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Shadow

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Shadow : Sunset Blvd. - SYNOPSIS - Joe Gillis is an out and down screenwriter who cannot pay his bills. He stumbles there, presuming it to be uninhabited while concealing his automobile from a finance company. He discovers that it is movie queen Norma Desmond, who's lost in her dreams of glory's house. Manager Max von Mayerling and her servant helps conserve her illusions. Desperate for money, Gillis agrees to perform on the screenplay for her comeback car that is presumed and finds himself becoming a man to the film star. With the idealistic studio script writer Betty Schaefer, who enjoys one of his endeavors he meets on the sly, and the two fall in love.

Norma Desmond grows jealous and suspicious, setting the stage for a confrontation. Director: Billy Wilder - Producer: Charles Brackett - Screenplay: Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder along with D.M. Marshman, Jr. Based A Can of Beans by Wilder and Brackett - Cinematography: John F. Seitz - Editing: Arthur Schmidt - Art Direction: Hans Dreier along with John Meehan - Music: Franz Waxman - Cast: William Holden, Gloria Swanson, Erich von Stroheim, Nancy Olson, Fred Clark, Lloyd Gough, Jack Webb, Cecil B. DeMille, Hedda Hopper, Buster Keaton, Anna Q. Nilsson, H.B. Warner, Ray Evans, Jay Livingston - BW-110 m. Why SUNSET BLVD is Essential - Frequently hailed as the definitive insider portrait of Hollywood, Sunset Blvd was among the first serious treatment of life In Hollywood, coming at a time when most films about films were irony free comedies and musicals.

The image exposes the film capitol at its worst as a world of fleeting fame where almost everyone is on the hustle for success, cash and sex. As such, it was a key influence on such movies as The Bad along with the Beautiful, The Star and The Barefoot Contessa. A major step in Hollywood realism, Sunset Blvd shocked audiences in 1950 with his portrait of an aging, rich woman purchasing a younger man's company. That it got such subject matter past the industry's self censor, the Production Code Administration, is a tribute to Billy Wilder's ability as a screenwriter and manager and Charles Brackett's production expertise.

Sunset Blvd was the final collaboration because of author writer Brackett And author manager Wilder, the longest writing collaboration in Hollywood history. Their previous films together included Double Indemnity and The Lost Weekend, Which Wilder also led, and Ninotchka. This was the last major Hollywood movie shot on a nitrate negative. The process was finally abandoned since the film was extremely flammable, however it produced amazingly lustrous white and black images. The role of Joe Gillis changed William Holden's picture from a conventional protagonist man to an actor of incredible power along with range, revealing a dark, cynical side. #photography #iphoneonly #art #artistsoninstagram #blackwhite #shadow