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Creepshow - (Devil's Advocates) by Simon Brown (Paperback)

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Highlights

  • Released in cinemas in 1982, Creepshow is typically regarded as a minor entry in both the film output of George A. Romero and the history of adaptations of the works of Stephen King.
  • About the Author: Simon Brown is associate professor of film and television at Kingston University.
  • 106 Pages
  • Performing Arts, Film
  • Series Name: Devil's Advocates

Description



About the Book



Simon Brown's analysis of Creepshow focuses on the key influences on the film, not just Romero and King, but also the anthology horrors of Amicus Productions, body horror cinema, and the special make up effects of Tom Savini, the relationship between horror and humor, and most notably the tradition of EC horror comics of the 1950s, from which the film draws both its thematic preoccupations and its visual style.



Book Synopsis



Released in cinemas in 1982, Creepshow is typically regarded as a minor entry in both the film output of George A. Romero and the history of adaptations of the works of Stephen King. Yet this lack of critical attention hides the fact that Creepshow is the only full collaboration between America's bestselling author of horror tales and one of the masters of modern American horror cinema. Long considered too mainstream for the director of Dawn of the Dead (1978), too comic for the author that gave audiences the film versions of Carrie (1976) and The Shining (1980), and too violent for a cinemagoing public turning away from gore cinema in the autumn of 1982, Creepshow is here reassessed by Simon Brown, who examines the making and release of the film and its legacy through a comic book adaptation and two sequels. His analysis focuses on the key influences on the film, not just Romero and King, but also the anthology horrors of Amicus Productions, body horror cinema, and the special make up effects of Tom Savini, the relationship between horror and humor, and most notably the tradition of EC horror comics of the 1950s, from which the film draws both its thematic preoccupations and its visual style. Ultimately the book argues that not only is Creepshow a major work in the canons of Romero and King, but also that it represents a significant example of the portmanteau horror film, of the blending of horror and comedy, and finally, decades before the career of Zack Snyder (Watchmen, Man of Steel), of attempting to recreate a comic book aesthetic on the big screen.



Review Quotes




'Simon Brown's Creepshow is an exemplary volume from the [Devil's Advocates] series... perhaps the greatest strength of [Creepshow] and the Devil's Advocates series as a whole: upon reading the volume, even if familiar with the film, there is often enough new context and ways of interpreting the cinematic text to make the film itself worth re-watching through new eyes... I would argue [Creepshow] belong[s] on the library shelf of any school with courses in cinema, as well as on the shelf of any scholar of horror interested in [the film].'

Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr., Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts




About the Author



Simon Brown is associate professor of film and television at Kingston University. A lifelong Constant Reader, he has published numerous articles on Stephen King adaptations, including pieces on Under the Dome, Cell, and Salem's Lot. His most recent work is the monograph Screening Stephen King: Adaptation and Horror Genre in Film and Television (2018).

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