For some reason, the world of rare books seems less
appealing to film and TV producers than it does to crime or thriller writers.
However, there are a handful of examples where rare or antiquarian books
feature prominently on the small screen and in movies. Here are seven that
immediately come to mind.
1) The Big Sleep (1946).
Directed by Howard Hawks, starring Humphrey Bogart.
In the film Philip Marlowe enters Geiger’s rare bookstore
and asks to see certain books with ‘points ‘. This is clearly a wind-up, as
Marlowe rightly suspects that the store is a front for an illegal operation.
Incidentally, what happened to this term, beloved of the rare book world in the
twenties and thirties? It seems to have died out completely.
2) The Ninth Gate (1999).
Written and directed by Roman Polanski, starring Johnny Depp.
Probably the best known example of a film in which a rare
book plays a central role. Depp is the bookseller who is asked by a client to authenticate
his copy of The Ninth gate of the Kingdom of Shadows, a seventeenth century treatise on devil worship, of
which only two other copies are known, one of which may have been written by Satan
himself. The book in question is fictional, but is based on the Hypnerotomachia
Poliphili (1499), whose woodcut
illustrations are cryptic instructions. We are given glimpses of pages from the book, which looks
little like any seventeenth century book that I’ve ever seen. Best thing in the
film is the art direction, especially the higgeledy-piggledy interior of the
bookshop.
3) Casting the Runes,
BBC TV drama based on the short story by M. R. James.
By far the most convincing TV drama involving rare books. A
scholar wishes to borrow an exceedingly rare work from an ancient academic
library, but finds that a mysterious stranger wants to do the same. The rest of
the story shows why this book is so important to both men. James is a brilliant
plotter and the spooky atmosphere of the library is wonderfully conveyed.
4) The Name of the Rose
(1986).Directed by Jean-Jacques Arnaud from the novel by Umberto Eco. Stars Sean
Connery, Christian Slater, and Ron Perlman.
Visually a terrific film, thanks to brilliant art direction that includes a sublimely romantic landscape setting (
presumably somewhere in northern Italy or the Balkans) and a library whose shelves
are crammed with incredibly
ancient-looking tomes. The library, which looks as if it was designed by Escher
from an idea by M. R. James, always reminds me of one of those amazing ancient
European libraries featured in that excellent tome Great Libraries of the
World. All the books look so scrumptious that
the fire which breaks out must bring out archivists and rare book librarians in
a cold sweat. The plot has holes.
How is it that in the midst of an inferno Sean Connery is able to make
such a rapid choice of which books to rescue? I also find it hard to believe
that there exists a poison so virulent that a scintilla deposited in the mouth
through page-turning could accumulate in the body without its taste (most
poisons are very bitter) being noticed by the illuminators in the scriptorium. Most
poisons of this potency need to be injected.
5) Black Books (
2000-2004).Channel 4, starring Dylan Moran,
Tamsin Grieg, and Bill Bailey.
It must be the only British sitcom to be set in a
second-hand bookshop. I don’t know how much background research the
scriptwriters undertook, but they seem to have concocted a very believable
owner from characteristics shared by a random selection of the most rebarbative
book dealers in the UK, several of whom may have been those encountered by
Driffield and myself. Bernard Black has a sharp and indeed withering wit, which
most dealers don’t necessarily show to their customers, unless you count barely
audible grunts as wit. Although the exterior shots use Collinge and Clark’s
premises in Bloomsbury, rumour has it that some aspects of Bernard Black’s
personality are based on various bookshop characters - Eric Barton, Thoreau Books, possibly Charing Cross Road shops.
6) Happy-go Lucky (2008).
Directed by Mike Leigh, starring Sally Hawkins.
One of the funnier scenes set in a bookshop sees the
delicious Sally Hawkins gamely engaged in the thankless task of engaging a
monosyllabic assistant in conversation, but failing miserably. Happily, being
cheerfully disposed, the lovely Sally won’t give up her mission to cheer people
up, although sadly she is doomed to failure.
7). Midsomer Murders,
ITV.
As far as I know only one episode of this popular TV series
concerns the criminal activities of a rare book dealer, but I may be wrong. Clearly,
the scriptwriter doesn’t want viewers to learn how little he knows about
bookshops, book dealers or antiquarian books generally, because the workings of
the book trade plays only a peripheral part in the screenplay.
Note. Have you noticed that when someone in a period
drama is seen reading or handing over a book that has been recently published
(say, a copy of his or her novel or poems) the volume is invariably bound in
leather, rather than in paper-covered boards, or even cloth; or if it is a book
of spells it is invariably jewel-encrusted or bound in a very new-looking or
brightly coloured leather. Could some props person explain why this is so? [R.M. Healey]
Many thanks Robin. Second hand books tend to turn more on TV - there was even a Lewis with a sort of occult bookshop run by the actor who used to play Trigger. Recently there was a slightly suspect man with a lawyer wife who sold second hand books on the internet and the copper (Vera?) seemed surprised that this was a viable business. Our own area Charing Cross Road features in the gay 60s noir Victim where a shop in Cecil Court is used for drop offs. Brilliant film with Dirk Bogarde. Some scenes in the cult Hanif Kureishi movie Sammy and Rosie Get Laid (Stephen Frears) were shot in our old Hammersmith shop.
