My Life Watching Movies
by Owen Gleiberman
Hachette Books
Hardcover
From the publisher's website:
Owen
Gleiberman has spent his life watching movies-first at the drive-in,
where his parents took him to see wildly inappropriate adult fare like Rosemary's Baby when he was a wide-eyed 9 year old, then as a possessed cinemaniac who became a film critic right out of college. In Movie Freak,
his enthrallingly candid, funny, and eye-opening memoir, Gleiberman
captures what it's like to live life through the movies, existing in
thrall to a virtual reality that becomes, over time, more real than
reality itself.
Gleiberman paints a bittersweet portrait of his complicated and ultimately doomed friendship with Pauline Kael, the legendary New Yorker
film critic who was his mentor and muse. He also offers an
unprecedented inside look at what the experience of being a critic is
really all about, detailing his stint at The Boston Phoenix and then, starting in 1990, at EW, where he becomes a voice of obsession battling-to a fault-to cling to his independence.
Gleiberman explores the movies that shaped him, from the films that first made him want to be a critic (Nashville and Carrie), to what he hails as the sublime dark trilogy of the 1980s (Blue Velvet, Sid and Nancy, and Manhunter), to the scruffy humanity of Dazed and Confused, to the brilliant madness of Natural Born Killers, to the transcendence of Breaking the Waves, to the pop rapture of Moulin Rouge! He
explores his partnership with Lisa Schwarzbaum and his friendships and
encounters with such figures as Oliver Stone, Russell Crowe, Richard
Linklater, and Ben Affleck. He also writes with confessional intimacy
about his romantic relationships and how they echoed the behavior of his
bullying, philandering father. And he talks about what film criticism
is becoming in the digital age: a cacophony of voices threatened by an
insidious new kind of groupthink.
Ultimately, Movie Freak
is about the primal pleasure of film and the enigmatic dynamic between
critic and screen. For Gleiberman, the moving image has a talismanic
power, but it also represents a kind of sweet sickness, a magnificent
obsession that both consumes and propels him.
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