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Living Dangerously: The Adventures of Merian C. Cooper, Creator of King Kong by Mark Vaz
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Living Dangerously: The Adventures of Merian C. Cooper, Creator of King…

by Mark Vaz

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(#51 in the 2008 Book Challenge)

Just to clear things up, the reason I read this was because Maud Hart Lovelace, the author of the Betsy-Tacy books, was married to a guy named Delos Lovelace, and he and Merian Cooper were close friends and Delos and Maud ended up naming their daughter after him. So, onward. I really had no idea that Merian C. Cooper had done so much. He was a fighter pilot in WWI, and then started into film -- first with documentaries, and this was so fascinating that I'm going to try to watch all of his early films. I loved reading about how he and his colleagues were wrestling with ideas about what it means to call something a documentary. You know they've got all this primitive film equipment that only works under the most ideal conditions, and they would miss shots and then have to decide whether it was okay to ask everyone to do the same thing again, only this time on purpose. Then King Kong, and it made me think about how impossible it would be now to ever watch that movie without any irony at all. I guess his big idea of a follow-up was a movie about defending New York City with a fighter squad of people riding giant eagles ... but WWII happened and he enlisted again as a pilot. In short, he did live a crazy adventurous life, but it also struck me as firmly pathological (cripes, he gave his son the "come home with your shield or on it" speech before he shipped out for Viet Nam) ... a view that wasn't shared by the author, who apparently thought this was normal.

Grade: A-
Recommended: I thought this was a very good biography, it worked well for me and I wasn't even that interested in the subject before I started reading, and I think it would be very enjoyable for anyone interested in the pioneer days of film. ( )
  delphica | Jun 10, 2009 |
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King Kong

Marguerite Harrison

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