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Return of a Mad Look at Old Movies

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The Return of a Mad Look at Old Movies1. What did Brenda have to hide?2. Was Rick really drunk, or was he just pretending?3. Where did lovely Lind Lane fit into all of this?4. Who pushed playboy Paul Poridge into the swimming pool?5. Why did Greg Gilmore suddenly disappear?6. When did Mary Ward find out about her late husband?7. What was Harriet Humble's biggest mistake?The answers to all these questions - and even some never asked - can be found on page one of this thrilling new paperback from the people who brought you A Mad Look at Old Movies.

192 pages, Paperback

First published March 1, 1970

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Dick de Bartolo

26 books3 followers

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5 stars
10 (27%)
4 stars
11 (30%)
3 stars
9 (25%)
2 stars
6 (16%)
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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Bryan.
781 reviews9 followers
June 17, 2017
Not the best of Mad as i remember it.
Profile Image for Rob Smith, Jr..
1,302 reviews37 followers
December 30, 2016
My goal was to reach 100 books in 2016. Due to the death of my father, my own illness more than twice this past year and trying to produce 4 books, i fell waaaaay behind. As days remained in the year a friend joked i should read a MAD magazine Don Martin collection of cartoons to speed up to 100. I scoffed at first. Then I learned of the death of my friend, MAD magazine's Duck Edwing on December 27th. Suddenly i realized I could rap up the year with a volume of Duck's cartoons and a volume of another MAD cartoonist friend, Jack Davis, who died this past August. Maybe an odd catharsis, but very satisfying to revisit the work of two legends in cartooning.

I first had this book more than 40 years ago. As i actually stopped and read it cover to cover, i wonder if I ever actually did that. I have now. I know I've flipped through it and read parts of this and the first part of the series. Now i have multiple copies of the book and carry one with me wherever i go. This book and the work of cartoonist Jack Davis really propelled me into cartooning. I should also credit the hilarious writing of Dick deBartolo. The combo inspired me in so much of my early work and whenever i could get away with sequential storytelling like is in this book and MAD magazine.

It is not sentimentality that has me praise this book. It's the outstanding illustrations and brilliant storytelling and dialogue of deBartolo. de Bartolo perfectly parodies and wide range of films in a hand full of pages. Each short story reflects a number of films in the genre reflected. Lots of details only a movie lover, like me, would pick up.

Younger people might get lost in this for the reason that they don't know the films and over sensitive types might be offended by what they perceive as being not P.C. Sad so many of the young have censored themselves with a narrow minded approach to life. Their backward viewpoint is why this book is likely never to see reprint. Such is the controls of censorship.

Bottom line: i recommend this book. 10 out of 10 points.
Profile Image for Jason Vedder.
137 reviews
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June 26, 2014
Disappointing. I first thought the parodies would be of actual older movies, like Greatest Show on Earth and others. but its the generic type of movie. None of the stories were funny to me. At a book sale I saw the MAD logo and put them in a sack ($3.00 for sack which had about 15 other books in the sack) so no great loss
Profile Image for FranklinTV.
248 reviews
June 21, 2016
Nice ridiculing of movie cliches by DeBartolo supported by the great art of Davis.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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