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$20.97
1. Cassavetes on Cassavetes
$8.19
2. Accidental Genius: How John Cassavetes
$1.96
3. Cassavetes Directs: John Cassavetes
$20.00
4. The Films of John Cassavetes:
 
5. American Dreaming: The Films of
$85.00
6. John Cassavetes: Lifeworks
 
$52.86
7. Where Does It Happen?: John Cassavetes
 
8. Faces
9. John Cassavetes (Cahiers du cinema)
 
10. Bookforum Feb/Mar 2006 (Volume
 
11. John Cassavetes (Rivages/Cinema)
12. Cassavetes über Cassavetes
$15.00
13. John Cassavetes: The Adventure
14. John Cassavetes Autoportraits:
$39.99
15. Playboy Magazine / July 1971 -
$41.51
16. John Cassavetes
 
17. Films of John Cassavetes,Pragmatism,
 
18. Accidental Genius How John Cassavetes
$14.13
19. Films Directed by John Cassavetes
 
20. The Films of John Cassavetes Pragmatism

1. Cassavetes on Cassavetes
by John Cassavetes
Paperback: 400 Pages (2001-08-15)
list price: US$35.00 -- used & new: US$20.97
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0571201571
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Since his death in 1989, John Cassavettes has become increasingly renowned as a cinematic hero--a renegade loner who fought the Hollywood system, steering his own creative course in a career spanning thirty years. Having already established himself as an actor, he struck out as a filmmaker in 1959 with Shadows, and proceeded to build a formidable body of work, including such classics as Faces, Woman Under the Influence, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, and Gloria. In Cassavettes on Cassavettes, Ray Carney presents the great director in his own words--frank, uncompromising, humane, and passionate about life and art.
... Read more

Customer Reviews (9)

5-0 out of 5 stars John Cassavetes an American Master
John Cassavetes was, without question, an American Master.His films can be unrelenting, the scrutiny he brings to bear on his living, breathing characters is absolutely ruthless and unsentimental.He was SO NOT looking to recreate reality in his films, becausethat would be too facile for a man of his intellect and aesthetic maturity.His films are filled with more real moments thananyone else.Some of the scenes and exchanges are so intimate - there is an uncomfortable, voyeuristic sensation that is experienced while watching them. "Woman on the Verge" is an example where Cassavetes make us endure the anguish Gena Rowlands' (his real life wife) character feels every waking moment of her life.Cassavetes movies demand its toll, its pound of flesh and at the end of his movies there is a sense of being purged.......

5-0 out of 5 stars John Cassavetes on John Cassavetes
This is the definitive book on Cassavetes, written by Ray Carney,
the foremost scholar and writer on Cassavetes.Also, one of my
teachers at Boston University.

5-0 out of 5 stars As brilliant as it gets!
Absolutely necessary reading for those interested in American alternative cinema and not only. The book gives a brilliant picture of USA's one of the best directors ever.
Highly recommended for everyone. No other book shows Cassavetes in this light. Packed with interesting material, as good as Cassavetas' cinema itself.

5-0 out of 5 stars Truly inspirational!
Ray Carney's "Cassavetes on Cassavetes" is a wonderful introduction to Cassavetes' work. I found it to be a great read - amazingly free of academic jargon or fancy terminology.It was hard to put down! And with incredible photos of the wild-man at work.A must for every fan of indie film as well as aspiring directors and artists - and also for students of life!If you want to know even more, I'd also recommend Ray Carney's massive web site devoted to Cassavetes and indie film. Any search engine will take you there. It has wonderful behind-the-scenes information about the making of Cassavetes' work.If you want a volume to provide ongoing daily inspiration and encouragement regarding the artistic process, buy this book.It is a book you will go back to again and again and again...

5-0 out of 5 stars My Way
Ray Carney's done a great service to film fans by bringing Cassavetes' scattered talks and interviews together into a coherent statement on art.Carney shows how Cassavetes' whole process of filmmaking was tied to his outlook on life.Combative, spontaneous and deliberately amateur, he aimed for situations where writer, actor and viewer are all left without direction, forced to respond to the story as individuals rather than reach for pre-approved 'social codes'.He savagely edited his films to defy audience expectations, usually rejecting versions that the studios, his collaborators and even his wife liked best.Some of Cassavetes' statements made me wonder if he did this to edit some part of himself--the Greek immigrant son made good, with the blonde wife and kids and Hollywood home.In some ways he was an insider desperate to stay on the outside.Conflict was fun for him, he thought America needed more of it, and the messy collaborative 'families' he built around each film were his alternative to the button-down corporate society he fought against all his life.

