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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Torment and Genius.
This is a pretty good overview, in some detail, of John Ford's career as one of Hollywood's most admired and successful directors, and as a man who seemed unable to find personal happiness. It gets the job done for anyone except Ford scholars. And it's a biography, not an appreciation of his movies.

There isn't much on Ford's Irish ancestry, not in the kind...
Published 23 months ago by Steven Daedalus

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars So-so Ford Bio
If you've never read a Ford bio, this is a decent introduction. But the book has three problems. It has very little interpretation and evaluation of the films. Much of the book is about Ford's flaws as a human being, especially his cruelty to the people he worked with. Film by film, he piles up examples of Ford's bad behavior without explaining what all this nastiness...
Published on March 17, 2000 by Donald McNamara


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars So-so Ford Bio, March 17, 2000
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If you've never read a Ford bio, this is a decent introduction. But the book has three problems. It has very little interpretation and evaluation of the films. Much of the book is about Ford's flaws as a human being, especially his cruelty to the people he worked with. Film by film, he piles up examples of Ford's bad behavior without explaining what all this nastiness has to do with Ford's achievement as an artist. Finally, much of the book's material comes from interviews. In a bibliographical essay, Davis lists all this material. In the text, however, he never makes it clear where he got a particular quote. Davis did quite a few interviews for the book. Those don't need further citation. If you want to track down quotations from other interviews, however, forget it. There's no way of finding out when an interview was given or what the context for the quote is.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Not bad, but misses the real genius, December 30, 1997
Although this book does a reasonable job of delivering the essential information about one of Hollywood's great directors, it spends too much effort attempting to analyze the dark side of John Ford, and too little time dealing with the art he created. The author speculates on Ford's drinking, his sexuality, and his family problems. If you want to know Ford's work, don't buy this book...buy one or two of his movies, instead....or buy Harry Carry Jr's book, or Peter Bogdanovich's book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Torment and Genius., April 1, 2010
This is a pretty good overview, in some detail, of John Ford's career as one of Hollywood's most admired and successful directors, and as a man who seemed unable to find personal happiness. It gets the job done for anyone except Ford scholars. And it's a biography, not an appreciation of his movies.

There isn't much on Ford's Irish ancestry, not in the kind of detail found in, say, Sinclair's book. And there's not much on the details of his films. Only the important ones are described, and then only thoroughly enough to give us an understanding of why they were successful or, in some cases, why they flopped.

It's candid and realistic. Davis seems to have interviewed many of the survivors of Ford's old stock company and has taken anecdotes from the memoirs of some others without, as another reviewer noted, all the sorts of scholarly attributions we might expect. Yet the book has an impersonal quality, as if Ford and all his quirks and accomplishments were being examined under a microscope. If you want warmth with a personal touch, you'll have to go elsewhere. Try Dobe Carey's book, or "Pappy", by Ford's grandson.

There was no point at which I felt John Ford was being pictured by the author as meaner than he actually was. That is to say, he could be a nice, sensitive guy to his friends and co-workers, but just as often (or maybe more often) he was a domineering son of Beelzebub who enjoyed seeing others in pain and in states of humiliation. In James Cagney's memoir, without anger, just in passing, Cagney refers to Ford as a "sadist." All of which, of course, raises a question of far broader significance. Why is it that we regard authoritarian achievers with awe (eg., Patton), while we seem only to respect equally effective authority figures who are not authoritarian (eg., Bradley). Or -- still more generally -- what exactly does "charisma" mean?

Whatever moved Ford to the extremes of authoritarianism -- a shift reflected dimly in his political views too -- Davis tries to explain in psychoanalytic terms, without much success. But the anger was certainly there. Ford hung with a few of his male friends, mostly ignored or argued with his family, tended to drink like a fish between productions, exiled old friends for the slightest of slights, gave his wife the non-person treatment, read widely, held a strong and somewhat unrealistic sentimental attachment to Ireland, found himself engulfed by an increasingly complex production system run by MBAs instead of persons, began repeating himself in his later years like so many other aging directors, and wound up depressed, reduced in means, and given to boozing. His last movie was an unqualified disaster.

He died in bed, of cancer, an adored, respected, ancient and wizened figure surrounded by religious objects representative of just about every faith known to man or beast, "the elements so mixed in him that nature might stand up and say to all the world, 'This was a man!'."
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5.0 out of 5 stars John Ford-Biography, November 13, 2011
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This review is from: John Ford: Hollywood's Old Master (Oklahoma Western Biographies) (Hardcover)
This book on John Ford is priceless! Ronald L.Davis has done a great job on John Ford...I have read other books related to the author. This is one of his best! I feel through Ronald's writing, that I'm living and sharing the scenes that are happening.This book started me buying John Ford films through Amazon.com. Everything is out there.
If you like those old western movies by John Ford, this is the book to give you highlights of all the behind the scenes stuff.Enjoy, as I have...
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0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An interesting and well written book about John Ford!, November 2, 2001
This review is from: John Ford: Hollywood's Old Master (Oklahoma Western Biographies) (Hardcover)
I recently read the John Ford biography by Ronald Davis, PhD, and found the book to be well written and very informative. After reading this book, it became quite obvious that Ford had an unhappy personal life. While Ford was in control of his professional life, his personal life was out of control. Ford was a represed man who lived a lie...
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John Ford: Hollywood's Old Master (Oklahoma Western Biographies)
John Ford: Hollywood's Old Master (Oklahoma Western Biographies) by Ronald L. Davis (Hardcover - Apr. 1995)
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