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Earthbound : David Bowie and the Man Who Fell to Earth, Paperback by Compo, S...

$ 9.04

  • Author: Susan Compo
  • Book Title: Earthbound : David Bowie and the Man Who Fell to Earth
  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Genre: Music, Biography & Autobiography
  • ISBN: 9781911036258
  • Item Height: 0.8 in
  • Item Length: 8.5 in
  • Item Weight: 19.8 Oz
  • Item Width: 6 in
  • Language: English
  • Number of Pages: 272 Pages
  • Publication Year: 2017
  • Publisher: Outline Press, The Limited
  • Topic: Entertainment & Performing Arts, Individual Composer & Musician
  • gtin13: 9781911036258

Description

Earthbound : David Bowie and the Man Who Fell to Earth, Paperback by Compo, Susan, ISBN 1911036254, ISBN-13 9781911036258, Brand New, Free shipping in the US 'Before there was Star Wars ... before there was Close Encounters ... there was The Man Who Fell To Earth.' - advertising tag line for 1981 reissue of the film. Earthbound is the first book-length exploration of a true classic of twentieth-century science-fiction cinema, shot under the heavy, ethereal skies of New Mexico by the legendary British director Nicolas Roeg and starring David Bowie in a role he seemed born for as an extraterrestrial named Thomas Newton who comes to Earth in search of water. Based on a novel by the highly regarded American writer Walter Tevis, this dreamy, distressing, and visionary film resonates even more strongly in the twenty-first century than it did on its original release during the year of the US Bicentennial. Drawing on extensive research and exclusive first-hand interviews with members of the cast and crew, Earthbound begins with a look at Tevis's 1963 novel before moving into a detailed analysis of a film described by its director as 'a sci-fi film without a lot of sci-fi tools' and starring a group of actors - Bowie, Buck Henry, Candy Clark, Rip Torn - later described by one of them (Henry) as 'not a cast but a dinner party.' It also seeks to uncover the mysteries surrounding Bowie's rejected soundtrack to the film (elements of which later ended up his groundbreaking 1977 album Low) and closes with a look at his return to the themes and characters of The Man Who Fell To Earth in one of his final works, the acclaimed musical production Lazarus.