The Miskatonic Institute of Horror Studies is excited to present “Destructible Man: The Dummy-death and Cinematic Storytelling Language” on April 11th at the Philosophical Research Society.

Howard S. Berger goes deep into one of cinema’s most overlooked niches: films that include a ‘dummy death,’ a cinematic illusion that transpires when a living actor is swapped out at the last second before a moment of extreme violence and replaced with a doomed doll. In that moment of shift is an important cinematic beat where the viewer gives in to the suspended belief of the transformation, and the visual storytelling takes over. Join as he unravels the complexities of the trope with clips, discussion, and dissection!

The class will be illustrated by clips from such dummy-death emboldened films like Strait-Jacket, Scanners, Dracula vs Frankenstein, The Birds, 2001, and The Fury in addition to two silent films: Alfred Clark’s Execution of Mary, Queen of Scots (1895), known to be the first edit in cinema as well as the first dummy-death and The Great Train Robbery (1903), the first complex narrative film and also the first dummy-death within a complex narrative film.

Date: April 11th 2019
Time: 7:30pm-10:30pm
Venue: Philosophical Research Society
Address: 3910 Los Feliz Blvd, Los Angeles, CA
Prices: $12 advance ($40 with book) / $15 door

About the Author

From humble beginnings as a bisexual art kid who drank more coffee than a 40-year-old author, Remy now holds a BFA in Film Production from Chapman University and is a proud member of the HorrorBuzz team (and still a bisexual art kid who drinks too much coffee). They were first introduced to the world of horror and camp when their grandma showed them The Rocky Horror Picture Show at age 5, and never looked back. When they're not writing cartoons or working on movies, one can spot them in various clubs around Los Angeles performing very, very self-deprecating standup comedy. Howdy ho!