Cindy Sherman's Office Killer

Another kind of monster

Dahlia Schweitzer author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Intellect Books

Published:15th May '14

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Cindy Sherman's Office Killer cover

One of the twentieth century’s most significant artists, Cindy Sherman has quietly uprooted conventional understandings of portraiture and art, questioning everything from identity to feminism. Critics around the world have taken Sherman’s photographs and extensively examined what lies underneath. However, little critical ink has been spilled on Sherman’s only film, Office Killer, a piece that plays a significant role both in Sherman’s body of work and in American art in the late twentieth century. Dahlia Schweitzer breaks the silence with her trenchant analysis of Office Killer and explores the film on a variety of levels, combating head-on the art world’s reluctance to discuss the movie and arguing instead that it is only through a close reading of the film that we can begin to appreciate the messages underlying all of Sherman’s work.

'An immersion in the world of 'Office Killer'' 

-- Will Brooker, editor of Cinema Journal

'Smart, sassy, and scholarly all at once, this is a wonderful book'

-- Toby Miller

'Schweitzer succeeds in doing what she set out to do--valorizing 'Office Killer'— by dissecting it in such a vivid and compelling way that it can be seen in a new light. Even though I appeared in the film, I dismissed it, along with everyone else. But I now see its importance—and its connections to films like Mildred Pierce, which I just so happen to love. Reading the book, I felt like I was in my very own seminar with Professor Schweitzer, emerging from the experience with knowledge of Cindy Sherman, mass media, gender identity, and more. '

-- Florina Rodov, who played the receptionist in 'Office Killer'

'Constitutes an astute but always accessible guide through the film itself and the multiple relevant critical contexts she points to incisively as informing it.' 

-- Deborah Jermyn, Reader in Film and TV, University of Roeham

ISBN: 9781841507071

Dimensions: 229mm x 178mm x 11mm

Weight: 345g

208 pages