Brandon’s Reviews > Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film > Status Update

Brandon
Brandon is on page 642 of 800
The section on technique is right down my nerd alley. Almendros: “When taking close-ups in a color picture, there is too much visual information in the background, which tends to draw attention away from the face. That is why the faces of the actresses in old black-and-white pictures are so vividly remembered…. Filmed in black and white, those figures looked as if they were lit from within“ (642).
May 29, 2025 05:47PM
Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film

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Brandon
Brandon is on page 778 of 800
As a souvenir, John Waters took home a palm fraud from the Spahn Ranch, which perhaps once shaded Charles Manson, Shorty Shea or both (778).
Jun 21, 2025 07:13PM
Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film


Brandon
Brandon is on page 777 of 800
Water says that Venice Beach is the only place that reminds him of the East Coast (777).
Jun 21, 2025 07:10PM
Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film


Brandon
Brandon is on page 771 of 800
I like John Waters irreverence: “Think of the lucky schoolchildren who get let out of class for smog alerts instead of blizzards” (771). I was never one of those children, but I can imagine how they feel, having survived Youth Corp and a disastrous football tryout at CSUN.
Jun 21, 2025 06:48PM
Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film


Brandon
Brandon is on page 770 of 800
What a curious excerpt from Robert Stone’s Children of Light: a son gets even with his father by attacking the older man’s beloved scenes.
Jun 21, 2025 06:40PM
Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film


Brandon
Brandon is on page 767 of 800
Julia Phillips memoir about winning Best Picture is so coked and sad. Nowhere to go but down.
Jun 21, 2025 06:23PM
Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film


Brandon
Brandon is on page 754 of 800
For laughs, I reread Groucho Marx letters to Warner Brothers re: the studio’s objection to the proposed “Night in Casablanca.” What a lovely work of writ & lit.
Jun 20, 2025 07:58AM
Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film


Brandon
Brandon is on page 750 of 800
How strange that Oscar Levant’s prose has little continuity between paragraphs. Ebert praises Levant’s one liners, and I did smile, but some paragraphs were sans smile. What beyond syntax makes words cohere in a sentence? How can theme be divided & distributed across paragraphs? Ignore counterpoint at peril of the self.
Jun 19, 2025 03:00PM
Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film


Brandon
Brandon is on page 734 of 800
“[The] dump grew continually…there wasn’t a dream afloat …which wouldn’t sooner or later turn up on it, having first been made photographic by plaster, canvas, plaster lath and paint. Many boats sink and never reached the Sargasso, but no dream ever entirely disappears…. it troubles, some unfortunate person, and someday, when that person has been sufficiently troubled, it will be reproduced on the lot.”
Jun 19, 2025 02:14PM
Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film


Brandon
Brandon is on page 731 of 800
The Hollywood section is the most cynical as it tells again & again how the movies lie & how we know it & how we justify it. The Budd Schulberg excerpt appears beside the Howard Koch excerpt. What a plot.
Jun 16, 2025 05:06AM
Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film


Brandon
Brandon is on page 720 of 800
“(Caroline) had learned from hurst the truth was only one criterion by which a story could be judged….” (720) Cinema is at best a fragment of a fact.
Jun 15, 2025 01:10PM
Roger Ebert's Book of Film: From Tolstoy to Tarantino, the Finest Writing From a Century of Film


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