Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2
Book reviews for "Silvera,_Alain" sorted by average review score:

Film Noir: An Encyclopedia Reference to the American Style
Published in Paperback by Overlook Press (1993)
Authors: Alain Silver and Elizabeth Ward
Amazon base price: $29.95
Used price: $17.97
Collectible price: $20.99
Buy one from zShops for: $26.70
Average review score:

The Torah.
For the Noir Geek, this is THE Sacred Book. Over 300 titles from the genre's "classic" postwar period are given the synopsis/analysis treatment. Reviews can be a bit "scholarly" (depending on the particular contributing writer) but overall very enlightening for fans who want to "go deep". As a collector who obsessively videotapes and archives obscure noir, I have reached for this book again and again and found it to be a valuable reference tool. One warning to those who wish to use it like a standard "movie guide"- the synopsis capsules are clinically outlined to the point of effectively becoming "spoilers", so you may want to see the film first, then read about it. Some reviewers have taken umbrage with the book's U.S.-centric focus. To them I would point out that while this volume excludes European-PRODUCED cinema, if one takes a closer look, a number of the films included were DIRECTED by people like Billy Wilder, Fritz Lang and Roman Polanski, all in fact native Europeans, so referring to them as "American" noirs may be a matter of semantics. Highly recommended for genre fans.

For Obsessives Only!
The casual film fan will be overwhelmed with this...academic jargon, much discussion of film theory, sensory overload of details. But, the obsessive film fan, who is a student (professional or amateur) of this genre will revel in the scope of what has become one of the standard texts on the genre (assuming there is any standard....whatever). A basically complete rundown on the Hollywood output of noir in the 30s through the early 60s...with all the detail on the films that it never occurred to you to ask in the first place.

It also has rather thourough essays on themes, threads, influences, settings...more than enough to explore other sources of noir citicism. It can be dry, it is sorely lacking in coverage of film noir outside the USA, the selection of neo-noir can be quibbled with (perhaps because the post-noir style still isn't settled..."Mullholland Drive", "Novocaine", and "Memento" are examples of how the genre is still evolving).

But all in all, an essential volume for the noir aficionado.

An essential Film Noir reference
This encyclopedia is a valuable addition to any Film Noir library. It contains production credits, plot summmaries, and brief analyses of hundreds of films noirs, as well as excellent appendices which include summaries of the Film Noir genre and a chronology. The analyses are in general quite good, if brief, with those by Robert Porfirio the most perceptive and well written. I question the book's stance that period films should be excluded based on the concept that "the action of film noir must be grounded in a contemporary setting." This not only eliminates many worthy films noirs, like Robert Siodmak's The Suspect (1945) from the book, but neglects those like The Suspect whose roots are clearly based in French Naturalism, itself a literary antecedent of Film Noir. However, the book's overall value supercedes their omission.


Horror Film Reader
Published in Paperback by Limelight Editions (2001)
Authors: Alain Silver and James Ursini
Amazon base price: $15.75
List price: $22.50 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $10.25
Collectible price: $14.28
Buy one from zShops for: $14.80
Average review score:

Great overview of the horror genre
This is a very interesting portrait of a much abused genre. The essays a quite wonderful, with the essay on Polanski's Repulsion worth the price of the book alone.

I discovered many movies from reading this book, and I am still on the hunt for some of them. But the hunt is a pleasure.

An excellent collection
HORROR FILM READER is an extensive collection of articles and essays combined to further our understanding of horror film's allure and impact upon the viewer. Divided into two sections, the first contains early works dating from 1952 up through 1975 while the second half delves into the more current arguments to date.

Part One: Seminal Essays contains:

"Ghoulies and Ghosties" by Curtis Harrington (1952)

"Horror Films" by William K. Everson (1954)

"The Subconscious: From Pleasure Castle to Libido Hotel" by Raymond Durgnat (1958)

"The Face of Horror" by Derek Hill (1958)

"A Bloody New Wave in the United States" by Jean-Claude Romer (1964)

"Horror Is My Business" by Terence Fisher (1964)

"The Horror Film: Polanski and REPULSION" by Ivan Butler (1967)

"From Voyeurism to Infinity" by Raymond Lefevre (1968)

"Mario Bava: the Illusion of Reality" by Alain Silver and James Ursini (1975)

Part Two: New Perspectives contains:

"Neglected Nightmares" by Robin Wood (1980)

