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Everyone wants to be found.
BILL MURRAY SCARLETT JOHANSSON
Lost In Translation15
The new film written and directed by Sofia Coppola
FOCUSFEATURESPRESENTSANAMERICANZOETROPE/ELEMENTALFILMSPRODUCTION ‘LOSTINTRANSLATION’
PRODUCER DESIGNER BILLMURRAYSCARLETTJOHANSSONGIOVANNIRIBISIANNAFARISFUMIHIROHAYASHI MUSICBRIANREITZELLCOSTUMENANCYSTEINER
PRODUCTIONANNEROSSK.K.BARRETTEDITORSARAHFLACK DIRECTOROFLANCEACORD LINECALLUMGREENEASSOCIATEMITCHGLAZER DESIGNERS PHOTOGRAPHY PRODUCER PRODUCER
EXECUTIVE FRANCISFORDCOPPOLA FREDROOS PRODUCED ROSSKATZ SOFIACOPPOLA WRITTENAND SOFIACOPPOLA PRODUCERS BY DIRECTEDBY
www.lost-in-translation.com
SOUNDTRACK AVAILABLE ON
ALSO AVAILABLE:
Death By Hollywood
By Steven Bochco (Bloomsbury, £12.99)
Perhaps
the
biggest
surprise
about this
trademark
witty and
showbiz
savvy account of
sex, murder and screenwriting is that it’s only BAFTA Fellow Bochco’s first novel.
Starring Michael Caine
By Michael Bishop (Reynolds & Hearn, £15.99)
The good, the bad and the downright ugly in this A-Z of Sir Michael’s 100 films to date which also reminds us he made 16 of them before becoming a star with Zulu in 1964.
Moving Pictures: Memories of a Hollywood Prince
By Budd Schulberg
(Rowan & Littlefield, £14.95)
Re-issue of the 1981 autobiog- raphy by the author of What Makes Sammy Run and On The Waterfront relates great tales of Hollywood’s Golden Age and beyond.
Location London
By Mark Adams (New Holland, £12.99)
Studded with stills, maps and handy graphics, this nifty little handbook will help
perk up any stroll in the Smoke for the unwary cinemagoer.
Tough Acts
By Steven Berkoff (Robson, £16.95)
Brief encounters with, among others, Al Pacino, Sylvester Stallone, Eddie Murphy and Joan Collins in this often wickedly funny series of essays by the multi- talented author.
Drew Barrymore
By Lucy Ellis & Bryony Sutherland (Aurum, £16.99)
N
several lifetimes since her E.T. splash aged six. Love, pain and the whole damn thing are charted here.
Ball Of Fire:
The Tumultuous Life & Comic Ar t of Lucille Ball By Stefan Kanfer (Faber, £17.99)
A
Lucy and The Lucy Show, as
told in this periodically fascinating biography.
Cinema’s Strangest Moments: Extraordinary But True Tales From The History of Film
By Quentin Falk (Robson, £8.99)
J
cheerful collection of the Strange-But-True across more than a century of film-making.
Richard Harris: Sex, Death & The Movies
By Michael Feeney Callan (Robson, £16.95)
W
Dumbledore from the first two Harry Potter films, here we learn pretty much the whole truth about the legendary hellraiser.
Richard Attenborough
By David Robinson (bfi, £5)
T
content than the execution,” remarked an American critic of the BAFTA’s President’s directing skills. “Almost without exception that is true, I’m glad to say”, acknowledges the good Lord in this softback biography updated for his recent 80th birthday.
Julie Walters: Seriously Funny
By Lucy Ellis & Bryony Sutherland (Virgin, £18.99)
W
ot yet 30 the heiress of a famous Hollywood name
seems to have lived
flop in films, red-haired Ball became the biggest star
on American TV in I Love
ournalistic integrity forbids anything more than mere
mention of this cheap and
hile the young probably know him only as crusty-
but-benign Prof.
he problem with Attenborough’s work is that he is more interested in the
orkmanlike survey takes us from national treasure Julie’s very humble begin-
nings in Birmingham right up to her latest triumph kit-off in Calendar Girls and as Harry Potter’s Mrs Weasley.
30

