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Odd Man Out
A Memoir of the Holllywood Ten
1st Edition
Edward Dmytryk
$19.95
Paper
0-8093-1999-3
978-0-8093-1999-2
224 pages, 6 x 9, 16 Illus.
3/20/1996

About the Book

In 1947, the House Un-American Activities Committee rudely interrupted the successful career and life of Edward Dmytryk, citing him with contempt of Congress. As a result, Dmytryk was fired by RKO and spent three years in England before returning to the United States to serve a six-month jail sentence and undergo a second round of hearings, during which he recanted and provided evidence against several of his former colleagues.

In this personal and perceptive book, Dmytryk sharply chronicles the history of a particularly turbulent era in American political life while examining his own life before and after the events universally called the witch hunts. He details his brief membership in the Communist Party of America, explaining his initial commitment to what he perceived as communist ideals of civil liberties, economic justice, and antifacism, followed by his eventual disillusionment with the party as it betrayed those ideals. He goes on to provide a fair assessment of what then happened to him and the effect it had on the rest of his life.

Dmytryk describes the activities, prejudices, and personal behaviors of all the parties enmeshed in the congressional hearings on communism in Hollywood. His reactions to other members of the Hollywood Ten and his recollection of conversations with them lend his book an immediacy that is not only informative but also absorbing. Most importantly, he does not uphold an ideology but rather presents the events as he perceived them, understood them, and responded to them. Dmytryk’s account is characterized by an openness born of a mature awareness of personal trial as history.


Authors/Editors

Edward Dmytryk was the driving force behind some of Hollywood’s greatest films, especially in the film-noir genre. Dmytryk’s work on Crossfire (1947) earned him a nomination for an Academy Award for Best Director. He is also known for such films as Murder, My Sweet (1945), The Caine Mutiny (1954), Raintree County (1957), The Young Lions (1958), and A Walk on the Wild Side (1962). Both Crossfire and The Caine Mutiny were nominated for Academy Awards as Best Picture.


Reviews

“Despite the usual tendency to lump the Hollywood Ten into one amorphous bluster, film director Dmytryk’s compelling memoir vividly particularizes his experi­ence as a member of that group… Some will insist he cynically exploited others to get off the blacklist, but Dmytryk’s forceful explanation of his controversial de­cision to name names is convincing.”—Choice


“This is a book written from the inside of a political hurricane made up of compromises and deceit in which the author, despite his idealistic impulses, managed to find himself. Dmytryk’s effort to fight his way out of blacklisting and back to active participation in the world of film-making is dramatically but appropriately presented.”—Michael Bliss, author of What Goes Around Comes Around: The Films of Jonathan Demme and Justified Lives: Morality and Narrative in the Films of Sam Peckinpah


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