WIN: A Sony "Bloggie" Camcorder With STRAW DOGS

And learn ten things about the original Straw Dogs and then ten things about the new version!

WIN A SONY €˜BLOGGIE€™ CAMCORDER AND LEARN TEN THINGS ABOUT THE ORIGINAL STRAW DOGS......AND TEN THINGS ABOUT THE NEW VERSION! Rod Lurie's remake of Straw Dogs is released in the UK on Friday 4th November and we have teamed up with Sony to give away a Sony "Bloggie" Camcorder to one lucky reader. Additionally, the lucky winner will also receive an awesome poster from the film. Details of how to win are at the bottom of this page. David and Amy Sumner (James Marsden and Kate Bosworth), a Hollywood screenwriter and his actress wife, return to her small hometown in the deep South to prepare the family home for sale after her father€™s death. Once there, tensions build in their marriage and old conflicts re-emerge with the locals, including Amy€™s ex-boyfriend Charlie (Alexander Skarsgård), leading to a violent confrontation. Here's an image of the bloggie camcorder with the full specs below; MHS-FS1 Bloggie„ Mobile HD Snap Camera Shoot brilliant Full HD videos and photos, then upload in moments 1920x1080 Full HD, 5.1MP, 4GB, USB arm and sharing software, 6.7cm/2.7" LCD, HDMI® Fun, light, easy Full HD video and still shooting Quick, easy web uploads with integral USB arm Fun, simple sharing software built in More info HERE

