#carol j clover
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doomsayings · 2 years ago
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men, women, and chainsaws
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agirlnamedbone · 2 years ago
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“The eyes on promotional posters and videocassette boxes are in the great majority of cases threatened, frightened eyes--commonly a woman’s eyes reaching in horror at a poised, bloody knife, an advancing shape, or something off-poster or off-box. ‘One of the most frequent and compelling images in the horror film repertoire,’ writes J.P. Telotte, ‘is that of the wide, staring eyes of some victim, expressing stark terror or disbelief and attesting to an ultimate threat to the human proposition.’ A standard moment in horror is one in which a person is caught by surprise--her vision assaulted--by the sight of things she does not want to see. Laurie in Halloween, for example, who looks into a closet only to see the dead body of her friend staring her in the face. And as Telotte points out, the effect is maximized by the reversal of the normal sequence in such a way that the reaction comes first. Over and over, horror presents us with scenarios in which assaultive gazing is not just thwarted and punished, but actually reversed in such a way that those who thought to penetrate end up themselves penetrated.”
--Carol J. Clover, from Men, Women and Chainsaws (1992)
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haveyoureadthisbook-poll · 2 months ago
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martyrbat · 2 years ago
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men, women, and chainsaws – carol j. clover
[TEXT ID: (the hero part always understood as implying some degree of monstrosity)]
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ispyspookymansion · 2 years ago
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i hate midsommar so much call dani a final girl again and im pushing you off the murder cliff
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veryslowreader · 2 years ago
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Men, Women, and Chainsaws by Carol J. Clover
Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin: "Chapter Six: Scars"
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daimonios · 1 year ago
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i think its so fun when academics have multiple seemingly super unrelated areas of study
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flocklings · 1 year ago
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kiss the creature into me please
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Friday the 13th
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I thought I had reviewed all of the Friday the 13th movies, but after showing Sean S. Cunningham’s original FRIDAY THE 13TH (1980, On Demand) to a friend who’d never seen it, I discovered I hadn’t done the first or the second. This was the latest of many viewings of one of the original slashers, and this time, watching with someone else, I noticed some things:
The film obviously borrows heavily from John Carpenter’s HALLOWEEN (1978), most notably with an opening murder set in the past, though Cunningham’s film provides no shocking revelation of the killer (that was saved for later) and provides the keys to a more concrete motive.
The big mistake in that opening sequence is partly shared with some scenes in HALLOWEEN. It starts with what seems to be a subjective camera shot that isn’t. Later, when it finally becomes a subjective shot with the killing of the two camp counsellors, Cunningham makes a mistake of his own. He breaks the tension by switching to an objective shot as the first counselor is killed.
Until my friend pointed it out, I hadn’t realized how androgynous the final girl (Adrienne King) is. Her short hair may have been intended to contrast with the female victims, and of course, it was the popular Dorothy Hamill cut of the period, but it also creates an intriguing sexual ambiguity that helps support Carol J. Clover’s contention in MEN, WOMEN AND CHAINSAWS: GENDER IN THE MODERN HORROR FILM that the final girl derives her power from her virginal, almost asexual status.
The final battle is a rarity for the period in depicting two women going at it hammer and tongs without a man as the source of contention. Yes, I know Jason’s death motivates the film, but they’re not exactly fighting over him.
I still maintain the best ending for the film would be for the final girl’s mother to come into her hospital room and be played by Betsy Palmer. Yes, it would mean there wouldn’t be any sequels (“Big loss,” I hear some of you saying sarcastically), but it would provide a much more interesting note of ambiguity. Or have I been watching too many gialli?
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rustystars · 2 years ago
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got a tcm book for christmas & i'm only three chapters in but literally. where's the gender
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agirlnamedbone · 2 years ago
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“One of the most disturbing things about I Spit on Your Grave, I think, is its almost perverse simplicity. The men are not odd specimens but in the normal range of variation; their acts of brutal rape are not traced to dysfunctional upbringing (no Mother Bateses here); Jennifer takes the revenge she does not for deep-seated psychological reasons but because it is the punishment that fits the crime; there are no extenuating circumstances; the law is not involved, nor are legal questions raised; and there is no concern whatever, not even at the level of lip service, with moral and ethical issues. In short, I Spit on Your Grave offers no outs; it makes no space for intellectual displacement. [...]
I Spit on Your Grave shocks not because it is alien but because it is too familiar, because we recognize that the emotions it engages are regularly engaged by the big screen but almost never bluntly acknowledged for what they are.”
