Adventures of a Suburban Boy

Adventures of a Suburban Boy

by JohnBoorman (Author)

Synopsis

John Boorman, hailed by the Observer as 'arguably Britain's greatest living director', offers an enthralling memoir of a creative life spent turning dreams into celluloid, and money into light. One of cinema's authentic visionaries, Boorman nevertheless enjoyed an archetypal English suburban boyhood in the 1940s and 50s, attending Catholic school and finding his first employment in a dry-cleaner's. But his abiding passion was for film, and he got his first break during the 'gold rush' era of British television in the 1960s. After directing several innovative documentaries for the BBC, he graduated to motion pictures, first filming pop stars The Dave Clark Five for 'Catch Us If You Can', then venturing to Los Angeles to make his first Hollywood picture - and his first masterpiece - Point Blank. The film inaugurated Boorman's profound friendship with star Lee Marvin, which also led to a second professional collaboration on Hell in the Pacific. What follows are accounts of Boorman's joys and agonies in the making of such extraordinary pictures as the terrifying backwoods adventure Deliverance, the fantastical epics Zardoz and Exorcist II: The Heretic, the glorious Arthurian legend Excalibur, his magnificent drama of imperilled Amazonian tribes, The Emerald Forest, and his semi-autobiographical, multi-Oscar-nominated Hope and Glory. Among the many friends and collaborators of whom Boorman offers vivid portraits are Lee Marvin, Sean Connery, Richard Burton, Marcello Mastroianni, Burt Reynolds, Jon Voight, Helen Mirren and Nicol Williamson.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 384
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Faber and Faber
Published: 04 Sep 2003

ISBN 10: 0571216951
ISBN 13: 9780571216956
Book Overview: Adventures of a Suburban Boy is film-maker John Boorman's vivid memoir of writing and directing films such as Deliverance and Excalibur, and working with Sean Connery, Helen Mirren and Burt Reynolds.

Media Reviews
Suburban origins, yes, but there's nothing remotely suburban about this boy's adventures with the biggest box of toys ever invented: Hollywood. John Boorman has made many classic films, notably Deliverance, Excalibur, The Emerald Forest and Hope and Glory, but he can also write well about the filmmaking process, as many readers will know from his contributions to the Faber film magazine Projections, which he also edited. This autobiography tells the utterly engaging story of one man's life in film and is packed with fascinating revelations about the industry and the personalities behind the movies themselves. A must for all film buffs but also a work of art in its own right as a brilliant autobiography; candid, exciting and written with a filmmaker's eye for telling imagery.
Author Bio
John Boorman was born in London in 1933. After working as a film reviewer for magazines and radio, he joined the BBC in 1955 as an assistant editor, and later directed a number of documentaries. His first feature was Catch Us If You Can in 1965. He is a five-time Academy Award-nominee, and was twice awarded Best Director at the Cannes Film Festival for Leo the Last (1970) and The General (1998). He has contributed as a writer or director to numberous other films, including Deliverance (1972), and Hope and Glory (1987). He is the author of Money Into Light: The Emerald Forest - A Diary, as well as the being the co-founder and editor of Faber & Faber's long-running series Projections: Film-makers on Film-making.