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Sergio Leone: Something to Do With Death

Sergio Leone: Something to Do With Death

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderfull
Review: A wonderfull decribtion of Sergio Leone and all his film. Christopher Frayling has written a very well researched book. So if you're interesed in knowing more about the genius that practaly MADE the western genre, buy and read this book. You won't regret it.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good but disappointing
Review: At over 500 pages, I expected this to be an amazingly informative and enjoyable text about Leone and the spaghetti western. It succeeds, on this front, about 50% of the time. My problem with the book is that it reads like a legal report and lacks the good humour and personality that distinguished Leone's films. Much of the book is simply a listing of facts, like an encyclopedia entry, without any real narrative of Leone's life. There aren't enough stories about Leone and his family/personal life/creative process. Instead, Frayling gets carried away with descriptions of Leone's colleagues, and collaborators, often devoting pages to figures that have only a peripheral relationship to Leone. The only truly revealing info about Leone, the man, is contained in his opinions about other films and his repeated claims that he was responsible for the achievements of others. I don't know. If you're a Leone fanatic, this is a pretty authoritative text but I've read far better filmmaker biographies.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Where was this 30 odd years ago?
Review: Awesome reading for the die hard spaghetti western fan!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliant
Review: I cannot understand the first review of this book. I understood this book to be a biography of Sergio Leone, not a story about Spaghetti Westerns so I was pleasantly surprised when the author began by desribing the whole cultural background of Mr Leone. The book is certainly not without emotion, but the author has attempted to provide a detailed and unbiased insight into the life of Mr Leone.

Had the book been more "humourous" as per the intial reviwer thoughts, this would have diverted from the objective of a biography, as I am sure Sergio's life was not just fun all the time, no offense to the first reviewer ("You smell like a pig already, lets try not to make things any worse" Tuco's guard "The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly")

Mr Frayling has obviously researched his subject in a fantastically detailed way, constructing a clear picture of his life, not just by his films, but by the people around him. This is evident in that Sergio himself contacted Prof Frayling after reading his earlier book on Spagehtti Westerns as it contained information about Sergio's father that even he hadn't previously known.

Check out Cenk Kirals site for Sergio Leone info (he was thanked by the author in the book)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Leone is God, and this is the Bible
Review: I worship Sergio leone. I've been a huge fan of his films since my childhood in the late Seventies. I've always wanted/needed a weighty, fact-filled bio-reference to illuminate his here-to-fore mysterious life/career. This is that book. More detailed than the expensive, picture-packed Italian book on Leone, S.T.D.W.D. will stand for a long time as the essential Leone tome. Literate, balanced, and exhaustive, this book is a triumph in every respect.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: All You Need to Know About Spaghetti
Review: Not only a fascinating insight into the spaghetti western and its master practitioner, but also an examination of where this form stands in the context of Italian cinema as a whole. Having finished reading, I re-viewed all of Leone's films. They are totally different viewing experiences in light of the knowledge gleaned from this book. A truly al dente reading experience.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Masterful biography
Review: There aren't too many directors who could inspire me to read a 576-page tome about their career. In fact, apart from a handful of auteurs to whom I'm still trying to speak and the dozen or so who have opened their hearts to Cashiers du Cinemart, there aren't too many directors I'd even like to read about. Yet, of all directors-past and present-it's only Sergio Leone's name that I've been scanning for when I troll the "directors biographies" section at Borders Bookstore. Sure, sure, maybe it'd be fun to read a nicely done work on Fritz Lang or Kenji Misumi but it's Leone who presents me with the biggest challenges.
This Italian mastermind helmed a handful of films, nearly all of which would rank among my favorites. More than creating some damn fine work, Leone's style influenced untold filmmakers. His films were operas powered by the music of Ennio Morricone. His dialogue's sparseness made it all the more powerful. Leone didn't shy away from embracing the language of cinema and creating his own dialect.

Remarkably, though Leone's filmography can be tallied on both hands, the breadth of rumours and conflicting stories are enough to easily fill Frayling's tome. Luckily, Fraying isn't above questioning the veracity of his subject. While never denying Leone respect, Frayling doesn't shirk his journalistic duty to present as many facets of the fiery, passive-aggressive auteur as possible.

Something to Do with Death takes its sweet time to get moving (I had to skip the second chapter and skim a few others before getting to the real "meat" of the book) but, once it gets going, there's little that can deter the reader from delving into the life of a truly enigmatic talent. (ISBN: 0571164382)


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