This book tells the story of movies that were flops at the box office, and that cost a fortune. It goes from the silent film era to the present. These are of course not every movie that bombed, but the highlights of the ones have the best stories. Entertaining but does get a bit bogged down at times. Also interesting how the movie industry has changed and how the pandemic has affected movie going. Seems that there will be less expensive flops in the future and the corporations that run the movie business become less risk averse. (Also see 'The Future Was Now' previous post)
Saturday, January 25, 2025
Box Office Poison
Monday, January 20, 2025
Aflame: Learning from Silence by Pico Iyer
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
The Tiger Slam
This biography/Tribute to Tiger Woods concentrates on his amazing wins in 2002-2001. His upbringing and later issues with health problems and scandals is mentioned, but this really is a love letter to Tiger. In some ways very diservingly, he was an amazing athlete and arguably the best golfer of all time, having changed the game and revitalized interest in golf during his run.
Monday, December 30, 2024
Empress of the Nile
This history/biogrpahy of egypt and egyptology tells the fascinating story of Christiane Desroches-Noblecourt and her lifelong involvement with egyptian antiquities, her amazing effort to save monuments and her tireless ability to share the stories of the Pharoahs.
Sunday, December 29, 2024
Obelisk Odyssey
Part travelogue, journal, history. This rambling but fun 'odyssey' follows the travels of Egyptian oblelisks from their origin to where they and up in cities all over the world. This is very entertaining and allows the author to describe his travels as he tracks down the oblelisks and describes the history of each one along with the travails that followed the monuments to their present resting places.
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
The Army that Never Was
This WW2 history documents the 'deception' strategies of the Allies in their attempt to confuse the Nazis as to the real strategies and troop strenght of the Allies. In particular the attempt to make sure the Germans did not know that the D-Day invasion of Nomrandy was 'the' invasion, leading them to believe that the real invasion would take place in Calais. This worked wonderfully and the Germans held large numbers of troops at Calais that could have been used to interupt the Normandy invasion. Surprisingly despite the title Patton plays a very minor part in this book.
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
The Scapegoat
This is the story of James the first of England, told through his 'favourite' the Duke of Buckingham. James I was the successor to Elizabeth the first, he was the son of Mary Queen of Scotts and was raised in Scotland and was the scottish king James VI. James had many 'facourites' who were people he apparently had a physical relationship with, but he appointed them to high offices. The Duke came for an average family, not royal, which was part of the issue with people who thought he was reaching above his status. However, he appeared to be a talented hard working person who was more than a pretty face.
The history is very detailed and in some ways too much so. The author gets bogged down in details that don't really enhance the story, I found myself skipping large sections of the book to move ahead.