Featuring never-before-seen photos from the set and posters and other memorabilia from Rick Dalton’s career, an original, exclusive script for a Bounty Law episode by Quentin Tarantino titled “Incident at Inez” and a Mad Magazine parody of Bounty Law titled “Lousy Law: Loser’s Last Ride” Quentin Tarantino’s long-awaited first work of fiction—at once hilarious, delicious, and brutal—is the always surprising, sometimes shocking new novel based on his Academy Award- winning film. The sunlit studio back lots and the dark watering holes of Hollywood are the setting for this audacious, hilarious, disturbing novel about life in the movie colony, circa 1969. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood tells the story of washed-up actor Rick Dalton. Once Rick had his own television series, a famous western called Bounty Law. But “it ain’t been that time in a long time” and now Rick’s only regular parts are as the heavy, ready to be bested by whichever young “swingin’ dick” the networks want to make a new star out of come pilot season. When a talent agent approaches Rick about starring in Italian Westerns (“Eye-talian Westerns”?), it only ignites a new crisis of confidence for the perpetually insecure actor. And then there’s Rick’s stunt double, Cliff Booth, a war hero who killed more Japanese soldiers during the Second World War than any other American, and who never thought he’d make it back home. If Rick’s career has stalled, Cliff’s has flamed out. Already living under a cloud of suspicion after the strange death of his wife at sea, Cliff makes the mistake of picking the wrong fight on set, and is soon reduced to the status of Rick’s full-time gofer. Right next door to Rick’s still glamourous Benedict Canyon home (“the house that Bounty Law built”) some Hollywood dreams are coming true, and these dreams belong to Sharon Tate. Not only is she Mrs. Roman Polanski—married to the only true rock star director—but Sharon is fast becoming a star in her own right, living life on the upswing in a tough town. Only a few miles away, in the desert around Chatsworth, lives a different kind of dreamer. Charles Manson is an ex-con who has spellbound a group of hippie misfits living with him in squalor on an old “movie ranch.” Little do his young followers know to what degree Charlie himself is an industry striver, more desperate for Columbia Records and Tapes’s attentions than for the revolution he preaches. These indelible characters—and many more: an acting child prodigy beaming with hope; a booze-drenched former A-lister who’s lost it all—occupy a vanished world from not so long ago that is brought to brilliant life in these pages. Here is 1969, the music, the cars, the movies and TV shows. And here is Hollywood, both the fairy tale and the real thing, as given to us by a master storyteller who knows it like the back of his hand. Read more
Download NowMan I was let down. For QT's entire career I've been waiting for him to write prose, that is, something OTHER than screenplays because he's teased many times, the last time when Kill Bill came out, that he was going to transition one of his stories into prose form... But this book is written like a script (without the character names or the INT/EXT stuff of course)... For example, paraphrasing here: Instead of "Rick Dalton walked down the street" it's "Rick Dalton walks down the street" which is how scripts are written, for the moment you're in, the moment you are watching as a viewer what's going on on the screen, and that the writing is conveying for that very moment... which really isn't writing, but watching in written form... So the book just feels lazy, rushed. He even adds parts not in the film, like when Manson looks at Cliff when Cliff's on the roof. In the movie nothing happens between them and it's mysterious; in the book, Manson does what QT describes as his usual "Ooga Booga" dance... That is, QT, the author, doesn't describe Manson as a character/person in the book that we're learning about, but instead like someone from pop culture the reader should know about already... There are other changes, completely unnecessary... Rick doesn't meet the agent in the bar, but in his office, and a lot of other things just... well... In the case of Once Upon A Time in Hollywood, don't wait for the book... Rewatch the movie.
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