As Carney presents him, Cassavetes wasn't out for the money, the glory, the ego or ultimately maybe even the art.He wanted fun, he wanted friends and he wanted people to really live as individuals.Are there folks like this around anymore?We need them more than ever. ... Read more


2. Accidental Genius: How John Cassavetes Invented the Independent Film
by Marshall Fine
Paperback: 496 Pages (2006-12-13)
list price: US$18.95 -- used & new: US$8.19
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1401360130
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
In the world of independent filmmaking, John Cassavetes became the prototypical outsider fighting the system for much of his career. A major star of live television and a serious actor, he stumbled into making his first film, Shadows, and created a template for working outside the Hollywood system that would produce some of the most piercing and human films of the last thirty years including A Women Under the Influence and Husbands.

Film critic Marshall Fine has been hailed by the New York Times for this "first full life of Cassavetes." The Minneapolis Star Tribune said, "Accidental Genius is as thoroughly researched as an academic study but reads like a pop biography minus the fawning." Fine reveals the passion and singularity that characterized Cassavetes and his lasting influence on filmmaking. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (16)

4-0 out of 5 stars Great insight
Lacking anything other to read about John Cassavetes outside of "Cassavetes on Cassavetes" (excellent book, by the way) I was happy to read this one. I agree with one reviewer who said it was a bit tame, but not one star tame, in my mind anyway. I love the detailed stories and anecdotes by the participants in each of the films. I do disagree sometimes with the author's interpretations of various scenes in the films, but that's part of the fun, isn't it? I laughed at some of the mule-headed, stubborn things John did to get his films made, and then immediately wished that I had more of that in me. I guess John's films are an acquired taste, talking to others. I myself never had to bother with that, I loved them since I caught "Chinese Bookie" on TV when I was a teenager on some UHF channel late at night. I'd recommend the book to fans of John's who don't know a lot about him, and for people who love to debate the meaning, substance and quality of his films.

5-0 out of 5 stars Any film library needs this.
The rise of independent film in Hollywood is an event which boils down to the efforts of one man: John Cassavetes. ACCIDENTAL GENIUS: HOW JOHN CASSAVETES INVENTED THE AMERICAN INDEPENDENT FILM is thus a biography any film buff will want: it holds an essential key to understanding the foundations and evolution of independent film as a whole, revealing his life and work in context of the evolving Hollywood industry. Any film library needs this.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

1-0 out of 5 stars snooozer
Not sure why I picked this book up. Knowing next to nothing about Cassavetes before attempting this book, I decided halfway through it, that I don't care who Cassevetes is.Not my cup of tea at all.

4-0 out of 5 stars Reverential Biography of the Film Auteur Who Gave Rise to Independent American Cinema-Verité
I just saw one of John Cassavetes' early films as a director, 1963's "A Child Is Waiting", which he apparently disowned once producer Stanley Kramer edited it to make the story of mentally disabled children in a state-run institution a more sentimental movie. Despite Cassavetes' misgivings about the finished product, what remains has some truly unexpected moments of emotional honesty. Author Marshall Fine, film and TV critic for Star Magazine, has written a thorough, sometimes effusive biography of the film auteur who died in 1989. Cassavetes is most definitely a worthy subject for a comprehensive book, as he was a groundbreaking filmmaker who made gritty, low-budget independent films well before Sundance.

His style was polarizing, but there is no getting around the fact that he dared to go to places other filmmakers feared, primarily the dark spaces where self-pity and hurtful actions were predominant. Even though his favorite director was ironically the supreme optimist Frank Capra, Cassavetes liked exposing the chaotic nature of life among the middle classes and refused to tie up loose ends for the sake of a happy ending. Fine does an illuminating job of showing the filmmaker's psyche at work and how he kept the focus constantly on the actors, especially as he created an intimate environment where spontaneity was encouraged and prized. Lacking the desire for a more formal process, Cassavetes employed a hand-held, semi-documentary style to elicit the naturalism he wanted to capture even when it meant constant script rewrites.

The author also explores the downside of the filmmaker's work techniques: his quick temper, his megalomania, his lack of savvy in dealing with studio bosses. More importantly, Fine takes us behind the scenes on each of Cassavetes' films beginning with 1959's jazz-infused "Shadows" of which he did two versions. From there, we see him at work on such acknowledged classics as "Faces" and "A Woman Under the Influence" all the way through the end of his life when he took over from Andrew Bergman on 1989's "Big Trouble" as he was dying of cirrhosis of the liver. Recollections are meticulously detailed but do not feel extraneous. It's a fascinating career well documented by Fine, though I wish he could have been more critical on the finished films and more interested in letting us know who is carrying on Cassavetes' legacy.

