movie scripts. I think this will be a good addition to his knowledge. For a Christmas present.

4Heralding a New Cinema  Sep 21, 2009
Harris dissects the five films nominated for the Best Picture Oscar of 1967. This deceptively simple structure doesn't begin to hint at the depths this author unearths as he charts the highs, lows, and near-derailments as Bonnie and Clyde, Doctor Doolittle, The Graduate, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner and In the Heat of the Night race toward the Big Night. Fueled by a cast of moguls, movie royalty and especially the brilliant young turks nipping at their heels, this is a reeling portrait of art, commerce, caprice, and how a handful of films pulled the movie business kicking and screaming into a new era. A triumph.

 
 
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