I'm reminded of a 1985 episode of Cheers I somehow caught as an impoverished student (w/o a television) in which Sam lends Diane $500 to purchase a signed first edition of The Sun Also Rises. Though I wasn't then much of a collector - again, impoverished - I thought the price a wild fantasy. We do see the book - which Sam accidentally destroys by dropping in his bath - but it looks nothing like the true first edition. No, not jewel-encrusted or brightly coloured leather - if memory serves it's red cloth.
ReplyDeleteThere's also a bookshop scene in Hitchcock's "Vertigo." Years ago, when I was a grad student in film at Columbia, the eminent critic Andrew Sarris taught many of my classes, and I soon found myself chafing like an adolescent at his strongly held auteurist tastes. In a paper I had to write on "Vertigo," I remarked -- in a deliberate effort to needle him -- that I'd been so bored by the movie that I'd spent most of the bookshop scene trying to read the titles of the volumes for sale and wondering about their prices. When Sarris handed the paper back to me (with a deservedly low grade, I'm sure), I saw that he'd drawn an angry red circle around this taunt and had written, "If you really feel that way, Mr. Klein, I pity you."
ReplyDeleteThanks Scrbblr, thanks Brian. I too have looked closely at books on screen and I remember a shot of a library in a college room in Brideshead (set in the 1930s) which when I froze the frame I could see the books were mainly Herons in that fake leather known as Skivatex - not really known until the late 1960s. What a giveaway!
ReplyDeleteI recall that in "La Reine Margot" (Isabelle Adjani version) the King of France is poisoned by whetting his finger to turn the pages of a book on hunting whose page corners had been so treated.
ReplyDeleteAnd, of course, the movie 84 Charing Cross Road (1987).
ReplyDeleteDon't forget 'The Three Mothers' in Argento's Inferno! The opening scene shows the pages being uncut.
ReplyDeleteBooks are not vital to the plot of Cronenberg's latest movie, Cosmopolis, but a scene or two are set in a wonderful antique bookshop.
ReplyDeleteI also vaguely recall an episode of Friends which featured the first edition of some children's book as a very meaningful gift to a character.
And the very bad SF movie The book of Eli was all about a very precious tome, after all books were destroyed in a clumsy effort to put an end to all wars.
Diane bought a signed copy of The Great Gatsby, and Sam dropped it in the bath.
ReplyDeleteOne of Nigel Burwood's former employees claims to be the source for Bernard Black. He is the most affable of people, and he was affable when he worked at Any Amount too. Apart, that is, from the time when a misguided American tourist insisted he be given a discount on a paperback copy of one of Shakespeare's plays.
Gareth, was it Gatsby? I seem to recall that it was the shock in learning of Jake Barnes' war wound that caused Sam to drop the book.
ReplyDeleteDoesn't one of the BBC serial of Tinker Taylor Soldier Spy include a scene in which Smiley (Alec Guiness) buys a book in what looks like an antiquarian book shop?
ReplyDeleteI remember a Taggart episode which featured Cooper Hay's van. Voltaire & Rousseau must surely have featured once but I can't mind one. I do mind an exchange that deserves to be noted -
ReplyDeleteCUSTOMER: 'Do you have a comedy section?'
Assistant: 'Not that I know of'
Just had to look up that Cheers episode on IMDb. Seems it was The Sun Also Rises after all.
ReplyDeleteFrom the episode:
Sam: God, it really is a book.
Diane: It's a book, and a very valuable book. It's a first edition Hemingway.
Sam: The Sun Also Rises. Boy, that's real profound.
Diane: I purchased it for five hundred dollars, but I'm sure it's worth a great deal more. It's signed by Ernest Hemingway himself.
Sam: For five hundred bucks, you'd think Margaux Hemingway'd come over to your house and act it out for you.
Brian - thanks for sharing that. Cheers! indeed. Got a feeling a signed first in a jacket in nice order of 'Sun Also' would be around $100,000 now. Obviously a very old episode.
ReplyDeleteThe film 'Wilbur Wants To Kill Himself' is a comedy set around an inherited secondhand bookshop in Glasgow.
ReplyDeleteI would have sworn it was Gatsby, but I was obviously wrong.
ReplyDeleteMy award for Most Unconvincing Onscreen Rare Book would go to one of two Amicus horror films: either the Marquis de Sade volume shown in "The Skull", or the book of black magic in "Asylum", which shows how to revive a dead body by dressing it in a suit illustrated with 1972-style huge lapels and flared trousers.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteThe headed bookshelves behind Bogart and Maloney in the photo above has long amused me. "Novels" to the left, "Literature" to the right, and "Engineering" in between!
There is a old bookshop in Patriot Games,which,perhaps, is the image that the public have of a SHB,antique wiring and managers who deliver books in person and who turn out to be a bad guy.
ReplyDeleteLong before Black Books there was a sit com in the 80s with Prunella Scales called 'After Henry'. It was written by Simon Brett and was originally on radio but later switched to TV. Much of the action was set in the fictional shop of 'Bygone Books'
ReplyDeleteA few episodes of Morse feature rare book shops and the Bod. features in Morse and Lewis. The parents of Myka Bering in Warehouse 13 run a rare bookshop which features in an episode in series 1. A typescript copy of the ZFT Manifesto is sought from a rare book dealer in an episode of Fringe in series 1.
ReplyDeleteOh, and 'The Ninth Gate' is an interesting idea turned into a really lousy movie.