Horror Zone: The Cultural Experience of Contemporary Horror Cinema

Front Cover
Ian Conrich
Bloomsbury Academic, 2010 - Performing Arts - 306 pages
Robin Wood has noted that horror 'has consistently been one of the most popular and, at the same time, the most disreputable of Hollywood genres'. Horror is still immensely popular but its assimilation into our culture continues apace. In "Horror Zone", leading international writers on horror take horror into the world outside cinema screens to explore the interconnections between the films and modern media and entertainment industries, economies and production practices, cultural and political forums, spectators and fans. They critically examine the ways in which the horror genre functions in all its multifarious forms, considering, for example, "The Friday the 13th" films as a contemporary grand guignol, the new series of "Mummy" and "Blade" films as blockbusters, and horror film marketing on the internet. They also examine the relationship between the contemporary horror film and the theme park ride, the horror film as art house cinema, relationships between pornography and the horror film, set and costume design in horror films such as "The Silence of the Lambs", and the place of special effects in this most reputable of film genres.

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Contents

Introduction
1
Manufacture and Design
4
Celebration Chat and Horror Film
67
Copyright

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About the author (2010)

Ian Conrich is a Professorial Fellow at the University of Vienna, Austria. Principal Editor of the Journal of New Zealand and Pacific Studies, he has been a Guest Editor of the Harvard Review, Post Script, Asian Cinema, and Studies in Travel Writing.The author of Studies in New Zealand Cinema (2009), and co-author of Gothic Dissections in Film and Literature: The Body in Parts (2017), he is an author or editor of a further fourteen books, including The Cinema of John Carpenter: The Technique of Terror (2004), Film's Musical Moments (2006), Contemporary New Zealand Cinema (2008), Horror Zone: The Cultural Experience of Contemporary Horror Cinema (2009), and Rapa Nui - Easter Island: Cultural and Historical Perspectives (2016).

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