5-0 out of 5 stars FASCINATING ACCOUNT OF ADYNAMIC MAN

Biographer Marshall Fine (Harvey Keitel and The Life and Times of Sam Peckinpah) introduces us to John Cassavetes by describing a 1954 night on a deserted New York street when the actor frightened away four thugs by "pretending to be a madman having a full-blown psychotic episode."

From this incident we learn as many would later discover that Cassavetes was someone who enjoyed turning things around, he loved spontaneity.Later he would become known as a gifted actor, an innovative director, the man whom many consider to be the father of independent films.

Although she declined to be interviewed, responding as she always did that Johndid not want a biography, Cassavetes' widow, Gina Rowlands, did give Fine her approval and access to many of the actor's close friends and associates.Thus, we are rewarded with an intimate portrait of this enigmatic individual who so changed the way we view and think of movies today.

After success as a star in 1950s television, Cassavetes began his highly acclaimed motion work work and made his first film, Shadows (1959).It was while he was serving as director of an acting workshop that he came up with a blueprint for films other than the ones made inside the then accepted system.In order to do this he tackled subjects other film makers wouldn't touch - race relations in America, marital relationships.

Faces, which many consider to be one of his finest works, received three Academy Award nominations, one of which was for best screenplay by Cassavetes.Later, Woman Under The Influence garnered an Oscar nomination for Gina Rowlands as best actress in a leading role and Cassavetes was nominated Best Director.Those were not his only accolades - as an actor hewon an Oscar nomination as best supporting actor for The Dirty Dozen.

Much of the richness in this extensive bio is found in the recollections of Cassavetes' close friends, such as Peter Falk and Ben Gazarra.Accidental Genius is a fascinating account of a dynamic and driven man who said, "It is not so important that people like your films.It's only important that you make something you like."

Highly recommended.

- Gail Cooke ... Read more


3. Cassavetes Directs: John Cassavetes and the Making of Love Streams
by Michael Ventura
Paperback: 320 Pages (2008-04-01)
list price: US$24.95 -- used & new: US$1.96
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1842432281
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

4-0 out of 5 stars insightful diary
There are great nuts-and-bolts examples of Cassavetes filmmaking method, told by a person with an underlined admiration for this individual.The author really does work as the fly on the wall.I wish more of these types of journals existed for Cassavetes' other films. ... Read more


4. The Films of John Cassavetes: Pragmatism, Modernism, and the Movies (Cambridge Film Classics)
by Ray Carney
Hardcover: 336 Pages (1994-03-25)
list price: US$65.00 -- used & new: US$20.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0521381193
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
The Films of John Cassavetes:Pragmatism, Modernism, and the Movies is the first book to tell in detail the story of a maverick filmmaker who worked outside the studio system. Providing extended critical discussion on six of his most important films (Shadows, Faces, Minnie and Moskowitz, A Woman Under the Influence, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, and Love Streams), Ray Carney argues that Cassavetes' work is a distinctly life-affirming form of modernist expression that is at odds with the world-denying modernism of many of the most important art works produced in this century. Cassavetes is revealed to be a profoundly thoughtful and self-aware filmmaker and a deeply philosophical thinker, whose work takes its place in the American tradition along with the writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson and William James. The six films treated here emerge as expressive interpretations of the bewildering challenges in contemporary American cultural experience. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (8)

5-0 out of 5 stars Scientific writing at its best
Carney's book is scientific writing at its best. The book, despite the level of abstraction, is totally captivating. A lot of connections to sociological theories (pragmatism) are used to penetrate the characters and C:s way of filming (as well as interesting observations about Hitchcock and Orson Welles). Also, this is a book about being human as much as it is about the films of Cassavetes. The book is well structured with one film and analysis per chapter. I'm not a film student but I learned a lot from reading this. Highly recommended!

5-0 out of 5 stars Read and Reread
I doubt that I can say anything about this book that hasn't been said before but this is, by every measure, an outstanding examination of Cassavetes amazing body of work.
I go back to this book every six months or so and have for a number of years. It is a very thorough, reverent, and insightful reference book but it goes well beyond that. Though very full of information, it is personal enough that it has allowed (and encouraged) me to go and evaluate the films myself without the feeling that there is a "law" or an agenda already set with these films.
The greatest beauty of Cassavetes' films is that each one belongs to the individual; meaning that every person who chooses to lend his or her heart to the characters, stories, and subject matter(s) can get something out of it that belongs solely to that person. The films can excite, enrage, entertain, and rattle you in ways that films seldom do.

