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Immaculate, The First Omen, and the Rise of the Pro-Choice Horror Film
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Immaculate, The First Omen, and the Rise of the Pro-Choice Horror Film

Featured Essays horror movies Immaculate, The First Omen, and the Rise of the Pro-Choice Horror Film Two recent horror films reflect growing cultural anxieties surrounding women’s bodies and reproductive rights. By JR. Forasteros | Published on June 4, 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share It’s not every day you get a Catholic-themed horror film that outspokenly supports a woman’s autonomy over her body. But 2024 is the year we get not one, but two of these films, released a week apart. The two films—Immaculate, starring and produced by Sydney Sweeney, and The First Omen, a prequel to the 1976 film about the birth of the Antichrist—are shockingly similar. Both feature a mild, American novitiate—Sweeney’s Sister Cecilia and Nell Tiger Free’s Sister Margaret—recruited by a priest to come to Italy. They arrive to work among the less fortunate; Cecilia in a hospice for nuns and Margaret in an orphanage. They each befriend another nun who is more sexually experienced (Sister Gwen and Sister Luz, respectively). Another nun, who is strangely obsessed with them, jumps to her death. The priest turns out to be manipulating the main nun into giving birth to a child, and as both women (now mysteriously pregnant) seek to unravel the mystery of what’s happening, they encounter numerous deformed babies. In the end, both women give birth, very much against their will. Films with similar themes hitting theaters around the same time is nothing new—I’m old enough to remember the summer of Deep Impact/Armageddon, followed by the release of both Antz and A Bug’s Life a few months later. But the similarities both large and small between these two recent films is even more profound. And coming as they do just 18 months after the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and eliminated the federal protection for abortion rights, the films arrive as visceral manifestations of the deep anxieties that decision has unleashed in the US. Author Jeffrey Jerome Cohen, a pioneer of “monster theory,” holds that horror fiction plays an important role in how a culture understands itself, particularly in relation to our fears and anxieties. He warns that societal tensions, traumas, and disruptions that create anxiety in a culture will manifest itself “symptomatically as a cultural fascination with monsters—a fixation that is born of the twin desire to name that which is difficult to apprehend and to domesticate (and therefore disempower) that which threatens.” (Monster Theory, p. 60) In other words, when we experience anxiety at a cultural level—for example, widespread fear about a woman’s access to safe medical treatment and whether she’ll retain autonomy over her own body—we should expect those anxieties taking the form of a monster we can domesticate (on the silver screen, for instance). We saw this in the 1970s in the wake of passing Roe vs Wade. Not quite two years after the landmark decision, the proto-slasher Black Christmas (1974) arrived in theaters. The film takes place at a sorority house at a university—notable because Harvard had only started admitting women to its undergraduate programs a decade earlier; many other Ivy League schools didn’t start until 1969. Final girl Jess personifies the fears of those who demonized women’s liberation: she is an independent, unmarried young woman who is pregnant and informs her boyfriend at the opening of the film she plans to get an abortion. One of the reasons Black Christmas is considered a proto-slasher is that Jess doesn’t embody the virginal values endorsed by conservative culture, and she’s not “punished” with a grisly end for her “transgressions.” She is the hero. Even still, the anxiety around her pregnancy—and particularly how it affects her boyfriend—drives the central mystery of the film. The Omen (1976) tells the story of a US ambassador who secretly adopts an infant after his wife gives birth to a stillborn child. The boy turns out to be the Antichrist and proceeds to kill his adoptive father, mother, and unborn sibling. Adoption has long been presented as an easy solution to unwanted pregnancies by anti-abortion activists, but The Omen reflects anxieties, however baseless and irrational, about the adoption process—can an adoptive parent really know the genetic heritage of their adopted child? What do they really know about the child they’re bringing into their home? What if the innocent baby turns out to be some kind of monster? (Yes, the question itself feels so monstrous it’s difficult to voice—which is why it ends up being sublimated into spectacle-filled horror films.) The decade ended with the (ahem) mother of all films about the fear of unregulated pregnancy: Alien (1979). The xenomorph attacks and impregnates humans by forcing its ovipositor down their throats and implanting a fetus in the chest cavity. All seems well, until the matured fetus suddenly bursts from the chest of its host, killing them. The xenomorph’s reproductive cycle is a funhouse mirror of human fertility, twisted into monstrous form. The titular alien is the embodied fear of fertility that’s not carefully controlled—and opponents of abortion rights argue that readily accessible abortions incentivize women toward sexual activity, since a pregnancy no longer need result in the birth of a child (those same opponents rarely extend this logic to men). All these films in one way or another express or explore anxieties around pregnancy unleashed by the federal guarantee of abortion rights. At the same time, another powerful cultural force was shifting in reaction to Roe: religion. Catholics have been the most historically consistent on abortion. Before 1973, Protestants saw abortion mainly as a Catholic issue—going back at least to Augustine, Catholic theologians categorized abortion as a sexual sin. It wasn’t until 1965 the Catholic Church categorized abortion as the taking of a life. Evangelicals, the other stridently pro-life group who’ve played an active part in the discussion around Roe, have traced a similar trajectory in recent decades. Southern Baptists before the 1980s wrote little about abortion. The Church of the Nazarene (the denomination in which I have my ministerial credentials) had no statement in its governing manual until 1976 (the Manual is updated quadrennially, so the 1976 edition is the first post-Roe Manual), and the statement in 1976 begins by permitting abortion when the life of the fetus or mother is threatened before going on to protest “abortion on demand.” The Southern Baptist Convention passed its first resolution on abortion in 1971—two years before Roe. The resolution called for the protection of fetal life but also called for legislation to protect the right for abortion in cases as varied as rape, deformity, and “damage to the emotional, mental, and physical health of the mother.” A professor at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary argued that “God is pro-choice.” The pastor of First Baptist Dallas, W. A. Criswell, said in reaction to Roe, “I have always felt that it was only after a child was born and had life separate from its mother that it became an individual person, and it has always, therefore, seemed to me that what is best for the mother and for the future should be allowed.” These statements stand in stark contrast to the positions held by the current leaders of those same institutions, reflecting a greater overall shift as abortion (and its increasing politicization) became a mobilizing issue for conservative evangelicals. The same anxieties about unregulated pregnancy that manifested in ’70s horror caused a sea change in American religious attitudes toward abortion legislation—especially among evangelicals. Professor and historian Kristen Kobes Du Mez observes that, by the end of the 1970s, abortion had become linked with second-wave feminism in the cultural imagination (as films like Black Christmas illustrate). Feminism presented a real challenge to evangelicals. As Du Mez stated in an interview with NPR: [F]or evangelicals, conservative evangelicals, gender difference is really foundational to their understanding of the social order. And they believe that God created men and women to be very different, even opposites. And the women’s primary calling is that of wife and mother. And so abortion also really severs that kind of biological or social relationship or threatens to do so. And for that reason, also, abortion is such a priority for evangelicals because it kind of strikes at the heart of their understanding of women and men and their understanding of how God has ordered society. Fast-forward to 2024. The US Supreme Court has overturned Roe v. Wade, ending federal protection for abortion rights. Thirteen states immediately enacted “trigger laws,” written to go into effect the moment Roe was overturned, and thirteen more moved swiftly on legislation to ban abortions. Enter the twin terrors of Immaculate and The First Omen. The monster in these two films are the priests who parade as loving father figures but who really seek to control the innocent, pious young female bodies for their own ends. Specifically, both priests orchestrate pregnancies without the consent of the young nuns in their charge. They abuse their religious authority to exercise control over the womb of the young women—an act both films depict as monstrous and deeply wrong. Both films’ endings highlight the protagonist’s reassertion of her autonomy over her own body and her womb (though admittedly it works better in Immaculate, since it doesn’t have to bear the burden of a 40-year-old sequel). Fifty years ago, our culture created films to process our collective fears about what reproductive freedom could mean for women. Fifty years later, the world hasn’t ended and no Antichrists have been born (to my knowledge). With the overturning of Roe, however, new anxieties have come to the surface: Who do we trust when we can’t trust those in authority? Still trapped in a patriarchal system, what must a woman do for men to hear her? Will women ever truly have autonomy over their own bodies? If the 1970s are any indication, Immaculate and The First Omen are only the first wave of films that incarnate not an Antichrist, but the very real anxieties contemporary women experience over the way powerful men continue to wield religion to control women’s bodies and reproduction.[end-mark] The post <i>Immaculate</i>, <i>The First Omen</i>, and the Rise of the Pro-Choice Horror Film appeared first on Reactor.
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How to invite and play with friends in Star Wars Hunters
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How to invite and play with friends in Star Wars Hunters