--Carol J. Clover, from Men, Women and Chainsaws (1992)
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sophopolis · 6 months ago
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this one tumblr post really got to me i still think about it and get really mad cuz it was something like, "80s horror director all need to say sorry women and you're welcome gay people"
i like dont even know what 2 say about that
sometimes im like maybe there's no fixing this maybe i just beat you bloody maybe i just beat u into a paste
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jimmynovac · 2 years ago
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how dare you put that on my dash. i trusted youuuu
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martyrbat · 2 years ago
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men, women, and chainsaws – carol j. clover
[TEXT ID: "Tortured survivor" might be a better term than "hero."]
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ispyspookymansion · 2 years ago
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“What is represented as male-on-female violence, in short, is figuratively speaking male-on-male sex.” - Carol J Clover on horror films
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fpere2023 · 2 years ago
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Critical Project: Empowerment in Horror
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Introduction
“…the majority audience, perhaps even more than the audience for horror in general, was largely young and largely male-conspicuously groups of boys who cheer the killer on as he assaults his victims, then reverse their sympathies to cheer the survivor on as she assaults the killer. Young males are also, I shall suggest, the slasher film's implied audience, the object of its address.” (Corrigan 514)
“Between 1974 and 1986, however, the formula evolved and flourished in ways of some interest to observers of popular cul-ture, above all those concerned with the representation of women in film.” (Corrigan 516)
Due to an increased awareness/acknowledgment of female horror fans, the portrayal of female characters has developed into one that is more respectful and empowering. 
How Annihilation Subverts the tropes of the Final Girl:
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“…the victim is eternally and prototypically the damsel.” (Corrigan 516)
In Annihilation the crew that embarks on the journey is made up of specialist and veteran women who desire to learn more about the phenomena. They are not damsels in distress but scientists who hunger for answers. (Garland, Annihilation, 21:05-24:08)
Dr. Ventress - psychologist (team leader)
Cassie Shepard - Geomorphologist
Josie Radek - Physicist
Anya Thorensen - paramedic
Lena Double - Biologist
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“…a blatantly phallic murderer, even gurgling orgasmically as she dies.” (Corrigan 516)
The deaths in Annihilation (focusing on the female team) occur both on and off screen. The first death occurs off screen. Cass Sheppard is found in the forest by Lena Double where her body is mutilated but not in a sexual manner. Her throat is bit open exposing gore that makes the viewer turn away in disgust. However, Sheppard is left closed with eyes staring wide at the sky above. The second death is brutal and quick as Anya Thorensen is mauled by the bear-human hybrid. Her face is torn in half leaving gore and the character once again staring wide eyed at the ceiling. The third death occurs off screen but is not as violent or as shocking as the others. Josie Radek accepts the metamorphosis she is undergoing within the shimmer and becomes one of the humanoid plants sprawled across the village. The fourth and final death of the female scientist occurs within the center part of the creature controlling the shimmer. The lead scientist, Dr. Ventress accepts her death and is evaporated by the light being expelled from her body. Non- of the deaths should arouse desire or satisfaction form viewers. They can either be brutal or beautiful but they are not sexual. 
(Garland, Annihilation, 1:02:03-1:02:3) [Shepard]
(Garland, Annihilation, 1:16:20-1:16:50) [Thorensen]
(Garland, Annihilation, 1:18:40-1:21:39) [Radek]
(Garland, Annihilation, 1:30:26 - 1:33:30) [Ventress]
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“As E. Ann Kaplan sums it up, "within the film text itself, men gaze at women, who become objects of the gaze; the spectator, in turn, is made to identify with this male gaze, and to objectify the woman on the screen; and the camera's original 'gaze' comes into play in the very act of filming." (Corrigan 517)
Because the main character is female the story is told from her perspective allowing the gaze to be her own. During one of the flashbacks (affair scene) Portman's character is shot from behind around eye level. Her back and face are shown in two separate shots showing her dominance in the bedroom and within the affair. She is in control. Her character is not sexualized as other female leads are in other horror movies (full body shots, breast exposed, loud orgasmic screaming) she is quietly pleasing herself while also dealing with the inner turmoil her actions have caused her. (Garland, Annihilation, 29:05 - 29:25)
“She is introduced at the beginning and is the only character to be developed in any psychological detail. We understand immediately from the attention paid it that hers is the main story line.” (Corrigan 518)
The other characters (Kane, other female leads) receive development as the story progresses allowing the audience to empathize and mourn each. 