"Is the Devil American? William Dieterle's THE DEVIL AND DANIEL WEBSTER" by Tony Williams (1999)

"Violence, Women, and Disability in Tod Brownings's FREAKS and THE DEVIL DOLL" by Martin F. Norden and Madeleine Cahill (1998)

"Monsters as (Uncanny) Metaphors: Freud, Lakoff, and the Representation of Monstrosity in Cinematic Horror" by Steven Schneider (1997)

"The Anxiety of Influence: George Franju and the Medical Horror Shows of Jess Franco" by Joan Hawkins (1999)

"Seducing the Subject: Freddy Krueger" by Ian Conrich (1997)

"What Rough Beast? Insect Politics and THE FLY" by Linda Brookover and Alain Silver (1999)

"Demon Daddies: Gender, Ecstasy and Terror in the Possession Film" by Tanya Krzywinska (1999)

"Women on the Verge of a Gothic Breakdown: Sex, Drugs and Corpses in THE HORRIBLE DR. HICHCOCK" by Glenn Erickson (1997)

"CANDYMAN: Urban Space, Fear, and Entitlement" by Aviva Briefel and Sianne Ngai (1996)

"THE HAUNTING and the Power of Suggestion: Why Robert Wise's Film Continues to "Deliver the Goods" to Modern Audiences" by Pam Keesey (1999)

There is too much between the covers of this Silver-Ursini collection to pass up. Not every article takes a fresh stance, but there are a number of moments when you may just say, "Gee, I hadn't thought of that." Also, on a comparative level, this collection's variety of perspectives lends a chance to juggle different views without the clutter of film books, journals, and magazines that would otherwise be needed.

This one is worth the buy.


Raymond Chandler's Los Angeles
Published in Hardcover by Viking Press (1987)
Authors: Elizabeth Ward, Alain Silver, and Raymond Chandler
Amazon base price: $25.00
Used price: $50.00
Collectible price: $12.71
Buy one from zShops for: $21.59
Average review score:

Beautiful book ... a must have for Chandler fans.
I bought this book a few years ago after happening across it on the internet. What a beautiful book. The selections are well-chosen and the photos are unreal. Buy it. You won't regret it.

Hardboiled, and hard to put down!
A goldmine for any fan of Chandler's Marlowe novels and short stories, I couldn't put this book down. It finally gave context to the vistas I had only been able to imagine previously, and I'll never be able to pick up any hard boiled detective story set in Los Angeles without flashing on the images painstakingly chosen to be included in this volume by Ward and Silver. An invaluable asset to any Chandler and noir fan.


The Vampire Film: From Nosferatu to Interview With the Vampire
Published in Paperback by Limelight Editions (1997)
Authors: Alain Silver and James Ursini
Amazon base price: $17.50
List price: $25.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $10.95
Buy one from zShops for: $16.37
Average review score:

A very fun book!
"The Vampire Film" is an astounding reference book for those interested in vampire films. The descriptions of the films are great, including an excellent section on the vampires of Hammer films. The filmography at the book's end is great!


Film Noir Reader
Published in Paperback by Limelight Editions (1996)
Authors: Alain Silver, Alain Silver, and James Ursini
Amazon base price: $14.00
List price: $20.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $6.00
Collectible price: $15.00
Buy one from zShops for: $13.85
Average review score:

Not as great as I had hoped
Perhaps I expected something more. The essays in this book are often repetitive and non-progressional in subject matter. The softcover version of the book has stills that are more brown and white than black and white... For my money, I am a bigger fan of Hirsch's "The dark side of the screen". It is a well thought, well researched look at noir with a cohesive structure. This all is not to say that a majority of the essays in the Reader are not helpful. Of course it is great to read Schrader's piece and some others which deal with nice specifics (how economics affected growth of B genre, lighting, etc.) but at the end of the day I feel too many of the essays are only about defining the genre (or not genre) rather than delving into other things. Also, I probably will buy more books by these authors simply because their care for noir is so true and strong...

Lightning Strikes Twice
Film Noir Reader 2 is as interesting as its forerunner. Not every article is great, but there is a lot of interest here.

The book opens with film writings from the Forties that show that while Americans did not coin the term film noir, some writers did notice a trend developing.

There are interesting articles on Cornell Woolrich, Sam Fuller and noir and painting. The article on British Film Noir is quite fascinating.

At the end of the book is a piece by a professor who discusses how he teaches a course on film noir. So this book traces film noir from a barely discerned trend to an academic course of study. Neat.

