Hardback : $54.84
From the award-winning screenwriter and director of cult classic Bull Durham, the extremely entertaining behind-the-scenes story of the making of the film, and an insightful primer on the art and business of moviemaking.
"This book tells you how to make a movie-the whole nine innings of it-out of nothing but sheer will." -Tony Gilroy, writer/director of Michael Clayton and The Bourne Legacy
"The only church that truly feeds the soul, day in, day out, is the church of baseball." -Annie in Bull Durham
Bull Durham, the breakthrough 1988 film about a minor league baseball team, is widely revered as the best sports movie of all time. But back in 1987, Ron Shelton was a first-time director and no one was willing to finance a movie about baseball-especially a story set in the minors. The jury was still out on Kevin Costner's leading-man potential, while Susan Sarandon was already a has-been. There were doubts. But something miraculous happened, and The Church of Baseball attempts to capture why.
From organizing a baseball camp for the actors and rewriting key scenes while on set, to dealing with a short production schedule and overcoming the challenge of filming the sport, Shelton brings to life the making of this beloved American movie. Shelton explains the rarely revealed ins and outs of moviemaking, from a film's inception and financing, screenwriting, casting, the nuts and bolts of directing, the postproduction process, and even through its release. But this is also a book about baseball and its singular romance in the world of sports. Shelton spent six years in the minor leagues before making this film, and his experiences resonate throughout this book.
Full of wry humor and insight, The Church of Baseball tells the remarkable story behind an iconic film.
From the award-winning screenwriter and director of cult classic Bull Durham, the extremely entertaining behind-the-scenes story of the making of the film, and an insightful primer on the art and business of moviemaking.
"This book tells you how to make a movie-the whole nine innings of it-out of nothing but sheer will." -Tony Gilroy, writer/director of Michael Clayton and The Bourne Legacy
"The only church that truly feeds the soul, day in, day out, is the church of baseball." -Annie in Bull Durham
Bull Durham, the breakthrough 1988 film about a minor league baseball team, is widely revered as the best sports movie of all time. But back in 1987, Ron Shelton was a first-time director and no one was willing to finance a movie about baseball-especially a story set in the minors. The jury was still out on Kevin Costner's leading-man potential, while Susan Sarandon was already a has-been. There were doubts. But something miraculous happened, and The Church of Baseball attempts to capture why.
From organizing a baseball camp for the actors and rewriting key scenes while on set, to dealing with a short production schedule and overcoming the challenge of filming the sport, Shelton brings to life the making of this beloved American movie. Shelton explains the rarely revealed ins and outs of moviemaking, from a film's inception and financing, screenwriting, casting, the nuts and bolts of directing, the postproduction process, and even through its release. But this is also a book about baseball and its singular romance in the world of sports. Shelton spent six years in the minor leagues before making this film, and his experiences resonate throughout this book.
Full of wry humor and insight, The Church of Baseball tells the remarkable story behind an iconic film.
RON SHELTON's Bull Durham launched a writing-directing career that
includes White Men Can't Jump, Blaze (1989), Cobb, and Tin Cup,
among other films. He also directed Jordan Rides the Bus, a
documentary about Michael Jordan's year in the minor leagues. A
former professional baseball player, he holds degrees from Westmont
College and the University of Arizona. He currently lives in Los
Angeles with his family.
