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  1. www.abebooks.com › 9780786421268 › Japanese-ScienceStuart Galbraith IV - AbeBooks

    Japanese Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films: A Critical Analysis and Filmography of 103 Features Released in the United States, 1950-1992 by Stuart Galbraith IV - ISBN 10: 0786421266 - ISBN 13: 9780786421268 - McFarland & Company - 2007 - Softcover

  2. Apr 17, 2002 · Stuart Galbraith's The Emperor And The Wolf is made all the more welcome by a shortage of English-language books on Kurosawa, not to mention a near-complete absence of material on Mifune. Mammoth ...

  3. Mar 9, 2022 · Monsters Are Attacking Tokyo! is a 1998 nonfiction book written by Stuart Galbraith IV and published by Feral House. Its main attraction is an oral history of Showa-era kaiju and sci-fi films, as told by the actors, directors, composers, cinematographers, technicians, and producers who worked on them.

  4. May 1, 1998 · Author Stuart Galbraith IV has compiled a list of virtually every rubber-suited monster movie ever made, along with dozens of bizarre fantasy and horror films, to produce the first complete compendium of Japan's most exported culture.

    • Stuart Galbraith IV, Yukari Fujii, Atsushi Sakahara
  5. Kyoto-based film historian Stuart Galbraith IV has had a long and varied career, but throughout it all he has demonstrated a great respect for the past and a strong conviction that it should be preserved for future generations. An archivist for Warner Bros. and a researcher at MGM, he worked as a “film detective” tracking down long-lost ...

  6. Nov 1, 2023 · A review of The Last Time I Saw Paris on Blu-ray by Stuart Galbraith IV from the Warner Archive Collection. The Last Time I Saw Paris (Blu-ray Review) Though only slightly above average as romantic melodrama, The Last Time I Saw Paris (1954) is surprisingly good overall.

  7. Mar 18, 2024 · A review of The Carpetbaggers on Blu-ray by Stuart Galbraith IV from Kino Lorber Studio Classics. The Carpetbaggers (Blu-ray Review) The Carpetbaggers (1964), from Harold Robbins’s epic, hot-and-steamy 1961 novel, is widely regarded as an “enjoyably bad movie,” but that’s not quite right.