Withnail and Us: Cult Films and Film Cults in British Cinema
By (Author) Justin Smith
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
28th February 2010
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Cultural studies
791.430941
Paperback
272
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Cult has entered the cultural psyche in a profound and pervasive way. There is no corner of popular culture beyond the potential for cult transformation. Indeed, in entering common parlance the term has effectively lost its clandestine mystique. But why And how did we get here with cult "Withnail and Us" charts the journey of cult in culture through an exploration of British cult films and their fans. It is about our bizarre and enduring fascination with once obscure or shocking movies, from "A Clockwork Orange" to "The Wicker Man". What is it about certain films that provokes such obsessive fan devotion What impells people to remote locations in search of filmic relics Why do they gather in groups to re-enact scenes learnt by heart Is any film worth re-viewing over 100 times From 1968 and all that, through the cultural byways of the 1970s, this book attempts to explain such strange practices, and to trace their origins in the makings of some remarkable films, including "Tommy", "The Man Who Fell To Earth", "Quadrophenia", "Withnail & I", "Trainspotting" and "Performance". Prepare to enter the arena of the unwell!
Justin Smith is Principal Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Portsmouth. A cultural historian specialising in British cinema, his publications include 'Withnail's Coat: Andrea Galer's Cult Costumes', 'Fashion Theory', Vol. 9, No. 3 (2005), and 'The Wicker Man Digest: A web ethnography of a cult fan community' in 'The New Film History' (2007).