Cassavetes films make you more than an audience member as they make you more aware than ever that you just might still be human.

Great book and highly reccomended.

5-0 out of 5 stars a very interesting and important book
I originally got this book and read the whole thing, before i had seen any of cassavetes movies. This is not a recommended route. I have now seen all of his films, except for husbands, and i can't tell you how amazing i think the importance of this book is. I wonder what the ratio is between the people whodisagree and agree with it's context, in respect to it's attitude towards american cinema. the book really does rewire your brain. The people who i am friends with, who are also interested in film are dumb founded when ever i casually undermine 2001 or citizen kane in a conversation. More importantly though, this book, like Cassavetes films, extends into life and actually opens you up to knew spiritual territory
you didn't think about. One last point: Does any one notice how suprisingly objective Carney is when he mentions his most hated film makers like Spielberg ? Get this book. It may feel too intellectual, but it really isn't. If you think that then you are reading it too quickly and not thinking about what it's actually saying.

5-0 out of 5 stars Boring is as boring does
I'm not sure what book the reviewer below this read, but I don't know how many times I'd have to read about films that completely re-imagine the way I (and our popular culture) see the world and my own experience before I'd feel "bored" or anything less than inspired and envigorated. In fact, I read this book very often - not just to gain information, like a dictionary or an encyclopedia, giving me facts and figure data I didn't have before, but as mental calethenics, or something like spiritual openess training. This is a much more meaningful and important activity than thematic comparison and contrsating, no matter how technically interesting that is. As the concepts and points of view on the world process thru my brain as I read them off the page, I gain new abilities to understand and see - and this takes work, and often repetition. So I reccomend anyone who reads this book and hopes to gain insight, not just into Cassavetes and his films, but into their own personal attitudes, to keep themselves OPEN, as Cassavetes explicitly did in every frame of film he exposed, and to always give the artist (or author) the benefit of the doubt before passing judgement based on arbitrary ulterior motives (which, naturally, we all have). This isn't easy (especially to the greatly film cultured), but I dare say you'll enjoy this book, and your life, a lot more.

5-0 out of 5 stars Don't read it without support
Almost everything Carney says, you tend to utterly hate him for at first.His most recent article seemed so pessimistic that I spent an hour in my apartment, sitting in front of the TV depressed by it all.

Everything Carney writes tends to be tough at first, because, like Cassavetes, hementions truths about life that very few people wish to confront.There isno evasion of reality in this book.People can be horrible to each other. We all die in the end.That's life.

Carney doesn't analyse Cassavetes'work in relation to other movies and cultural trends (as most filmprofessors tend to do), but prefers to focus entirely on the performancesof the characters on screen.Like Cassavetes, he never really explains thecharacters' motivations, but instead focuses on how they react to theirenvironments.Everything he writes is about life -- you'll find nothingabout tendentious compositions, popular culture, or auteur theory.Theonly important thing here is Carney's love for the characters and theircreator.

One of the greatest books ever written on American film. ... Read more


5. American Dreaming: The Films of John Cassavetes and the American Experience
by Ray Carney
 Hardcover: 288 Pages (1985-02)
list price: US$42.00
Isbn: 0520050991
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6. John Cassavetes: Lifeworks
by Tom Charity
Paperback: 200 Pages (2001-06-03)
list price: US$19.95 -- used & new: US$85.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0711975442
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Unfashionable in his lifetime, John Cassavetes appeared in mainstream films like Rosemary’s Baby and The Dirty Dozen in order to finance his own highly distinctive independent films.This detailed biography celebrates the work of a uniquely uncompromising filmmaker whose examples inspired leading directors like Martin Scorcese who described him as “a guide and a teacher”. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (4)

5-0 out of 5 stars An American Original
I've long been a fan of John Cassavetes, the actor. But after
reading this book, I realize that the man's gift to film wasn't
in the acting he did for others, but rather his amazing body of
work as a writer and director. This book provides a thorough
account of each of his movies and insight into his many
collaborators. Not a coldly analytical critique, but an honest
and detailed look at the career and character of an American
original, warts and all.

5-0 out of 5 stars Telling it like it is
...
Far from being a rush job, Charity's book boasts considerable new research and interviews with most of the important figures in Cassavetes' life (though, sadly not Gena Rowlands, his widow). I spotted a handful of errors, generally minor cultural lapses you might expect from a foreign critic - but, let me emphasise, these are few and far between. Packed with great, sometimes hilarious anecdotes (Cassavetes really rocked!) Charity's book brings JC to life - and the same can be said about Cassavetes' notoriously difficult films, which have rarely been explored with such vivid insight and penetration. As a major bonus, the book comes with fascinating tributes from the likes of Gary Oldman, John Sayles, Jim Jarmusch and Pedro Almodovar, to name but a few. It would be worth buying for these alone - but then it would be worth buying without them too...