A Good Anthology
This is a very good anthology of noir criticism. It contains three of the first assessments of noir in English, by Higham, Durgnat and Schrader right next to each other - boom, boom, boom - so one can see the criticism of noir developing before one's eyes.

The rest of the essays/arcticles are mostly very interesting. There is one on John Farrow, who is usually overlooked, so it is good to see his films grouped together and examined. The essay on Anthony Mann's noirs is quite strong, and Ursini's article on noir TV, shows such as "Peter Gunn" and "The Fugitive" is very interesting and makes one wish that there were more written on this part of TV history.

I think this would be an essential part of any noir fan's library.


The Noir Style
Published in Hardcover by Overlook Press (06 December, 1999)
Authors: Alain Silver and James Ursini
Amazon base price: $35.00
List price: $50.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $13.25
Collectible price: $36.00
Buy one from zShops for: $13.00
Average review score:

Poor production values sink the project
While the idea of having two of the most knowledgeable scholars of the noir film host a coffee-table art book on the topic sounds promising, the resulting product is heinously flawed. Despite the brevity of the text, a blocky font makes it difficult to read. The 'duotone' reproduction is achieved by imposing blue plate on the black plate--making vintage photographs resemble a poorly adjusted television screen. Further, the large reproductions merely expose the grain, scratches, and dust spots that any skilled retoucher could have removed. Pick up Mark Viera's SIN IN SOFT FOCUS: PRE-CODE HOLLYWOOD and see how this book should have looked.

Coffee Table Noir
A large, handsome book, suitably published in black and white. If you are a fan of the Noir genre, this belongs on your coffee table. The pictures, from the collections of the authors, are evocative of their milieu, illustrating the classic noir films of the 40's and 50's. There isn't quite as much information about each picture as I would like, and for a couple, such as the cover and frontspiece, no information at all. This book is a supplement to the Noir Readers of the authors, and as such, serves it's purpose well. Do not buy this as a text, but for illustrative purposes. Enjoy looking at the chilling dark dangerous ladies, the crooked cops, the doomed characters. Great pictures.

Noir Gold!
Alain Silver has already written the definitive book on the subject with his (and Elizabeth Ward) 'Film Noir: An encyclopaedic reference to the American style' and now with 'The Noir Style' he has written the definitive book about the look of these movies.

Most critics agree that style was one of the main elements of this genre and Paul Schrader went further to suggest that noir style was working out the conflict visually. Where would this kind of movie be without its deep shadows and expressive lighting? With over two hundred production stills the authors explore the various characteristics and meanings of this essentially American art form. What makes the book so wonderful for me, apart from the excellent design by Bernard Schleifer, are the stills, mostly large one to a page and beautifully printed as 175 screen duotones, they leap off the page. Each photo has a very comprehensive caption.

As well as the seven chapters there are several spreads called 'Motif' where certain visual treatments are examined in more detail, prison bars, dream and flashback, face and gesture, sexual debasement, night and the wheel and one I thought particularly interesting about photographer Weegee (his real name was Arthur Fellig and he got his obscure nickname from his job, in the twenties, at The New York Times, where he worked in the photo darkrooms removing excess water from prints before they were dried, he did this with a squeegee) he covered New York city for various tabloid papers and his style was a photographic version of the noir movies. Page forty-seven shows one of his photos of a dead man on a city pavement, wearing a blood soaked shirt, over the page is a still of Kirk Douglas playing dead from the movie 'Out of the Past', they actually have very little in common, one is sanitised reel life the other is real life.

'The Noir Style' could not be any better and with Silver's 'Film Noir' encyclopaedia you will have a very full account of this fascinating movie genre. One other noir film book I have enjoyed is 'Dark City' by Eddie Muller, a detailed text and picture study. A neat touch is that Muller's written the book in the language style of the hardboiled private eye books of the forties...all three books hit the bull's eye!


Film Noir
Published in Paperback by Overlook Press (1993)
Authors: Alain Silver and Elizabeth Ward
Amazon base price: $17.95
Used price: $25.00
Collectible price: $24.99
Average review score:

Sorry, but a disappointment
For anyone who complains I can't rate any Carly album below 4 stars, here's one. Film Noir was such a disappointment for me, especially since I had enjoyed her 2nd album of standards, My Romance, so much. To me, this album is just plain, bland. With a handful of exceptions, I don't feel Carly brought anything to these songs. Perhaps because all the tempos are so similiar, or the subject matter (40s film music, for which I'm not really a fan), or something else, I'm not sure. Carly's voice, usually such a wonderful instrument, is flat here.

