Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

The Film Club

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Country
  
Canada

Publication date
  
September 2007

ISBN
  
978-0-88762-285-4

Author
  
David Gilmour

OCLC
  
141842386

3.2/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Pages
  
264 pages

Originally published
  
September 2007

Genre
  
Non-fiction

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Publisher
  
Thomas Allen Publishers

David Gilmour books
  
A Perfect Night to Go to China, Lost Between Houses, Back on Tuesday, An Affair With The Moon

The film club


The Film Club is a non-fiction book by Canadian writer David Gilmour. It is a memoir of himself letting his teenage son (Jesse Gilmour) drop out of high school under the stipulation that he must watch three films a week. It was first published by Thomas Allen Publishers in September 2007.

Contents

Plot

David Gilmour allowed his 15-year-old son Jesse to stop going to school without getting a job under the condition that they watch three films each week together. They go by their film schedule for three years while discussing them with each other. During this time, Jesse has trouble with the influence of drugs and his girlfriend. By the book's completion, Gilmour works harder and Jesse tries to live successfully.

Films

The films that David Gilmour watches with his son includes Citizen Kane, Showgirls, Pulp Fiction, Last Tango in Paris, The 400 Blows, Ran, Singin' in the Rain, The Exorcist and Basic Instinct. Gilmour's rationale for the varied film genres is that it gives his son some education.

Release

The Film Club has been translated into 24 languages. The memoir sold well in Germany, Brazil, and Canada. The book's popularity helped him become Pelham Edgar Visiting Professor of Literary Studies at the University of Toronto. He has said that if he would send his best work to Mars, it would The Perfect Order of Things.

Reception

Gregory Kirschling of Entertainment Weekly gave the book an A-, saying "Gilmour's a clear, breezy writer, and his book's got a lot of heart; ultimately, it becomes subtly affecting." Pat Saperstein of Variety said that Gilmour's idea is "a fascinating experiment – especially for parents of teens going through similar struggles – and mostly engaging, albeit a tad self-involved". Heather Harris of Metro Times said that the memoir has many strengths in relation to family.

References

The Film Club Wikipedia