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[ecrea] CfP Hammer Films, June 10-12, 2015, Paris
Wed Jan 28 02:28:51 GMT 2015
International Conference
Hammer Film Productions: A Laboratory for Modern Horror
June 10-12, 2015.
Organizing committee: Gilles Menegaldo, Université de Poitiers,
(gilles.menegaldo /at/ univ-poitiers.fr) ; Anne-Marie Paquet-Deyris, Université
Paris Ouest,, (apaquet-deyris /at/ u-paris10.fr), Mélanie Boissonneau,
Université Paris 3/IRCAV, (boissonneau.m /at/ gmail.com)
Venues: Wednesday 10 June : Université Paris Ouest Nanterre, Thursday 11
June : Université Paris 3- Sorbonne Nouvelle, Censier Center, Friday 12
June: Cité Internationale, Fondation Lucien Paye
The recent re-edition of the famous French magazine Midi-Minuit
Fantastique (Rouge Profond), recent DVD and BluRay editions of Hammer
films and the revival of Hammer Film Productions in 2007—all call for a
re-assessment of the role played by this independent British studio
which, twenty years after Universal, gave new life to the mythical
figures of Dracula, Frankenstein, the Mummy and the Werewolf through
modern incarnations more in tune with the evolution of social trends in
Great Britain.
Hammer studios were created in 1934 by Enrique Carreras and William
Hinds. After a modest beginning in which a distinct style could already
be noted, especially in science fiction films like Four Sided Triangle
(Terrence Fisher, 1953) and The Quatermass Xperiment (Val Guest, 1955),
the studio had its first major hits with The Curse of Frankenstein
(1957) and Horror of Dracula (1958), both directed by Terence Fisher and
starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee, all of whom left an
indelible mark on the genre. From 1955 to 1979, the studio produced
approximately 150 films and two successful TV series in various genres:
science fiction, exotic adventures such as The Stranglers of Bombay
(Terence Fisher, 1959), comedy, war films and crime dramas. But the
company quickly became associated with the horror genre and the
recycling of Gothic figures that have now become modern myths.
The cultural and aesthetic homogeneity of Hammer films has, for one,
much to do with the fact that they are often based on Victorian novels.
This coherence is also due to collaborations between directors,
composers, cinematographers, and costume and production designers.
Terence Fisher is generally considered to be the company’s most
emblematic filmmaker, having directed five instalments of Frankenstein
(1957, 1958, 1967, 1969, 1974), three of Dracula (1958, 1960, 1966), as
well as The Mummy (1959), The Hound of the Baskerville (1959), The Two
Faces of Dr. Jekyll (1960), The Curse of the Werewolf (1961) an The
Phantom of the Opera (1962). Other directors who have gained some
recognition include Freddie Francis, John Gilling with The Reptile
(1966) and The Plague of the Zombies (1966), and Peter Sasdy. Jimmy
Sangster, who wrote The Curse of Frankenstein, Horror of Dracula and The
Mummy among other films, is probably the most famous screenwriter. Jack
Asher was often in charge of the film’s flamboyant cinematography, Jack
Asher of production design, James Bernard of music. Though the
narratives often favour the male characters, much of the films’ success
stems from their “scream queens,” like Barbara Shelley, Ingrid Pitt,
Veronica Carlson, Martine Beswick, Valerie Gaunt and Carol Marsh, who
are usually limited to the parts of victims. Indeed, the films exploited
both violence and eroticism, in spite of censorship. Thus, one of the
aims of this conference will be to determine the specificity of the
Hammer style.
This conference invites speakers to reconsider the history of Hammer
Films. Various periods will be examined and the assumption that the Bray
studio of the 1960s represents the company’s golden age will be
interrogated. The appearance of similar albeit smaller companies like
Amicus and Tigon or of brief horror film cycles in British cinema will
be considered. Scholars can resort to various theoretical and
methodological frameworks to analyse the films: film history, semiotics,
psychoanalysis, gender studies, postcolonial studies, acting and
performance studies, etc. The question of the films’ reception in Great
Britain and around the world will be central, along with the matter of
censorship—e.g., the “Japanese versions” of Horror of Dracula (1958).
The conference will also involve individuals who collaborated with the
studios (actors, technicians), journalists and other people who helped
Hammer films gain recognition. The conference will also feature
screenings and round table discussions.
Below are some of the aspects that can be dealt with:
• the major mythical figures and their evolution (Dracula, Frankenstein,
etc.)
