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[ecrea] Special issue of the Journal of Italian Cinema & Media Studies 5.2
Thu Mar 09 14:26:47 GMT 2017
Intellect is delighted to announce that the /Journal of Italian Cinema &
Media Studies 5.2/ is now available.
This special issue of JICMS is dedicated to ‘Italian Horror Cinema’. In
both fan culture and the academy (which are frequently connected),
Italian horror films have been singled out for their alleged
transgressions, and the challenges they arguably pose to various
‘norms’, ‘whether these be aesthetic norms of commercial mainstream
cinema film-making or broader social and ideological norms’ (Hutchings
2003: 132). This special issue seeks to engage with this developing
trend, as an outlet for such trans-disciplinary research: sitting within
the concerns of both Film Studies and Italian Studies, while embracing
the exigencies of historically informed nuance.
For more information about this issue, please click here
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal,id=215/> or email
(katy /at/ intellectbooks.com) <mailto:(katy /at/ intellectbooks.com)>
Articles within this issue include (partial list):
All the colours of the dark: Film genre and the Italian giallo
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23217/>
*Authors: *Alexia Kannas
Page Start: 173
Recent scholarship on the giallo film – and Italian horror more broadly
– has emphasised the use of the Italian term filone (‘thread’ or
‘streamlet’) instead of ‘genre’ to describe the particular production
contexts of Italian genre film in the post-war period. This article
considers how and why the giallo problematizes film genre as it is
traditionally conceived, and argues that the giallo film is uniquely
positioned to pose fundamental questions about genre as a theoretical
system, as well as to question the task of genre criticism itself.
Through an examination of historical approaches to film genre via the
giallo case study, the article shows how this group of films debunks
theories of generic evolution and complicates the notion of generic
hybridity. Whilst challenging the cultural hegemony of Hollywood,
framing the giallo as a genre demands a radical conceptualisation of
genre systems that more readily accommodates their propensity to shift
and change over time.
A comparative analysis of the factors driving film cycles: Italian and
American zombie film production, 1978-82
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23218/>
*Authors: *Todd K. Platts
Page Start: 191
This study shines light on the general factors involved in film cycle
development and non-development through a focus on /Dawn of the Dead/’s
(Romero, 1978/79) influence in the Italian and US film markets. Four
factors, commercial success, sociopolitical events and broader social
currents, supporting cultural phenomena and ephemera, and industrial
compatibility, are comparatively assessed with respect to the Italian
zombie cycle from 1978 to 1981 and the lack of an American cycle from
the same period. The comparative approach advanced in the article
properly historicises the development of zombie cinema after one of its
landmark films. Moreover, while the approach is applied to late
1970s/early 1980s zombie cinema, it offers a general analytic for future
film cycle scholarship.
Streaming Italian horror cinema in the United Kingdom: Lovefilm Instant
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23221/>
*Authors: *Stefano Baschiera
Page Start: 245
This article investigates the distribution of Italian horror cinema in
the age of video streaming, analysing its presence and categorisation on
the platform Lovefilm Instant UK, in order to investigate the importance
of ‘niche’ in what is known as the long tail of online distribution and
the online availability of exploitation films. The author argues that
looking at the streaming presence of Italian horror and comparing it to
its prior distribution on home video formats (in particular VHS and DVD)
we can grasp how distribution and access have shaped the understanding
of the genre. In particular, this article addresses the question of the
categorisation of the films made by the S-VOD services and the limits of
streaming distribution, such as lack of persistency in availability and
the need for enhanced curatorship.
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