Read The Reluctant Film Art of Woody Allen Online

Authors: Peter J. Bailey

Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Performing Arts, #Film & Video, #History & Criticism, #Literary Criticism, #General, #Literary Collections, #American

The Reluctant Film Art of Woody Allen (64 page)

Sarris, Andrew. Review of
Broadway Danny Rose. The Village Voice
(February 7, 1984), p. 47.
Schickel, Richard. “Postscript to the ‘80s” (review of
Crimes and Misdemeanors). Time
(October 16, 1989), p. 82.
——. “Just Funny Isn’t Enough” (review of
Manhattan Murder Mystery) Time
(August 23,1993), p. 67.
——. “Now Playing at the Jewel” (review of
Purple Rose of Cairo). Time
(March 4, 1985),p. 78.
——. “Dream Machine” (review of
Radio Days). Time
(February 2, 1987), p. 73.
——. “Return to Weimar” (review of
Shadows and Fog). Time
(March 23, 1992), p. 65.
——. “They Sorta Got Rhythm” (review of
Everyone Says I Love You). Time
(December 9,1996), p. 81.
——. “The Wages of Fame” (review of
Celebrity). Time
(November 16, 1998).
——. “Woody Allen Comes of Age.”
Time
(April 30, 1979), pp. 62–65.
Schneller, Johanna. “Woody Allen.”
US
229 (February 1997), pp. 46–50, 114.
Schwarzbaum, Lisa. Review of
Sweet and Lowdown. EW Online
(December 3, 1999).
——. “Woody Sings!” (review of
Everyone Says I Love You). Entertainment Weekly
(December 20, 1996), p. 74.
Shales, Tom. “Woody Allen: The First 50 Years.”
Esquire
(April, 1987), p. 88–95.
Shechner, Mark. “Jewish Writers.”
Harvard Guide to Contemporary American Writing
. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1979, pp. 191–239.
——. “Woody Allen and the Failure of the Therapeutic.”
From Hester Street to Hollywood,
ed. Sarah Blacher Cohen. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1983, pp. 231–44.
Shelley, Percy Bysshe.
The Selected Prose and Poetry of Percy Bysshe Shelley
ed. Carlos Baker. New York: Modern Library, 1951.
Siegal, Mark. “Ozymandias Melancholia: The Nature of Parody in Woody Allen’s
Stardust Memories” Literature/Film Quarterly
13, 2 (1985), pp. 76–83,
Sinyard, Neil.
The Films of Woody Allen
. New York: Exeter Books, 1987.
Stevens, Wallace. “The Idea of Order at Key West.”
The Collected Poems ofWallace Stevens
. New York: Alfred K. Knopf, 1954.
Steuer, Joseph. “Woody Allen: A Celebrity in Spite of Himself.”
Indie
(September/October 1998), pp. 14–15, 38–39.
Sunshine, Linda.
The Illustrated Woody Allen Reader
. New York: Knopf, 1993.
Taubin, Amy. “Sean Penns High Wire Act” (review of
Sweet and Lowdown). The Village Voice
(December 1–7, 1999), 89.
Travers, Peter. “Everything Old is New Again” (review of
Everyone Says I Love You). Rolling Stone
(February 20, 1997), p. 96.
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The Liberal Imagination
. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1976.
Turan, Kenneth. “Beyond the Gossip, Now the Movie” (review of
Husbands and Wives). Los Angeles Times
(September 18, 1992), F, p. 1.
Tutt, Ralph. “Truth, Beauty and Travesty”: Woody Allen’s Well-Wrought Urn.”
Literature/Film Quarterly
19/2 (1991), pp. 104–8.
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Love Declaired
by Denis de Rougemont).
Assorted Prose
. New York: Knopf, 1965.
——. “Van Loves Ada, Ada Loves Van.”
Picked-Up Pieces
. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1975, pp. 199–210.
Welsh, James M. Review of
Manhattan Murder Mystery. Films in Review
(November/December, 1993), p. 413.
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Brooklyn Is Not Expanding: Woody Allen’s Comic Universe
. Rutherford, New Jersey: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1992.
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. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1981.
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The Glass Menagerie
. New York: New Directions, 1966.
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The Unruly Life of Woody Allen
by Marion Meade).
London Review of Books
(27 April 2000), 3.
Woolf, Virginia.
To the Lighthouse
. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1955.
Yacowar, Maurice.
Loser Take All: The Comic Art of Woody Allen
. New York: Frederic Unger, 1979.
Yalom, Irwin.
When Nietzsche Wept
. New York: Basic Books, 1992.
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(December 3, 1999).
Zimmerman, Bernhard.
Greek Tragedy: An Introduction,
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Saturday Evening Post
(September 21, 1963), pp. 26–27.

Index

Note: Extended discussions of films or themes are noted in bold
.