1-0 out of 5 stars A Major League Disappointment
I bought this book with great hopes. John Cassavetes is an important filmmaker
whose work is still inexplicably neglected by mainstream film critics,
historians, and teachers. But I'm sorry to say that the book was a major league
disappointment. Tom Charity is a reviewer for Time Out magazine and the book
shows all the flaws of what I might call "the reviewer's syndrome." It is all
too obviously a quickie project thrown together in a few weeks or months to cash
in on Cassavetes' increasing popularity. Omnibus Press, the publisher of the
book, has in the past specialized in precisely this sort of book and Charity's
volume unfortunately takes its place alongside their previous biographies of
Madonna, New Kids on the Block, and other pop culture flashes in the pan. It is
shallow, glib, and (worst of all) mistake-ridden.

The first problem is that Charity's "research" (such as it is) shows every sign
of being rushed, slipshod, and superficial. The book is riddled with
errors--hundreds and hundreds of them--from scores of factual mistakes, wrong
names, and dates to a a whole series of interpretive gaffes, when Charity a
journalist who has previously attempted nothing more ambitious that a volume on
the astronaut movie, The Right Stuff, attempts to produce high-brow
interpretations of Cassavetes' challenging works of art. The second problem is
the organization of the book, or more precisely, complete lack of organization.
Clearly at a loss to fill the space available to him, Charity throws in bits of
this and that helter-skelter to fill up the pages: a given chapter might begin
with vacuous "celebrity" quotes from a contemporary director about Cassavetes,
which leads into a sketchy (and, as I noted, mistake-ridden) production history;
followed by a series of excerpts based on fawning, sycophantic!
, and completely unrevealing interviews with actors who knew Cassavetes, and end
with a wool-spinning series of generalizations by Charity about the meaning of
the film. Charity doesn't even make a half-hearted attempt to bring it all
together. It's just thrown out there, one thing after another, a little of this
and a little of that separated by rows of asterisks, for what you can make of
it. No vision of Cassavetes the man or Cassavetes the artist emerges. It's a
method that might be described as "back up and dump"--one (all too often
mistaken) fact or event after another, with no rhyme or reason to hold it
together, and no insights or revelations at the end.

The best parts of Charity's book are the sections where he quotes extensively
from another critic who not only knew Cassavetes personally, but has written far
better books about him: Ray Carney. That fact alone should tell you something.
If you want to know the real truth about Cassavetes' life and work, check out
Carney's newly published Cassavetes on Cassavetes or any of his other books on
the filmmaker. Or check out his web site which has extensive information about
all of the films. Carney's work is the opposite of Charity's quickie make-a-buck
volume: It is deep, searching, thoughtful, carefully researched and presented,
and impeccable in its accuracy. It is an attempt to probe the soul of the man
and the artist. Do yourself a favor and skip Charity and read the critic Charity
borrows his few decent points from.

5-0 out of 5 stars JC would be proud
A terrific introduction to one of the most important American film-makers of all time, whose influence extends around the globe (there'd be no dogme without him) and whose films are testaments to being true to artistic vision, to oneself and to others.I say 'introduction' because that's what all books on film should aspire to - to introduce the reader to the movies but not replace the experience of watching them.Charity, who writes with tremendous affection laced with a touch of hard-boiled cynicism that is perfect for his subject, is an ideal guide.His brisk and authoritative text is laced with anecdotes (many of them told in the first person by an astounding range of interviewees who knew, loved and worked with Cassavetes) and it includes testaments from a variety of film-makers who testify gladly to the effect that Cassavetes had on their work, from Almodovar to Gary Oldman and Jim Jarmusch.There are few biographies of film-makers that can make you feel like you know the subject - even Frayling's massive work on Sergio Leone is cold and distant compared to this.Reading Lifeworks was like watching Cassavetes films.I can't think of any higher recommendation.Except to say that this book also made me want to watch them all again.And again.
Mr Charity, sir, I salute you. ... Read more


7. Where Does It Happen?: John Cassavetes and Cinema at the Breaking Point
by George Kouvaros
 Hardcover: 264 Pages (2004-07)
list price: US$57.00 -- used & new: US$52.86
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 081664330X
Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
"A good movie," John Cassavetes has remarked, "will ask you questions you don’t already know the answers to." And in his films, Cassavetes is as good as his word. Taking up the radical question that Cassavetes’s films consistently pose—specifically, where is the line between actor and character, fiction and reality, film and life?—George Kouvaros reveals the unique, and uniquely illuminating, position that Cassavetes’s work occupies at the intersection of filmmaking and film theory.

