Rebels on the Backlot: Six Maverick Directors and How They Conquered the Hollywood Studio System (P.S.)

Rebels on the Backlot: Six Maverick Directors and How They Conquered the Hollywood Studio System (P.S.)

by SharonWaxman (Author)

Synopsis

By the Hollywood correspondent for "The New York Times", "Rebels On The Backlot" is a revealing and page-turning account of the new generation of film directors who are changing the face of today's Hollywood. Very much as the 1970s gave rise to a defining group of filmmakers such as Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola, the 1990s witnessed a new generation who captured the imaginations of audiences, and opened the pursestrings of the Hollywood film machine. "Rebels On The Backlot" follows six top-level film directors, from the origins of their careers through the making and release of their signature films. They are: Quenton Tarantino ("Pulp Fiction"), Paul Thomas Anderson ("Boogie Nights"), David Fincher ("Fight Club"), Steven Soderbergh ("Traffic"), Spike Jonze ("Being John Malkovich"), and David O. Russell ("Three Kings"). The book uses the development, writing, shooting, editing, and release of each director's major film to explore the lives and struggles each of them faced. It will dip in and out of each filming experience, drawing in the stories of other figures along the way, creating a chronological portrait of contemporary Hollywood, and the rebel generation of the 1990s. This is also a story of an emerging community of talented artists - directors, writers, actors of young Hollywood - who supported each other, burn with envy at one another's success, swap girlfriends and boyfriends, and ultimately spur each other to greater accomplishments.

$18.92

Quantity

20 in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 386
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: William Morrow Paperbacks
Published: 02 Mar 2006

ISBN 10: 0060540184
ISBN 13: 9780060540180

Media Reviews
Admirably reported . . . Waxman unearths juicy anecdotes that'll keep film fans cackling and turning the pages. -- Salon.com
Riveting tales of Hollywood hubris . . . a fun read. -- Entertainment Weekly
Vivid . . . fascinating . . . delightful . . . [Waxman's] background as a hard news reporter serves her well. -- New York Times Book Review
A behind-the-cameras fireball of wicked insider revelations . . . Love it! -- Liz Smith, syndicated columnist
[Waxman's] thorough reporting results in a compulsively readable chronicle of the decade's auteurs and their work. -- Premiere
Enjoyably dishy. -- Variety
Addictively readable . . . fascinating -- Miami Herald
A lively book with gossipy and readable stories about some obsessive guys who are as much rascals as rebels. -- Los Angeles Times Book Review
Terrific . . . wildly informative and readable about the plight of the biggest young talents in modern movies -- Buffalo News
[Rebels on the Backlot] makes a case for creating a new film canon of this late `90s renaissance. -- Pittsburgh Tribune
Waxman perceptively depicts the vocabulary of the new Hollywood . . . well-written . . . recommended. -- Library Journal
Hums along on detail and gossip, adding up to a template for making it in contemporary Hollywood. -- men.style.com
Up-close, often gossipy -- The Hollywood Reporter
Fascinatingly candid -- Minneapolis Star Tribune
Author Bio
Sharon Waxman is a Hollywood correspondent for the New York Times and previously was a correspondent for the Washington Post covering the entertainment industry. She lives in southern California with her family.