Best movie reference books according to redditors

We found 5 Reddit comments discussing the best movie reference books. We ranked the 4 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Movie Reference:

u/rlrthesecond · 6 pointsr/GODZILLA

Just get this book, and be amazed.

http://www.amazon.com/Art-Japanese-Monsters-Sean-Linkenback/dp/0991459911/ref=sr_1_5?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1453745138&sr=1-5&keywords=monster+movie+posters

Got it for Christmas a few years ago, and it's incredible. I ended up buying a polish Godzilla vs Hedorah poster because of it.

u/TragedyT · 5 pointsr/bladerunner

Well, it's always going to be controversial.

According to Ridley Scott, Deckard IS a Replicant, and over the years, he's released two cuts of the film to move towards making this more explicitly unambiguous.

According to several other key creative minds on the film, including the producer, the writers, and the main actor, it was always meant to be left subtle and ambiguous.

According to me, I much prefer the film with it left ambiguous.

I think it has a much more interesting meaning and purpose to it that way, and is just a better film, frankly. Ridley is known for being a stubborn old goat who domineers all he surveys, but he ain't the boss of me, and I think he's just plain wrong.

Anyway, over the years, I have seen so many various cuts and alternate scenes and versions (such as the megacut on Disc 4 of the box set) that Blade Runner has kind of become the ultimate Phil Dick movie, in that it exists in several different self-contradictory forms simultaneously in a way that is both nonsensical and impossible, very much like the plots of many of his books. I find that to be the greatest tribute to PDK of all (even if it is the unintentional result of a notoriously volatile production).

I can't recommend reading Paul M Sammon's Future Noir highly enough, if you have any interest in this subject.

Edit: Newer link. Looks like even books get a 'Final Cut' nowadays.

u/GUSHandGO · 1 pointr/startrek

I loved The Star Trek Compendium as a kid. Lots of good info there.