The bombs fall on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941 and Hollywood rolls up its sleeves and swaps the diplomatic velvet glove for the patriotic steel fist . . . A story well worth telling * * Observer * *
A captivating history . . . makes you want to revisit many of the films * * Daily Telegraph * *
Mark Harris conducts a fastidious investigation into the five top filmmakers who put their careers on hold to help the war effort . . . Fascinating * * Total Film * *
Harris deftly threads the story of each man into the wider canvases of Hollywood and the war * * Scotland on Sunday * *
Gripping . . . reveals how an elite squad of Hollywood's greatest directors recorded the bravest - and bloodiest - actions of World War II * * Mail on Sunday * *
Tough-minded, information-packed and irresistibly readable * * New York Times * *
Can't-put-it-down history of the World War II propaganda film * * San Francisco Chronicle * *
Harris has a huge story to tell, and he does so brilliantly . . . an inspirational, if cautionary, tale of the triumph of the individual over the collective, of personal vision over groupthink, and ultimately of art over propaganda * * Wall Street Journal * *
Harris is a lively commentator, and a master weaver of multifarious threads * * Empire * *
Impeccably researched and irresistibly entertaining * * Belfast Telegraph * *
Full of colourful anecdotes about the golden age of Hollywood as well as unflinching descriptions of what the directors faced on the frontline, the 500-plus pages just fly by. This would make a great movie... * * Aberdeen Evening Express * *
This is as epic an undertaking as those historical Hollywood sagas of the '30s and '40s, including anecdotes from this golden age of film * * Good Book Guide * *
I enjoyed the honesty of this book. It opened my eyes * * The Truth About Lies * *
A startling account of how five exemplary film-makers (John Ford, George Stevens, John Huston, William Wyler, Frank Capra) enlisted in every branch of the US forces, only to return, deeply moved and changed, to approach cinema in new ways * * Financial Times * *