David Church is based at the Department of Communication and Culture, Indiana University.
By taking fans' nostalgia seriously, Grindhouse Nostalgia makes a
brilliant contribution to understanding cult movies and fandom.
Exploring historical complexities of the drive-in and the grind
house, David Church builds an impressive theory of subcultural
value, retrosploitation and cultural memory. The 'new' might not
always be better, but this new study most definitely challenges and
surpasses previous work in the field.'--Professor Matt Hills,
Aberystwyth University
David Church's new book for Edinburgh University Press, Grindhouse
Nostalgia: Memory, Home Video, and Exploitation Film Fandom, is a
book which very ably takes its title and spins it into an
entertaining and informative read. Church does what so many authors
fail at, in that he lays out the exact amount of historical context
required to understand the topic at hand... It's a fabulous
addition to any film library.'--Nick Spacek "Starburst
Magazine"
'Grindhouse Nostalgia is a serious study of a subject rarely
treated seriously, namely exploitation cinema and its continuing
allure...This is a thought-provoking study, especially noteworthy
in the part dealing with rape-revenge films, and deserves the
attention an endurance of those with a more scholarly
inclination.'--Dejan Ognjanovic "Rue Morgue"
Grindhouse Nostalgia casts much needed new light on the very
processes through which mainly 1970s exploitation has come to be
imagined and reimagined as a cultural category. It also shows how
this mutable and contested generic formation has been taken up in
different media in different ways at different times. In this
regard, the book offers something akin to a scholarly blueprint. It
is one that could inspire others to consider how perceptions of
cultural categories are activated across audiovisual cultures as
various stakeholders shape and reshape media landscapes in
selective and strategic fashion: a contribution that promises to
extend far beyond the lowbrow and American audiovisual cultures
considered in this particular study...destined to become a seminal
work in the field.'--Richard Nowell "Media Industries"
Grindhouse Nostalgia is a serious study of a subject rarely treated
seriously, namely exploitation cinema and its continuing
allure...This is a thought-provoking study, especially noteworthy
in the part dealing with rape-revenge films, and deserves the
attention an endurance of those with a more scholarly
inclination.'--Dejan Ognjanovic "Rue Morgue"
'True exploitation-film fans will appreciate this smart, swift
volume. Although technically an academic tome, it's hardly work
when the subject matter is so fun, and David Church traces the
history of grindhouse cinema from its dirt-cheap roots (when what
was playing was largely secondary) to its corporate co-opting today
as a catchall term. While Bill Landis and Michelle Clifford's
Sleazoid Express remains the definitive depiction of the Times
Square moviegoing experience, Church's book excels in examining the
scene ever since: namely, the second wave ushered by Quentin
Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez's big-screen Grindhouse; the
subsequent coattail-riding DVD reissues of B-, C- and Z-level fare;
and now the faux-retro vibe of such titles as blaxploitation spoof
Black Dynamite and women-in-prison romp Sugar Boxx.'--Rod Lott
"Bookgasm.com + FlickAttack.com"
Whether the practices and the economics of the film industry or the
technologies of digital reproduction and distribution, Church's
knowledge base is impressive, and the interpretation he has
constructed is both comprehensive and persuasive. On the one hand,
he moves comfortably between theoretically minded writers like
Pierre Nora and Andreas Huyssen and 'low-brow' commentators like
Joe Bob Briggs and the hosts of Mystery Science Theater 3000, on
the other he draws broadly from fields as diverse as memory
studies, reception history and fan culture. This is combined with a
sympathetic yet critical-minded appreciation of so-called
grindhouse films themselves, of the audiences to whom they were
marketed, and of the ingenuity and resourcefulness that a current
cohort of film-makers - Quentin Tarantino, Robert Rodriguez, Eli
Roth and Rob Zombie, most prominently - have brought to bear in
exploiting, as it were, the exploitation genre.'--James J. Ward
"Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television"
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