Slant: Fritz Lang
In 1997, St. Martin's Griffin Press published Fritz Lang: The Nature of the Beast to widespread critical acclaim. Now, after several years of remaining out of print, the University of Minnesota Press has released a beautiful new paperback edition of the biography which Stanley Kauffmann called a "permanent resource" upon its initial release. Indeed, Patrick McGilligan's nearly 500-page treatment of the elusive, demonstrative German director seemingly spares no detail, chronicling Lang's entire life with a precision that transcends merely ticking off facts in chronological fashion and, more interestingly, revels in the director's off-screen faults just as frequently as he applauds the on-screen brilliance. Such jarring juxtaposition is epitomized by the books epigraph, spoken by Lang himself: "My private life has nothing to do with my films." McGilligan looks to test this claim throughout, detailing the life of a man dedicated to artistic integrity and meticulous detail while working, yet also capable of rampant adultery, giving numerous tongue-lashings to cast and crew, and, even, murder.
By: Clayton Dillard
Story Date: 2013-11-07T04:56:00+00:00