Buy this book! Read it! Keep it nearby! Refer to it! Everything you will need to know about comedy, cinema, love, sex, and class is in here. This book is like having a close friend nearby - someone who has taken the DEEP DIVE into the life and work of Lubitsch and come back to the surface to tell the tale over a fine meal. Comedy gets a bad rap for somehow being "inferior" to Tragedy but - wow - that is simply not the case (as this book shows).
McBride's seismic book details the creative arc The Master's Master took from his earliest days working for Max Reinhardt up to his penultimate and lovely swan song film, Cluny Brown. I cannot imagine the work that this took - but there it is. You, the reader, will appreciate Lubitsch's itinerary, you'll become familiar with this different periods and styles - and you'll walk away with a clear knowledge of his themes, how he expressed them, and what his films - in the larger socio-political landscape - actually represent.
But wait! There's more! All of the above is rendered with tremendous empathy, in a non-technical language, in an enormously accessible style. I am not kidding: I did not want to finish this book for fear of ending a great meal.
Want to maximize your experience with the book? Watch the films as you read about them. At least watch the ones you can find. And there's enough out there to make this worth the effort. Reading on To Be Or Not To Be? Watch it again! No harm in that. Never saw it? My condolences, you have some homework.
As McBride points out: when he introduces Lubitsch to students or people who've never heard of him, they are delighted. I concur. Young, old, American, other, tall, short, fat, thin: EVERYONE gets something from Ernst when they meet him. This book explains why that is. My take on WHY? Well, Lubitsch understood men and women better than most directors and his themes resonate down through the decades. And here comes the BIG reveal: Gay, straight, bi, trans, whatever....all people undergo the feelings in a Lubitsch film. One could take the plot to Monte Carlo, swap genders, or make both leads women, and it would STILL PLAY TODAY. Again, the book explains how and why.
OK, I think I'm running out of praise (there's more inside, but let me stop here).
I will add this: McBride's book goes way beyond your standard history / critical analysis. It's like having someone step into your workspace and present you with a 3 dimensional narrative about a guy and his movies. Always civil, never demeaning, deeply empathic, sophisticated, witty, - HOW DID LUBITSCH DO IT? is cut from the same cloth as its subject matter.
A must own book (which I first borrowed from my library and then bought!).
Federico Muchnik
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How Did Lubitsch Do It? Hardcover – June 26, 2018
by
Joseph McBride
(Author)
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Print length576 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherColumbia University Press
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Publication dateJune 26, 2018
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Dimensions6.14 x 1.44 x 9.21 inches
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ISBN-100231186444
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ISBN-13978-0231186445
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Editorial Reviews
Review
[This] excellent, authoritative book . . . is chockful of cultivated insights. -- Phiilip Lopate ― New York Review of Books
Named the best silent film book of 2019. ― Silent London
McBride delivers his best book yet . . . A nuanced, thorough look at an important artist and his art. ― Publishers Weekly (starred review)
In How Did Lubitsch Do It? Joseph McBride has written a love letter to a filmmaker . . . McBride’s detailed appreciations could serve, ideally, as a viewer’s companion to the many layers of Lubitsch’s art. -- Geoffrey O'Brien ― Wall Street Journal
Film historian Joseph McBride's tome How Did Lubitsch Do It? makes a comprehensive and enthusiastic . . . case for [Lubitsch]'s importance. ― New York Times Book Review
Though some early Lubitsch films are lost, McBride rescues the director's neglected and underrated reputation, securing his legacy with critical insights and sound scholarship in one of the few full-length appreciations of the artist. Highly recommended. ― Library Journal
[McBride] reacquaints readers with the director’s genius. . . . Will be a great companion for those interested in underexplored comedies in film history. ― Washington Post
There is no better time than now for a comprehensive study of Lubitsch like McBride’s. . . McBride does much-needed work in showing how Lubitsch was one of the consummate artists America was ever lucky enough to claim as her own. ― San Francisco Chronicle
How Did Lubitsch Do It? is one of the most indispensable film books I’ve ever read, not only a rigorously researched and considered biography and an illuminating analysis of Lubitsch’s technique but a broader study of how culture affects filmmaking and vice versa. ― Filmmaker Magazine
