<p>From the late 1930s to the mid-1950s five big movie studios-Paramount Warner Bros. Twentieth Century-Fox Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) and RKO-dominated Hollywood&#39;s film industry. This &quot;big studio system&quot; operated primarily as a series of assembly-line production factories. Ideally each churned out fifty-two movies a year enough to supply showcase theaters across the country with a new lineup each week-with profit being the overriding goal.</p><p>Of this era veteran screenwriter Julius Epstein (<em>Casablanca</em>) said: &quot;It was not called the motion picture industry for nothing. [It] was like working at belts in a factory.&quot;</p><p>Studios assigned the majority of the lower-tier screenplays to directors under long-term contract and expected them to stick to the script and keep productions within the budget. These filmmakers known as &quot;house directors&quot; often made films quickly inexpensively and with limited resources. <em>Just Making Movies: Company Directors on the Studio System</em> collects twelve interviews with house directors from this era all conducted by the author during the 1980s. These previously unpublished interviews provide a clear picture of how the big studio system operated as told by those who knew it best.</p><p>Despite limitations house directors sometimes made enduring film classics such as Charles Walters&#39;s <em>Easter Parade</em> Henry Koster&#39;s <em>The Bishop&#39;s Wife</em> George Sidney&#39;s <em>The Three Musketeers</em> and Vincent Sherman&#39;s <em>The Hasty Heart</em>. In these interviews the filmmakers talk candidly about working with such superstars as Joan Crawford Errol Flynn Richard Burton Bette Davis Judy Garland Cary Grant Esther Williams and Lana Turner.</p>
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.