Cycles, Sequels, Spin-offs, Remakes, and Reboots: Multiplicities in Film and Television
edited by Amanda Ann Klein and R. Barton Palmer
University of Texas Press, 2016 Paper: 978-1-4773-0817-2 | Cloth: 978-1-4773-0900-1 | eISBN: 978-1-4773-0818-9 Library of Congress Classification PN1995.9.S29C93 2016 Dewey Decimal Classification 791.436
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
With sequels, prequels, remakes, spin-offs, or copies of successful films or franchises dominating film and television production, it sometimes seems as if Hollywood is incapable of making an original film or TV show. These textual pluralities or multiplicities—while loved by fans who flock to them in droves—tend to be dismissed by critics and scholars as markers of the death of high culture. Cycles, Sequels, Spin-offs, Remakes, and Reboots takes the opposite view, surveying a wide range of international media multiplicities for the first time to elucidate their importance for audiences, industrial practices, and popular culture.
The essays in this volume offer a broad picture of the ways in which cinema and television have used multiplicities to streamline the production process, and to capitalize on and exploit viewer interest in previously successful and/or sensational story properties. An impressive lineup of established and emerging scholars talk seriously about forms of multiplicity that are rarely discussed as such, including direct-to-DVD films made in Nigeria, cross-cultural Japanese horror remakes, YouTube fan-generated trailer mash-ups, and 1970s animal revenge films. They show how considering the particular bonds that tie texts to one another allows us to understand more about the audiences for these texts and why they crave a version of the same story (or character or subject) over and over again. These findings demonstrate that, far from being lowbrow art, multiplicities are actually doing important cultural work that is very worthy of serious study.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Amanda Ann Klein is an associate professor of film studies at East Carolina University. R. Barton Palmer is Calhoun Lemon Professor of Literature and director of film studies at Clemson University.
REVIEWS
"A strong and very necessary addition to the growing body of work that contends with filmic repetition and the commercial and cultural complexities of film and television production and reception across multimedia platforms. The range of essays is impressive."
— Carolyn Jess-Cooke, University of Glasgow, author of Film Sequels: Theory and Practice from Hollywood to Bollywood and coeditor of Second Takes: Critical Approaches to the Film Sequel
"This volume expands on Amanda Ann Klein’s American Film Cycles to open up an extremely fruitful approach to serial and related media phenomena. It will no doubt be adopted as a supplementary text for a wide range of courses in film and television studies."
— Linda C. Badley, Professor of English, Middle Tennessee State University, and author of Lars von Trier and many other works on film
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Introduction (Amanda Ann Klein and R. Barton Palmer)
Chapter 2. The Kissing Cycle, Mashers, and (White) Women in the American City (Amanda Ann Klein)
Chapter 3. Descended from Hercules: Masculine Anxiety in the Peplum (Robert Rushing)
Chapter 4. The American Postwar Semidocumentary Cycle: Factual Dramatizations (R. Barton Palmer)
Chapter 5. Cycle Consciousness and the White Audience in Black Film Writing: The 1949–1950 "Race Problem" Cycle and the African American Press (Steven Doles)
Chapter 6. Vicious Cycle: Jaws and Revenge-of-Nature Films of the 1970s (Constantine Verevis)
Chapter 7. Familiar Otherness: On the Contemporary Cross-Cultural Remake (Chelsey Crawford)
Chapter 8. Anime's Dangerous Innocents: Millennial Anxieties, Gender Crises, and the Shōjo Body as a Weapon (Elizabeth Birmingham)
Chapter 9. It's Only a Film, Isn't It? Policy Paranoia Thrillers of the War on Terror (Vincent M. Gaine)
Cycles, Sequels, Spin-offs, Remakes, and Reboots: Multiplicities in Film and Television
edited by Amanda Ann Klein and R. Barton Palmer
University of Texas Press, 2016 Paper: 978-1-4773-0817-2 Cloth: 978-1-4773-0900-1 eISBN: 978-1-4773-0818-9
With sequels, prequels, remakes, spin-offs, or copies of successful films or franchises dominating film and television production, it sometimes seems as if Hollywood is incapable of making an original film or TV show. These textual pluralities or multiplicities—while loved by fans who flock to them in droves—tend to be dismissed by critics and scholars as markers of the death of high culture. Cycles, Sequels, Spin-offs, Remakes, and Reboots takes the opposite view, surveying a wide range of international media multiplicities for the first time to elucidate their importance for audiences, industrial practices, and popular culture.
The essays in this volume offer a broad picture of the ways in which cinema and television have used multiplicities to streamline the production process, and to capitalize on and exploit viewer interest in previously successful and/or sensational story properties. An impressive lineup of established and emerging scholars talk seriously about forms of multiplicity that are rarely discussed as such, including direct-to-DVD films made in Nigeria, cross-cultural Japanese horror remakes, YouTube fan-generated trailer mash-ups, and 1970s animal revenge films. They show how considering the particular bonds that tie texts to one another allows us to understand more about the audiences for these texts and why they crave a version of the same story (or character or subject) over and over again. These findings demonstrate that, far from being lowbrow art, multiplicities are actually doing important cultural work that is very worthy of serious study.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Amanda Ann Klein is an associate professor of film studies at East Carolina University. R. Barton Palmer is Calhoun Lemon Professor of Literature and director of film studies at Clemson University.
REVIEWS
"A strong and very necessary addition to the growing body of work that contends with filmic repetition and the commercial and cultural complexities of film and television production and reception across multimedia platforms. The range of essays is impressive."
— Carolyn Jess-Cooke, University of Glasgow, author of Film Sequels: Theory and Practice from Hollywood to Bollywood and coeditor of Second Takes: Critical Approaches to the Film Sequel
"This volume expands on Amanda Ann Klein’s American Film Cycles to open up an extremely fruitful approach to serial and related media phenomena. It will no doubt be adopted as a supplementary text for a wide range of courses in film and television studies."
— Linda C. Badley, Professor of English, Middle Tennessee State University, and author of Lars von Trier and many other works on film
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Introduction (Amanda Ann Klein and R. Barton Palmer)
Chapter 2. The Kissing Cycle, Mashers, and (White) Women in the American City (Amanda Ann Klein)
Chapter 3. Descended from Hercules: Masculine Anxiety in the Peplum (Robert Rushing)
Chapter 4. The American Postwar Semidocumentary Cycle: Factual Dramatizations (R. Barton Palmer)
Chapter 5. Cycle Consciousness and the White Audience in Black Film Writing: The 1949–1950 "Race Problem" Cycle and the African American Press (Steven Doles)
Chapter 6. Vicious Cycle: Jaws and Revenge-of-Nature Films of the 1970s (Constantine Verevis)
Chapter 7. Familiar Otherness: On the Contemporary Cross-Cultural Remake (Chelsey Crawford)
Chapter 8. Anime's Dangerous Innocents: Millennial Anxieties, Gender Crises, and the Shōjo Body as a Weapon (Elizabeth Birmingham)
Chapter 9. It's Only a Film, Isn't It? Policy Paranoia Thrillers of the War on Terror (Vincent M. Gaine)