Revered film historian Joseph McBride's new book, How Did Lubitsch Do It?, explores this master of modern comedy in scintillating detail. ― LA Weekly
A compelling case for Lubitsch as an unequaled master of elegant, sophisticated entertainments marked by sly innuendo and adult sensibilities that have stood the test of time. ― DGA Quarterly
Critical study. ― Weekly Standard
A critical study. ― Wellesnet
A critical study. ― Mass Live
Nine well-informed chapters written in McBride's familiar, accessible style. -- Matthew Sorrento ― Film International
[A] fine book. ― The Sydney Morning Herald
A book well worth recommending. It is enjoyable, provocative and thorough. ― World Socialist Web Site
In this delightfully informative book McBride is unabashedly nostalgic for the urbane art of concealing art that Lubitsch mastered in The Shop around the Corner and in so many of his other films. -- David Weir ― Athenaeum Review
How Did Lubitsch Do It? is a critical [and] masterful study. -- Michel Ciment ― Positif
Joseph McBride’s study of Lubitsch matches the breadth and range of his incomparable work on Welles and Ford. Reading it, it is impossible not to want to see each of the director’s greatest films again or for the first time – readers will be driven straight to seek out not only the repertory standards but the silents, the musicals, and the German films. It is especially gratifying to see McBride apply his supple understanding of the intricacies of Lubitsch’s sexual politics to the paradoxes lurking for contemporary viewers, exploring how the films play both against and into feminist readings. McBride doesn’t shy from such explorations, but never leaps to premature conclusions. The book is an act of devotion matched to the heart of its subject. -- Jonathan Lethem, author of Motherless Brooklyn
McBride subtly and concretely describes the change in cinematic tastes over the course of a century. We who love cinema and Lubitsch should be grateful to have such a book in our lifetime, and it will be the definitive work for years to come. -- Molly Haskell, author of From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies
Ernst Lubitsch’s work has never needed reappraisal more than it does today, and McBride is just the writer for the job. As usual, he mobilizes formidable research and passionate sympathy to probe a great director’s many sides. We see Lubitsch the ethnic comedian, the exile, the romantic, the sardonic satirist, the sly provocateur, the moralist, the supremely confident master of technique. Above all, we see an artist who poured into film after film his keen sensitivity to the vagaries of love and his tolerant wisdom about the ways of the world. -- David Bordwell, University of Wisconsin-Madison
It’s a wonderful book on a wonderful picturemaker! The work and detail and time put into it ― just extraordinary. Superb! A great service to the public, bringing this unique and brilliant director back to the public's attention. This splendid work does real justice to its subject. -- Peter Bogdanovich
Although Ernst Lubitsch is one of the wittiest, most entertaining, and sexiest of filmmakers, he’s difficult to write about because wit and humor are more resistant to analysis than drama. McBride succeeds admirably in this task, providing a comprehensive, in-depth critical analysis and commentary on the cultural significance of Lubitsch’s work. His book is a joy to read and a gift to anyone who cares about the art of film. -- James Naremore, Indiana University
Named the best silent film book of 2019. ― Silent London
McBride delivers his best book yet . . . A nuanced, thorough look at an important artist and his art. ― Publishers Weekly (starred review)
In How Did Lubitsch Do It? Joseph McBride has written a love letter to a filmmaker . . . McBride’s detailed appreciations could serve, ideally, as a viewer’s companion to the many layers of Lubitsch’s art. -- Geoffrey O'Brien ― Wall Street Journal
Film historian Joseph McBride's tome How Did Lubitsch Do It? makes a comprehensive and enthusiastic . . . case for [Lubitsch]'s importance. ― New York Times Book Review
Though some early Lubitsch films are lost, McBride rescues the director's neglected and underrated reputation, securing his legacy with critical insights and sound scholarship in one of the few full-length appreciations of the artist. Highly recommended. ― Library Journal
[McBride] reacquaints readers with the director’s genius. . . . Will be a great companion for those interested in underexplored comedies in film history. ― Washington Post
There is no better time than now for a comprehensive study of Lubitsch like McBride’s. . . McBride does much-needed work in showing how Lubitsch was one of the consummate artists America was ever lucky enough to claim as her own. ― San Francisco Chronicle
How Did Lubitsch Do It? is one of the most indispensable film books I’ve ever read, not only a rigorously researched and considered biography and an illuminating analysis of Lubitsch’s technique but a broader study of how culture affects filmmaking and vice versa. ― Filmmaker Magazine