Central to any understanding of Cassavetes’s achievement is the issue of performance. Looking at the work of Gena Rowlands, Ben Gazzara, and Cassavetes himself in films such as Faces, A Woman under the Influence, and The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, Kouvaros shows how performative instances—gestures, words, or glances—open up intimations of dramas belonging neither strictly to these films nor to the everyday worlds in which they are immersed.

A major reassessment of the filmmaker as a formal experimenter, Where Does It Happen? gives Cassavetes his due as a filmmaker whose critical place in the modern cinema is only now becoming clear. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (4)

5-0 out of 5 stars Anexcellent essay about Cassavetes
Anexcellent essay about Cassavetes, perfectly clear, well informed and innovative. Among many strong proposals, it shows in a very rigorous and fascinating way how and why films are welcomed in a temporal context, what aspects of them are seen or not seen... How deeply films are historical subjects. Asensitive and exciting book.

4-0 out of 5 stars The best critical book in English on Cassavetes
The shocking intolerance and hysteria of "idiephile"'s review demands a response. Comparing the writing of Ray Carney to ice cream and the writing of Kouvaros to ground glass is cheap-shot sloganeering and advertising, not criticism of any kind. In fact, the prose of Kouvaros is lucid and pleasurable, and what he has to say about Cassavetes is thoughtful and unpredictable. What a strident anti-intellectual like Cassavetes might have thought about any book written about him, especially an academic one, is irrelevant.

4-0 out of 5 stars A splendid addition to Cassavetes studies
Many regard John Cassavetes as something of a wild home movie-maker, shooting improvisational and self-indulgent slices of autobiography in his own house, enlisting friends and family as collaborators, paying little regard to aesthetic or formal concerns. It is this idea that George Kouvaros sets out to challenge in his splendid new book. Courageously determined not to take Cassavetes at his own word, Kouvaros very title, WHERE DOES IT HAPPEN?, seems deliberately intended as a provocation, attached as it is to this study of a director who privileged the 'who' over the 'where'. But the word 'where' in Kouvaros' title refers equally to that place where his book 'happens', namely the arena of film theory. It is here that Kouvaros excels, since he has clearly read everything there is to read about Cassavetes, and puts his research to good use. WHERE DOES IT HAPPEN? is, then, as much a history of critical trends as a study of one man's oeuvre, and Kouvaros' book provides a fine overview of approaches to the director. Which is not to say that Kouvaros' book adds nothing new to the debate. On the contrary, chapters dedicated to THE KILLING OF A CHINESE BOOKIE and LOVE STREAMS provide a series of sustained insights which made me eager to watch these masterpieces again.

1-0 out of 5 stars Academic gobbledygook
Why do the professors feel that they have to turn everything into academic gobbledygook? This book takes a filmmaker who was known for his freedom from intellectual abstractions and critical cliches and turns him into a practitioner of the latest French-fried intellectual practices. You can't find Cassavetes here for the cant. His work is lost and unrecognizable, buried under the layers of continental critical jargon. If you are really interested in learning abouto Cassavete, skip Kouvaros and read the filmmaker's own descriptions of his films and his accounts of making them in Cassavetes on Cassavetes or in Ray Carney's books. Carney's books read like eating ice cream. This is like trying to chew and swallow ground glass. Too bad. Cassavetes deserves much better. He would have been howling with laughter at what has been done to him. ... Read more


8. Faces
by John Cassavetes
 Paperback: Pages (1970-01-01)

Asin: B000F81ARE
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars for Cassavetes specialists
For Cassavetes specialists
You must reading it, interesting for Faces admirers who love the movie ... Read more


9. John Cassavetes (Cahiers du cinema) (French Edition)
by Thierry Jousse
Paperback: 159 Pages (1989)

Isbn: 2866420810
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10. Bookforum Feb/Mar 2006 (Volume 12, issue 5) John Cassavetes cover, Gary Indiana, Nadine Gordimer interview, Michael Roth on Bernard-Henri Levy, Rene' Steinke on Myth, the New Cezanne, Joan Richardson on Emerson
by Tom Piazza, Gerald Howard, Harold Brodkey, Robert Walser Louis Auchincloss
 Single Issue Magazine: Pages (2006-01-01)

Asin: B003M1SHO0
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11. John Cassavetes (Rivages/Cinema) (French Edition)
by Laurence Gavron
 Mass Market Paperback: 176 Pages (1986)

