Horror Film

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2004-12-01
Publisher(s): Univ Pr of Mississippi
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Summary

In large part due to its emphasis on gore, screaming teenage girls, and otherworldly elements, horror films have received little critical attention from mainstream movie magazines and film-studies journals.InHorror Film: Creating and Marketing Fear, essayists focus primarily on how film technology, marketing, and distribution effectively create the aesthetics and reception of horror films.Previously unpublished, these essays cover several styles of horror film-including the silent German Expressionist masterpieceNosferatu, the jittery mock-documentaryThe Blair Witch Project, and the gracefully shotThe Exorcist. Essayists question how lighting, editing techniques, sound, and camera and film equipment affect how viewers perceive a horror movie. Some essays focus on groundbreaking films, such as Michael Powell'sPeeping Tomand Robert Aldrich'sWhat Ever Happened to Baby Jane?Most concentrate on a specific technique and how it is used in a variety of horror movies. Contributors explore how the evolution of editing in horror films and more realistic special effects have changed how these movies are made. Marketing and distribution are also explored to ascertain how the genre has become part of the American mainstream.Using a variety of critical approaches and concentrating on aspects of horror film that have been overlooked,Horror Film: Creating and Marketing Fearis a valuable, original addition to the growing body of work on the genre.Steffen Hantke, a professor of English at Sogang University in Seoul, South Korea, is the author ofConspiracy and Paranoia in Contemporary American Literature: The Works of Don DeLillo and Joseph McElroy.

Author Biography

Steffen Hantke, a professor of English at Sogang University in Seoul, South Korea.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Horror Film and the Apparatus of Cinema
vii
Steffen Hantke
Part I: Light, Camera, Editing
Spectral Vampires
Nosferatu in the Light of New Technology
3(18)
Stacey Abbott
Imaging the Abject
The Ideological Use of the Dissolve
21(14)
Claire Sisco King
The Camera's Eye
Peeping Tom and Technological Perversion
35(17)
Catherine Zimmer
A Film Is Being Beaten
Notes on the Shock Cut and the Material Violence of Horror
52(33)
David Scott Diffrient
Part II: Marketing, Packaging, Franchising
The Horror ``Event'' Movie
The Mummy, Hannibal, and Signs
85(14)
Philip L. Simpson
``There Is Only One''
The Restoration of the Repressed in The Exorcist: The Version You've Never Seen!
99(18)
Michael Arnzen
Proliferating Horrors
Survival Horror and the Resident Evil Franchise
117(18)
Richard J. Hand
Simulating Torture, Documenting Horror
The Technology of ``Nonfiction Filmmaking'' in Devil's Experiment and Flowers of Flesh and Blood
135(18)
Jay McRoy
Part III: Theory, History, Genre
A Nasty Situation
Social Panics, Transnationalism, and the Video Nasty
153(20)
James Kendrick
From SBIGs to Mildred's Inverse Law of Trailers
Skewing the Narrative of Horror Fan Consumption
173(18)
K. A. Laity
Horror Meets Noir
The Evolution of Cinematic Style, 1931--1958
191(22)
Blair Davis
Queering Consumption and Production in
What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
213(14)
Lorena Russell
Notes 227(14)
Works Cited 241(14)
Contributors 255(4)
Index 259

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