ABSTRACT

The Routledge Companion to Cult Cinema offers an overview of the field of cult cinema – films at the margin of popular culture and art that have received exceptional cultural visibility and status mostly because they break rules, offend, and challenge understandings of achievement (some are so bad they’re good, others so good they remain inaccessible).

Cult cinema is no longer only comprised of the midnight movie or the extreme genre film. Its range has widened and the issues it broaches have become battlegrounds in cultural debates that typify the first quarter of the twenty-first century. Sections are introduced with the major theoretical frameworks, philosophical inspirations, and methodologies for studying cult films, with individual chapters excavating the most salient criticism of how the field impacts cultural discourse at large. Case studies include the worst films ever; exploitation films; genre cinema; multiple media formats cult cinema is expressed through; issues of cultural, national, and gender representations; elements of the production culture of cult cinema; and, throughout, aspects of the aesthetics of cult cinema – its genre, style, look, impact, and ability to yank viewers out of their comfort zones.

The Routledge Companion to Cult Cinema goes beyond the traditional scope of Anglophone and North American cinema by including case studies of East and South Asia, continental Europe, the Middle East, and Latin America, making it an innovative and important resource for researchers and students alike.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

The cult cinema studies experience

part I|78 pages

Genres and cycles

chapter 1|13 pages

‘Naughty,’ ‘nasty,’ ‘culty’

Exploitation film

chapter 2|9 pages

Underground film and cult cinema

chapter 3|7 pages

Cult-art cinema

Defining cult-art ambivalence

chapter 4|10 pages

“It happens by accident”

Failed intentions, incompetence, and sincerity in badfilm

chapter 5|9 pages

Cult horror cinema

chapter 6|10 pages

Cult science fiction cinema

chapter 8|9 pages

The Italian giallo

part II|54 pages

Global and local cult cinema

chapter 9|9 pages

Latsploitation

chapter 10|7 pages

Iranian cult cinema

chapter 11|6 pages

Rebels without a cause

The Bombay cult film

chapter 12|10 pages

East Asian cult cinema

chapter 14|8 pages

Blaxploitation filmmaking

part III|59 pages

Critical concepts

chapter 15|9 pages

Cult cinema and gender

chapter 16|9 pages

Cult cinema and nostalgia

chapter 17|9 pages

Oc/cult film and video

chapter 18|10 pages

Transgression in cult cinema

chapter 19|10 pages

Access all areas?

Anglo-American film censorship and cult cinema in the digital era

chapter 20|8 pages

Cult cinema and camp

part IV|53 pages

Exhibition, distribution

chapter 21|12 pages

Midnight movies

chapter 22|8 pages

Drive-in and grindhouse theatres

chapter 23|10 pages

Blood cults

Historicising the North American “shot on video” horror movie

chapter 24|11 pages

Cult cinema in the digital age

chapter 25|8 pages

Cult cinema and film festivals

part V|42 pages

Fandom

chapter 26|9 pages

Conventions and cosplay

chapter 27|9 pages

Grown woman shit

A case for Magic Mike XXL as cult text

chapter 28|10 pages

The cut between us

Digital remix and the expression of self

chapter 29|10 pages

The professionalised fandom of careers in cult

“Passionate work” within academia and industry

part VI|30 pages

Music and sound

chapter 30|10 pages

Cult musicals

chapter 31|8 pages

Cult soundtracks (music)

chapter 32|10 pages

Sounding out cult cinema

The ‘bad’, the ‘weird’ and the ‘old’

part VII|54 pages

Aesthetics and intermediality

chapter 33|9 pages

Inside an actor’s scrapbook

Heath Ledger’s aesthetic practice of unbalancing

chapter 34|11 pages

Special effects and the cult film

Cult film production and analogue nostalgia on the digital effects pipeline

chapter 35|9 pages

Production play

Sets, props, and costumes in cult films

chapter 36|8 pages

Cult film and adaptation

chapter 37|13 pages

Cult film – Cult television

part VIII|52 pages

Auteurs

chapter 38|9 pages

“It’s a strange world”

David Lynch

chapter 39|10 pages

“You guys always bring me the very best violence”

Making the case for Joss Whedon’s The Avengers and Serenity as mainstream cult

chapter 40|9 pages

Anti-auteur

The films of Roberta Findlay1

chapter 41|11 pages

Anna Biller

part IX|57 pages

Actors

chapter 43|8 pages

Judy Garland

chapter 44|8 pages

From the other side of the wind

Dennis Hopper

chapter 45|9 pages

Barbara Steele

chapter 46|8 pages

Bruce Lee

Cult (film) icon

chapter 47|10 pages

All he needs is love

The cult of Klaus Kinski

chapter 48|10 pages

Crispin Glover