EBOOK

Cinematic Immunity
An Oral History of New York Filmmaking As Told by the Crews that Got the Shot
Michael Lee Nirenberg(0)
About
The unbelievable insider stories of how they 'got the shot'!
Cinematic Immunity tells the story of New York City's movie industry from the crew members who created the sets, lit the scenes, and shot the film. Focused on the golden age (1950-1990) of New York filmmaking, Cinematic Immunity covers On the Waterfront through The Sopranos.
The East Coast film industry, thousands of miles from the Los Angeles executives, existed by its own rules and with little oversight. It was a close-knit and freewheeling community of movie technicians that took on the most outrageous challenges to get every shot perfect. Behind-the-scenes documentaries and books feature "above the line" talent-actors, producers, directors, and writers. For the first time, readers will hear the unvarnished truth of the New York movie industry-tales about union politics, labor strikes, movie families, dangerous locations, difficult shots, volatile directors, anecdotes about actors, pranks, friendships, rivalries, generational shifts, substance use and abuse, technical feats, and more.
Readers will hear never heard before stories about classic (and not so classic) films and television shows including: Midnight Cowboy, The Warriors, The French Connection, The Exorcist, The Godfather, The Wiz, The Taking of Pelham 123, Annie Hall, Cruising, Do The Right Thing, When Harry Met Sally, Home Alone 2, The Sopranos, and Law and Order.
Expect to discover secrets about how your favorite scenes were shot and the outrageous characters with outsized talents whose personalities sometimes dwarfed actors and directors. Tales of their exploits, what they saw (and did) on these sets was previously only passed among themselves as showbiz lore but now, readers learn of Marlon Brando's pranks on the set of The Godfather, how crews kept William Friedkin from killing them, the actors, and himself, and how consummate New Yorker Sidney Lumet was the angel to Friedkin's demons.
Author Michael Lee Nirenberg has worked as a scenic artist in New York since 2006, and in many cases, alongside many of the people featured in the book. This book is a labor of love comprised of over 150 interviews and hundreds of hours of recordings. Cinematic Immunity includes hundreds of behind-the-scenes images from studio archives and from the technicians who were there.
"Cinematic Immunity chronicles the wild behind
the scenes tales from the legendary films made in dirty old New York… but told
from an entirely new perspective. Not the usual stars, directors and
publicists but from the people who did all the work and can actually tell the
truth - the below the line crews who know where all the bodies are
buried! Fascinating, funny and impossible to put down." - Larry
Karaszewski, Academy Award winning screenwriter, Ed Wood, Dolemite,
Big Eyes.
"Michael Nirenberg's writing about film is as funny, incisive, gritty, and thrilling as the films whose lore he is diving into. He knows where to get the real scoop, the stories too good to be true, and gives them to us with all the wit, wisdom, and insanity we could hope for." Lena Dunham
"Cinematic Immunity addresses filmmaking and all the
resulting lore borne out of it in a book that flips our perception of who
cinema's true "insiders" actually are. Excavating a secret history of the last
50 years in movies via interviews with the crews that made them, Nirenberg
presents a book that is riotously fun, full of gossip, and worthy of any
world-class cinema studies program." Alissa Bennett, Writer and Director of the Gladstone
Gallery
"They tell some great stories. The appearance of
light-weight Arriflex cameras having made location shooting
possible, these NY crews were thrown into diabolically dirty and dangerous
and polluted locations where no film was ever shot before... A film could
not be shot that way today. It shouldn't. And yet Pelham 123 remains a
very good film." - Alex Cox, director, Repo Man,
Cinematic Immunity tells the story of New York City's movie industry from the crew members who created the sets, lit the scenes, and shot the film. Focused on the golden age (1950-1990) of New York filmmaking, Cinematic Immunity covers On the Waterfront through The Sopranos.
The East Coast film industry, thousands of miles from the Los Angeles executives, existed by its own rules and with little oversight. It was a close-knit and freewheeling community of movie technicians that took on the most outrageous challenges to get every shot perfect. Behind-the-scenes documentaries and books feature "above the line" talent-actors, producers, directors, and writers. For the first time, readers will hear the unvarnished truth of the New York movie industry-tales about union politics, labor strikes, movie families, dangerous locations, difficult shots, volatile directors, anecdotes about actors, pranks, friendships, rivalries, generational shifts, substance use and abuse, technical feats, and more.
Readers will hear never heard before stories about classic (and not so classic) films and television shows including: Midnight Cowboy, The Warriors, The French Connection, The Exorcist, The Godfather, The Wiz, The Taking of Pelham 123, Annie Hall, Cruising, Do The Right Thing, When Harry Met Sally, Home Alone 2, The Sopranos, and Law and Order.
Expect to discover secrets about how your favorite scenes were shot and the outrageous characters with outsized talents whose personalities sometimes dwarfed actors and directors. Tales of their exploits, what they saw (and did) on these sets was previously only passed among themselves as showbiz lore but now, readers learn of Marlon Brando's pranks on the set of The Godfather, how crews kept William Friedkin from killing them, the actors, and himself, and how consummate New Yorker Sidney Lumet was the angel to Friedkin's demons.
Author Michael Lee Nirenberg has worked as a scenic artist in New York since 2006, and in many cases, alongside many of the people featured in the book. This book is a labor of love comprised of over 150 interviews and hundreds of hours of recordings. Cinematic Immunity includes hundreds of behind-the-scenes images from studio archives and from the technicians who were there.
"Cinematic Immunity chronicles the wild behind
the scenes tales from the legendary films made in dirty old New York… but told
from an entirely new perspective. Not the usual stars, directors and
publicists but from the people who did all the work and can actually tell the
truth - the below the line crews who know where all the bodies are
buried! Fascinating, funny and impossible to put down." - Larry
Karaszewski, Academy Award winning screenwriter, Ed Wood, Dolemite,
Big Eyes.
"Michael Nirenberg's writing about film is as funny, incisive, gritty, and thrilling as the films whose lore he is diving into. He knows where to get the real scoop, the stories too good to be true, and gives them to us with all the wit, wisdom, and insanity we could hope for." Lena Dunham
"Cinematic Immunity addresses filmmaking and all the
resulting lore borne out of it in a book that flips our perception of who
cinema's true "insiders" actually are. Excavating a secret history of the last
50 years in movies via interviews with the crews that made them, Nirenberg
presents a book that is riotously fun, full of gossip, and worthy of any
world-class cinema studies program." Alissa Bennett, Writer and Director of the Gladstone
Gallery
"They tell some great stories. The appearance of
light-weight Arriflex cameras having made location shooting
possible, these NY crews were thrown into diabolically dirty and dangerous
and polluted locations where no film was ever shot before... A film could
not be shot that way today. It shouldn't. And yet Pelham 123 remains a
very good film." - Alex Cox, director, Repo Man,