"Two Sleepy People", the duet with John Travolta, is embarassingly bad. I probably rank it as the worst song I've every heard on one of Carly's albums. Most of the others songs, while not as bad as "Sleepy People" are, sorry to say, dull.

"Laura" (with the blending in of Carly's own song "Haunting") is one of the exceptions. As is "Don't Smoke In Bed". Here at least, Carly's voice has some (pardon the expression) smoke and fire to it. Lastly, "Spring Will Be A Little Late This Year" with Jimmy Webb is a wonderful (and perhaps her best ever) duet. Those three songs aside, Film Noir is a vast disappointment.

Wow!
This is an exceptional album. "Ev'ry time we say Goodbye" is the absolute best rendition of this Cole Porter song that I have ever heard..worth the price for that song alone. But the other songs are almost as memorable. Including the albums only original song "Film Noir" which Carly co-wrote with Jimmy Webb. This is a wonderfully produced and arranged album and surely any Carly fan or lover of 40's music can't help but enjoy this. Booklet contains black and white photos of Carly, and a 3 page essay by Martin Scorcese.

Film Noir Ranks On Top As "Classic Carly"
I agree with the other reviewer, this CD is getting worn out by the laser on my CD player due to over-play, too. It's funny, but as time goes by, you find that certain CD's remain in your "always play" CD file, and this album is one of them. My favorite tracks on this album are "Every Time We Say Goodbye", and Frank Loesser's "Spring Will Be A Little Late This Year",which was recorded as a duet with Jimmy Webb and vocally delivered in a simple, honest way. Another one of my favorite songs, and arrangements on Carly's album is her rendition of "Laura" (nominated for a Grammy a couple of years ago, but lost). By the way, if you get into 'film noir', and love the "Laura" theme, then get the new CD release called "Silver Screen Serenades" by 'cabaret' artist, Michael Poss. It contains a full-string arrangement to the lost love theme to Hitchcock's "Marnie". Both, Carly's and Michael Poss' arrangements emote the same mysterious, 'film noir' feel for the true movie love theme buffs. Carly's got class, always had it, and always will. I hope she climbs on top of all the music charts again, with her newest CD release. By the way, I loved "Two Sleepy People" which was intended to be delivered in a cute "sleepy" way by John Travolta and Carly Simon. Great CD!


Film Noir Reader 3: Interviews With Filmmakers of the Classic Noir Period
Published in Paperback by Limelight Editions (2002)
Authors: Alain Silver, James Ursini, and Robert Porfirio
Amazon base price: $15.75
List price: $22.50 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $15.64
Collectible price: $27.53
Buy one from zShops for: $13.00
Average review score:

Notes
Just a couple of points to add to Dr. Schwartz's fine review of all three Film Noir entries. The price of this reader is...hefty .... Considering what you get in return, only confirmed enthusiasts should pony up that amount. A big point in the book's favor: an interview with screenwriter Daniel Mainwaring, aka Geoffrey Homes, (Out of the Past, Invasion of Body Snatchers,et.al.), a major influence on the genre, and the only interview with this neglected figure that I know of. Lastly, it's remarkable how many of these artists were unaware of contributing to a distinct body of work we now call film noir. Perhaps the zeitgeist of the time wore a trenchcoat; certainly something generic was afoot.