Isbn: 2869300441
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12. Cassavetes über Cassavetes
by John Cassavetes
Paperback: 550 Pages (2003)

Isbn: 3886612562
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13. John Cassavetes: The Adventure of Insecurity (Studies in Contemporary Film)
by Ray Carney
Paperback: 68 Pages (1999-07-20)
list price: US$15.00 -- used & new: US$15.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0967417007
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
A handsomely illustrated, general introduction toCassavetes' major films. The book contains an introductory essay, aswell as essays on Woman Under the Influence, Faces, Shadows, Minnieand Moskowitz, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, Husbands, LoveStreams, and all of the other major films. It features a new,previously unpublished interview about Cassavetes' life and work, andis beautifully illustrated with more than two dozen behind-the-scenesphotographs of Cassavetes working with his actors and his crew. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (4)

5-0 out of 5 stars A new way of knowing
This insightful book about Cassavetes by Ray Carney will open up a new way of seeing and knowing film.Carney is most persuasive about the importance of film as the newest art form.Gone are the canned, predictable experiences of current day studio films.Cassavetes' films are about life as we all experience it, in all its complexity, richness and craziness.Carney's easy-to-understand text will open up Cassavetes' films to you as a way to embrace life and art through film.Cassavetes wrestled with the questions we all wrestle with and allows you to form your own answers and understanding.A wonderful book about this film giant!

If you want to know more about Cassavetes and his films, Ray Carney has a MEGA-WEBSITE.Search on Cassavetes on any search engine to find it.You won't be sorry!It includes great background information on how Cassavetes made his movies, along with terrific photos of the genius at work.A must for indie film lovers and aspiring directors...

5-0 out of 5 stars This book will change how you view film
Ray Carney's writing is so different from most film criticism. It reads so clearly. You won't find any jargon, or fancy-schmancy film-book theories here. He doesn't attempt to explain the films or their characters byoffering simplified psychological or sociological understandings. Instead,Carney shows how valuable it is to stay with the complex experiencesoffered in the films, to allow yourself to let the films teach yousomething new. Carney argues that all great art can give us new powers ofunderstanding, more perceptive eyes and ears. (I highly recommend you checkout his website, Ray Carney on Life and Art, which features his writingabout other indie filmmakers, masterwork paintings and American culture.)Carney's deep belief in the importance of art comes through in his writingas the most radical, original and hopeful statements on art that I've everread. The Films of John Cassavetes:The Adventure of Insecurity haschanged the way I now look at all film.

5-0 out of 5 stars This Book Will Change How You View Film
Ray Carney's The Films of John Cassavetes:The Adventure of Insecurity has become my essential viewing guide to Cassavetes' films and it haschanged the way I now look at all film.

Carney's writing is so differentfrom most film criticism. It reads so clearly. You won't find any jargon,or fancy-schmancy film-book theories here. He doesn't attempt to explainthe films or their characters by offering simplified psychological orsociological understandings. Instead, Carney shows how valuable it is tostay with the complex experiences offered in the films, to allow yourselfto let the films teach you something new. Carney argues that all great artcan give us new powers of understanding, more perceptive eyes and ears.Carney's deep belief in the importance of art comes through in his writingas the most radical, original and hopeful statements on art that I've everread. I highly recommend you check out his web site athttp://people.bu.edu/rcarney which features his writing about other indiefilmmakers, masterwork paintings and American culture.

5-0 out of 5 stars This Book Will Change How You View Film
Ray Carney's The Films of John Cassavetes: The Adventure of Insecurity hasbecome my essential viewing guide to Cassavetes' films and it has changedthe way I now look at all film.

Carney's writing is so different frommost film criticism. It reads so clearly. You won't find any jargon, orfancy-schmancy film-book theories here. He doesn't attempt to explain thefilms or their characters by offering simplified psychological orsociological understandings. Instead, Carney shows how valuable it is tostay with the complex experiences offered in the films, to allow yourselfto let the films teach you something new. Carney argues that all great artcan give us new powers of understanding, more perceptive eyes and ears.Carney's deep belief in the importance of art comes through in his writingas the most radical, original and hopeful statements on art that I've everread. I highly recommend you check out his website (Ray Carney on Life andArt) which features his writing about other indie filmmakers, and Americanculture. ... Read more


14. John Cassavetes Autoportraits: Propos selectionnes et montes par Ray Carney
by John; Ray Carney; Sam Shaw; Larry Shaw; Andre Labarthe Cassavetes
Hardcover: 188 Pages (1992)