"If you loved Bull Durham, you obviously must read Ron Shelton’s
book about how it was made. Less obvious, but equally true: if you
simply love movies, you must read it. No insider has ever written
so well, and so revealingly, about the script-rewriting, the
studio-fighting, the actor-coddling, the entire sausage-making
process of any movie." --Daniel Okrent; author of Last Call,
The Guarded Gate, and Nine Innings
"I am among the legion of fans who loved the romantic comedy (and
semi-autobiographical) movie Bull Durham, written and directed by
Ron Shelton. His new book, The Church of Baseball: The Making of
Bull Durham, is an enchanting education on how Crash and Nuke and
Annie -- and Shelton -- and their madcap medley of co-characters
overcame real and fictionalized obstacles to populate a variety of
ballparks and bedrooms and, in dramatic fact, triumph over the
snooty `suits' in Hollywood suites." --Ira Berkow, Pulitzer
Prize-winning sports columnist and author of Baseball's Best Ever:
A Half-Century of Covering Hall-of-Famers
"The Church of Baseball is a heart pumping ride, from pitch to
script to screen to the Oscars, as Ron Shelton turns his minor
league love triangle into the greatest sports movie of our time. No
filmmaker has given such an unfiltered glimpse into the
storytelling process. Shelton has a mutual love for filmmakers and
ballplayers—the grunts who take field and the management that
controls their dreams. While chasing through the white knuckle pace
of movie production, Ron Shelton somehow finds that strand of DNA
in all of us that roots for the man at the plate as he chases love,
success, good scotch, high fiber, and the hanging curveball.”
--Jason Reitman, writer-director of Thank You for Smoking; Juno; Up
in The Air; and Young Adult
"In 1988, Ron Shelton wrote and directed Bull Durham, maybe the
best baseball movie ever. Now he tells the story of how that
classic was made and the book is as funny, tough and touching as
the picture. Home run." --David Thomson, author of The
Biographical Dictionary of Film
"THE CHURCH OF BASEBALL is one of the best books ever written about
the making of a movie. But it’s much more than a first-rate
insider’s take on the business. It’s a book about the human comedy.
Ron Shelton’s perceptions about people and predicaments have a
novelistic richness. You don’t need to know a thing about movies or
the infield fly rule to savor THE CHURCH OF BASEBALL.” --Peter
Rainer, Author of Rainer on Film: Thirty Years of Film Writing in a
Turbulent and Transformative Era; Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize
in Criticism
“This book tells you how to make a movie – the whole nine innings
of it – out of nothing but sheer will. And it’s Ron Shelton so you
can’t stop smiling even when it all goes sideways. It’s always
fascinating to hear how great films fall together, this time you’ve
got the guy who called the game spinning the yarn. Major
League stuff.” --Tony Gilroy, writer/director of Michael
Clayton and The Bourne Legacy
"Rookie of the Year. A brilliant first book details the author's
first movie, BULL DURHAM...At age 76, Ron Shelton has written his
first book, and the biggest question upon reading it is, What took
him so long? The Church of Baseball details the production of
1988’s Bull Durham, which Shelton wrote and was his directorial
debut. It’s a remarkable account of how the Hollywood sausage is
made, but it’s also a touching account of the author’s relationship
with baseball...The movie, of course, ultimately became a classic.
This book? Every bit as good."--Mark Bechtel; Sports
Illustrated
"The Church of Baseball: The Making of Bull Durham is a fraught,
rollicking and gossipy romp through the funny-in-retrospect ordeal
of fighting for a cinematic project that seemed as unlikely to
succeed as a Class A shortstop making it to the
Show." --Elizabeth Nelson,The Wall Street Journal
"…an exceedingly enjoyable memoir of the making of “Bull Durham,”
and a reminder just how well that film’s baseball scenes have held
up through the years…Thirty-four summers after “Bull Durham” first
hit theaters, its influence is still apparent." --Mike
Vaccaro; New York Post
"...a reflective, first-person account of how he conceived the
characters and story and then managed to bring it to life as a
first-time film director. Shelton takes readers through the writing
of the script in detail, highlighting his aims in each scene.
