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Troubles in a Golden Eye: Starring Taylor And Brando With John Huston
 
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Troubles in a Golden Eye: Starring Taylor And Brando With John Huston [Hardcover]

William Russo (Author), Jan Merlin (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 8, 2005

"There is a fort in the South where a few years ago a murder was committed. The participants of this tragedy were: two officers, a soldier, two women, a Filipino, and a horse."

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 148 pages
  • Publisher: Xlibris Corp; illustrated edition edition (June 8, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1413495656
  • ISBN-13: 978-1413495652
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,988,289 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Dr. William Russo is a film critic, author, and recluse.

In recent years he has collaborated with Emmy-winning writer, Jan Merlin. The two men have one historical novel, The Paid Companion of J.Wilkes Booth. The team and has also written books on Hollywood features, Troubles in a Golden Eye (about the making of John Huston's Reflections in a Golden Eye), and MGM Makes Boys Town (a study of the efforts to film the docudrama about Father Flanagan which starred Spencer Tracy and Mickey Rooney). The latest tandem effort is Hanging With Billy Budd, which details the adaptations of the Melville novel to stage, screen, opera, radio, and television.

Russo wrote a memoir and study of James Kirkwood, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of A Chorus Line, based on years of discussions and conversations with his old friend. One of Russo's most popular books is A Thinker's Damn: Audie Murphy, Vietnam, and the Making of The Quiet American. This work also takes a notable literary work, by Graham Greene, and traces the evolution into a seminal American movie, directed by Joseph Mankiewicz. For this work, Dr. Russo interviewed all the survivors of the first American film made in Vietnam. The book provides, arguably, the most incisive portrait of film star and war hero Audie Murphy. He has contributed essays to Spencer Tracy Fox Film Actor, published by the New England Vintage Film Society, and has essays in the compilation book Stage to Screen.

As editor for Lukeion Press, part of Author22 Publishing, out of Las Vegas, he served guided writers like Frank Vinh Noan (Vietnam, My Love) who was Joseph Mankiewicz's assistant troubleshooter for The Quiet American, and William Cate, a young musician whose diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis led to the book, Body Hate: A Gay Man's Struggle.

Russo holds a Master of Arts degree and a doctorate.

An inveterate writer of letters, Russo has corresponded with some of the most famous people of the past fifty years from Katharine Hepburn and Bette Davis to Richard Nixon and Dr. Richard Mudd, giving him a window into many worlds and providing him with first-hand research information for various books.

In 2011 he appeared in the film A Walk with Mal Tempo.

He has written a number of humor books, including Red Sox 2011: A Whimsical Autopsy. Others entertainments include: Sex, Drugs, Sports & Whimsy (2 volumes) as well as Rajon Rondo: Superstar. His latest book is Death, Taxes and Sports Whimsy.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Judgments in a Jaundiced Eye: A Book of Errors, April 26, 2007
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This book contains considerable information concerning the script development, casting, filming, and reception of John Huston's movie version of Carson McCuller's Reflections in a Golden Eye. Not being filled with a sufficient number of Hollywood stories and shenanigans, it is not quite a coffee table book, but it is not exactly an academic book, either, in large part because it neglects attribution, in all but the most general way as a list of sources at the end, of the sentiments and thoughts expressed by various characters who are quoted within the text itself. So we learn, for example, that one actor who worked with director John Huston (not necessarily on this film, however) found him self-involved and sadistic, but we never learn who this actor was or what the occasion for her or his comments might have been. Such comments, by the way, seem to have been included whether or not they pertain to this film chiefly because the authors, one of whom purports to be a Professor of Literature and Film at Curry College in Massachusetts and the other an actor, seem to dislike Huston from the get go and don't want to miss any opportunity to slur his reputation. Thus his legitimate artistic concerns about the technicolor effects he wished to achieve in this movie are dismissed as mere nattering (page 102), while what is supposed to pass as critical commentary on Huston's work overall amounts to little more than snide asides about what the authors regard as Huston's disingenuous, self-serving manner of speaking masquerading as special insights into the film.

