Non-Fiction Reviews: “Making Movies”, “Gomorrah”, & “Pure Invention”

I. Making Movies [1995] by Sidney Lumet – β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…

This book on movie-making is by American director Sidney Lumet (1924 – 2011) who was probably best known for directing a number of β€œlegal” films including 12 Angry Men [1957], Murder on the Orient Express [1974] and The Verdict [1982]. It provides a deep insight into the β€œmagical” process of making movies, from deciding whether to do a movie (Lumet almost always decided β€œinstinctively”) to the final editing process and running previews. Lumet was a β€œtrier” and a “doer”. He tells us in his book that he did not believe in waiting around for opportunities and liked to create his own luck. His eagerness to create chances reflected the sheer variety of films he directed. Cinematic success is hard to pin down, he states. That is also his first lesson to us: β€œnobody knows what that magic combination is that produces a first-rate piece of work” [Vintage, 1995: 9]. Even a great script or a great star-actor does not guarantee success.

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