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This Is No Dream

Making Rosemary's Baby

by James Munn

Type
Stories
Subject
One FilmRosemary's Baby
Keywords
Roman Polanski, film making
Publishing date
2018
Publisher
Reel Art Press
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Hardcover • 207 pages
9 ¼ x 11 inches (23.5 x 28 cm)
ISBN
978-1-909526-58-7
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Book Presentation:
The birthing of Rosemary's Baby: behind the scenes, 50 years on

This Is No Dream: Making Rosemary’s Baby is a definitive, illustrated history of Roman Polanski’s great 1968 film, from director and casting choices to the kudos and condemnation it received upon its release. During its making, Polanski fell seriously behind schedule and was almost fired; star Mia Farrow faced an ultimatum―career or marriage―from husband Frank Sinatra; and actor John Cassavetes nearly came to blows with his genius director. Photographer Bob Willoughby―a veteran special set photographer who shot for such movies as Ocean’s 11 (1960), Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) and The Graduate (1967)―captured it all, along with other studio photographers.

The story begins with author Ira Levin, who was struck with the idea that “a fetus could be an effective horror if the reader knew it was growing into something malignly different from the baby expected.” He set his story in present-day Manhattan, he made the mother-to-be a young woman who had just moved into a mysterious apartment building with her actor husband and he had the baby’s father just happen to be the devil incarnate. And with that, Rosemary’s Baby was born. For most of 1967, Levin’s novel rested comfortably in the top ten of the New York Times bestseller list. It was practically a given that a movie version would be made and, by August 1967, cameras were ready to roll. On June 12, 1968, Rosemary’s Baby hit American theaters.

This book, commemorating the 50th anniversary of this landmark picture, features Bob Willoughby’s work, with many of his behind-the-scenes images presented here for the first time.

Press Reviews:
In a genre best known for its gruesome and grisly tropes, Rosemary’s Baby made the realm of the supernatural all too plausible in a delectable mixture of the mystical and the mundane. -- Miss Rosen ― AnOther

From the start, people sensed that there was something real and unreal about the movie. It did not feel or seem like other horror flicks. It was beautiful, languid, a fever dream you suspect is really happening, like Hitchcock on LSD. -- Rich Cohen ― WSJ

An insightful study of the film. -- Laura Jacobs ― Vanity Fair

Provides a fascinating look at the inspired choices ― and lucky breaks ― that made the film iconic. -- Lisa Zeidner ― Washington Post

On the film’s 50th anniversary,this study and the unseen behind-the-scenes saga is almost as unsettling as the movie itself. ― Globe and Mail

See the publisher website: Reel Art Press

See Rosemary's Baby (1968) on IMDB ...

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