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El. knyga: Bodies of Desire and Bodies in Distress: The Golden Age of Italian Cult Cinema 1970-1985

  • Formatas: 305 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Sep-2015
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781443882880
  • Formatas: 305 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Sep-2015
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781443882880

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In recent years, there has been an explosion of critical interest in the icons, genres and traditions of 1970s Italian cult film. Thanks to the international success of directors such as Dario Argento and Sergio Martino, and the influential giallo (thriller) cycle in which they worked, these unconventional and often controversial films are now impacting on new generations of filmmakers, scholars and moviegoers alike.Bodies of Desire and Bodies in Distress: The Golden Age of Italian Cult Cinema 19701985 considers the current interest in specific Italian directors and cult genres, exploring the social, political and cultural factors that spawned a decade of cinema dominated by extreme, yet stylish, images of sexuality and violence. Bodies of Desire and Bodies in Distress situates the explosion of 1970s Italian cult 'excess' against the toxic backdrop of political violence and terrorist activity that produced shocking images of carnage and crime during this period. The volume also considers why the iconography of the sexually liberated female became recast as a symbol of fear and violation in a range of Italian cult film narratives. In addition, the book also analyses how longstanding regional distinctions between Italy's urban North and the much maligned rural South fed into sex and death cycles produced between 1970 and 1985. Bodies of Desire and Bodies in Distress profiles leading 1970s Italian directors and performers including Aristide Massaccesi (Joe D'Amato), Laura Gemser, and Dario Argento (who also provides an interview discussing his work and 1970s Italian society). The volume also provides case-studies of the giallo cycle, rape and revenge dramas, the Italian rogue cop series, post-apocalypse films, barbarian movies, and sex comedy formats. By considering the icons and genres from the golden age of Italian cult film alongside the crucial social and sexual tensions that influenced their creation, this book will be of interest to film scholars and cult movie fans alike.
Acknowledgements ix
Foreword xii
Enzo G. Castellari
Introduction Bodies of Desire and Bodies of Distress beyond the `Argento Effect' 1(20)
Chapter One "There is Something Wrong with that Scene": The Return of the Repressed in 1970s Giallo Cinema
21(21)
Chapter Two Don't Torture the Landscape: Italian Cult Cinema and the Mezzogiorno Giallo
42(16)
Chapter Three Rape, Revenge and Railtrack: Space and Sexual Spectacle in the Suspense Thriller Giallo
58(29)
Chapter Four Maternal Monsters and `Demonised' Bodies: The Three Mothers and Beyond
87(22)
Chapter Five Fear at 109 Degrees: An Interview with Dario Argento
109(22)
Chapter Six "Body in a Bed, Body Growing Dead": Uncanny Women in the Gothic Horror Films of Aristide Massaccesi
131(24)
Chapter Seven Black Sex, Bad Sex: Monstrous Ethnicity in the Black Emanuelle Films
155(24)
Chapter Eight High Crimes and Fatalistic Cops: The Italian Poliziotteschi Films of the 1970s
179(30)
Chapter Nine New Barbarians on the Block: The Italian Post-Apocalyptic Peplums of the Early 1980s
209(29)
Chapter Ten The Years With(out) Lead: Terrorism, Trauma and Titillation: 1970--1985
238(21)
Conclusion No So Erotic Encores 259(9)
Bibliography 268(7)
Filmography 275(6)
Index 281
Xavier Mendik is Associate Professor in Film and Director of Graduate Studies within the School of Media at Birmingham City University, from where he runs the Cine-Excess International Film Festival. He has written extensively on cult and horror film traditions. Some of his publications (as author/editor/co-editor) include: Peep Shows: Cult Film and the Cine-Erotic (2012); 100 Cult Films (with Ernest Mathijs, 2011); The Cult Film Reader (with Ernest Mathijs, 2008); Alternative Europe: Eurotrash and Exploitation Cinema Since 1945 (2004); Shocking Cinema of the Seventies (2002); Underground USA: Filmmaking Beyond the Hollywood Canon (2002); Dario Argento's Tenebrae (2000); and Unruly Pleasures: The Cult Film and its Critics (2000).