cover image America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry

America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry

Daniel Eagan. Continuum, $39.95 (818pp) ISBN 978-0-8264-2977-3

The great, the historic, and the lousy (but, alas, influential) all find their place in this engrossing survey of titles selected by the Library of Congress's National Film Registry. Eagan (HBO's Guide to Movies on Videocassette and Cable TV) chronologically catalogues 500 Registry films, from 1893's 30-second Blacksmithing Scene to 1995's Fargo, jumbling Hollywood classics together with obscure art films, cartoon shorts, documentaries, industrial and student films, newsreel footage from the Hindenburg disaster and the Zapruder film. Each entry includes complete cast and credits lists and an engaging one- to two-page historical and interpretive essay. These are packed with biographical thumbnails of actors and directors and making-of narratives-from screenplay rewrites to on-set feuds and hysterics to final-cut showdowns-that buffs and scholars will delight in. Eagan dutifully assesses the artistic merits of each film (yes, even Animal House) in critiques that abound in pithy and sometimes contrarian opinions: he rates Clint Eastwood rather higher than either Orson Welles (Citizen Kane is, merely, ""a delightful stunt with the appeal of an eager puppy"") or the ""glib, cruel"" Robert Altman. The result is an erudite, perceptive, always entertaining cinematic encyclopedia. Photos.