I said that one of the authors of this work "purports" to be a professor of English because, if he really is, how is one to account for the almost innumerable errors in agreement, dangling modifiers, incoherent sentences, comma splices, and other mistakes the likes of which one is used to finding in undergraduate writing? Thus we read, for instance, the following sentence: "Determined to get the visual result he wanted, the film prints took on the nature of an obsession for Huston" (102). Does this sound like nattering, by the way? And even if it is, the sentence should be written, "Determined to get the visual result he wanted, Huston became obsessed with the film prints." There are countless similarly ungrammatical sentences scattered liberally throughout the book. At the very least, these issues, and others such a doubled phrases and stuttering or stammering starts in which the original form of the sentence is maintained in company with the form the sentence finally came to have, indicate that no one has done a very careful job of proof reading (another undergraduate problem). Taken together, these errors and oversights call into question the competence of the authors, a doubt that extends to the unsourced quotations to which I referred above. Is this really what the person in question said or wrote, or has an unattended error slipped through here as well? Why, in the same vein, use the same quotation over and over, or parts of it, as these authors do, sometimes, moreover, in an attempt to establish wholly different and even contrasting attitudes about the subject of the quotation? The book, in short, is appallingly written, at times incoherent, and though it may and undoubtedly does have some value in aiding our understanding of this under rated movie by a largely under rated director, its facts and especially its critical judgments need to be regarded with suspicion until confirmed by one's own independent research.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Sober recounting of fascinating events, March 10, 2007
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K. Anderson "Xanadude" (Los Angeles, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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A book based on the making of John Huston's marvelously loopy 1967 film adaptation of Carson McCullers' "Reflections in a Golden Eye" should be a lot more fun than this. Over the years I have really come to appreciate the mix of talent and foolhardiness that converged to create this film which I regard as a mini- masterpiece of failed intentions, so I was thrilled to learn that a book existed that delved into the behind the scenes details of its production.

Authors Russo and Merlin have crammed the book with a lot of research details, quotes, interviews and little-known facts, but somewhere along the line a sense of fun was left out. Fascinating it is, engaging, I'm not so sure.

It really can't be easy to make a book about the oversized personalities of Elizabeth Taylor, Marlon Brando and John Huston joining forces to make a film about adultery, repressed homosexuality and a nutcase who cuts off her nipples with gardening shears, into a sober (sometimes dry) recounting of the ups and downs of the filmmaking process, but "Troubles in a Golden Eye" does just that. I really wish it were a more entertaining read, for there is no faulting the authors in the amount of information they have amassed about the film. Unfortunately, that may be the problem, as the book reads more like an unfurling of facts and less like a book that has a point of view. At the end one has no sense of what one is to make of it all. Does it reveal Hollywood's uncomfortable melding of art and commerce? Is it a treatise on artistic waste or ego-based folly? It's hard to come away with anything meaningful other than a vague sense of gratitude that at least
someone found the film interesting enough to write about.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Ugly Truth, May 24, 2010
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After writing this movie book with Jan Merlin, I realized it was not your typical PR story or one of those fan-styled books. As writers, we know intimately the details of some of the stars and have inside information on the actual filming of this dog of a movie. This does not always sit well with friends of the people involved, which is why this is unauthorized book angered the hangers-on and toadies of the principals. Some people involved with this film wanted to spill the dirt, and let me tell you the dirt is here by the shovels-full. The usual jealous types can't say much except try to stop you from learning about egomaniacs like Brando, Taylor, Huston, and the cult writer McCullers. If it makes you want to see the movie again to understand what went wrong in the production, we have done our jobs. As for me, I love the movie and enjoy sharing how it must have felt to be on the set while it was made on Long Island and Rome in 1966. This was a goal with which we succeeded. Apologies to any whose feelings were hurt during the making of this book.

Enjoy!
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