Revered film historian Joseph McBride's new book, How Did Lubitsch Do It?, explores this master of modern comedy in scintillating detail. ― LA Weekly
A compelling case for Lubitsch as an unequaled master of elegant, sophisticated entertainments marked by sly innuendo and adult sensibilities that have stood the test of time. ― DGA Quarterly
Critical study. ― Weekly Standard
A critical study. ― Wellesnet
A critical study. ― Mass Live
Nine well-informed chapters written in McBride's familiar, accessible style. -- Matthew Sorrento ― Film International
[A] fine book. ― The Sydney Morning Herald
A book well worth recommending. It is enjoyable, provocative and thorough. ― World Socialist Web Site
In this delightfully informative book McBride is unabashedly nostalgic for the urbane art of concealing art that Lubitsch mastered in The Shop around the Corner and in so many of his other films. -- David Weir ― Athenaeum Review
How Did Lubitsch Do It? is a critical [and] masterful study. -- Michel Ciment ― Positif
Joseph McBride’s study of Lubitsch matches the breadth and range of his incomparable work on Welles and Ford. Reading it, it is impossible not to want to see each of the director’s greatest films again or for the first time – readers will be driven straight to seek out not only the repertory standards but the silents, the musicals, and the German films. It is especially gratifying to see McBride apply his supple understanding of the intricacies of Lubitsch’s sexual politics to the paradoxes lurking for contemporary viewers, exploring how the films play both against and into feminist readings. McBride doesn’t shy from such explorations, but never leaps to premature conclusions. The book is an act of devotion matched to the heart of its subject. -- Jonathan Lethem, author of Motherless Brooklyn
McBride subtly and concretely describes the change in cinematic tastes over the course of a century. We who love cinema and Lubitsch should be grateful to have such a book in our lifetime, and it will be the definitive work for years to come. -- Molly Haskell, author of From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies
Ernst Lubitsch’s work has never needed reappraisal more than it does today, and McBride is just the writer for the job. As usual, he mobilizes formidable research and passionate sympathy to probe a great director’s many sides. We see Lubitsch the ethnic comedian, the exile, the romantic, the sardonic satirist, the sly provocateur, the moralist, the supremely confident master of technique. Above all, we see an artist who poured into film after film his keen sensitivity to the vagaries of love and his tolerant wisdom about the ways of the world. -- David Bordwell, University of Wisconsin-Madison
It’s a wonderful book on a wonderful picturemaker! The work and detail and time put into it ― just extraordinary. Superb! A great service to the public, bringing this unique and brilliant director back to the public's attention. This splendid work does real justice to its subject. -- Peter Bogdanovich
Although Ernst Lubitsch is one of the wittiest, most entertaining, and sexiest of filmmakers, he’s difficult to write about because wit and humor are more resistant to analysis than drama. McBride succeeds admirably in this task, providing a comprehensive, in-depth critical analysis and commentary on the cultural significance of Lubitsch’s work. His book is a joy to read and a gift to anyone who cares about the art of film. -- James Naremore, Indiana University
About the Author
Joseph McBride is a film historian and professor in the School of Cinema at San Francisco State University. He is the author of many books, including three critical studies of Orson Welles; Frank Capra: The Catastrophe of Success (1992); Steven Spielberg: A Biography (1997); Searching for John Ford (2001); and Frankly: Unmasking Frank Capra (2019).
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Product details
- Publisher : Columbia University Press (June 26, 2018)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 576 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0231186444
- ISBN-13 : 978-0231186445
- Item Weight : 2.1 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.14 x 1.44 x 9.21 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#1,287,144 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,620 in Video Direction & Production (Books)
- #1,705 in Movie Direction & Production
- #2,039 in Genre Films
- Customer Reviews:
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Reviewed in the United States on July 29, 2019
McBride's seismic book details the creative arc The Master's Master took from his earliest days working for Max Reinhardt up to his penultimate and lovely swan song film, Cluny Brown. I cannot imagine the work that this took - but there it is. You, the reader, will appreciate Lubitsch's itinerary, you'll become familiar with this different periods and styles - and you'll walk away with a clear knowledge of his themes, how he expressed them, and what his films - in the larger socio-political landscape - actually represent.
