****** Since this is a bit out of the way for most film scholars, i thought i'd point out that Killing for Culture is distributed in the US by Subterranean (they also do City Lights) and Last Gasp (who have an amazing amount of out of the way material). You can also pick it up at many Tower Records stores and they might do special orders for it. And snuff films may have been an urban myth until the spread of videocameras: When the FBI caught a couple of kidnappers a few years back, they also confiscated a videotape of them killing their victim. Happy Dreams, LT In <[log in to unmask]> Neil Pollock <[log in to unmask]> writes: > >Rebecca > >I thought I'd reply to the list because it may be of general interest. >Aren't snuff films an "urban myth". A book you may know about is David >Kerekes & David Slater. Killing for Culture: an illustrated history of >death film from mondo to snuff. This is reviewed in Sight & Sound July >1994, p.31. > >I'd be interested to know whether the torture & killing of people for the >cinematic pleasure of the rich & sick is in any way a reality - or >whether it is simply a piece of fantasy which was assumed a sense of >reality because filmmakers have chosen to indulge in exploiting this >fantasy. > >Neil Pollock >Library Manager >Australian Film TV & Radio School ---- To signoff SCREEN-L, e-mail [log in to unmask] and put SIGNOFF SCREEN-L in the message. Problems? Contact [log in to unmask]