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Consumed (Dark Protectors)

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Author: Zanetti, Rebecca

Binding: Paperback

ISBN: 9781601831422

Details:

Author: Zanetti, Rebecca

Color: Multicolor

Binding: Paperback

Number Of Pages: 341

Release Date: 18-12-2012

EAN: 9781601831422

Package Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.9 inches

Languages: English

Description:

Praise for Say Hello to My Little Friend: A Century of Scarface “Brilliant. One of my favorite films. So many ways to look at it. So much I didn’t know. Nat Segaloff is that rare film scholar: as entertaining as he’s informative.” —David Morrell, New York Times Bestselling Author of First Blood (Rambo) “Nat Segaloff, noted film historian, author, and veteran show business insider, has struck gold with Say Hello to My Little Friend: A Century of Scarface. There is nothing in this fascinating tome that is not addressed in this in-depth study of both the 1932 version and the 1983 remake. Whether discussing the social aspects surrounding the films and the circumstances of their creation, or the people and production involved, Nat Segaloff delves deep to unearth it all in startling detail. It’s surprising it hasn’t been done before, but thankfully it took an entire century to get it right. A must-have for any and all fans of great reportage.” —Dwayne Epstein, New York Times Bestselling Author of Lee Marvin: Point Blank and Killin’ Generals: The Making of The Dirty Dozen, the Most Iconic WWII Movie of All Time “Not content with tracing the origins, production, reception, and legacy of Howard Hawks’s film and Brian De Palma’s remake with an incredible wealth of detail, Nat Segaloff takes digressions into the history of the main players, Prohibition, the cocaine trade, and many other subjects, always in a concise and entertaining manner. For all these reasons, Say Hello to My Little Friend is the ultimate all-in-one guide on Scarface that will teach you everything and more.” —Laurent Vachaud, co-author of De Palma on De Palma “Al Pacino fans will devour this book. It identifies Scarface as the driving force behind Pacino’s evolution as a star. The analysis of his Tony and Paul Muni’s Tony in the first Scarface is fascinating, as are all of Segaloff’s stories about the Mob and how it infiltrated Hollywood during the film industry’s golden age.” —Robert Hofler, author of The Way They Were and The Man Who Invented Rock Hudson

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