But wait! There's more! All of the above is rendered with tremendous empathy, in a non-technical language, in an enormously accessible style. I am not kidding: I did not want to finish this book for fear of ending a great meal.
Want to maximize your experience with the book? Watch the films as you read about them. At least watch the ones you can find. And there's enough out there to make this worth the effort. Reading on To Be Or Not To Be? Watch it again! No harm in that. Never saw it? My condolences, you have some homework.
As McBride points out: when he introduces Lubitsch to students or people who've never heard of him, they are delighted. I concur. Young, old, American, other, tall, short, fat, thin: EVERYONE gets something from Ernst when they meet him. This book explains why that is. My take on WHY? Well, Lubitsch understood men and women better than most directors and his themes resonate down through the decades. And here comes the BIG reveal: Gay, straight, bi, trans, whatever....all people undergo the feelings in a Lubitsch film. One could take the plot to Monte Carlo, swap genders, or make both leads women, and it would STILL PLAY TODAY. Again, the book explains how and why.
OK, I think I'm running out of praise (there's more inside, but let me stop here).
I will add this: McBride's book goes way beyond your standard history / critical analysis. It's like having someone step into your workspace and present you with a 3 dimensional narrative about a guy and his movies. Always civil, never demeaning, deeply empathic, sophisticated, witty, - HOW DID LUBITSCH DO IT? is cut from the same cloth as its subject matter.
A must own book (which I first borrowed from my library and then bought!).
Federico Muchnik
Verified Purchase
5.0 out of 5 stars
The definitive book on the master's master.
By Amazon Customer on July 29, 2019
Buy this book! Read it! Keep it nearby! Refer to it! Everything you will need to know about comedy, cinema, love, sex, and class is in here. This book is like having a close friend nearby - someone who has taken the DEEP DIVE into the life and work of Lubitsch and come back to the surface to tell the tale over a fine meal. Comedy gets a bad rap for somehow being "inferior" to Tragedy but - wow - that is simply not the case (as this book shows).By Amazon Customer on July 29, 2019
McBride's seismic book details the creative arc The Master's Master took from his earliest days working for Max Reinhardt up to his penultimate and lovely swan song film, Cluny Brown. I cannot imagine the work that this took - but there it is. You, the reader, will appreciate Lubitsch's itinerary, you'll become familiar with this different periods and styles - and you'll walk away with a clear knowledge of his themes, how he expressed them, and what his films - in the larger socio-political landscape - actually represent.
But wait! There's more! All of the above is rendered with tremendous empathy, in a non-technical language, in an enormously accessible style. I am not kidding: I did not want to finish this book for fear of ending a great meal.
Want to maximize your experience with the book? Watch the films as you read about them. At least watch the ones you can find. And there's enough out there to make this worth the effort. Reading on To Be Or Not To Be? Watch it again! No harm in that. Never saw it? My condolences, you have some homework.
As McBride points out: when he introduces Lubitsch to students or people who've never heard of him, they are delighted. I concur. Young, old, American, other, tall, short, fat, thin: EVERYONE gets something from Ernst when they meet him. This book explains why that is. My take on WHY? Well, Lubitsch understood men and women better than most directors and his themes resonate down through the decades. And here comes the BIG reveal: Gay, straight, bi, trans, whatever....all people undergo the feelings in a Lubitsch film. One could take the plot to Monte Carlo, swap genders, or make both leads women, and it would STILL PLAY TODAY. Again, the book explains how and why.
OK, I think I'm running out of praise (there's more inside, but let me stop here).
I will add this: McBride's book goes way beyond your standard history / critical analysis. It's like having someone step into your workspace and present you with a 3 dimensional narrative about a guy and his movies. Always civil, never demeaning, deeply empathic, sophisticated, witty, - HOW DID LUBITSCH DO IT? is cut from the same cloth as its subject matter.
A must own book (which I first borrowed from my library and then bought!).
