"The writing of the screenplay became an intense and extremely stimulating sort of game in which, with a camera in the hands of God rather than any mortal cinemaphotographer, I wrote the scenes one after the other as I would like to have them be."--from the Afterword This is the original screenplay that Dickey submitted to Warner Brothers. He had begun it with the idea of creating a work that would stand on its own as a work of art and still enhance and deepen the audience's apprehension of their indi vidual experience ...
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"The writing of the screenplay became an intense and extremely stimulating sort of game in which, with a camera in the hands of God rather than any mortal cinemaphotographer, I wrote the scenes one after the other as I would like to have them be."--from the Afterword This is the original screenplay that Dickey submitted to Warner Brothers. He had begun it with the idea of creating a work that would stand on its own as a work of art and still enhance and deepen the audience's apprehension of their indi vidual experience of Deliverance and its special meaning to them. When he sent this screenplay to Warner Brothers it was with a sense of having accomplished that goal--"I was convinced I had put down on paper what I wanted to happen on the screen, no matter who the director was, or the actors, or any of the rest of the crew." But while acknowledging the creativity, bravery, and dedica tion of John Boorman and the actors and the crew who made the film version of Deliverance, Dickey also states that their real ization is not the film as he would have had it. That film exists only in his imagination and within this screenplay. The story as filmed is presented in twenty-two production stills that speak of the undeniable strengths of the production that received nomi nations from the Motion Picture Academy for its awards of best picture, best direction, and best editing. Arthur Knight de scribed the film as "one of those rare films that resonates like a literary work but that--rarer still--avoids either being or sounding literary." Dickey concludes his Afterword with an invi tation to the reader to "show [the screenplay] in the wide screen theater of his mind and compare it with the version he has seen in actual theaters, or on television."
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Seller's Description:
Near Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. 080931029-5. First edition. Near fine in near fine dust jacket. (1"-inch closed tear at head of front cover. Couple small edge nicks in DJ. Rear panel mildly rubbed. Faint foxing at top edge & at end-papers. ) Small cloth issue. (O); 6 1/4" x 9 1/4"; 157 pages.
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Seller's Description:
The rarely seen screenplay by James Dickey, adapted from his best selling novel. Includes an afterword by him and 22 b&w stills. Soft top corner crease to the back cover, which is lightly mirrored to some of the corners of the book, otherwise near fine.