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"Forget the unwieldy title and just marvel at the fact that academic writing on film can be as lively and stimulating as this! Daniel O'Brien produces a remarkably allusive study of the cinema's treatment of the muscular male physique (with particular attention to the Hercules movies directed by such talented auteurs as Vittorio Cottafavi and Mario Bava, as well as lesser talents such Pietro Francisci, responsible for the two Steve Reeves Hercules movies). O'Brien examines the fascinating subtexts of this oft-despised genre and its contradictory approaches to masculinity. What's more, O'Brien performs a particularly impressive feat of prestidigitation, couching complex notions within prose that is always supremely readable. Classical Masculinity and the Spectacular Body on Film - both for its complex, prodigal ideas and its counterintuitive clarity - should be required reading both for afionados of genre cinema and for those academics unable to write anything but clotted, impenetrable prose." - Barry Forshaw
'Peplum films' [were] the trashy, kitsch and camp mythological romps popular in the late 1950s and early 1960s. This lowbrow epic genre is the focus of Daniel O'Brien's book,and he rightly argues that it is a subject worthy of study." - Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones, THE