Download The Disaster Artist: My Life inside 'The Room', the Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made AudioBook Free
Nineteen-year-old Greg Sestero met Tommy Wiseau at an operating school in San Francisco. Wiseau's views were rivetingly wrong, yet Sestero, hypnotized by such uninhibited acting, thought, "I have to do a landscape with this guy." That impulse transformed both of their lives. Wiseau appeared to never have browse the rule booklet on interpersonal connections (or the instructions on the bottle of dark hair dye), yet he generously offered to position the aspiring professional up in his LA apartment. Sestero's nascent behaving profession first sizzled, then fizzled, resulting in Wiseau's last-second offer to Sestero of co-starring with him in The Room, a movie Wiseau wrote and designed to finance, produce, and direct - in the auto parking lot of your Hollywood equipment-rental shop. Wiseau spent $6 million of his own money on his film, but despite the efforts of the disbelieving (and frequently fired) staff and uncomfortable (and frequently fired) stars, the movie made no sense. Nevertheless, Wiseau rented a Hollywood billboard presenting his alarming headshot and staged a red carpet premiere. The Room made $1,800 at the pack office and shut after two weeks. One reviewer said that viewing The Room was like "getting stabbed in the top". The Disaster Artist is Greg Sestero's laugh-out-loud funny accounts of how Tommy Wiseau defied every regulation of artistry, business, and companionship to make "the Resident Kane of bad videos" (Entertainment Weekly), which is currently an international sensation, with Wiseau himself beloved as an oddball celebrity. Written with award-winning journalist Tom Bissell, The Disaster Artist can be an inspiring tour de push, an open-hearted portrait of the enigmatic man who will improbably catch your heart.