James Cameron

A Retrospective

Ian Nathan author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Palazzo Editions Ltd

Published:3rd Nov '22

£30.00

Available to order, but very limited on stock - if we have issues obtaining a copy, we will let you know.

James Cameron cover

James Cameron is the most successful filmmaker of all time by some margin. Which is something we tend to take for granted. The question at the heart of his story isn’t only how this came about, but what is it about Cameron that makes him such a universal storyteller? Cinema has had its godlike directors, lifting it up into new spaces, but he is their Zeus. The man who made the biggest film of all time, Titanic, then topped that by making the next biggest film of all time, Avatar.

Encapsulating not only the magnitude of James Cameron as a filmmaker but the minutiae too – the incredible stories of an artist whose commitment to the medium knows few bounds. The tales behind the films are as epic as the films themselves. The astonishing making of The Abyss, much of it shot submerged in a decommissioned nuclear plant, could fill a book on its own.


James Cameron: A Retrospective is an enthralling and beautifully illustrated film-by-film biography – from The Terminator to Aliens to Avatar 2 – of the most popular director in movie history.

'Brimming with insight and packed with a dropship's worth of interviews, Ian Nathan's James Cameron: A Retrospective is a valuable look into the man behind the myth. Cameron's persistence, technical wizardry, and reverence for the art of filmmaking shine off the page. Essential reading for fans of film history; REQUIRED reading for fans of Aliens.'

* Perfect Organism Podcast *

'James Cameron: A Retrospective is a super-interesting book, lots of information and pictures, and I love the way Ian Nathan tells the story.'

* Luis Nostromo, Alien Museum, Barcelona *
'James Cameron: A Retrospective is the best written book I have ever read on a filmmaker.'   -- Terry Wickham, Mantaray Pict

ISBN: 9781786751140

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

224 pages