Toronto New Wave Cinema and the Anarchist-Apocalypse
By (Author) David Christopher
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
1st July 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Individual film directors, film-makers
Film history, theory or criticism
Hardback
296
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
The Toronto New Wave (TNW) comprises a group of avant-garde filmmakers working in Canada from the 1980s and into the new millennium whose innovative film works share significant affinities with anarchist themes and aesthetics. Several of the TNW filmmakers openly identify as anarchists and/or acknowledge a debt to anarchism in their production of highly apocalyptic narratives as part of their cinematic political projects. However, recognition of anarchism's progressive apocalyptic theoretical relevance has yet to be substantially taken up by scholarship in cinema analysis. This analysis introduces an anarchist-inflected analytical methodology to understand the apocalyptic-revelatory political work these films attempt to accomplish in the perceptual space between the filmic texts and both their auteurs and potential viewers, and to re-locate the TNW within cinema history as an ongoing phenomenon with new significance in an apocalyptic era of digital distribution.
David Christopher is Lecturer of Popular Screen Cultures at the University of Leicester