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From Hell [2001 film] (2001) — Producer — 247 Exemplare

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The key to a really great "Behind-The-Scenes" book is an impartial perspective, and that is one area this book falls short. Unfortunately, it isn't the only area.

Jane Hamsher can possibly be forgiven for not taking a step back and telling the facts without a personal slant to them; after all, she isn't a journalist, and this isn't really a straight forward making-of book (as the title says, its about the producers). What I can't bring myself to overlook is how badly one-sided and self-serving the book actually is. To believe this book's accounts to the fullest, you would have to go along with the idea that Hamsher was the not only the sole reason this movie ever got made, but that it would have been a complete disaster if it wasn't for her. I really would have a problem with that idea if she wasn't the one who kept underlining it as fact. According to Hamsher, she was the lone sane voice among a crowd of stupid men. She was responsible for the artistic choices that made the film great, and all of the decisions that made them happen. Of course, everybody else was wrong, so each choice she made was an uphill battle. NOt only does she paint Oliver Stone as completely inept and Quentin Tarantino as a childish illiterate hack, but she even manages to cast an unfavorable picture of her co=producer as a juvenile man-child in need of constant supervision.

Ultimately, Hamsher spends half of the time painting the ultimate feminist picture on how it took a woman to do a man's job. No doubt in some cases that was true, but according to her the weight of all responsibility was resting on her shoulders. She takes great pleasure in repeatedly pointing out that she has to dress her own production partner, and shows contempt for the men that were afraid to let her on the set where convicted murderers and rapists were running around loose "pretending" to riot. She also spends a great deal of time obsessing on Oliver Stones questionable attitude towards women, and successfully transfers those insecurities to most of the crew as well. Whenever someone disagrees with her, they are either stupid or afraid of a woman in power.

Between the holier-than-thou attitude and hear-me-roar male bashing, there was some great info on the shooting of the film, but not nearly enough, and what little info there is must be taken with a grain of salt when you realize that it's all appears orchestrated to make her look good. If you want to hear a producer pat herself on the back - at the expense of everybody else involved in the film - over and over again than this is the book for you. If you want the real story on the making of Natural Born Killers, you might want to look elsewhere, like The Devil's Candy or Losing the Light.
… (mehr)
 
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smichaelwilson | 1 weitere Rezension | Jun 1, 2016 |
Gossipy and one-sided but an interesting read for the cinemaphile.
 
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fanoula | 1 weitere Rezension | Nov 9, 2008 |

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