Victor Fleming: An American Movie Master by Michael Sragow

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: December 2008
  • 645pp
  • Sales Rank: 71,257

Reader Rating: (5 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: December 2008
    • Publisher: Knopf Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 645pp
    • Sales Rank: 71,257

    Synopsis

    The full-length, definitive biography of the legendary director of Gone With the Wind and The Wizard of Oz.

    Victor Fleming was the most sought-after director in Hollywood’s golden age, renowned for his ability to make films across an astounding range of genres–westerns, earthy sexual dramas, family entertainment, screwball comedies, buddy pictures, romances, and adventures. Fleming is remembered for the two most iconic movies of the period, Gone With the Wind and The Wizard of Oz, but the more than forty films he directed also included classics like Red Dust, Test Pilot, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and Captains Courageous. Paradoxically, his talent for knowing how to make the necessary film at the right time, rather than remaking the same movie in different guises, has resulted in Victor Fleming’s relative obscurity in our time.

    Michael Sragow restores the director to the pantheon of our greatest filmmakers and fills a gaping hole in Hollywood history with this vibrant portrait of a man at the center of the most exciting era in American filmmaking. The actors Fleming directed wanted to be him (Fleming created enduring screen personas for Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, and Gary Cooper), and his actresses wanted to be with him (Ingrid Bergman, Clara Bow, and Norma Shearer were among his many lovers).

    Victor Fleming not only places the director back in the spotlight, but also gives us the story of a man whose extraordinary personal style was as thrilling, varied, and passionate as the stories he brought to the screen.

    The New York Times - Jeanine Basinger

    …a thoroughly researched, detailed book on Fleming's life and career. Mr. Sragow puts Fleming in perspective, giving him his rightful due without falsely exaggerating his importance…Mr. Sragow's writing is sometimes chatty, sometimes pedestrian, but never less than knowledgeable.

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    Biography

    Michael Sragow is the movie critic for The Baltimore Sun, and contributes regularly to The New Yorker. He has also written for Salon, The Atlantic Monthly, The New York Times, and Rolling Stone, among many publications. He edited the Library of America’s two volumes of James Agee’s work, as well as Produced and Abandoned: The National Society of Film Critics Write on the Best Films You’ve Never Seen. He lives with his wife, Glenda Hobbs, in Baltimore.

    Customer Reviews

    "Ditto"by Marek

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    July 17, 2009: Well-its strange but I agree with all three previous reviews.This book is extremely detailed and probably NOT for the casual reader. It covers the life of the most famous Hollywood director you've never heard of. The "Wizard of Oz" and "Gone with the Wind" are just two films that this giant directed. For me, I also count "Treasure Island"( Wallace Beery and Jackie Cooper) as well as "Captains Courageous"(Spencer Tracy)as favorites. The fact that he's relatively unknown has as much to do with his early life(covered extensively in the early chapters) as the fact that he died relatively young after finishing "Joan of Arc"(Ingrid Bergman)and shuned publicity in his later life. After reading this book I will definately look for some of his films that I have previously bypassed("Tortilla Flat", "Test Pilot", "A Guy Named Joe", "Bombshell").A must for film historians.

    Scholarly tome takes time getting past Fleming's early years...by Anonymous

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    July 07, 2009: I have to say I agree with the other reviewer who had trouble wading through the enormously detailed earlier sections of the book dealing with Fleming's family background and experiences before setting foot in Hollywood. It does take patience to read these early chapters and there seems to be, as the other comment indicated, too much time spent on giving the plot details of even lesser films that no longer exist.

    It isn't until the chapter on Clark Gable that I began not having to force myself to read further. It's an extensive biography and the reports of behind-the-scenes details on films like THE WIZARD OF OZ, GONE WITH THE WIND and JOAN OF ARC, are practically worth the price of the book--but the extensively researched material on many other aspects of Fleming's life are going to frustrate any reader looking for a typical biography of a filmmaker.

    Sragow never quite makes his case for films Fleming made after 1940, despite his earnest attempts to do so. Nevertheless, the book is well written and the subject is certainly worthy of a book encompassing his life and career as the man who directed two of the most famous films of all time in the same year.

    But much of its 645 pages are heavy going. Definitely not light summer reading--a film for film scholars that will probably find a permanent place among the biographies of well-known directors.


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