A self-effacing portrait of Hollywood insider Tom Mankiewicz, loaded with vibrant anecdotes.
A compelling study of Richard Donner, an ebullient, ballsy risk-taker who was a director even before he was aware of it.
A memoir chronicling the five-decade career of film and TV director Garry Marshall.
A compilation of biographies, filmographies, and film-by-film analyses written by the who's who of film historians focusing on 30 key directors who helped shape the film noir genre.
As this Taschen volume makes clear, the Master of Suspense remains appealing to cineastes young and old, with 50-plus features underscoring his timeless ingenuity.
Author Gwenda Young makes the case that from the silent era to the golden age, Clarence Brown deserves a place among the giants.
Director Ernst Lubitsch, who was idolized by Wilder and Welles, is brought into sharp focus.
The making of George Stevens' Texas-sized epic is recounted in Don Graham's meticulously chronicled book.
As the newly scaled down yet no less comprehensive Taschen book Stanley Kubrick’s Napoleon: The Greatest Movie Never Made demonstrates, Kubrick was nothing if not a completist.
The best of new publications by, for, and about directors, their teams and the industry.