"A marvelous bombshell of a book, by one of our most formidably
knowledgeable and insightful writers on film, it is filled with
surprises and witty asides. Though Thomson is quick to pounce
on the hypocrisies and historical omissions of some of these war
movies, there is nothing compromised about his own daredevil
judgments. We are in the hands of a master critic/essayist." —
Phillip Lopate
"One of the finest living stylists in the English language."
— The Guardian
“Persistently, thoughtfully questioning what filmmakers intend,
what conversations they’re accidentally stepping into and how we as
moviegoers are implicated as war-story consumers. Thomson is
exceedingly well-equipped for the job . . . . bracing and
surprising.” — Los Angeles Times
“This stellar book is about how filmmakers simplify the bloody
business of war and why audiences buy into it. Readers who
enjoy vigorous arguments and good writing will love this book.” —
Library Journal (starred review)
“Praise the gods for giving us a writer with a deep moral sense and
an epigrammatic prose style who writes as exquisitely about war as
he does about film. Thomson's book brims with striking
observations and provocative readings of crucial films, the great
and the forgotten, from All Quiet on the Western
Front to Apocalypse Now to Black Hawk
Down and scores more. The Fatal Alliance is an
absorbing, uproarious and essential book -- about war, about film,
about us. And my God, the man can write!" — Mark Danner,
author of Stripping Bare the Body: Politics Violence
War and Spiral: Trapped in the Forever War
“Thomson’s own genius is his ability to remain one of the leading
authorities on cinematic history, without shying away from the
controversial. Cinephiles seeking provocative arguments will
appreciate his work.” — Library Journal
"Interesting and thought-provoking . . . . Insightful and
important.” — Booklist
“With each new book from David Thomson . . . I have the same
sensation I have when I enter a dark movie theatre: Anticipation,
delight, curiosity . . . . a brilliant writer who writes better
about film than almost everybody else . . . . not just a book about
how films have treated war, but a fascinating, coruscating study of
how films have shaped our minds and feelings about something that
terrifies us, grips us . . . . What can I say? David Thomson,
you’ve done it again.” — James Grissom
“Insightful, fascinating, and educational . . . . The author's
examination of why these types of films continue to resonate,
despite their bleak and catastrophic subject matter, is a must
read." — PopCultureGuy
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