TEN THINGS YOU MAY NEVER HAVE KNOWN ABOUT THE ORIGINAL STRAW DOGS

Rod Lurie€™s remake of Sam Peckinpah€™s Straw Dogs was always bound to cause a stir. Peckinpah is one of those directors whose work tends to inspire a certain brand of obsessive cult fandom, and Lurie knew from the beginning that, by daring to take on a film like Straw Dogs, he was painting a big red bull€™s-eye on his back. It comes at an interesting moment: long delayed, the film finally makes it to cinema screens almost exactly forty years after Peckinpah€™s original. 1971 was a crucial year for controversial film, with Ken Russell€™s extraordinary The Devils (still unavailable on home video in the UK and the US), A Clockwork Orange (withdrawn by its director Stanley Kubrick from UK distribution) and Straw Dogs (banned on home video in the UK for eighteen years) all sending shockwaves through audiences, critics and censors at the time. Rod Lurie may have drawn some of the sting out of the critical response by re-imagining the film in a very different setting, and rethinking everything from the film€™s characterisation to its philosophy and its gender politics. Nevertheless, the remake is acutely aware of the long shadow that the original casts. The interior of the farmhouse is a remarkably detailed replica of the original, despite the very different settings. There are moments, snatches of dialogue, and shot sequences which are clearly intended as a kind of homage to Sam. However, forty years is a long time in the film industry. What are some of the most startling differences and parallels between the 1971 original and the 2011 remake? 1. The character David Sumner (Dustin Hoffman) was originally an academic writing about an obscure eighteenth century poet, and then a lawyer, before being re-crafted as the €œastro-mathematician€ of the finished film. The 2011 version of David Sumner is a Hollywood scriptwriter working on a film about the siege of Leningrad in the Second World War. 2. Sam Peckinpah asked Harold Pinter to redraft the script; Pinter declined, rubbishing the screenplay€™s €˜pathetic assumption that it is saying something €œimportant€ about human beings€™. Rod Lurie says he has ignored Gordon Williams€™ original novel, The Siege at Trencher€™s Farm, for his remake. The screenplay is credited to Lurie, Sam Peckinpah, and the screenwriter of the first version, David Zelag Goodman, who went on to collaborate with Peckinpah on subsequent drafts. 3. Gordon Williams believed that the movie, unlike his novel, contained a rape scene because Peckinpah €˜liked to abuse women in his films€™. Peckinpah was less than complimentary about his source material: €˜Read the goddamn book€™, he told one interviewer. €˜You€™ll die gagging in your own vomit€™. Long before shooting began, Rod Lurie told one journalist, €˜You can be certain that Amy's not going to be smiling in the rape in MY film€™. 4. Sam Peckinpah was heavily influenced by the writings of Robert Ardrey, who saw man as no different from other animals, driven by a territorial imperative. Rod Lurie has declared his film is about how violence is not innate or natural to humans, but learned. He sees it as the chief philosophical difference between his film and Peckinpah€™s. 5. An early title for the film was The Square Root of Fear. Peckinpah shot it down as €œbloody phucking awful€. Long before Rod Lurie began work on his remake, Edward Norton€™s name was attached to the production, under the working title... The Square Root of Fear. 6. T.P. McKenna, playing the role of the local magistrate Major Scott, had his arm in a sling throughout the film, leading to speculation about the symbolism of the €œbroken arm of the law€ in this village which preferred to police itself. In fact, the sling was required after McKenna broke his arm falling off a table he had been dancing on with two prostitutes at a pre-shoot party. The equivalent of the Major in Rod Lurie€™s version is an African-American Iraq veteran played by Laz Alonso. The Iraq connection is a reminder that Peckinpah€™s original was made very much in the shadow of the Vietnam War, including the news of the massacre at My Lai of five hundred Vietnamese women, children and old men at the hands of US soldiers. 7. Many British critics were offended by Peckinpah€™s take on their homeland, and his depiction of Cornish country folk. Gavin Millar remarked, €˜Peckinpah€™s acquaintance with English life, let alone rural and regional life, is unsurpassedly faint€™. Some critics have been uneasy about Rod Lurie€™s depiction of rural Mississippi life, which is the setting for his remake. A critic for popmatters.com complains about €˜a number of uncomplimentary Southern stereotypes, substituting Mississippi rednecks for the British working class tormenters from the original film€™. 8. Peckinpah famously declared of Amy, €˜There are two kinds of women. There are women, and then there€™s pussy. € Amy is pussy, under the veneer of being a woman€™. In an interview for www.ifc.com, Rod Lurie claims, "Our Amy is a fierce Amy ... "She's a feminist Amy. She's an Amy of 2011." 9. Peckinpah employed two body doubles for the film€™s infamous rape scene. In the final cut, only a few frames featuring a double were used. According to www.opposingviews.com, Kate Bosworth was €˜left shaken€™ after filming the rape scene in the remake: €œThe panic you see flooding me in that rape scene is real.€ 10. The 1971 film fell under the wheels of the Video Recordings Act in the 1980s, and was unavailable on home video in the UK for eighteen years. BBFC Secretary James Ferman was convinced that the film eroticised and endorsed sexual violence, and refused to grant it a certificate. In September 1999, BBFC President Andreas Whittam Smith told The Guardian that Straw Dogs would never be passed by the Board in its uncut form. In September 2002, the BBFC, apparently following advice from a viewer panel and evidence from clinical psychologists, performed a quite spectacular U-turn, and Peckinpah€™s film was once again made available for UK viewers to make up their own minds. On 26 August 2011, Rod Lurie€™s film was passed at €˜18€™ uncut by the BBFC. However, sexual violence remains one of the most troublesome issues for the BBFC in terms of censorship and certification. Recent films that have fallen foul of their guidelines on sexual violence include Murder Set Pieces (2008), Grotesque (2009), A Serbian Film (2010) and Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence) (2011). - Stevie Simkin, 31 October 2011. Dr. Stevie Simkin is Reader in Drama and Film in the Faculty of Arts at the University of Winchester, UK. He is the co-editor with Professor Julian Petley of the Controversies series: in-depth studies of key controversial films of the past 40 years. His book about Straw Dogs for the series has been described by Peckinpah biographer Garner Simmons as 'Exceptionally well-written .... needs to be read by anyone interested in understanding Sam Peckinpah's Straw Dogs as a serious work of cinematic art€™; veteran US film critic Stephen Farber calls it €˜a swift, compelling read. Thorough and scholarly without the faintest whiff of academic stuffiness, Stevie Simkin's study of Straw Dogs summons up the turmoil of the 1960s and 70s and illuminates the highly charged subject of sexual violence on film'. The Controversies series will be launched formally on November 9th 2011 at 7pm at the Barbican, London, with a special screening of Straw Dogs followed by a panel discussion featuring Katy Haber (Peckinpah€™s assistant on all his films throughout the 1970s), the film€™s co-star Susan George, Stevie Simkin and Julian Petley. Straw Dogs is at UK cinemas Friday 4th November Barbican launch http://www.barbican.org.uk/film/event-detail.asp?ID=12824 Controversies book series http://www.palgrave.com/products/Series.aspx?s=CONTRV All you need to do for your chance of winning a copy of the Blu-ray is email contest@obsessedwithfilm.com with the e-mail header Straw Dogs. Make sure you leave your full name and address and please only enter if you are 12 or over. Winners will be picked at random and notified in December.
Editor-in-chief
Editor-in-chief

Matt Holmes is the co-founder of What Culture, formerly known as Obsessed With Film. He has been blogging about pop culture and entertainment since 2006 and has written over 10,000 articles.