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Jacques Tourneur: The Cinema of Nightfall [Hardcover]

Chris Fujiwara (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0786404914 978-0786404919 July 1998
At least three of director Jacques Tourneur's films-Cat People, I Walked with a Zombie and The Leopard Man-are recognized as horror classics. Yet his contributions to these films are often minimized by scholars, with most of the credit going to the films' producer, Val Lewton. An examination of the director's full body of work reveals that those elements most evident in the Tourneur-Lewton collaborations-the lack of monsters and the stylized use of suggested violence-are apparent in Tourneur's films before and after his work with Lewton. This insightful critical study examines each of Tourneur's films, as well as his extensive work on MGM shorts (1936-1942) and in television. What emerges is evidence of a highly coherent directorial style that runs throughout Tourneur's works.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"Fujiwara's book will serve as an excellent guide for anyone who wishes to explore Tourneur's unique work" -- San Francisco Examiner Magazine

"Fujiwara's scholarly but immensely readable tome offers a fascinating account of the Cat People auteur's life, work and unique approach to filmmaking" -- VideoScope

"a valuable examination of one of Hollywood's most neglected talents" -- Film Review

"comprehensive treatment" -- AB Bookman's Weekly

"everything by the underappreciated French born director is covered in this 300+ pages book" -- Psychotronic

"interesting treatment of an important...director" -- Public Library Quarterly

About the Author

Chris Fujiwara is a freelance writer. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 340 pages
  • Publisher: McFarland & Company (July 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0786404914
  • ISBN-13: 978-0786404919
  • Product Dimensions: 10.2 x 7.4 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,409,233 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Beauty, May 12, 2003
By 
Chris Fujiwara is one of the world's best film critics. (Look for his soon-to-be-published work on Otto Preminger.) "The Cinema of Nightfall" is specifically about the great(and vastly underrated) Jacques Tourneur, but it is much more than that. It is one of the best books ever written about how to see and experience movies. Fujiwara goes inside the process of just how a film creates meaning, using Tourneur's very subtle genius as his base. The chapters on the more famous works("Cat People", "I Walked with a Zombie" and the immortal "Out of the Past") are the best analyses ever written on those titles. However, perhaps the most impressive part of Fujiwara achievement is his coverage of the more obscure Tourneurs: "Stars in My Crown", "Canyon Passage", "Berlin Express", the shorts. (His chapter on "Nightfall" is worth the price of admission -- a whole film theology in miniature.) "Cinema of Nightfall" is a model of film understanding and film love.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Exceptional (and accessible) study of Tourneur, February 14, 2008
By 
Gary Morris (Portland, OR USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Jacques Tourneur has long been a favorite of horror fans, French critics, and a few sensible American observers like Manny Farber as a creator of some of cinema's most subtly potent effects, particularly in his trio of B-horror films for Val Lewton at RKO in the early 1940s and his Lewtonesque Curse of the Demon in 1958. His most famous film noir, Out of the Past, is also widely considered one of the genre's greatest. Fans who have wished to better understand Tourneur have had to cobble together a biography, production histories, and analysis from widely scattered sources -- obscure academic journals like Film and Psychoanalysis, zines like FilmFax and Photon, French-language studies for those who can read them, and one of the several books devoted to Val Lewton. The Edinburgh Film Festival issued an anthology of essays in English devoted entirely to Tourneur, but that book was aimed squarely at academics. It's Chris Fujiwara's book Jacques Tourneur: The Cinema of Nightfall, which straddles the academic and popular, that will likely be the standard reference in English for the foreseeable future.

Fujiwara begins by persuasively rescuing Tourneur from one of Sarris' gulags: the dreaded third ranking in American Cinema. Sarris' backhanded praise in phrases like "subdued, pastel-colored sensibility" and "a certain French gentility" has been seconded by many critics, who attributed the virtues of the Lewton-produced films to Lewton and the brilliance of Out of the Past and Night of the Demon to Tourneur's "intelligent" manipulation of prosaic generic elements. Fujiwara argues that the things that distinguish Cat People, I Walked with a Zombie, and Leopard Man -- narrative ambiguity, lyrical mise-en-scene, understated dramatics -- are also present in such unjustly forgotten thrillers, westerns, and historical dramas as Experiment Perilous, Stars in My Crown, Way of a Gaucho, and others. By examining Tourneur's early French features and many MGM shorts, he shows decisively that the director's stylistic maturity occurred before his first widely acclaimed feature, Cat People, and only grew from there.

Fujiwara devotes meaty individual chapters to each of the features, with a close reading and critical analysis leavened with production data and contextualizing commentary. True to the author's missionary zeal, some of the best material is the most polemical, as when he effectively articulates the minority view that Leopard Man is not the mess that many (including Tourneur) have claimed, but a major work of "precise and inexhaustible poetry" that presaged the anti-narrative cinema that would be de rigeur in Hollywood two decades later. Fujiwara is also strong on the visual beauty of Stars in My Crown, the sense of personal conviction in Night of the Demon, and the connection between the underrated Experiment Perilous and the Lewton films. Overall, a worthy, well-written and -researched tribute to an auteur who deserves a higher ranking than Sarris, and too many other critics, has given him. Included are a detailed bibliography and filmography, along with photos.

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Guide to Tourneur's Films, October 5, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Jacques Tourneur: The Cinema of Nightfall (Hardcover)
Jacques Tourneur was a uniquely talented director with a string of distinctive films to his credit, including Cat People, Canyon Passage, I Walked With a Zombie and Out of the Past. Tourneur's best films look and sound like no one else's, stylish, subtle and strangely...quiet. At last there is an intelligent, discerning book on the subject of the talented Frenchman. Perhaps a bit more background on the making of the films would have been appreciated, otherwise this is an excellent and eye-opening bit of original film scholarship.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
Maurice Tourneur, Jacques Tourneur's father, was born Maurice Thomas in Paris on February 2, 1876, the oldest of three children of a jeweler who also manufactured imitation pearls. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
canyon passage, experiment perilous, leopard man, fake clown, rainbow pass, magic alphabet, shot dissolves, cat people, offscreen space, diegetic reality, telephone interview with the author, murder sequences, film dissolves, camera tracks, calypso singer, traveling shot, opening montage
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Canyon Passage, Night of the Demon, The Leopard Man, Berlin Express, Jacques Tourneur, Great Day, Anne of the Indies, Circle of Danger, Maurice Tourneur, Easy Living, Dana Andrews, The Comedy of Terrors, Days of Glory, New York, War-Gods of the Deep, United States, Miss Keane, Nick Carter, They All Come Out, Phantom Raiders, Romance of Radium, Master Detective, Betty Lou, Fort Holland, Bert Granet
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