As a screenwriter, novelist, and political activist, Dalton Trumbo stands among the key American literary figures of the 20th century - he wrote the classic antiwar novel ""Johnny Got His Gun"", and his credits for ""Spartacus"" and ""Exodus"" broke the anticommunist blacklist that infected the movie industry for more than a decade. By defining connections between Trumbo's most highly acclaimed films (including ""Kitty Foyle"", ""Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo"", and ""Roman Holiday"") and his important but lesser-known movies (""The Remarkable Andrew"", ""He Ran All the Way"", and ""The Boss""), the author identifies how for nearly four decades Trumbo used the archetype of the rebel hero to inject social consciousness into mainstream films. This new critical survey - the first book-length work on Trumbo's screenwriting career - examines the scores of films on which Trumbo worked and explores the techniques that made him, at the time he was blacklisted in 1947, Hollywood's highest-paid writer. Hanson reveals how Trumbo dealt with major themes including rebellion, radical politics, and individualism - while also detailing lesser-known areas of Trumbo's screenwriting, such as his troubling portrayal of women, the dichotomy between his proletarian attitude and bourgeois lifestyle, and the almost surreptitious manner in which he included antiestablishment rhetoric in seemingly innocuous scripts. An extensive filmography is included.
About the AuthorPeter Hanson is a director of films including
Every Pixel Tells A Story (2002) and
Stagehand (2006). He lives in Marina Del Rey, California.
Reviews"extensive research"-
Choice; "intelligently written...useful"-
Classic Images; "wonderfully documented...Trumbo stood head and shoulders above his peers...clearly details every facet of [his] career with warmth, praise, and intelligence...refreshing...marvelous"-
Film & History.Book InformationISBN 9780786432462
Author Peter HansonFormat Paperback
Page Count 255
Imprint McFarland & Co IncPublisher McFarland & Co Inc
Weight(grams) 467g