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4.5
If you’re a fan of the Faculty of Horror podcast and/or Rue Morgue Magazine (and if you’re not...for shame, doc)!, you know the name Andrea Subissati: co-host and executive editor extraordinaire, unabashed horror enthusiast, Pomeranian dress-up expert, and a wicked (wicked!) wit when it comes to breaking down the subtexts and sociological auras around film. This book offers up the proto-years of Subissati, her masters thesis that delivers the goods on the importance of horror and the cultural criticisms roiling in the depths of George A. Romero’s Living Dead movies. The approach is sufficiently academic to have no doubt scored Subissati her degree and a textbook deal. The stunning interviews to be found in Rue Morgue Magazine, the cutting editorials on Scorsese’s patriarchal snobbery and brilliant discussions with Alex West on their podcast show the refined, exquisite talent of Subissati's observations brought to a further height, but this highly insightful book is well worth your time to show you not only where it started (in print), but that this is no Joanie-come-lately. Subissati is the real deal in movie criticism, and no academic press was gonna hold her back.