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Framing
Monsters
Fantasy
Film and Social Alienation
by Joshua David Bellin
March
paper,
0-8093-2624-8, $30.00
cloth,
0-8093-2623-X, $60.00
272
pages, 6 x 9, 6 illus.
Film
Studies / Popular Culture
The
canon of popular cinema has long been rife with fantastic tales, yet critical
studies have too often expediently mixed the fantasy genre with its kindred
science fiction and horror films or dismissed it altogether as escapist
fare. Framing Monsters: Fantasy Film and Social Alienation reconsiders
the cultural significance of this storytelling mode by investigating how
films seemingly divorced from reality and presented in a context of timelessness
are, in fact, encoded with the social practices and beliefs of their era
of production.
Situating representative fantasy films within their cultural moments,
Joshua David Bellin illustrates how fantastic visions of monstrous others
seek to propagate negative stereotypes of despised groups and support
invidious hierarchies of social control. In constructing such an argument,
Framing Monsters not only contests dismissive attitudes toward
fantasy but also challenges the psychoanalytic criticism that has thus
far dominated its limited critical study.
Beginning with celebrated classics, Bellin locates King Kong
(1933) within the era of lynching to evince how the film protects whiteness
against supposed aggressions of a black predator and reviews The Wizard
of Oz (1939) as a product of the Depression’s economic anxieties.
From there, the study moves to the cult classic animated Sinbad
Trilogy (1958–1977) of Ray Harryhausen, films rampant with xenophobic
fears of the Middle East as relevant today as when the series was originally
produced.
Advancing to more recent subjects, Bellin focuses on the image of the
monstrous woman and the threat of reproductive freedom found in Aliens
(1986), Jurassic Park (1993), and Species (1995) and
on depictions of the mentally ill as dangerous deviants in 12 Monkeys
(1996) and The Cell (2000). An investigation into physical freakishness
guides his approach to Edward Scissorhands (1990) and Beauty
and the Beast (1991). He concludes with a discussion of X-Men
(2000) and Lord of the Rings (2001–2003), commercial
giants that extend a recent trend toward critical self-reflection within
the genre while still participating in the continuity of social alienation.
Written to enhance rather than undermine our understanding of fantastic
cinema, Framing Monsters invites filmmakers, critics, and fans
alike to reassess this tremendously popular and influential film type
and the monsters that populate it.
“Framing Monsters is a significant study of the ideological
workings of fantasy films from classics such as King Kong and
The Wizard of Oz to contemporary favorites like Jurassic
Park and Lord of the Rings. Invested as both fan and academic,
Bellin meticulously argues that this genre reinforces structures of alienation
relating to race, class, gender, and disability.”
—Rob Latham, author
of Consuming Youth: Vampires, Cyborgs, and the Culture of Consumption
An
associate professor of English at La Roche College in Pittsburgh, Joshua
David Bellin is an amateur filmmaker and the author of The
Demon of the Continent: Indians and the Shaping of American Literature.
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