Aaron, Caroline
Abraham, F. Murray
“acceptance, forgiveness, and love,”
Adair, Gilbert
Adler, Jerry
Aiello, Danny
Airplane
“Alabammy Bound,”
Alda, Alan
Alden, Harold
Allen, Woody: ambivalent attitude toward art,;argument that critics exaggerate the value and complexity of art; association of plot resolution with illusion; assumption that artworks replicate human corruption,; belief that happy endings happen only to fictional characters,; belief that life’s bleakness demands escapist consolations of art,; blurring of reality with movie reality,; characters’ capacity for confounding art and life,; conflict between creating comic vs. serious art; conflicting attitudes on art’s derivation from artists’ lives,; continuity with tradition of Jewish/American humor; conviction of the indistinguishability of art and narcissism,; criticized for anti-Semitic depictions of Jews,; demoralization of 1990s protagonists; doubts about the family as solution to existential dilemma,; exploitation of “Woody Allen” protagonist; films reflect a convergence of American theatrical realism with classic Hollywood film style; identification with non-”Woody Allen” protagonists; intermingling of comic and serious modes in films; love of movies developed in childhood; magic as metaphor for artworks; 1990s preference for creating “magic lantern en’tertainments” over serious films,; objection to the category of “loser,”; opposition to Modernist ideal of art’s redeeming capacities,; opposition to Modernist ideal of art’s redeeming capacities ironized in
Deconstructing Harry,
; protagonists’ anxiety about integrity of self; repudiation of genetic determinism and Greek notions of fatality; skepticism toward existentialist affirmation; skepticism toward the distortions of artistic representation; tendency to invoke and imitate films of European masters; thematic disparity between surface order and internal corruption,; thematic tension between WASP decorum and Jewish humor,; unconcern for audience; unresolved conflict between artistic idealism and pragmatic realism; view that reality of death nullifies all other human perceptions, —films:
Alice
,;
Annie Hall,
;
Another Woman,
;
Bananas,
;
Broadway Danny Rose,
;
Bullets Over Broadway,
;
Celebrity
;
Crimes and Misdemeanors,
;
Deconstructing Harry
;
Everyone Says I Love You,
;
Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Sex,
;
Hannah and Her Sisters,
;
Husbands and Wives,
;
Interiors,
;
Love and Death,
;
Manhattan,
;
Manhattan Murder Mystery
;
Midsummer Nights Sex Comedy A,
;
Mighty Aphrodite,
; “Oedipus Wrecks,”;
Play It Again, Sam,
;
Purple Rose of Cairo,
;
Radio Days,
;
September,
;
Shadows and Fog
;
Sleeper,
;
Stardust Memories,
;
Sweet andLowdown,
;
Take the Money and Run,
;
Zelig
—prose:
Complete Prose of Woody Allen,, The,
; “Death (A Play),”; “God: A Play,”; “Kugplmass Episode, The,”; “My Apology,”; “My Secret Life with Bogart,”; “Random Reflections of a Second Rate Mind,”; “Remembering Needleman,”; “Through a Life Darkly” (review of Bergmans
The Magic Lantern
)
—scripts:
Bullets Over Broadway
(Allen and Douglas McGrath);
Radio Days
Alley, Kirstie
Allison, Terry L.
Always Leave Them Laughing
Amarcord
(Fellini)
Ames, Christopher
Anderson, Maxwell
Anderson, Sherwood
Ansen, David
Anspach, Susan
Anthony, Lysette
antimimetic emblems
Anzell, Hy
“Archaic Torso of Apollo” (Rilke)
Armstrong, Louis
Astaire, Fred
Autumn Sonata
(Bergman)
Balaban, Bob
Baldwin, Alec
Barrault, Marie-Christine
Barrymore, Drew
Barth, John
Barthelme,Donald
Baumbach, Jonathan
Baxter, John
Beattie, Ann
Bellow, Saul
Benjamin, Richard
Benny, Jack
Berger, Anna
Bergman, Ingmar
Bergmann, Martin
Berkow, Ira
Berle, Milton
Bernstein, Mashey
Betdeheim, Bruno
Bicycle Thief, The
(De Sica)
Big Sleep, The
Bjorkman, Stig
Blake, Richard A.
Bloom, Claire
Bogart, Humphrey,
passim
Bonham Carter, Helena
Borowitz, Eugene
Bourne, Mel
Branagh, Kenneth
Brecht, Berthold
Brickman, Marshall
Brode, Douglas (
The Films of Woody Allen
)
Brooks, Albert
Brooks, Mel
Brown, Georgia
Bunuel, Luis
Burr, Raymond, 206
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
Byrne, Anne
Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, The
(Murnau)
Caine, Michael
Canby, Vincent
Carmichael, Hoagy
Carnegie Deli comedians
Carroll, Tim (
Woody and His Women
)
Carver, Raymond
Casablanca
(Michael Curtiz),
passim
Cassavettes, John
Cavett, Dick
Chapin, Kay
Chaplin, Charlie
Charles, Nick and Nora
“Cheek to Cheek,”
Chekhov, Anton
cinema verite
Citizen Kane
(Welles)
City Lights
(Chaplin)
Civilization and Its Discontents
(Freud)
Cohen, Lynn
Cohen, Sarah Blacher
Combs, Richard
Conroy, Frances
Coover, Robert
Coppola, Francis Ford
Counterlife, The
(Roth)
Cowie, Peter

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