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B Is for Bad Cinema

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Considers films that lurk on the boundaries of acceptability in taste, style, and politics.B Is for Bad Cinema continues and extends, but does not limit itself to, the trends in film scholarship th...
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  • 01 March 2014
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Considers films that lurk on the boundaries of acceptability in taste, style, and politics.

B Is for Bad Cinema continues and extends, but does not limit itself to, the trends in film scholarship that have made cult and exploitation films and other "low" genres increasingly acceptable objects for critical analysis. Springing from discussions of taste and value in film, these original essays mark out the broad contours of "bad"-that is, aesthetically, morally, or commercially disreputable-cinema. While some of the essays share a kinship with recent discussions of B movies and cult films, they do not describe a single aesthetic category or represent a single methodology or critical agenda, but variously approach bad cinema in terms of aesthetics, politics, and cultural value. The volume covers a range of issues, from the aesthetic and industrial mechanics of low-budget production through the terrain of audience responses and cinematic affect, and on to the broader moral and ethical implications of the material. As a result, B Is for Bad Cinema takes an interest in a variety of film examples-overblown Hollywood blockbusters, faux pornographic works, and European art house films-to consider those that lurk on the boundaries of acceptability.

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Price: £72.50
Pages: 274
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series, Horizons of Cinema
Publication Date: 01 March 2014
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781438449951
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

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Illustrations
Acknowledgments

1. Introduction: B Is for Bad Cinema
Claire Perkins and Constantine Verevis

Part I. Aesthetics

2. Explosive Apathy
Jeffery Sconce

3. B-Grade Subtitles
Tessa Dwyer

4. Being in Two Places at the Same Time: The Forgotten Geography of Rear-Projection
Adrian Danks

5. Redeeming Cruising: Tendentiously Offensive, Coherently Incoherent, Strangely Pleasurable
R. Barton Palmer

6. The Villain We Love: Notes on the Dramaturgy of Screen Evil
Murray Pomerance

7. From Bad to Good and Back to Bad Again? Cult Cinema and Its Unstable Trajectory
Jamie Sexton

Part II. Authorship

8. Coffee in Paradise: The Horn Blows at Midnight
Tom Conley

9. The Risible: On Jean-Claude Brisseau
Adrian Martin

10. The Evil Dead DVD Commentaries: Amateurishness and Bad Film Discourse
Kate Egan

11. Liking The Magus
I. Q. Hunter

12. BADaptation: Is Candy Faithful?
Constantine Verevis

Contributors
Index