惇蹋勛圖厙

Book Chapter

'Come on Boy 每 Bring it!': Embracing Queer Aesthetics in Marcus Nispel's The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003)

Details

Citation

Elliott-Smith D (2015) 'Come on Boy 每 Bring it!': Embracing Queer Aesthetics in Marcus Nispel's The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003). In: Clayton W (ed.) Style and Form in the Hollywood Slasher Film. London: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 180-194. https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9781137496461

Abstract
Marcus Nispel*s 2003 aesthetically polished remake of Tobe Hooper*s iconic original The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) was essentially a box-office success, taking approximately $80 million during its US theatrical release period# I want to argue initially that, despite the film*s often disjointed intertextual references to Hooper*s original , the remake*s tone, themes and aesthetics significantly have more in common with Bay*s slick, commercialised, hyperkinetic stylistic tendencies in that they have been &updated in their capacity for gore and contemporary pacing* (Lizardi 2010). While this extends to the film*s visual reimagining of an &MTV-sanctioned counterculture*, whereby the ragtag gang of misfits in Hooper*s original are swapped for &a vanload of beautiful people adorned with corporate product placements* (Keursten 2005), it also highlights a self-referential awareness of the place of the slasher sub-genre in both cultural and film theory. Here the hyper-stylisation of Nispel*s remake collides with the hyper-emphasis of the horror film*s academic and ideological critique. This works towards an updating of the original film*s mythology, a commercialising of its aesthetics and, arguably, a &queering* of its monstrous patriarchal structures (in which a now all-pervasive matriarchy persists) and of the sub-genre*s erotic objectification of the female body, supplanting this with that of the fetishised male victim.

Keywords
Horror Film; Slasher Horror; Gender Studies; Queer Horror; LGBTQ Studies; Film Studies; Genre Studies

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of Hertfordshire
Publication date31/12/2015
Publication date online31/10/2015
PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
Publisher URL
Place of publicationLondon
ISBN9781137496461
eISBN978-1-137-49647-8

People (1)

Dr Darren Elliott-Smith

Dr Darren Elliott-Smith

Senior Lecturer in Film & Gender Studies, Communications, Media and Culture