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HITS, FLOPS, AND OTHER ILLUSIONS by Ed Zwick

HITS, FLOPS, AND OTHER ILLUSIONS

My Fortysomething Years in Hollywood

by Ed Zwick

Pub Date: Feb. 13th, 2024
ISBN: 9781668046999
Publisher: Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster

An accomplished director, screenwriter, and producer recalls some behind-the-scenes drama.

After creating the hit 1980s TV show thirtysomething, Zwick directed a pre-superstar Denzel Washington in Glory, produced the Oscar-winning Shakespeare in Love, and was trusted with big-budget vehicles for Leonardo DiCaprio (Blood Diamond) and Tom Cruise (The Last Samurai). In this avuncular memoir, he recalls which parts of that success were stumbled upon or hard-fought, telling a few tales about his colleagues and himself. In 1982, he writes, thirtysomething came after spending “four years writing scripts no one wanted to make and directing TV that wasn’t worth seeing.” Shakespeare in Love spent years in production (Julia Roberts was originally slated for Gwyneth Paltrow’s role) and was nearly sunk by the volcanic fury of Harvey Weinstein, who tried to undercut Zwick’s production role. Glory was quite nearly undermined by star Matthew Broderick’s domineering mother. None of the dish Zwick delivers is very spicy or surprising—DiCaprio likes women, Cruise is intense, Brad Pitt has an ego, Shia LaBeouf is mercurial—but it explains how easily personality clashes can derail a project and how a good director manages the difficult dance between art and commerce in an industry overflowing with narcissists. Getting sidetracked is simply part of the job: The author estimates that he took on “as many projects that died in utero as those that thrived and made it into the theaters.” Zwick keeps his own ego out of the narrative—he even downplays his yearslong struggle with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma—and chapters close with lists of advice for young filmmakers, which mostly boil down to “keep your ego in check,” “expect the unexpected,” and “Hollywood isn’t fair.” Throughout his career, Zwick has kept his sense of humor; regarding comedy, “no movie can be funny enough.”

A good-natured memoir of 1990s and 2000s show-running and filmmaking.