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  1. I'm Losing You is a 1996 novel by the American novelist, screenwriter and director Bruce Wagner. Wagner adapted his novel for, and directed, a 1998 film of the same title, starring Frank Langella and Daniel von Bargen. The film adaption grossed $12,688 in limited release.

    • Bruce Wagner
    • 1996
  2. I'm Losing You may refer to: "(I Know) I'm Losing You", a 1966 song by The Temptations. I'm Losing You (novel), a 1996 novel by Bruce Wagner. I'm Losing You (film), a 1998 film by Bruce Wagner adapted from the novel. "I'm Losing You" (John Lennon song), a 1980 song by John Lennon from Double Fantasy.

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  4. Oct 1, 1992 · 3.46. 301 ratings34 reviews. A novel set in Hollywood brings together a offbeat crew that includes porn stars in love, scheming dermatologists, celebrity chore-whores, masseurs, traitorous shrinks, and sightless children, among others, in a glittering world of decadence. Reprint. Genres Fiction Novels Contemporary.

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    • Paperback
  5. I'm Losing You is a 1998 American drama film directed by Bruce Wagner and adapted from his 1996 novel of the same name. The film stars Rosanna Arquette, Frank Langella, Andrew McCarthy, and Elizabeth Perkins.

  6. Jul 31, 2012 · In an epic novel that does for Hollywood what Nashville did for Nashville, I’m Losing You follows the rich and famous and the down and out as their lives intersect in a series of coincidences that exposes the “bigger than life” ferocity of Hollywood—and proves that Bruce Wagner is a talent to be reckoned with.

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    • Bruce Wagner
  7. Bruce Wagner. Penguin, Jul 31, 2012 - Fiction - 336 pages. “A writer without mercy . . . this book is like a wire stretched across the throat.” —Oliver Stone. In an epic novel that does for...

  8. www.kirkusreviews.com › bruce-wagner › im-losing-youI'M LOSING YOU | Kirkus Reviews

    Jul 17, 1996 · i'm losing you by Bruce Wagner ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 17, 1996 Screenwriter Wagner's second well-done Hollywood novel (Force Majeure, 1991) surveys the mostly sordid L.A. scene from top to bottom, making up for a lack of dramatic focus with lots of hypergossipy vignettes of hustling, deviance, New Age goofiness, and consumer lust—and that's ...

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