The Film Club

A Memoir

Contributors

By David Gilmour

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$9.99

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  1. ebook $9.99
  2. Trade Paperback $19.99

This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around May 6, 2008. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.

A warmly witty account of the three years a man spent teaching life lessons to his high school dropout son by showing him the world’s best (and occasionally worst) films.

At the start of this brilliantly unconventional family memoir, David Gilmour is an unemployed movie critic trying to convince his fifteen-year-old son Jesse to do his homework. When he realizes Jesse is beginning to view learning as a loathsome chore, he offers his son an unconventional deal: Jesse could drop out of school, not work, not pay rent – but he must watch three movies a week of his father’s choosing.

Week by week, side by side, father and son watched everything from True Romance to Rosemary’s Baby to Showgirls, and films by Akira Kurosawa, Martin Scorsese, Brian DePalma, Billy Wilder, among others. The movies got them talking about Jesse’s life and his own romantic dramas, with mercurial girlfriends, heart-wrenching breakups, and the kind of obsessive yearning usually seen only in movies.

Through their film club, father and son discussed girls, music, work, drugs, money, love, and friendship – and their own lives changed in surprising ways.

Genre:

On Sale
May 6, 2008
Page Count
256 pages
Publisher
Twelve
ISBN-13
9780446537100

David Gilmour

About the Author

David Gilmour‘s sixth novel, A Perfect Night to Go to China, won the 2005 Governor-General’s Award for fiction in Canada and has been translated into Russian, French, Thai, Italian, Dutch, Bulgarian, Serbian and Turkish. China and a previous book, Lost Between Houses, were both nominated for Ontario’s Trillium Book Award. His novels have been praised by visionaries from William Burroughs to Northrop Frye, and in publications ranging from People magazine to the New York Times Book Review .

Gilmour worked for the Toronto International Film Festival before moving into a broadcasting career with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) where he served as the national film critic for country’s flagship news show, The Journal. He went on to host his own talk show on CBC’s Newsworld, Gilmour on the Arts, which won a Gemini Award. Gilmour’s 5,000-word memoir of reading Tolstoy (My Life with Tolstoy) appeared in last summer’s issue of the Walrus magazine (the Harper’s of Canada) to huge response and acclaim.

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