Profiles the independent motion picture writer, director, producer, and actor, featuring commentary from fellow actors and directors.
C
rab Monsters, Teenage Cavemen, and Candy Stripe Nurses is an outrageously rollicking account of the life and career of Roger Cormanone of the most prolific and successful independent producers, directors, and writers of all time, and self-proclaimed king of the B movie. As told by Corman himself and graduates of The Corman Film School, including Peter Bogdanovich, James Cameron, Francis Ford Coppola, Robert De Niro, and Martin Scorsese, this comprehensive oral history takes readers behind the scenes of more than six decades of American cinema, as now-legendary directors and actors candidly unspool recollections of working with Corman, continually one-upping one another with tales of the years before their big breaks.
Crab Monsters is supplemented with dozens of full-color reproductions of classic Corman movie posters; behind-the-scenes photographs and ephemera (many taken from Cormans personal archive); and critical essays on Cormans most daring filmsincluding
The Intruder,
Little Shop of Horrors, and
The Big Doll House that make the case for Corman as an artist like no other.
Praise for
Crab Monsters, Teenage Cavemen, and Candy Stripe Nurses: This new coffee table book, brimming with outrageous stills from many of Cormans hundreds of films, looks at the wild career of the starmaker who was largely responsible for so much of the Hollywood we know today.
New York PostVividly illustrated.
People An enthusiastic ode to colorful, seat-of-your-pants filmmaking, this ones hard to beat.
Booklist (starred review)
It includes in-depth aesthetic appreciations of ten of Cormans movies, which, taken together, make a compelling case for Corman as an artist. Hollywood.com
Author Nashawaty deftly describes how Cormans legacy is far more nuanced than most realize.
American Way magazine
Outrageously entertaining . . .
Parade magazine
Endlessly fascinating. PopMatters.com
Youd think itd be impossible for any writer to put together a Roger Corman biography that's anywhere near as fun as his movies, but
Entertainment Weekly writer/critic Chris Nashawaty has done just that.
Complex magazine