From Library Journal
A professor of literature and film history, McFarlane gives some attention to internationally famous British-born actors and directors, but the bulk of his book consists of scores of substantive, often recent interviews with mostly unknown actors and technicians responsible for creating a distinctive British cinema. Included are gothic film icon Peter Cushing, cameramen-directors Freddie Francis and Jack Clayton, actor-writer-director Bryan Forbes, character actor Michael Hordern, and composer John Addison. We are also reintroduced to Phyllis Calvert, Ian Carmichael, Michael Craig, Margaret Lockwood, Virginia McKenna, Dinah Sheridan, Richard Todd, and Bill Travers. Director Ronald Neame reveals that such performers remain familiar because "on American television they just didn't have enough material and among the cheap, easy material they could lay their hands on were old British films." Julie Christie summarizes the past in the foreword, and English Patient director Anthony Minghella fields queries about the future of U.K. film in the afterword. Recommended and necessary for comprehensive cinema collections.?Kim R. Holston, Am. Inst. for Char. Prop. Casualty Underwriters, Malvern, PA
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Product Description
An Autobiography of British Cinema tell the story of British film by those who made it.
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