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Oliver Stone's USA: Film, History, and Controversy

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Challenging audiences and leaving critics in disarray, the films of Oliver Stone have compelled viewers to reexamine many of their most revered beliefs about America's past. Like no other filmmaker, Stone has left an indelible mark on public opinion and political life, even as he has generated enormous controversy and debate among those who take issue with his dramatic use of history.

This book brings Stone face-to-face with some of his most thoughtful critics and supporters and allows Stone himself ample room to respond to their views. Featuring such luminaries as David Halberstam, Stephen Ambrose, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., Walter Lafeber, and Robert Rosenstone, these writers critique Stone's most contested films to show how they may distort, amplify, or transcend the historical realities they appear to depict.

These essays—on Salvador, Platoon, Wall Street, Born on the Fourth of July, The Doors, JFK, Heaven and Earth, Natural Born Killers, and Nixon—enlarge our understanding of Stone's films, while also giving us a fuller appreciation of the filmmaker as artist and intellectual. They reveal how Stone's experience in Vietnam colors his views of American government and corporate culture and suggest new ways of looking at the complex tensions between art and history that shape Stone's films.

In response, Stone offers an articulate and passionate defense of his artistic vision. Disavowing once and for all the mantle of "cinematic historian," Stone declares himself first and foremost a storyteller, a dramatist and mythmaker who deliberately refashions historical facts in pursuit of higher truths. The undeniable centerpiece of this artistic manifesto is Stone's fascinating commentary on the making and meanings of JFK, the film that reopened a case that many thought finally closed.

A provocative and timely reexamination of a great American artist, Oliver Stone's USA will also reignite public debate over the relationship between history and art as well as the artist's responsibility to his audience.

340 pages, Paperback

First published May 1, 2000

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About the author

Robert Brent Toplin

19 books2 followers
Robert Brent Toplin is professor of history at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington and film review editor for the Journal of American History. Among his ten books are Oliver Stone’s USA: Film, History, and Controversy, History by Hollywood: The Use and Abuse of the American Past, and Ken Burns’s The Civil War: Historians Respond.

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Profile Image for Carolyn Fitzpatrick.
890 reviews33 followers
November 10, 2016
The beginning is a series of articles about Oliver Stone's work in general, plus his own defense of his films. Most of these were rather boring, but I did like one articles that tracked Stone's life and how it matched up with the different movies that he is known for. Then were are articles about Stone's major movies, starting with Platoon which was the only one that I was interested in since that's the only one that I've seen. Very interesting comparisons between Platoon, Stone's life, the Vietnam War in general, and The Green Berets.
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