Girl on film : a graphic novel memoir /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Castellucci, Cecil, 1969- author.
Imprint:Los Angeles, California : Archaia, [2019]
©2019
Description:1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 23 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11967822
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Leta, Vicky, artist.
Duffy, Melissa, artist.
Gagnon, V., artist.
Berg, Jon (Cartoonist), artist.
Quigley, Kieran, illustrator.
Lafuente, Joana, illustrator.
Fiorentino, Mike, letterer.
ISBN:9781684154531
1684154537
Summary:One thing young Cecil was sure of from the minute she saw Star Wars was that she was going to be some kind of artiste. Probably a filmmaker. Possibly Steven Spielberg. Then, in 1980, the movie Fame came out. Cecil wasn't allowed to see that movie. It was rated R, and she was ten. But she did watch the television show and would pretend with her friends that she was going to that school. Of course they were playing. She was not. She was destined to be an art school kid. Chronicling the life of award-winning young adult novelist and Eisner-nominated comics scribe Cecil Castellucci, with art by some of the most original illustrators in comics, Vicky Leta, Jon Berg, V. Gagnon, and Melissa Duffy taking on different era of her life, Girl On Film follows a passionate aspiring artist from a young age through adulthood to deeply examine the arduous pursuit of storytelling, while exploring the act of memory and how it recalls and reshapes what we think we truly know about ourselves.
Review by Booklist Review

Castelucci is perhaps best known for being a writer, but, as a teenager, she was obsessed with being a film director, and this graphic memoir chronicles her passion for film and her ultimate failure to turn it into a career. Attending performance-arts high school in New York in the 1980s, Castelucci was surrounded by fame, and there's a jaw-dropping number of cameo appearances (Cher! Andy Warhol! Christian Slater!) as a result. Occasionally she interrupts the account of her youth with ruminations in a different visual style on the nature of memory and the often-slippery project of writing a memoir, which both throws her memory of events into question and bolsters the importance of those memories, adding surprising weight to the work overall. The heart of this chronicle of growth, illustrated by a team of artists in a fittingly chameleonic style, nicely captures the vicissitudes of passion and drive; and the ultimate message that failure to achieve a youthful dream isn't a disaster is a comforting one. A lively, artfully told, and thoughtful memoir.--Sarah Hunter Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A noted YA author reflects on her path to creative fulfillment. Ever since seeing Star Wars in 1977, Cici felt destined to become a filmmaker--not just an artist, but an artiste. And after stumbling into an informal dance mentorship with Jacques d'Amboise, she felt her artistic world opening wide. She continued moving closer to her dream, attending NYU's film program until her parents' tuition help ran dry and she had to move home to Montreal. Feeling lost, she then left for Paris, where she took acting lessons. Back in Montreal, Cici joined a punk band, worked on her filmmaking, and discovered comics, pointing her toward future success. Any obstacles she encounters fail to create long-lasting tension on the page; whether being the quirky sidekick to her friends' star power, lacking the technical film skills to execute her directorial visions, or recounting her high school sexual assault, Castellucci's narrative rarely pauses to sink into the emotional beats. Interludes of contemporary Cecil dialoguing with her scientist father about the nature of memory repeatedly break the narrative flow. Four different illustrators represent different moments of her life; of them, Gagnon's art bursts with the most energy. The intended audience is a bit hazy: Some things are given historical context that seems intended for teens, while many other references--although not vital to following the overall story--are dropped in without context. A solid memoir of a young artist. (Graphic memoir. 14-adult) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review


Review by Kirkus Book Review