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The Night of the Hunter: A Biography of a Film - Classic Movie History & Analysis for Film Buffs & Students
The Night of the Hunter: A Biography of a Film - Classic Movie History & Analysis for Film Buffs & Students
The Night of the Hunter: A Biography of a Film - Classic Movie History & Analysis for Film Buffs & Students

The Night of the Hunter: A Biography of a Film - Classic Movie History & Analysis for Film Buffs & Students

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Description

Reaching simultaneously into the realms of film and literature, this detailed exploration of The Night of the Hunter examines the genesis and the eclectic form of each work and the process of transformation by which the novel became a motion picture. It provides the first major study of the long-lost first-draft screenplay by James Agee and confronts a fifty-year controversy about the authorship of the film. This is a story of artistic convergence on many levels--of novelist and director, director and actor, and cinematic form and tastes. The novel, a 1953 debut from Davis Grubb, was a popular and critical success, remaining on the New York Times best-seller list for four months. Hollywood responded to its atmospheric lyricism, and in the hands of first time director Charles Laughton, the book became a film that is equal parts thriller, allegory, and fever dream, filled with slow, inexorable suspense. On the set, Laughton functioned both as an auteur and a collaborator to create his vision of the book, mixing cinematic flourishes both realistic and abstract in sometimes tense situations. The talents that clashed or came together along the road from book to movie make the final film a product of rich stylistic contradiction and rewarding complexity. Through biography, production history, and critical analysis of the novel and film, author Jeffrey Couchman makes the case that this initially overlooked cinematic gem is a prismatic work that continually reveals new aspects of itself.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
I was seven or eight when I first saw Night of the Hunter in 1958 and it was very different from any other film I'd seen, scary, creepy, yet still funny in places and with a heartwarming ending.Calling this "a biography of a film" describes it to a T. Learning the background of the film, the novel from which it was taken, and clearing up writer James Agee's reputation after Paul Gregory, the producer, for some reason, later made disparaging remarks about him.This is certainly Robert Mitchum's finest psychological portrayal on film. And one wishes Charles Laughton had had a commercial success with it so that he could have directed others.If you are among those who know and love this beautiful film by all means GET THIS BOOK, so you can enjoy it all the more.
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