Pet Sematary
Pet Sematary
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Abstract
Most scholarship on Mary Lambert's Pet Sematary (1989) overarchingly focuses on the Stephen King novel (1983), and tends strongly towards housing the story within the Gothic literary tradition. The film itself is often absent from considerations of North American horror cinema of the 1980s, and from wider horror scholarship in general. This Devil's Advocate stands as a corrective, and provides a holistic analysis – textual, contextual, and industrial – of the film, in order to properly situate it as an important entry into the history of horror cinema. This book joins a growing body of works – both journalistic and academic – that aim to revisit older films in order to call attention to and/or redress the gendered imbalance in our written horror histories. McMurdo charges Pet Sematary with several contributions to the horror genre: as an important entry within the tradition of “grief horror”; as a horror film that both adheres to and defies the generic conventions of its historical context, one both engaged with and respondent to its time of creation; as a film that changed the fortunes of the cinematic Stephen King “brand” on the cusp of a new decade. Pet Sematary is the highest grossing horror film directed by a woman in cinematic history, and it stands as a story that we keep returning to – as seen by the 1992 sequel, the 2019 remake, and a forthcoming prequel. Pet Sematary’s modern relevance and importance to genre history then, is manifold, and this book argues it is past time for its reconsideration as a classic of horror cinema.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: ‘Come on doc, we’ve got places to go’
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1:
‘You’ll have all the grief you can stand and more’: the centrality of grief in Pet Sematary
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2:
‘Couldn’t plant anything here but corpses anyway’: contextualising Pet Sematary
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3:
‘The ground is sour’: analysing Pet Sematary
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4:
‘A place where the dead speak’: authorship and the production of Pet Sematary
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5:
‘Sometimes dead is better’ (?): revisiting and remaking Stephen King and Pet Sematary
- Legacy and conclusion: ‘Here’s to your bones’
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End Matter
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