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The Shooting Script: A Novel of Suspense [Hardcover]

Laurence Klavan (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 1, 2005
Following his critically acclaimed novel The Cutting Room, Laurence Klavan returns with The Shooting Script. Establishing shot: New York City, present day. Zoom in on a run-down tenement building, somewhere west of Times Square, the home of Roy Milano, a thirtyish, divorced typesetter who lives for the movies. In fact, by pursuing the legendary uncut print of Orson Welles’s The Magnificent Ambersons, Roy has become something of a minor celebrity among the fellow misfit film fanatics he caters to in his homemade newsletter, Trivial Man. But there’s nothing trivial when Roy’s old rival Abner Cooley shows up with a check in his hand and the words “Someone is trying to kill me” on his lips.

With his mother ailing, Roy needs the money as badly as Cooley needs someone to head off a trigger-happy stalker who’s determined to put both him and his controversial new screenplay into permanent turnaround. And though Roy does his best, like many a private eye before him, he quickly finds his head turned by an enticing distraction. Not a femme fatale, but a flick.

Roy is all but powerless to resist an e-mail from a mysterious fan that lures him with the promise of an elusive treasure as fiercely sought after by the celluloid cognoscenti as the Ark of the Covenant was by Indiana Jones. It’s Jerry Lewis' famous unreleased drama, The Day the Clown Cried. But when he arrives at a rendezvous too late to save a dying man, Roy realizes he’s stumbled into a dangerous race to possess a piece of cinema history. To catch up, he’ll have to match wits with a rogues’ gallery: a bored and bitter superstar comedian, a hot-shot producer turned drugged-out has-been, a ferocious German actor who likes to role-play off-camera, a mercurial director with a scary sense of humor, and a hard-bitten cop who’s mad about movies.

Meanwhile, Roy will be tempted by the wiles of three fetching females–and tormented by a single-minded psychopath with more faces than Lon Chaney. He’ll even go on location, pursuing and being pursued from the mansions of the Hamptons to the harbors of Maine, the boulevards of L.A. to the canals of Amsterdam. No one’s ever gone to this much trouble just to see a movie. But for Roy, the reward far outweighs the risk. And a chance to glimpse the Big Picture might just be worth coming face-to-face with the Big Sleep.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

A whirlwind of movie trivia whips up Klavan's (The Cutting Room) second hyperactive, hilarious yarn starring Roy Milano, the hardcore film fanatic last seen gleefully pursuing Orson Welles's lost treasure The Magnificent Ambersons. But Roy is now facing desperate times as a walking billboard for the Union Square Farmer's Market to pay for his suddenly mute mother's convalescence. Roy's unrewarding pavement pounding brings him face to face with the ultimate "trivial person success story," arrogant Abner Cooley, who brags he's been commissioned to write a script for the 12-part cult fantasy novel The Seven Ordeals of Quelman. Abner's stroke of fortune has made him a target for fanatic Quelman fans, one of whom is trying to kill him. Abner hires Roy to find his attacker, but Roy is soon sidetracked by the prospect of obtaining a priceless copy of Jerry Lewis's unreleased Nazi drama The Day the Clown Cried . The plot thickens when Roy finds the movie's owner, Ted Savitch, dead of a heart attack—or was it murder? A retired television star, Savitch's daughter, Dena, and a whole gaggle of oddballs sweep Roy from Manhattan to the Hamptons, on to Los Angeles and a bicycle built for two in Amsterdam, and all the while he's dodging bullets and Oscar statuettes in hectic hot pursuit of the elusive stolen videotape. A gratifying ending drops the curtain on this wholly entertaining sequel: a frenzied encore for suspense fans and an edifying indulgence for seasoned film buffs.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Hard-boiled nerd Roy Milano is back in another screwball adventure, this one revolving around Jerry Lewis' unreleased 1972 Holocaust movie, The Day the Clown Cried. When an anonymous caller claiming to possess this obscure treasure turns up dead, Milano embarks on a strange quest around the globe, chased by a mystery man whose unpredictable attacks invariably remind our idiosyncratic hero of some useless tidbit of arcane movie lore. Klavan's best moments come from his wry impersonations of Jerry Seinfeld (Howie Romaine), who has run out of things to buy and toys with acquiring Clown, and Robert Evans (Troy Kelvin), who seems bent on remaking Clown with Bjorn Bork in the lead. The swift and senseless plot flies off its tracks here and there, and Roy's non sequiturs grow a bit thin, but there is enough delightful insanity along the way to please fans of silly suspense (from Jonathan Lethem to Kinky Friedman). David Wright
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Ballantine Books (March 1, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345462769
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345462763
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,091,441 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

