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[ecrea] New Book - Merchants of Menace: The Business of Horror Cinema
Thu Apr 10 15:29:03 GMT 2014
About Merchants of Menace
Anglophone horror films are typically approached as the inevitable
by-products of psychological and social demons haunting filmmakers and
their homelands - in short, as if they were, "our collective
nightmares". Consequently, the genre's industrial character remains
under-explored and poorly understood. Merchants of Menace responds to
this major void in film historiography by shedding much-needed new light
on one of the world's most enduring audiovisual forms. Spanning from
1930 to the present, this groundbreaking collection boasts fourteen
original chapters that focus on topics as diverse as early zombie
pictures, post-WWII chillers, Civil Rights-Era marketing, Hollywood's
literary adaptations, Australian horror production, "torture-porn"
auteurs, and twenty-first century remakes.
Table Of Contents
Introduction
There’s Gold in them there Chills, by Richard Nowell
Section One
Production Lines, Trends, and Cycles
Chapter One
‘House of Horrors’: Corporate Strategy at Universal Pictures in the
1930s, by Kyle Edwards
Chapter Two
The Undead of Hollywood and Poverty Row: The Influence of Studio-Era
Industrial Patterns on Zombie Film Production, 1932-46, by Todd K. Platts
Chapter Three
By the Book: American Horror Cinema and Horror Literature of the late
1960s and 1970s, by Peter Hutchings
Chapter Four
Risen From the Vaults: Recent Horror Film Remakes and the American Film
Industry, by Kevin Heffernan
Chapter Five
Monster Factory: International Dynamics of the Australian Horror Movie
Industry, by Mark David Ryan
Section Two
Film Content, Style, and Themes
Chapter Six
‘Bad Medicine’: The Psychiatric Profession’s Interventions into the
Business of Postwar Horror, by Tim Snelson
Chapter Seven
Horror Film Atmosphere as Anti-Narrative (and Vice Versa), by Robert Spadoni
Chapter Eight
‘A Kind of Bacall Quality’: Jamie Lee Curtis, Stardom, and Gentrifying
Non-Hollywood Horror, by Richard Nowell
Chapter Nine
‘New Decade, New Rules’: Rebooting the Scream Franchise in the Digital
Age, by Valerie Wee
Section Three
Movie Marketing, Branding, and Distribution
Chapter Ten
‘Hot Profits Out of Cold Shivers!’: Horror, the First Run Market, and
the Hollywood Studios, 1938-42, by Mark Jancovich
Chapter Eleven
Strange Enjoyments: The Marketing and Reception of Horror in the Civil
Rights Era Black Press, by Mikal J. Gaines
Chapter Twelve
Bids for Distinction: The Critical-Industrial Function of the Horror
Auteur, by Joe Tompkins
Chapter Thirteen
Low Budgets, No Budgets, and Digital-Video Nasties: Recent British
Horror and Informal Distribution, by Johnny Walker
Chapter Fourteen
Hammer 2.0: Legacy, Modernization, and Hammer Horror as a Heritage
Brand, by Matt Hills
Reviews
“Unearthing the industrial logics of the horror genre, Merchants of
Menace provides lively case studies that expose the tactics of their
production as well as unusual quirks in the process. These studies will
reanimate and refashion our histories of the genre and the standard
maxims about horror-film fabrication, cultural tastes, the films'
heroines and heroes, and the audiences for these movies. An outstanding
collection!”
- Janet Staiger, Professor Emeritus of Communication, University of
Texas at Austin, USA
“A major advance in our understanding of the industrial underpinnings of
horror cinema and of commercial filmmaking generally.”
– Robert E. Kapsis, Professor of Sociology and Film Studies, Queens
College (CUNY), USA, and author of Hitchcock: The Making of a Reputation
“As the first collection to explore the economics of horror movies from
Dracula to Scre4m, Merchants of Menace offers a new and illuminating
perspective on the history of the genre. Challenging the conventional
accounts of horror movies as symptoms of cultural unease, the
spectator’s unconscious or renegade politics, its contributors examine
the commercial strategies that have shaped their production and
marketing of fear for entertainment, and the audiences who have consumed
horror for recreation.”
- Richard Maltby, Flinders University, Australia, and author of
Hollywood Cinema
“Taking us through a century of Anglo-American horror production,
Merchants of Menace illustrates how production strategies, target
markets, product differentiation and brand identities have all impacted
on the themes and preoccupations of this most vital and persistent of
popular film genres. Packed with insightful historical research and
analysis from some of the most influential scholars in contemporary
horror film studies, this book highlights the importance of attending to
the industrial and commercial factors that have shaped trends within the
horror film from the height of the Hollywood studio system to the
digital age. Shedding new light on the studios, production companies,
star names, auteur directors, and canonical–and previously
under-explored–films that characterise horror film history, Merchants of
Menace asks us to look at the history of horror cinema–and the
vicissitudes of horror production and distribution–from new and vital
perspectives. Essential reading for horror film scholars and fans alike.”
- Kate Egan, Lecturer in Film Studies, Aberystwyth University, UK,
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