To See the Saw Movies: Essays on Torture Porn and Post-9/11 Horror

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James Aston, John Walliss
McFarland, Jun 25, 2013 - Performing Arts - 208 pages

The Saw films, often derided by critics as "torture porn" and an excuse to show blood and gore, are the highest-grossing horror series in cinema history. In view of their hold on audiences and their controversial content, they deserve study. This first collection of fresh essays by academic authors from Europe, America and Australia addresses the cultural, religious and philosophical facets of the films, investigating how the franchise reflects a post-9/11 shift in U.S. popular culture towards increasing pessimism and how it may be read as a metaphor for the "war on terror"; dissecting how the series explores such issues as freewill and determinism; assessing the films' representations of the body; and applying a Deleuzian perspective to the franchise.

 

Contents

Introduction James Aston and John Walliss
1
Ethical Guidance and the Turn Toward Cultural Pessimism James Aston and John Walliss
13
Body Horror Ben McCann
30
Video Games Movies and Control Evangelos Tziallas
45
God Free Will and Foreknowledge in Conflict Fernando G Pagnoni Berns and Amy M Davis
73
Jigsaw as Acousmêtre and Existential Guru Brian H Collins
86
Morality Nihilism and Symbolic Suicide Steve Jones
105
The Jigsaw Assemblage Jacob Huntley
123
Life in the Mannequin Factory Dean Lockwood
139
Monstrous Bodies and Gendered Abjection Madeleine Smith
157
Sound Design Jeffrey Bullins
176
About the Contributors
195
Index
197
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About the author (2013)

James Aston is program leader for screen at the University of Hull film studies undergraduate program. He lives in Willerby, United Kingdom. John Walliss is senior lecturer in criminology in the faculty of sciences and social sciences, Liverpool Hope University, UK.

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