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- Making and Remaking Horror in the 1970s and 2000s
Making and Remaking Horror in the 1970s and 2000s
Angebote / Angebote:
AN EXPANSIVE TREATMENT OF THE
MEANINGS AND QUALITIES OF ORIGINAL
AND REMADE AMERICAN HORROR MOVIES
In Making and Remaking Horror in the 1970s and 2000s
author David Roche takes up the assumption shared by
many fans and scholars that original horror movies are
more "disturbing, " and thus better than the remakes. He
assesses the qualities of movies, old and recast, according
to criteria that include subtext, originality, and cohesion.
With a methodology that combines a formalist and cultural
studies approach, Roche sifts aspects of the American
horror movie that have been widely addressed (class, the
patriarchal family, gender, and the opposition between terror and horror) and those that
have been somewhat neglected (race, the Gothic, style, and verisimilitude). Containing
seventy-eight black and white illustrations, the book is grounded in a close comparative
analysis of the politics and aesthetics of four of the most significant independent American
horror movies of the 1970s-The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, The Hills Have Eyes, Dawn of the
Dead, and Halloween-and their twenty-first-century remakes.
To what extent can the politics of these films be described as "disturbing" insomuch as
they promote subversive subtexts that undermine essentialist perspectives? Do the politics
of the film lie on the surface or are they wedded to the film's aesthetics? Early in the book,
Roche explores historical contexts, aspects of identity (race, ethnicity, and class), and the
structuring role played by the motif of the American nuclear family. He then asks to what
extent these films disrupt genre expectations and attempt to provoke emotions of dread,
terror, and horror through their representations of the monstrous and the formal strategies
employed? In this inquiry, he examines definitions of the genre and its metafictional
nature. Roche ends with a meditation on the extent to which the technical limitations of the
horror films of the 1970s actually contribute to this "disturbing" quality. Moving far beyond
the genre itself, Making and Remaking Horror studies the redux as a form of adaptation and
enables a more complete discussion of the evolution of horror in contemporary American
cinema.
DAVID ROCHE, Toulouse, France, is professor at the Université Le Mirail. He is the editor
of Conversations with Russell Banks (published by University Press of Mississippi), coeditor
of Approaches to Film and Reception Theories, and author of L'Imagination malsaine: Russell
Banks, Raymond Carver, David Cronenberg, Bret Easton Ellis, David Lynch.
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