Federico Muchnik
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Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2018
“McBride subtly and concretely describes the change in cinematic tastes over the course of a century.” Molly Haskell, the film critic who is special in her own right, says this on the back of McBride’s book. Her remark begins to make an important point about the author of “How Did Lubitsch Do it?” The point she approaches and I want to say out loud is this: Joe McBride is a national living treasure. (I’m alluding to the Japanese term—as in ‘Preserver of important intangible cultural properties.’) Now, of course, this assertion calls for some justification. In McBride’s head and heart resides a century of film history, film accomplishments—the films themselves, the great directors, the trends, whether visually or in scripts, the cross-fertilizations, the technical innovations, the progress or regress in sophisticated sensibility, the historical and cultural context (and, in this particular book, the cross-cultural context) and so on. When McBride does a biography, or in this case a critical study, it is astounding how his capacious and comprehending sensibility captures the auteur, his personality and history, his stars and ways of relating to them, his film techniques, all the accomplices in the achievements (from camera person to scriptwriter to critic to coffeeboy), the cultural, historical and political context of all these facets. His understanding and presentation is not linear and shuns simplification. Instead he is like an eagle diving in from all directions. The rendering must be 360 degrees. Reading this book, you will take delight in the trustworthy overview of the author as guide—“a century of cinematic tastes”—and the inter- and intra-view as well. Just reading the acknowledgements will bowl you over re the many research inquiries and conversations that make the interpretations so respectable (that’s the inter-view); and then there is the intra-view—the author’s extreme empathic effort to get the Lubitsch films and arc of career from a Lubitsch point of view. But beyond the depth and breadth, beyond all this, you’ll delight in the author’s charm and wit—even in the midst of his persuading you of Lubitsch’s charm and wit; the elegance does honor to his much esteemed Subject and mirrors McBride’s image of the Lubitsch sensibility.
You will detect that I am partial. Guilty as charged. But I protest that I am hard to please—and that’s some mitigation. Frankly, though, I did gasp at the accomplishment of this book. And it made me want to see all the films it reviewed and wish that Lubitsch, so admired by other great comic directors, like Wilder, who followed in his wake, were here to give us more.
You will detect that I am partial. Guilty as charged. But I protest that I am hard to please—and that’s some mitigation. Frankly, though, I did gasp at the accomplishment of this book. And it made me want to see all the films it reviewed and wish that Lubitsch, so admired by other great comic directors, like Wilder, who followed in his wake, were here to give us more.
8 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries
philosophy junky
4.0 out of 5 stars
excellent overview of the master of sophisticated 1930s social film comedy
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 20, 2019Verified Purchase
Ernst Lubitsch created some of the most sophisticated and stylish film comedies of the 1920s, 30s and 40s - films which use a subtle, oblique style to address big questions around the sexual relations between men and women, and even the vast totalitarian threats confronting western society at that time.
His 1939 comedy "Ninotchka" satirised the grim realities, and joylessness, of state socialism, and his 1942 "To Be or Not To Be" targeted the Nazi threat at a time when many other film-makers preferred to ignore the human costs of these 'utopian' ideologies.
At a time when feature films are largely spin-offs from comic books and video games, this book takes us back to an era when Hollywood profited from sublety, sophistication and immense visual and verbal wit.
This profile is a great introduction to the man, the films, and his themes.
His 1939 comedy "Ninotchka" satirised the grim realities, and joylessness, of state socialism, and his 1942 "To Be or Not To Be" targeted the Nazi threat at a time when many other film-makers preferred to ignore the human costs of these 'utopian' ideologies.
At a time when feature films are largely spin-offs from comic books and video games, this book takes us back to an era when Hollywood profited from sublety, sophistication and immense visual and verbal wit.
This profile is a great introduction to the man, the films, and his themes.
Jourdat Alain-Michel
5.0 out of 5 stars
livre-somme sur l'oeuvre en gestation et mine d'informations
Reviewed in France on January 29, 2019Verified Purchase
Je suis chroniqueur professionnel et il faut allier concision et exhaustivité. Cet ouvrage de Joseph Mc Bride est à mon sens le plus abouti sur Ernst Lubitsch même si celui de Scott Eyman est très enrichissant par ailleurs. Lubitsch est à la haute-couture cinématographique ce que le caleçon est au vaudeville et la toge à la tragédie. Incontournable et indémodable.
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