NONFICTION

Sleeping with Strangers: How the Movies Shaped Desire

Knopf. Feb. 2019. 368p. photos. index. ISBN 9781101946992. $28.95; ebk. ISBN 9781101947005. FILM
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Movies introduced the masses to the "voyeur delight" of exploring sexuality on screen from a safe distance, which allowed for many shades of sensuality and gender to find cinematic representation. Film historian Thomson (Moments That Made the Movies) specifically examines "feminine significance and power, macho confidence, and gay wit" in this context—a wide scope that includes recent films such as Call Me by Your Name and Phantom Thread but largely remains rooted in Thomson's ken of classic cinema. He ruminates on the sexual meanings of performers (Rock Hudson, Marlene Dietrich), directors (Alfred Hitchcock, George Cukor), and genres (male buddy Westerns) and whether all movies had a "gay air" that was suspicious of "America's approved romantic formulae." With a tone of academic remove, the book never gets salacious (though given its adult language and subject matter, it would earn a Hard R rating as a movie) or all that alluring, either.
VERDICT Cinephiles with critical eyes will get the most out of this exploration of "beauty on screen, desire in our heads, and the alchemy they make in the dark." [See Prepub Alert, 8/27/18.]
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