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Book reviews for "Browning,_Tod" sorted by average review score:

London After Midnight
Published in Hardcover by Cornwall Books (1985)
Authors: Philip J. Riley and Tod Browning
Amazon base price: $24.50
Used price: $149.99
Collectible price: $132.35
Average review score:

A monumental under-taking to film & Chaney fan delight
This is a must have for Chaney & Horror film fans! This undertaking must have been a ton of work & a ton of hours to put together but it is a perfect reconstruction of a film that to this date has not surfaced & its only copy may have perished in MGM's vault 7 fire. You also must also acquire a copy of The Marie Collidge-Rask novel (long out of print). Together they make the experiance as close to seeing the film as you & I may ever find.

An exquisite reconstruction
Neither Phillip J. Riley nor anyone else has ever found a copy of the legendary lost Lon Chaney reputed masterpiece, London After Midnight. But Riley found the hat Chaney wore, and enough stills to make the lost film come alive.


Dark Carnival: The Secret World of Tod Browning: Hollywood's Master of the Macabre
Published in Hardcover by Anchor (1995)
Authors: David J. Skal and Elias Savada
Amazon base price: $23.00
Used price: $28.49
Average review score:

It was cultivating but it seemed to lack the writers touch
It started off good then i started to loose intrest. it felt like it needed a few more adjitives.

A top-notch biography of a difficult subject
Director Tod Browning, best known for his films "Dracula" (1931) and "Freaks," was a surrealist for the masses. In his films he used characters with mental and physical abnormalities to illustrate the plight of humanity diminished by modernism. He was one of the first horror auteurs in America, and filtered elements of the fantastic from European film makers like Robert Weine and F.W. Murnau. As an artist, he was uneven, and as the subject of a biography, he is all but unknowable, but David J. Skal does the best he can. Some sections of the book (especially the ones covering Bela Lugosi and the making of "Dracula") retread earlier work by Skal. Browning is also not the best subject for a biographical treatment, since he left almost no letters or personal effects. Instead of resorting to guesswork or pop psychology, however, Skal (with his collaborator Elias Savada, a film historian) wisely focuses on the content of Browning's films. The best sections of the book deal with Browning's frequent silent movies collaborations with Lon Chaney, Sr., and the making of, and subsequent furor over, the film "Freaks." This is a top notch book that should appeal greatly to film buffs, lovers of silent cinema, Hollywood historians, cultural critics, and horror fans of all stripes. (And compleatists and trainspotters will be happy to know that the filmography is both detailed and exhaustive.)

where else?
Will you find this much detail about Browning. That alone gets Skal's effort the highest rating. Fascinating material.


Related Subjects: Author Index

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