Isbn: 2866421299
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15. Playboy Magazine / July 1971 - John Cassavetes, Timothy Leary, Heather Van Every
by Playboy Magazine
Paperback: 214 Pages (1971)
-- used & new: US$39.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B000H7EGX8
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Editorial Review

Product Description
July 1971PLAYMATE: Heather Van EveryCOVER: Kay Sutton YorkPICTORIALS: The Porn Is Green with text by John Bowers, uncovers the burgeoning skin trade in California, featuring Lolita Rios, Kim Hope and others; I'll Put Your Name In Lights, Natividad Abascal with text by Woody Allen, features Natividad Abascal, who costarred with Allen in "Bananas"; Blooming Beauty features Linda Evans photographed by John DerekINTERVIEW: John CassavetesFEATURES: Profile of Timothy Leary by Donn Pearce; fiction by Sean O'Faolain, Murder At Cobbler's Hulk; Ken W. Purdy expains The Jaguar Storywith photos of the XJ-12, XK-120, SS-100 and the D-type; Pick of the Day Sailersby Bill Robinson discusses popular small sailing craft, with five full-page illustrations (Sunfish, Hobie Cat 16, Rhodes 19, Buccaner, Sanderling) by Martin Hoffman.PAGES: 214 ... Read more


16. John Cassavetes
Paperback: 96 Pages (2010-08-10)
list price: US$45.00 -- used & new: US$41.51
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 6130773544
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Editorial Review

Product Description
John Nicholas Cassavetes was a Greek-American actor,screenwriter and filmmaker. He appeared in manyHollywood films. He is most notable as an pioneer ofAmerican independent film. His films are noted fortheir use of improvisation and a realistic cinémavérité style.Cassavetes was born in New York City,the son of Katherine Cassavetes (who was to featurein some of his films) and Nicholas John Cassavetes,Greek immigrants to the U.S. His early years werespent with his family in Greece; when he returned,at the age of seven, he spoke no English. He grew upon Long Island, New York. He attended PortWashington High School from 1945 to 1947,participating in Port Weekly (the school paper), RedDomino (interclass play), football, and the PortLight (yearbook). ... Read more


17. Films of John Cassavetes,Pragmatism, Modernismnd the Movies , 1994 publication
by Rsy Csrny
 Paperback: Pages (1994-01-01)

Asin: B003HZYRRM
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18. Accidental Genius How John Cassavetes Invented the Independent Film - 2006 publication.
by Marshal Fin
 Hardcover: Pages (2006)

Asin: B003ZPB6OQ
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19. Films Directed by John Cassavetes (Study Guide): A Woman Under the Influence, Shadows, Husbands, a Child Is Waiting
Paperback: 48 Pages (2010-10-21)
list price: US$14.14 -- used & new: US$14.13
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1155189574
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This is nonfiction commentary.Chapters: A Woman Under the Influence, Shadows, Husbands, a Child Is Waiting, the Killing of a Chinese Bookie, Gloria, Faces, Opening Night, Love Streams, Minnie and Moskowitz, Big Trouble, Too Late Blues. Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 47. Not illustrated. Free updates online. Purchase includes a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: Husbands is a 1970 film written and directed by John Cassavetes. This ensemble film, which describes three middle class men in the throes of a midlife crisis, stars Ben Gazzara, Peter Falk and Cassavetes. The film, in cinéma vérité style, was described by Time magazine as Cassevetes' finest work while condemned by other prominent critics. It consisted largely of lengthy improvisations by the cast, and provides what one recent critic described as a "devastatingly bleak view of the emptiness of suburban life." Gus, Harry, and Archie (Cassavetes, Gazzara and Falk, respectively) are three husbands with families in suburban New York. All are professional men. As the film begins, they are shaken when their best friend Stuart suddenly dies of a heart attack. They have difficulty coping with the death, and spend two days hanging out, playing basketball, sleeping in the subways, and drinking, including one lengthy scene at a bar in which they have an impromptu singing contest. Harry goes home, has a vicious argument with his wife, and decides to fly to London. The other two decide to go with him. They check into an expensive hotel, dress in formal clothing, and meet three young women at a gambling casino. They go back to their rooms with the women. Gus pairs off with Mary Tynan (Jenny Runacre), Archie with Julie (Noelle Kao), a young Asian woman who seems not to speak English, and Harry with Pearl Billingham (Jenny Lee Wright). However, their efforts to hook up with these women are awkward and ...http://booksllc.net/?id=4264016 ... Read more


20. The Films of John Cassavetes Pragmatism Modernism and the Movies - 1994 publication.
by Raymond Carny
 Paperback: Pages (1994)

Asin: B003ZOIGZE
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