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The Blood Poets : A Cinema of Savagery, 1958-98 - v.2 : Millennial Blues, from "Apocalypse Now" to "The Edge"

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Why do people feel the need to create images of violence, and why do audiences continually watch them?

This work brings together the multiple disciplines of psychology, criminology, censorship and anthropology in a study of 40 years of violent American cinema.

The 40 years are divided between two volumes. The first volume looks at "American Chaos" from the films "Touch of Evil" to "Brazil".

This second volume covers "Millenial Blues" between the films "Apocalypse Now" and "The Edge".

Jake Horsley raises a dialogue between scholars and movie buffs as readers struggle to find their own answers to the connection between the need to portray and the need to watch violent films.

The study shows the readers how to use violent film as a text with which to analyze society, but without losing touch with the aesthetic qualities of the films themselves.

The author uses films such as "Psycho", "A Clockwork Orange", "M.A.S.H." and "Blade Runner".

Together, the volumes aim to provide both a critical overview of the films themselves and a cultural study of the social and psychological factors relating to the demand for screen violence.

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£68.80 Save 20.00%
RRP £86.00
Product Details
Scarecrow Press
0810836696 / 9780810836693
Hardback
01/11/1999
United States
English
464p.
24 cm
general /undergraduate Learn More