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This book is an ambitious attempt to produce an interdisciplinary
reading of a set of relatively recent Hollywood films that appear
to make references to the biblical genre of apocalyptic and
associated ideas of Christian martyrdom and eschatology: End of
Days, Armageddon, Alien3, The Rapture, The Seventh Sign. It is a
'preposterous' reading (Mieke Bal's term), reversing a common-sense
impulse to view what comes first chronologically (the biblical
text) as an unproblematic template rather than as itself the
consequence of subsequent, contextualized readings. The cinematic
reworkings Copier describes shift our understanding of both texts
(biblical and cinematic) and genre. Within this process, the
apocalyptic subject-the martyr-adopts variable poses that reflect
the effects of this disorienting reversal: across the five films
analysed, the martyr moves from identifiably Christian motivations
to the representation of patriotic American masculinity, or even to
something that, in a contrary sense, powerfully challenges the
conventional masculinity of any martyrdom that counts as
significant. To achieve a genuine interdisciplinarity, Copier not
only avoids reading each film as if it were simply the visual
counterpart to a (biblical) narrative, but also analyses in the
case of each film what the 'shot list' of a key sequence reveals
about the semiotics at work within its construction. Unlike most
encounters between religion and film, her film analysis goes far
beyond the identification of themes and motifs. Here the author
engages with the larger field of film studies, and especially with
film as a visual medium.
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