|
Showing 1 - 12 of
12 matches in All Departments
David Fincher's Zodiac (2007), written by producer James Vanderbilt
and adapted from the true crime works of James Graysmith, remains
one of the most respected films of the early 21st century. As the
second film featuring a serial killer (and the first based on fact)
by Fincher, Zodiac remains a standout in a varied but stylistically
unified career. It similarly stands out among a new wave of crime
cinema in the early 2000s, including the modern classics Inside
Man, Michael Clayton, and Academy Award winner No Country for Old
Men. While commonly described as a serial killer film, Zodiac also
hybridizes the policier genre and the investigative reporter film.
And yet, scholarship has largely ignored the film. This collection,
edited by Matthew Sorrento and David Ryan, is the first book-length
study dedicated to the film. Section One focuses on early
influences, such as serial and spree killer films of the 1960s and
70s and how their treatments helped to shape Fincher's film. The
second section analyses the film's unique treatment of narrative
with studies of rhetoric onscreen, intertextuality, and gender. The
book closes with a section on media studies, including chapters
focusing on game theory, data and hegemony, the Zodiac's treatment
in music, and the use of sound in cinema. By offering new avenues
in Zodiac studies and continuing a few established ones, this book
will interest scholars of cinema and true crime along with fans and
enthusiasts in these areas.
Arkham Asylum for the Criminally Insane is a staple of the Batman
universe, evolving into a franchise comprised of comic books,
graphic novels, video games, films, television series and more. The
Arkham franchise, supposedly light-weight entertainment, has
tackled weighty issues in contemporary psychiatry. Its plotlines
reference clinical and ethical controversies that perplex even the
most up-to-date professionals. The 25 essays in this collection
explore the significance of Arkham's sinister psychiatrists,
murderous mental patients, and unethical geneticists. It invites
debates about the criminalization of the mentally ill, mental
patients who move from defunct state hospitals into expanding
prisons, madness versus badness, sociopathy versus psychosis, the
"insanity defense" and more. Invoking literary figures from
Lovecraft to Poe to Caligari, the 25 essays in this collection are
a broad-ranging and thorough assessment of the franchise and its
relationship to contemporary psychiatry.
|
|