Skip to main content Site map

Sleaze Artists: Cinema at the Margins of Taste, Style, and Politics


Sleaze Artists: Cinema at the Margins of Taste, Style, and Politics

Paperback by Sconce, Jeffrey

Sleaze Artists: Cinema at the Margins of Taste, Style, and Politics

WAS £25.99   SAVE £3.90

£22.09

ISBN:
9780822339649
Publication Date:
24 Oct 2007
Language:
English
Publisher:
Duke University Press
Pages:
352 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 8 - 16 May 2024
Sleaze Artists: Cinema at the Margins of Taste, Style, and Politics

Description

Bad Girls Go to Hell. Cannibal Holocaust. Eve and the Handyman. Examining film culture's ongoing fascination with the low, bad, and sleazy faces of cinema, Sleaze Artists brings together film scholars with a shared interest in the questions posed by disreputable movies and suspect cinema. They explore the ineffable quality of "sleaze" in relation to a range of issues, including the production realities of low-budget exploitation pictures and the ever-shifting terrain of reception and taste.Writing about horror, exploitation, and sexploitation films, the contributors delve into topics ranging from the place of the "Aztec horror film" in debates about Mexican national identity to a cycle of 1960s films exploring homosexual desire in the military. One contributor charts the distribution saga of Mario Bava's 1972 film Lisa and the Devil through the highs and lows of art cinema, fringe television, grindhouse circuits, and connoisseur DVD markets. Another offers a new perspective on the work of Doris Wishman, the New York housewife turned sexploitation director of the 1960s who has become a cult figure in bad-cinema circles over the past decade. Other contributors analyze the relation between image and sound in sexploitation films and Italian horror movies, the advertising strategies adopted by sexploitation producers during the early 1960s, the relationship between art and trash in Todd Haynes's oeuvre, and the ways that the Friday the 13th series complicates the distinction between "trash" and "legitimate" cinema. The volume closes with an essay on why cinephiles love to hate the movies. Contributors. Harry M. Benshoff, Kay Dickinson, Chris Fujiwara, Colin Gunckel, Joan Hawkins, Kevin Heffernan, Matt Hills, Chuck Kleinhans, Tania Modleski, Eric Schaefer, Jeffrey Sconce, Greg Taylor

Contents

Acknowledgments vii Introduction 1 Part 1: Sleazy Histories Pandering to the "Goon Trade": Framing the Sexploitation Audience through Advertising / Eric Schaefer 19 Women's Cinema as Counterphobic Cinema: Doris Wishman as the Last Auteur / Tania Modleski 47 Representing (Repressed) Homosexuality in the Pre-Stonewall Hollywood Homo-Military Film / Harry M. Benshoff 71 Pornography and Documentary: Narrating the Alibi / Chuck Kleinhans 96 El signo de la muerte and the Birth of a Genre: Origins and Anatomy of the Aztec Horror Film 121 Art House or House of Exorcism? The Changing Distribution and Reception Contexts of Mario Bava's Lisa and the Devil / Kevin Heffernan 144 Part 2: Sleazy Afterlives Troubling Synthesis: The Horrific Sights and Incompatible Sounds of Video Nasties / Kay Dickinson 167 The Sleazy Pedigree of Todd Haynes / Joan Hawkins 189 Para-Paracinema: The Friday the 13th Film Series as Other to Trash and Legitimate Film Cultures / Matt Hills 219 Boredom, Spasmo, and the Italian System / Chris Fujiwara 240 Pure Quidditas or Geek Chic? Cultism as Discernment / Greg Taylor 259 Movies: A Century of Failure / Jeffrey Sconce 273 Selected Bibliography 311 Contributors 321 Index 325

Back

JS Group logo