That’s followed by his selling the script to a studio, with himself
attached as a neophyte director, and then hiring a crew, casting
and shooting the movie, and navigating the editing process. The
entire tale is colored by his continual clashes with studio
executives on the oddest things imaginable....Told purely from the
creator’s perspective, this book is a lively, witty master class in
screenwriting and film direction, much in the cheeky spirit
of Bull Durham. VERDICT Highly entertaining and
informative look at a popular film classic, this book should find
wide interest among film and sports buffs." --John Maxymuk;
starred Library Journal review
"Shelton’s fabulous CHURCH OF BASEBALL [is] about so much more than
sports…The book, just like Bull Durham, the classic film he wrote
and directed in 1987, will stand the test of time… That there
was a demand for this fabulous tome speaks to the enduring appeal
of his classic… Shelton reveals studio heads originally didn’t
even deem [Susan Sarandon] worthy of an audition because she wasn’t
regarded as “hot” enough. In the best traditions of books
about the movie business, the glimpse behind the curtain reveals
this and so many other gossipy nuggets that reinforce the old
William Goldman line about nobody really knowing anything in that
town... “Perhaps Bull Durham has resonated all these years
because it is about loving something more than it loves you back,”
writes Shelton. “It’s about reckoning. It’s about loss. It’s
about men at work, trying to survive in the remote outposts of
their chosen profession . . . It cannot be dismissed that it’s
also about the joy of playing a game for a living. It’s about team
and connections and risk and reward.” The book, like the
movie, is about all of that and so much more." --Dave
Hannigan, The Irish Times
“‘Bull Durham’ fans, rejoice at ‘Church of Baseball… Shelton’s
breezy behind-the-scenes recap.” --Douglass K. Daniel, AP News
"Ron Shelton hears America singing, schmoozing, and swearing. His
writing-directing debut, Bull Durham (1988), transported
fans into the offbeat mystique and comic muck of baseball…Shelton’s
new memoir, The Church of Baseball, does for filmmaking
what Bull Durham did for the national pastime: it
demystifies the craft, pillories the business, and celebrates the
calling with wit and passion…Shelton’s prose is as natural as his
dialogue, and he conjures characters with casual mastery…The book
takes us inside his screenwriting process as his characters emerge
with distinct voices and signature first lines…In The Church
of Baseball, as in Bull Durham, Shelton riffs on
life in the American grain, and scales the heights of the homegrown
surreal. Like Mark Twain, he reveals an unsentimental education
that reads like a robust and impudent yarn." --Michael Sragow, Air
Mail
"It’s a detailed, nostalgic and, at times, uproarious inside story
of the making of Bull Durham, and an account of Shelton’s life in
and out of baseball, which led him to write and direct the movie."
--Peter Moore, Parade
"A marvelous book about a classic movie that is guaranteed to send
fans back to the Church of Baseball to hear their favorite sermon
one more time" --Booklist, starred review
"In this spectacular debut, screenwriter and director Shelton
reflects on the deeply personal passion that brought his canonical
sports film, 1988’s Bull Durham, to life…Shelton produces a
work that’s humanizing and intimate. In addition to his fascinating
analyses of the script’s genesis…readers will revel in Shelton’s
own accounts of playing baseball professionally in the minor
leagues in the 1960s. As he writes, it was the “fragile and
absurd... wondrous and thrilling” world he discovered there that
ignited his dreams to write the film. The result is an immensely
moving look into the mind behind the masterpiece." (July)
--Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
"A filmmaker’s memoir about the making of one of the best sports
movies of all time. Shelton’s book is not simply a jaunty
recollection of his directing debut, with all its attendant
breakthroughs and headaches. The author, who displays sheer,
unadulterated love for his subject, also delivers a savvy,
unusually informative tutorial on how to take a motion picture from
the concept stage to script development, casting, production, and
post-production. Shelton examines all of this in a charismatic
style that decodes jargon and engages from first page to last.
There’s plenty of gossip (mostly generous), surprising insights,
useful screenwriting strategies, and tips for would-be directors on
how to combat studio meddling. Even certified film buffs who have
read numerous how-to books by those in the industry will find the
author’s advice sound and clarity refreshing. “Making a good and
successful movie is a minor miracle every time,” he writes in the
introduction. He goes on to prove his point several times over,
chronicling a montage of maddening impediments, unexpected
reversals, scheming, happy accidents, and the unpredictable alchemy
that is screen chemistry… He set about demystifying a game that
clings to its mysteries like pine tar to a bat only to rediscover
that some of those mysteries are real—and poetic. Fans of the film
will have new reasons to appreciate it—and the team that made
it." --Kirkus Reviews, Starred review
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