Ready for My Closeup: The Making of Sunset Boulevard and the Dark Side of the Hollywood Dream

During the 75th-anniversary year of what Billy Wilder called "the swimming pool story" during its development, Ready for My Closeup: The Making of Sunset Boulevard and the Dark Side of the Hollywood Dream by David M. Lubin offers a lovingly detailed look at the production of the classic film.

Lubin, professor of art at Wake Forest University and former writer for Rolling Stone, begins with writer-director Billy Wilder's youth and coming-of-age in Vienna during the heyday of silent movies. He presents a thorough yet chattily accessible history of the people involved in Sunset Boulevard and how they came together in a film that dances on the line between reality and fiction. Recounting how Gloria Swanson had gone from silent-film "it" girl to low-budget talk-show host, how William Holden's failure to break out of handsome but bland secondary roles fostered in him a sense of desperation, and how Erich von Stroheim's directing career abruptly ended after his sole collaboration with Swanson, Lubin sets forth a clear case for how these actors portrayed funhouse-mirror versions of themselves to create an incisive Hollywood satire. Lubin's examinations of film conventions found in crime thrillers and screwball comedies also illustrate how Wilder played with genres and maintained suspense in a movie that depicted its narrator as dead in its first scene.

Aficionados of movie classics and those intrigued by storytelling will enjoy peeling back the layers of one of the great films of its era. --Kristen Allen-Vogel, information services librarian at Dayton Metro Library

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