• themes and motifs: the mad scientist, witchcraft, the family, figures
of (legal, scientific, religious) power, etc.
• the relationship between the films and their context, notably the 1960s
• the representation of the Victorian era and the colonial empire
• the representation and function of women in the narratives
• modes of transgression and forms of repression
• symbolic systems, recurrent metaphors
• aesthetics: set design, camerawork, colour, editing, music and soundtrack
• Hammer stars and acting strategies
• the recycling or parodying of the Hammer touch in films produced by
Aardman studios or Roger Corman, or in the films of Mario Bava, Roman
Polanski, Tim Burton, etc.
• comparative studies between Hammer films and successful British horror
films like The Innocents (Jack Clayton, 1961), Burn, Witch Burn (Sidney
Hayers, 1962), Don’t Look Now (Nicholas Roeg, 1973), etc.
• Hammer productions that do not belong to the horror or Fantastic genres
• the new Hammer productions of the 2000s
Scientific committee: Mélanie Boissonneau (IRCAV), Laurent Jullier
(Nancy, IRCAV), Gilles Menegaldo (Poitiers), Anne-Marie Paquet-Deyris
(Paris Ouest Nanterre), David Roche (Université Toulouse 2 Jean Jaurès)
Proposals in English or French, including title, 300-word abstract,
selected bibliography and author blurb, should be sent by February 20th,
2015 to:
Mélanie Boissonneau : (boissonneau.m /at/ gmail.com)
Gilles Menegaldo : (gilles.menegaldo /at/ wanadoo.fr)
Anne-Marie Paquet-Deyris : (paquet.deyris /at/ yahoo.fr)
David Roche : (mudrock /at/ neuf.fr)
Selected Bibliography
Barnett, Vincent L. “Hammering Out a Deal.” Historical Journal of Film,
Radio and Television 34.2 (June 2014): 231-52.
Bigorgne, David. “Un Goût Hammer.” CinémAction 112 “Le Surhomme à
l’écran” (2004): 132-41.
Bourgoin, Stéphane. Terence Fisher. Paris: Édilig, 1984.
Caen Michel, Stanzick Nicolas, Midi-Minuit Fantastique, intégrale
augmentée, vol. 1, Pertuis, Rouge profond, 2014.
Coe, Jonathan. “Hammer’s Cozy Violence.” Sight and Sound 6.8 (August
1996): 10-13.
Dixon, Wheeler Winston. The Charm of Evil: The Life and Films of Terence
Fisher. Metuchen, N.J. and London: Scarecrow Press, 1991.
---. “The End of Hammer.” Seventies British Cinema. Ed. Robert Shail.
Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. 14-24.
Forshaw, Barry. British Gothic Cinema. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2013.
Gaffez, Fabien. “En nous les anomalies du monde : Touches sur la Hmmer
Films.” Positif 553 (March 2007): 76-80.
Hearn, Marcus. Hammer Glamour. London: Titan Books, 2009.
Hearn, Marcus and Alan Barnes. The Hammer Story: The Authorised History
of Hammer Films. London: Titan Books, 2007.
Huckvale, David. Touchstones of Gothic Horror. Jefferson, NC: McFarland,
2010.
---. Hammer Films’ Psychological Thrillers. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2014.
Hutchings, Peter. Hammer and Beyond: The British Horror Film. Manchester
and New York: Manchester UP, 1993.
Kinsey Wayne, Hammer Films, The Bray Studios Years, Reynold and Hearn,
London, 2002.
Kinsey, Wayne. Hammer Films: A Life in Pictures. Sheffield: Tomahawk
Press, 2008.
Meikle, Denis and Chrostopher T. Koetting. A History of Horrors: The
Rise and Fall of the House of Hammer. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 2009.
Rolinson, Dave and Nick Cooper. “‘Bring Something Back’: The Strange
Career of Professor Bernard Quatermass.” Journal of Popular Film and
Television 30.3 (Fall 2002): 158-65.
Stanzick, Nicolas. Dans les griffes de la Hammer. Lormont: Le Bord de
l’eau, 2010.
Wilson, Brian. “Notes on a Radical Tradition: Subversive Ideological
Applications in the Hammer Horror Films.” CineAction 72 (October 2008):
53-57.
David Roche
Professor of Film Studies / professeur d'études filmiques
DEMA, Université Toulouse 2 Jean Jaurès
Vice-President of SERCIA http://www.sercia.net/
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