Carrie’s Sisters New Blood in Contemporary Female Horror Cinema

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2020
Host editors
  • N. Chare
  • J. Hoorn
  • A. Yue
Book title Re-reading the Monstrous-Feminine
Book subtitle Art, Film, Feminism and Psychoanalysis
ISBN
  • 9781138602946
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9780429469367
Series Routledge Advances in Film Studies
Chapter 7
Pages (from-to) 121-137
Number of pages 17
Publisher New York: Routledge
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA)
Abstract
Since the new millennium, a striking number of women have started to adopt and adapt formal and thematic elements from horror cinema. In this essay I will look at some of interesting horror films directed by woman, asking how these films are indebted to Barbara Creed’s psychoanalytic concepts and investigating if and how they might open new perspectives on “female monstrosity” as abject or/and castrating. By returning to Creed’s work and to one of the bloodiest heroines of the 1970s horror cinema Brian De Palma’s Carrie (dir. 1976) and its remake by Kimberly Pierce in 2013, I will follow a common red thread of blood in the aesthetics (as form, affect and meaning) of contemporary horror cinema. I focus my arguments around Jane Campion’s In the Cut (dir. 2003) and Lucille Hadzihalilovic’s Evolution (dir. 2015) to argue that a female perspective and female agency in contemporary horror aesthetics opens up intimate, inner perspectives, and unconscious desires that merge with perceptions of the outer world, social violence, and connections to the environment.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429469367-9
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