Extreme Cinema

Author(s):  
Aaron Kerner ◽  
Jonathan Knapp

Extreme Cinema surveys post-millennial trends in transnational cinema—particularly in its highly stylized treatment of explicit sex and violence. In many cases these cinematic embellishments skirt narrative motivation or even impede narrative progression, favoring instead the possibility to elicit an affective response in the spectator: physical sensation separate from cognition and emotion. As a result, in many instances extreme cinema is not governed according to narrative conventions (narrative arcs driven by character motivation), and instead emphasizes spectacles. If not episodic in structure, then, extreme cinema might host abrupt ruptures in the diegetic narrative—experiments in form and/or composition (editing, extreme close-ups, visual disorientation, sounds that straddle the boundary between non-diegetic and diegetic registers), the exhibition of intense violence and pain, acute intimacy with bodies in the throes of sex. In more episodic films, like the musical, or pornography, extreme cinema frequently showcases set cinematic numbers that flood sensory channels with auditory and/or visual stimulus. Extreme cinema wields the potential to manipulate the viewing body (as demonstrated by “reaction” videos posted on hosting sites such as YouTube). Crucially, the affects and emotions prompted by these films can vary wildly: abjection, disgust, arousal, laughter. Films considered include those of the American torture porn genre, as well as films that other scholars and marketers have classified as “New French Extremity” and “Asia Extreme.” While content is assuredly a concern, what Extreme Cinema explores, above all, is the importance of cinematic form.

Author(s):  
Aaron Michael Kerner ◽  
Jonathan L. Knapp

This chapter discusses depictions of pain in the cinema, and at the same time attempts to demonstrate how the graphic exhibition of bodies in pain wields the potential to elicit an affective response in the spectator. The films discussed in this chapter include films from the American torture porn genre (e.g., Saw, and Hostel), as well as Martyrs, and A Serbian Film. Describing torture porn’s depiction of violence, along with its obsession with rust and ruin, the chapter argues that the genre mourns the loss of an industrial past to a world of digital technologies—and calls for a violent return to the body. This violent return to the body is also taken up by European films that depict explicit violence, blood, and gore. Pain is used in these films to show the human body taken to its absolute limit: at the threshold between human and animal, and between flesh and meat.


Author(s):  
Aaron Michael Kerner ◽  
Jonathan L. Knapp

This chapter focuses on sound design and its potential to elicit an affective response in the spectator. Films discussed in this chapter include: Berberian Sound Studio, Inside, and 127 Hours. Building off of Michel Chion’s work on cinematic sound, the chapter explores the complicated relationship between image and sound, between seeing and hearing. Chion argues for a model of the human senses that is “transsensorial,” suggesting that sound can be used by films to appeal to other senses, such as vision, smell, taste, and touch. Thus, sound can elicit sensation in the spectator’s body. Extreme films wield sound as a weapon: high-pitched drones communicate the intense pain of characters on screen and, slipping between diegetic and non-diegetic registers, do violence to the image and the narrative itself. Drawing from the work of Jean-Luc Nancy and Lisa Coulthard, the chapter explores how cinematic noise—screams, scrapes, and subterranean rumbles—are designed to resonate within spectators’ bodies.


1951 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 20-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.E. McKell ◽  
S.W. Tuthill ◽  
A.J. Sullivan

1966 ◽  
Author(s):  
DONALD N. FARRER ◽  
JIM MILNER
Keyword(s):  

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Haworth ◽  
Nathaniel Hunt ◽  
Yawen Yu ◽  
Nicholas Stergiou

1976 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. C. Dodwell ◽  
B. N. Timney ◽  
V. F. Emerson
Keyword(s):  

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