Craziest Bits From Joe Eszterhas Ebook, Gibson responds Eszterhas, Joe Eszterhas death threats---Joe Eszterhas isn't done with Mel Gibson just yet. The screenwriter has written "Heaven and Mel," an eBook recounting in colorful detail his relationship with the disgraced director that Amazon will be released on June 6, TheWrap has learned.
"I can't remember ever reading a more haunting, nuanced portrait of a Hollywood superstar in decline," Dave Blum, editor of Kindle Singles, told TheWrap exclusively. "This is an eyewitness account by a gifted storyteller of a man of faith at war with his demons. In the end, the demons win."
Amazon contacted Eszterhas after he released to TheWrap a tape of Gibson ranting violently during a dinner at his home in Costa Rica.
"On a human level it's a great story, and it can't be told in a nine-page letter," Eszterhas told TheWrap. "Much of it is amusing, some of it is very serious and has to do with anti-Semitism and questions of values. But mostly it's just very human. I view it as a terrific tale."
A spokesman for Mel Gibson could not immediately be reached for comment.
"Heaven and Mel" is part of Amazon's "Kindle Single" program, which allows for publication of short books on an accelerated schedule. It will cost $2.99.
The book, obtained by TheWrap, provides context and detail around the conflict between Gibson and the screenwriter, who was to do a screenplay about Jewish freedom fighters in the 2nd century, the Maccabees.
After his screenplay was rejected by Gibson and Warner Bros., Eszterhas accused the director of making anti-Semitic statements and threatening to kill his ex-girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva.
Among the new details in the book are Gibson's emails to Eszterhas during the research and writing process.
In the book, Eszterhas describes Gibson's world from the inside as an invited guest and collaborator who slowly comes to distrust the person who hired him.
While Eszterhas wanted to write a story of Jewish heroism, he realized over time that Gibson was seeking a story that "prefigured" the coming of Jesus Christ.
Eszterhas wonders in his book: "Was his intent to make Judah Maccabee, the Jewish Braveheart, into a John the Baptist-like messenger for Jesus?"
Throughout, Eszterhas offers choice observations about Hollywood and why he left Malibu to raise his second family, wife Naomi and four young sons, in Ohio.
"I can't remember ever reading a more haunting, nuanced portrait of a Hollywood superstar in decline," Dave Blum, editor of Kindle Singles, told TheWrap exclusively. "This is an eyewitness account by a gifted storyteller of a man of faith at war with his demons. In the end, the demons win."
Amazon contacted Eszterhas after he released to TheWrap a tape of Gibson ranting violently during a dinner at his home in Costa Rica.
"On a human level it's a great story, and it can't be told in a nine-page letter," Eszterhas told TheWrap. "Much of it is amusing, some of it is very serious and has to do with anti-Semitism and questions of values. But mostly it's just very human. I view it as a terrific tale."
A spokesman for Mel Gibson could not immediately be reached for comment.
"Heaven and Mel" is part of Amazon's "Kindle Single" program, which allows for publication of short books on an accelerated schedule. It will cost $2.99.
The book, obtained by TheWrap, provides context and detail around the conflict between Gibson and the screenwriter, who was to do a screenplay about Jewish freedom fighters in the 2nd century, the Maccabees.
After his screenplay was rejected by Gibson and Warner Bros., Eszterhas accused the director of making anti-Semitic statements and threatening to kill his ex-girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva.
Among the new details in the book are Gibson's emails to Eszterhas during the research and writing process.
In the book, Eszterhas describes Gibson's world from the inside as an invited guest and collaborator who slowly comes to distrust the person who hired him.
While Eszterhas wanted to write a story of Jewish heroism, he realized over time that Gibson was seeking a story that "prefigured" the coming of Jesus Christ.
Eszterhas wonders in his book: "Was his intent to make Judah Maccabee, the Jewish Braveheart, into a John the Baptist-like messenger for Jesus?"
Throughout, Eszterhas offers choice observations about Hollywood and why he left Malibu to raise his second family, wife Naomi and four young sons, in Ohio.