Spiraling Down the Noir Trail
If you are a "noir addict," as I am, you are indeed fortunate to have read the original FILM NOIR READER, its sequel, FILM NOIR READER 2 and the last one in the series...FILM NOIR READER 3.
The first one was the most interesting of the group, containing the most seminal essays on the noir style by Durgnat, Higham, Porfirio and Schrader and even a translation from Borde & Chaumenton's French framing of the "noir mystique." Also, several noir films were considered in a "case study" section, among them KISS ME DEADLY, NIGHT & THE CITY, ANGEL FACE and the post-noir LONG GOODBYE. The last section of Volume One dealt with "Noir, Then and Now" with several interesting articles on noir's legacy and the new noir. It was a sensational critical work after Silver & Ward's trend-setting volume FILM NOIR, now in its third edition from Overlook Press.
FILM NOIR 2, in the Limelight series carries on the tradition of including seminal essays on noir by Nino Frank, the film critic who actually named the style, Jean-Pierre Chartier and Claude Chabrol, among other worthy and perceptive American
critics such as Tom Flinn and Stephen Farber. Reverting to the case history approach, Robert Porfirio, Robin Wood, Silver and Ward, among others scrutinize critically the films of Hitchcock,
the femme fatales of PUSHOVER (Kim Novak) & THELMA JORDON (Barbara Stanwyck)among other themes as "jazz & noir," "tabloid cinema" and "neo-noir fugitives," all wonderful essays written with style and critical acumen. Part 3 of this volume seems to suggest this would be the last in the series, discussing the "evolution" of noir, especially essays on the "new noir," and especially Kent Minturn's excellent article on "abstract expressionism and film noir, demonstrating the effects of Jackson Pollack's paintings on the noir style.
FILM NOIR READER 3 must be the absolute last in the series because it focus is on mainly interviews with filmmakers of the classic noir period. Divided into 3 sections, it deals with 8 directors such as Andre de Toth, Fritz Lang, Billy Wilder, Robert Wise among others, filmmakers such as photographers James Wong Howe and John F. Seitz, actors such as Claire Trevor and Lizabeth Scott, composers such as Miklos Rozsa and finally a series of commentaries about noir by Curtis Bernhardt, Budd Boetticher and Daniel Fuchs.
Of the director section, all were fairly interesting interviews by Alain Silver or Robert Porfirio with the exception of Otto Preminger who seemed to defy the questions put to him and did not care to be labelled a "noir" director. Of the actors, I enjoyed Claire Trevor's appraisal of her roles and Lizabeth Scott's method of transforming herself psychologically into a "femme fatale." But the commentaries section of this interview book really runs out of steam with Daniel Fuchs' perception of Jews, Gentiles and Communists in Hollywood as well as the take of his own words on THE GANGSTER with Barry Sullivan.
He even complains as he writes answers to Porfirio's questions, while admiring the critic, he feels "it pains him his own prose is so lousy."
While this third volume is chock full of wonderful stills
from classic films of the period, sometimes the stills have absolutely nothing to do with the text...worse, there are serious flaws in editing that mar the book...on p. 60 Anne Bancroft is referred to in THE BLUE GARDENIA while on the next page it is Anne BAXTER, the real star of the film is seen in a still with Ann Sothern; the still facing p. 135 identifies Ray Teal as the actor in the foreground with Orson Welles on the stairs in CITIZEN KANE while it is actually RUSSELL COLLINS and more blatantly, in the still on p.141 from BODY AND SOUL, how can any one mistake B-actress HAZEL BROOKS seen here with John Garfield for the beautiful and classy Lili Palmer identified in the caption.
Finally, I believe FILM NOIR READER 3 is a worthy entry in the series for its preservation of information and stills about noir although the interviewers seemed to have scraped rock bottom to put this volume together. Perhaps they should turn their attentions to the new noir. However, I must commend the publisher, Limelight, for continuing the series and bringing about an affordable paperback with such gorgeous stills that are alone worth the ... price. And some of the interviews are really excellent--the ones with Billy Wilder, Miklos Rozsa and James Wong Howe among others. But it is difficult to take such diverse views on noir and give them a unique, systematic frame of reference because of the very complexity in the material and the divergent views among the authors. I simply cannot imagine how far down "the noir trail" we can go without stumbling in the future. Volumes 1 and 2 are certainly superior to this last one, but Vol. 3 gives me a sense of closure regarding the material, but not the "noir style." For as long as there are men deceived by women for cash or sex, noir will go on forever.


The Film Director's Team
Published in Paperback by Silman-James Press (1993)
Authors: Alain Silver and Elizabeth Ward
Amazon base price: $13.97
List price: $19.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $7.00
Buy one from zShops for: $11.95
Average review score:

A 2nd A.D.'s two-cents.
I recieved this book as a gift, and got a lot from it. It is dated, and based mostly on West-coast studio work, (2 things I am not), but there was still a great deal of information for me to continue my education in the Assistant Director department. I also found the UPM info a learn expearence, since that is not my speciality. I wish there were more AD books like it out there.


The Vampire Film: From Nosferatu to Bram Stoker's Dracula
Published in Paperback by Limelight Editions (1993)
Authors: Alain Silver and James Ursini
Amazon base price: $25.00
Used price: $4.88
Collectible price: $4.95
Buy one from zShops for: $37.12
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2

Reviews are from readers at Amazon.com. To add a review, follow the Amazon buy link above.