(Anthem Art and Culture), by Gary Morris (Editor), Bert Cardullo (Introduction), Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword). London and New York: Anthem Press, 2009.
David Hudson, IFC.com
Writing in Cineaste, Adrian Martin, in his article "What's Cult Got to Do with It? In Defense of Cinephile Elitism," cites the abuse of the term cult film, saying the category had become "elastic, a catchall for anything slightly maverick or strange" (Martin). He observes indies pushed as "instant cult classics" and marketing tags in media outlets hailing nostalgia, "favorites," and foreign films as cult films. What is cult? It's not enough, Martin points out, to watch a film repeatedly, nor that a film attract a large, devoted following. Cult films are best defined as "orphans" discarded, forgotten, or never recognized by the film industry. For him, cult film must be rescued from oblivion and brought to veneration. It is an after-market, "value-added" aspect that can expire or be revoked if the film ever crosses over to the mainstream or larger commercial success. The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), according to Martin, is an example of a film going from "subcultural" to mass culture status. To be sure, his approach is elitist, as the title of the article states, and the critic wants to limit cult film by critical opinion, not the marketplace of audiences.
Entertainment Weekly lists its top 50 cult films and makes the typical statement about what they are: "usually strange, quirky, offbeat, eccentric, oddball, or surreal, with outrageous, weird, unique and cartoony characters or plots, and garish sets." The list contains old standbys like Un Chien Andalou (1928), a film designed to be avant garde and which aptly gathered a cult following; and Freaks (1932), a film consistently dubbed cult by virtue of its content. Freaks, by definition, satisfies EW's "strange, quirky, offbeat, eccentric, oddball, or surreal," description. But at number 10 on the list we find The Shawshank Redemption (1994). Why? AMC's Filmsite blurb on the film calls it an "inspirational, life-affirming and uplifting, old-fashioned style Hollywood product." Hardly quirky or outrageous.
1. Marginality Content falls outside general cultural norms
2. Suppression Subject to censor, ridicule, lawsuit, or exclusion
3. Economics Box office flop upon release but eventually profitable
4. Transgression Content breaks social, moral, or legal rules
5. Cult following Generates devoted minority audience
6. Community Audience is or becomes self-identified group
7. Quotation Lines of dialog become common language
8. Iconography Establishes or revives cult icons
A test of the checklist could go this way: The 1998 film The Big Lebowski shows up as number 34 on the Entertainment Weekly list of 50 top cult movies. It receives a weak point for criterion 1, Marginality, only because the characters are slackers, neurotic, or nihilistic and these character traits are depicted as likeable or comedic. The Big Lebowski gets nothing for criterion 2, Suppression. The Coen brothers' film was not suppressed. As for economics, Lebowski was made with a $15 million budget and has a gross revenue to date of $47 million in worldwide distribution. The film is not particularly transgressive, but it racks up points with criterion 5, Cult Following. See www.lebowskifest.com for latest merchandise and festival information.
1. Marginality Transvestitism, homosexuality ![]()
2. Suppression N/A
3. Economics Profitable in college and midnight movie release ![]()
4. Transgression Bisexual seduction ![]()
5. Cult following Established cult industry ![]()
6. Community LGBT and Boomer groups ![]()
7. Quotation "Time Warp" dance ![]()
8. Iconography "Conscious" parody; presents transvestite costume icon
An ideal example of the Internet factor in cult cinema evolution is Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story (1987) directed by Todd Haynes. The 43-minute low-budget film deals with the pop singer's fatal anorexia and brother/pianist's homosexuality. LGBT groups supported Haynes for the film's satire of conventional repression of self and the lethality of social norms. Then Superstar was suppressed by court order in 1990, ostensibly for its unauthorized use of copyrighted performances of Carpenters music. All known copies were confiscated and ordered destroyed. And thus it remained until bootleg copies appeared on YouTube. In the present digital/archival culture, nothing is suppressed for very long.
Cult cinema came of age in America with midnight movies and campus showings of films such as David Lynch's Eraserhead (1976) and Rocky Horror. It continues in cyberspace with 2 Girls, 1 Cup, a shorter version of Hungry Bitches (2007) by Marco Villanova.
1. Marginality Coprophagia, emetophilia ![]()
2. Suppression N/A
3. Economics (?) Advertising revenue for host site ![]()
4. Transgression Displays rare paraphilias ![]()
5. Cult following (?) Viral video ![]()
6. Community Coprophiliac fetishists, voyeurs ![]()
7. Quotation "Two girls, one cup" ![]()
8. Iconography Replaced "The Aristocrats" (2005) for most hits
This film probably requires no careful analysis; its transgressive quality and viral growth data give it prima facie cred. Using the device for Shawshank or The Dark Knight (2008) might be more necessary and useful.
AMC's Filmsite. Dirks, Tom, Ed. American Movie Classics, Inc. 2010. www.filmsite.org
Corrigan, Timothy, and White, Patricia. The Film Experience: An Introduction, 2nd ed., Bedford St. Martin's 2009.
Entertainment Weekly. www.ew.com
Giamatti, Louis. Understanding Movies, 10th ed. Pearson/Prentice Hall 2005.
Martin, Adrian. "What's Cult Got to Do with It? In Defense of Cinephile Elitism." Cineaste 34.1 Winter 2008.
Mast, Gerald, and Kawin, Bruce F. A Short History of the Movies, 10th ed. Pearson/Longman 2008.
Naim, Tom. "Into McLuhan's Maelstrom." New Statesman 74.1906 (Sept. 22, 1967): 362-363. Rpt. in Contemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Daniel G. Marowski and Roger Matuz. Vol. 37. Detroit.






