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Christmas 2014: The best books on film

Nothing like a dame: Judi Dench’s charming and self-deprecating anecdotes lead the way

Christopher Fowler
Saturday 13 December 2014 13:00 GMT
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Judi Dench appeared at the Hay Festival to perform excerpts from Shakespearean plays
Judi Dench appeared at the Hay Festival to perform excerpts from Shakespearean plays (Getty Images)

The more glamorous the star, the glossier the memoir; Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow (Simon & Schuster, £13.60), by Sophia Loren, is a trawl through her memorabilia that displays very Italian preoccupations: love, mothers, movies, pasta and a jail sentence, but nothing about acting.

Angelica Huston’s second memoir Watch Me (Simon & Schuster, £9.90) is more rigorous. Despite her pivotal position in a Hollywood dynasty she’s drily likeable, ordering joke-shop glasses for the crew after her co-star’s eye falls out.

Behind The Scenes (W&N £9.90, John Blake £5.95), by Judi Dench, may be a photo scrapbook but it’s a delight thanks to the star’s self-deprecating charm. Snapped beside her car, she writes: “I don’t drive it. I just lean against it.” No chronological plod this, but a freefall tumble through a brilliant career: Like Dench herself, treasurable. Young Winstone (Canongate, £9.00), by Ray Winstone, is as much about London as his nascent career. Ray made such an impression in Scum that I still remember his prison number, and he is just as vivid on his formative years, losing his virginity at 14 standing up by the mini-golf, and generally running riot around Mile End. There’ll be another volume, I hope.

Robin Williams: When The Laughter Stops, by Emily Herbert, is a ghoulish cut-and-paste wipe-around that feels like sitting on a cushion still warm from the subject’s body. What I Love About Movies (littlewhitelies.co.uk, £25.00), a volume culled from Little White Lies magazine, is a triumph of design over content. Tarantino gets a cover slot, cheeky considering he delivers a less than revelatory 20-second comment. What are movies? “Life,” says Richard Linklater. “Lunch,” say the Coen brothers. The “Vol No 1” cover tag is a threat that represents the end of film criticism as we know it.

It’s down to Richard Ayoade to take us into the postmodern movie era with Ayoade on Ayoade: A Cinematic Odyssey (Faber & Faber, £10.49), in which the actor/director reviews his career and makes sure you’ll never be able to read a media interview again. Slaps are administered to lazy film critics, smug directors, and inept publicists while surreal flights find Dostoevsky and the Kardashians sharing the same page. For the self-obsessed media-twerp in your life, or perhaps the Little White Lies crew.

Nine elegant volumes of BFI Film Classics provide insightful and complementary sci-fi distillations, the richest being studies on Brazil, by Paul McAuley; The War of the Worlds, by Barry Forshaw; Alien, by Roger Luckhurst; and Quatermass and the Pit, from Kim Newman. Love movies? Get the set (Macmillan, £12.99 each).

Behind the scenes, The Art of Frozen (Chronicle, £16.99) examines the decorative Norwegian roots of Disney’s cash-cow, proving all that research paid off, while The Art of Dreamworks (Abrams, £20.40) has colourful character and landscape designs covering the studio’s output from Antz to their latest, Home. Alien: The Archive (Titan Books, £22.75) is another lush bundle of stills and awestruck prose that suggest it’s time to call a moratorium on the term “ultimate”, while Interstellar: Beyond Time and Space (Titan Books, £22.75) is an informative director-sanctioned overview of the mind-bending epic. It’s a pity these volumes aren’t as innovative in presentation as their subjects.

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