LAURENCE KLAVAN wrote the novels, "The Cutting Room" and "The Shooting Script," which were published by Ballantine Books. He won the Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for the novel, "Mrs. White," written under a pseudonym. His graphic novels, "City of Spies" and "Brain Camp," co-written with Susan Kim, were published in 2010 by First Second Books at Macmillan. Their Young Adult novel series, "The Young Country," was recently acquired by Harper Collins. His work has been published in such print and online journals as The Alaska Quarterly, The Literary Review, Conjunctions, Natural Bridge, Louisville Review, Gargoyle, Pank, Stickman Review, The Dirty Goat, Straylight, Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, Playgirl, Café Irreal, Foliate Oak, Brink, Conte, Literateur, Skive, Hamilton Stone Review, Killing the Buddha, Pig in a Poke, Morpheus Tales, and Barnstorm. His story, "Alert," published in Sliptongue, is included in Best New Erotica 9 and "The Dead End Job," also published in Sliptongue, is included in Best New Erotica 10. He received two Drama Desk nominations for the book and lyrics to "Bed and Sofa," the musical produced by the Vineyard Theater in New York and the Finnborough Theatre in London in 2011. His musical, "Embarrassments," also co-written with composer Polly Pen, was produced by the Wilma Theater in Philadelphia. His one-acts, including "Sleeping Beauty" and "The Show Must Go On," have been produced by such theaters as Ensemble Studio Theater and Manhattan Punchline in New York, Actors Theatre of Louisville, and many others. His one-act, "The Summer Sublet," is included in Best American Short Plays 2000-2001. His theater work is published by Dramatists Play Service. His website is Laurenceklavan.com.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Stephanie Plum for Boys, March 5, 2005
By 
Monica (Tacoma, Washington) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Shooting Script: A Novel of Suspense (Hardcover)
Laurence Klavan's THE SHOOTING SCRIPT is a lot of over-the-top breezy, gonzo fun. Like a Janet Evanovich novel for boys. While the plot engages and the pace brisk, my big problem with this novel was the absence of women who weren't either boinking main character Ray Milano or somehow related to him. Though I guess some readers might find this a plus rather than a minus.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Klavan has a winning franchise with Milano and this series, March 19, 2005
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Shooting Script: A Novel of Suspense (Hardcover)
There is a part of me that is constantly amazed whenever I turn on a television or slip a DVD into the player and see something actually materialize on the screen. All we ever see is the end result of a process that is so convoluted, illogical, and laborious that it's a wonder that the only thing that ever shows up on a movie or a television screen is a test pattern (of course, I have the same reaction whenever I crack the binding on a new book and actually see something in print, but that's another story).

There are a lot of projects, however, that start off as a good idea and never happen. Ever see a film called LaBrava, starring Dustin Hoffman? Of course not. Didn't happen. It almost happened, but as my firearms trainer once told me, "almost" only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades. Another project that "almost" happened is a legendary film by Jerry Lewis --- yes, that Jerry Lewis --- titled The Day the Clown Cried. Clown, a rare dramatic vehicle for Lewis that was filmed in 1972, may never see the light of day, for a variety of reasons. Naturally, everyone who knows about it wants to see it. And that, of course, would include Roy Milano, Laurence Klavan's film-obsessed creation, who makes a welcome return in THE SHOOTING SCRIPT.

The general object of Milano's obsession is film trivia, to the extent that he is able to think of little else. Indeed, odd pieces of trivia pop into and out of Milano's consciousness, unbidden, at the most inappropriate times --- including, but not limited to, moments of near-death. Milano encounters several of these moments in THE SHOOTING SCRIPT, almost from the minute he receives a cryptic call from a stranger concerning a long-sought copy of the Jerry Lewis movie. The call leads Milano to a somewhat manic and madcap pursuit of the film, from New York to Los Angeles, to Amsterdam and back again, shadowed all the while by a mystery man who will stop at nothing to get the film for himself. Milano reprises his role in 2004's THE CUTTING ROOM as an almost-lovable nudge who would get a life except for the fact that he is enjoying his neurosis too much to do so.

Klavan, while not a deep literary writer, is an extremely entertaining one, and his plot holds together, hilariously, as a vehicle for the presentation of arcane film facts. In THE SHOOTING SCRIPT Milano's fixation is with what actor/director replaced what actor/director in which film. The trivia is extremely interesting if you have even a passing interest in film history, and if you are as obsessed with it as Milano, you will find the narrative to be riveting as the facts come flying at you.

THE SHOOTING SCRIPT establishes that Klavan has a winning franchise with Milano and this series. Given that Klavan has several decades' worth of film history to work with, we hopefully can look forward to much more of Klavan, and Milano, in the years to come. Recommended.

--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars strong thriller, March 1, 2005
This review is from: The Shooting Script: A Novel of Suspense (Hardcover)
Roy Millano considers himself a "Trivial Man", a person so obsessed with movie arcane that he doesn't have a life and his only source of income is a newsletter he produces. He considers himself a movie detective after finding the original long lost version of the movie "The Magnificent Ambersons" (See THE OUTING EDGE) even though he was almost killed while pursuing it.

Now Roy's mother is ill and his aunt wants him to get a real job to pay for her care. When he gets an e-mail from an anonymous person telling him that he has a copy of the Day the Clown Cried, a Jerry Lewis drama, that was never released, Roy rushes to meet the man. When he arrives at his hotel room, the man is dead and there is no tape. Forgetting about his mother's illness Roy follows the trail to the tape and is stalked by another "Trivial Man" who is willing to kill anyone who gets in his way of finding and keeping the tape.

THE SHOOTING SCRIPT is a story of what happens when obsession is taken to extreme; Laurence Klavan has a protagonist with a refreshingly unique voice who can quote movie trivia at the drop of a hat especially when he is nervous. The dangerous situations Roy finds himself in pursuing the movie does not deter him from going after what he wants even though he knows he might get killed by his obsessive stalker killer.

Harriet Klausner
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Before I blacked out, I saw the face of the most famous child star of the 1970s. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Jerry Lewis, New York, Graus Menzies, Johnny Cooper, Howie Romaine, Stanley Lager, Leonard Friend, Ted Savitch, Troy Kevlin, Macaroon Heart, Detective Florent, Abner Cooley, Alan Boilerman, Bar Harbor, Mike Fitzgerald, Roy Milano, The Seven Ordeals of Quelman, Romaine World, Taylor Weinrod, The Terrible Rebel, Thor Ludwig, Elizabeth Taylor, Fred Astaire, George Segal, Gone With the Wind
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