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“When De Palma says that female frailty is a predicate of the suspense genre, he proposes, in effect, that the lack of the phallus, for Lacan the privileged signifier of the symbolic order, is itself simply horrifying, at least in the mind of the male observer.” (Corrigan 521)
Although it is brought to attention the limited strength of the female characters (gun pickup scene). The characters are proven to be capable of protecting themselves when the situation calls for it. (Portman scenes shooting the alligator at eye level). (35:40) (Garland, Annihilation, 36:08-36:38)
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“The cinematic gaze, we are told, is male, and just as that gaze "knows" how to fetishize the female form in pornography (in a way that it does not "know" how to fetishize the male form) so it "knows," in horror, how to track a woman ascending a staircase in a scary house and how to study her face from an angle above as she first hears the killer's footfall.” (Corrigan 521)
The characters are not hypersexualized in the film. They are allowed to have messy buns and wear baggy clothes because they are meant to survive. (Garland, Annihilation, 27:38 - 28:57)
“…boyish: because they are transformed males.” (Corrigan 522)
Although they do take the place of the ale team they are not reflections of them. The women have their own reasons for entering the shimmer and are able to progress to the end (two of them)
“…victim-hero…” (Corrigan 526)
None of the women are victims because they chose to enter the shimmer and continued forward knowing the danger. 
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“Abject terror, in short, is gendered feminine…” (Corrigan 522)
Most of the women are stoic throughout the film or show some moments of weakness but they are not screaming and sobbing throughout the film. They work to survive. (Garland, Annihilation, 44:35-47:08)
(Garland, Annihilation, 1:10:56 - 1:14:30) Madness scene
How annihilation fulfills the trope of the final girl described by Clover:
“Brian De Palma elaborates:…you fear more for her than you would for a husky man."(Corrigan 516)
Hitchcock…'Torture the women!' The trouble today is that we don't torture women enough.” (Corrigan 516)
The team of women in Annihilation suffer both grotesque physical and psychological changes due to their time in the shimmer. The audience is disturbed by their suffering and sympathizes with their struggles. However, the horror is not solely experienced by them. As the film progresses the viewer learns about the fate of the Male team which acts as a catalyst to the true horror of the shimmer. 
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“The killer is often unseen or barely glimpsed, during the first part of the film, and what we do see, when we finally get a good look, hardly invites immediate or conscious empathy.” (Corrigan 518)
Because it is not humanoid, the entity controlling the shimmer creates no connection with the viewer. Only confusion and fear. 
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“No male character of any stature lives to tell the tale.” (Corrigan 518)
None of the male team survives to explain their experience in the shimmer. All that remains is the footage they recorded. (Garland, Annihilation, 47:28-48:55)
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“-we see through his eyes and (on the soundtrack) hear his breathing and heartbeat.” (Corrigan 518)
Beginning shot of Kane's clone returning home. But it is brief and Pormans characters perspective is the one we focus on. (Garland, Annihilation, 6:27-7:30)
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“The last point is the crucial one: the same female body does for both. The Final Girl (1) undergoes agonizing trials, and (2) virtually or actually destroys the antagonist and saves herself.” (Corrigan 524)
The body shifts due to shimmer, the psychological torment Portman's character faces due to her guilt and experience in the shimmer as well as her battle against her clone in the heart of shimmer qualifies her for 1. The destruction of the shimmer through the clone is 2.
“At the moment that the Final Girl becomes her own savior, she becomes a hero; and the moment that she becomes a hero is the moment that the male viewer gives up the last pretense of male identification.” (Corrigan 524)
By burning the shimmer, Portmans character is able to do the thing her husband, Kane, could do, essentially making her the final girl. However she is ultimately changed forever. 
Sources
“Annihilation.” Box Office Mojo, https://www.boxofficemojo.com/release/rl1057129985/.
Clover, Carol J. Her Body, Himself Men, Women, and Chain Saws: Gender in the Modern Horror Film. 1992.  Princeton University Press.  In Critical Vision in Film Theory (2011).  Corrigan, et al.  Bedford/St.Martins, p. 511-530 
“The Most Surprising Horror Movie Statistics and Trends in 2023 • Gitnux.” GITNUX, 13 Mar. 2023, https://blog.gitnux.com/horror-movie-statistics/.
Published by Statista Research Department, and Jan 5. “U.S.: Horror Films' Popularity by Gender 2022.” Statista, 5 Jan. 2023, https://www.statista.com/statistics/1342707/horror-movies-theater-viewing-gender-united-states/#:~:text=As%20of%20October%202022%2C%20approximately,added%20up%20to%2021%20percent.
Annihilation. Directed by Alex Garland. Performance by Natalie Portman Jennifer Jason Leigh, Gina Rodriguez, Tessa Thompson, Tuva Novotny, and Oscar Isaac. Paramount Pictures. 2018. Film
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