🎉   Please check out our new website over at books-etc.com.

Seller
Your price
£18.99
Out of Stock

Steven Spielberg

A Life in Films. Jewish Lives

By (author) Molly Haskell
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Yale University Press, United States
Published: 24th Jan 2017
Dimensions: w 146mm h 210mm d 22mm
Weight: 408g
ISBN-10: 0300186932
ISBN-13: 9780300186932
Barcode No: 9780300186932
Trade or Institutional customer? Contact us about large order quotes.
Synopsis
From the prizewinning Jewish Lives series, a film-centric portrait of Steven Spielberg, the extraordinarily gifted movie director whose decades-long influence on American popular culture is unprecedented "A swift and elegant introduction to Spielberg's life and work."-David Denby, New Yorker "Everything about me is in my films," Steven Spielberg has said. Taking this as a key to understanding the hugely successful moviemaker, Molly Haskell explores the full range of Spielberg's works for the light they shine upon the man himself. Through such powerhouse hits as Close Encounters of the Third Kind, E.T., Jurassic Park, and Indiana Jones, to lesser-known masterworks like A.I. and Empire of the Sun, to the haunting Schindler's List, Haskell shows how Spielberg's uniquely evocative filmmaking and story-telling reveal the many ways in which his life, work, and times are entwined. Organizing chapters around specific films, the distinguished critic discusses how Spielberg's childhood in non-Jewish suburbs, his parents' traumatic divorce, his return to Judaism upon his son's birth, and other events echo in his work. She offers a brilliant portrait of the extraordinary director-a fearful boy living through his imagination who grew into a man whose openness, generosity of spirit, and creativity have enchanted audiences for more than 40 years. About Jewish Lives: Jewish Lives is a prizewinning series of interpretative biography designed to explore the many facets of Jewish identity. Individual volumes illuminate the imprint of Jewish figures upon literature, religion, philosophy, politics, cultural and economic life, and the arts and sciences. Subjects are paired with authors to elicit lively, deeply informed books that explore the range and depth of the Jewish experience from antiquity to the present. In 2014, the Jewish Book Council named Jewish Lives the winner of its Jewish Book of the Year Award, the first series ever to receive this award. More praise for Jewish Lives: "Excellent." -New York Times "Exemplary." -Wall Street Journal "Distinguished." -New Yorker "Superb." -The Guardian

New & Used

Seller Information Condition Price
-New
Out of Stock

What Reviewers Are Saying

Submit your review
Newspapers & Magazines
"A swift and elegant introduction to Spielberg's life and work."-David Denby, New Yorker

"'Everything about me is in my films,' Spielberg once said. Yet in this compact study of a sprawling career, Haskell comes close to presenting a unified theory of a director who entertains multitudes, and contains them too."-Victoria Segal, Sunday Times

"A superbly readable portrait of the man through his movies . . . this meeting of the minds of the critic and the director turns out to be exceptionally fruitful."-Kate Muir, Times (London)

"The exploration here is lively, the critic is deeply informed, and she approaches her mandate with a calmness of inquiry that is a gift often bestowed on the outsider anthropologist impervious to tribal influences."-Lisa Schwarzbaum, New York Times Book Review

"Luckily, Molly Haskell is far too wise a critic to be flummoxed by Mr. Spielberg's seemingly critic-proof oeuvre. She nails Mr. Spielberg when he needs to be nailed . . . Ms. Haskell's great on the movies that give her something to write about, like 'Duel,' 'Jaws,' and 'Empire of the Sun.'"-Scott Eyman, Wall Street Journal

"This fascinating critical study and close reading of the movies, written by a prominent feminist film critic, focuses on the evolution of Spielberg's Jewish identity."-New York Times Book Review, Editors' Choice

"As Haskell delves into her subject, however, she discovers the influences and challenges that shaped this outsize figure in American mainstream cinema, including his denied, then embraced Jewish faith, and comes up with a compelling and remarkable figure."-Sarah Jilani, Times Literary Supplement

"In a long nomadic career of film writing, the feminist critic Molly Haskell has never wild about Spielberg, her taste steeped in the great auteurs, her signature a coolly playful rigour. Unexpectedly, this makes her the perfect biographer for a director with a life-long weakness for treacle. Spielberg emerges with his credibility enhanced for having been put through the wringer."-Danny Leigh, Financial Times

"Legendary movie critic Haskell weaves Spielberg's entire body of work through her captivating narrative, providing a poignant study of him as a person and a filmmaker."-Publishers Weekly

"Haskell's discussion of the childlike wonder inherent to many of the director's films and her eloquent defense of some of his riskier, less successful movies is particularly valuable. . . . Recommended for readers of film criticism or commentary."-Library Journal

"[Haskell] takes Spielberg's statement that 'everything about me is in my films' and provides a fascinating portrait of the man and his entire oeuvre, illustrating just how entwined they are. She reveals that this extraordinarily gifted individual would translate 'not only his childhood but whatever he was feeling and experiencing at any given time' into his films."-Anne Joseph, Jewish Chronicle

"Haskell has turned out a brilliant, almost exemplary book: in 200-odd pages it manages to precis the key facts of Spielberg's off-camera life and distill the essence and flow of his evolving, shifting cinematic achievements . . . an excellent critical biography of a great film director, and is warmly recommended."-Andrew Pulver, Jewish Renaissance

"This unlikely match of biographer and subject gives [Haskell's]study the tension and snap of a good romantic comedy. . . . An essential volume on an artist whose aversion to interviews has shortened the shelf of worthwhile studies on him."-Guy Lodge, The Observer

"An arresting set of connections, linking the stresses of childhood and adolescence with the defining themes of his expensive output, ultimately taking a view on Spielberg as a more personal filmmaker than many of his contemporaries . . . a filmmaker this refreshing volume make you keen to reassess, or perhaps indeed visit for the first time with new eyes."-Trevor Johnson, Sight & Sound

"Molly Haskell, one of our most essential authorities on the movies, has written a fascinating, witty, acutely discerning book about a subject that would seem, at first glance, odd. But what a spectacular match it proves to be! Spielberg is given his proper due, and Haskell outdoes herself."-Phillip Lopate, author of American Movie Critics

"Steven Spielberg and Molly Haskell-the great producer-director of modern film and one of the most intelligent and sensitive film writers we have ever had. The result is as rich and intriguing as the meeting of Elliott and E.T. We know the Spielberg films, or we think we do, until they come under the cool yet warming gaze of Ms. Haskell. As a result, we are the more fascinated with Spielberg and the more encouraged by the principle of essential and enlightening film commentary."-David Thomson, author of A Biographical Dictionary of Film

"Molly Haskell's writing is always thought provoking and rife with insight. She skillfully argues that Hollywood's most commercially successful film maker has, over a forty-five-year career, produced a series of highly personal films that give voice to the director's inner conflicts and longings. This persuasive re-think will no doubt intrigue fans and, in fact, anyone who has ever watched a Spielberg movie. A must for anyone interested in a serious look at popular cinema."-Joseph Egan, author of The Purple Diaries

"This is a wonderful book, at once personal and critical, eloquent and vivacious. The book vibrates with a productive tension between the writer and her subject."-Morris Dickstein, author of Dancing in the Dark and Why Not Say What Happened