If you’re having trouble playing with friends in Star Wars Hunters, you’re not alone. With so much going on screen, that option may get lost. Don’t worry though, we’ll show you how to invite and play with friends in Star Wars Hunters. Star Wars Hunters: How to invite and play with friends. Like any modern mobile game out there like CoD Warzone Mobile, you have to do a bunch of stuff to unlock more mechanics. Star Wars Hunters follows that same rule. The good news is that it’s quite easy — unlike other mobile games. If you manage to get past the login failed error, all you need to do is play eight matches in the public arena. Since all you’re going to be doing is playing public matches, racking up those eight should be a breeze.  To check how many matches you’ve played so far, go to your profile which is on the top left hand of the screen. Once you’re in that menu, you should see a Match History option. Select it, and you’ll see all the matches you’ve won...
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How to fix the no audio bug in Destiny 2 The Final Shape
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How to fix the no audio bug in Destiny 2 The Final Shape

If you’re experiencing no audio in Destiny 2, first of all, you’re missing out on some amazing sound design, and second, you need to know how to fix it. Here is the workaround. How to fix sound bug in Destiny 2 If you’re hearing no sound in Destiny 2, the bug is most likely to do with your 3D audio software. This bug can be easily fixed by switching off whatever 3D audio software you may have turned on. Common 3D audio software that is causing Destiny 2 to play no sound could be things like Windows Sonic for Headphones or Dolby Atmos. To remedy the bug, simply head into your Windows Spatial Sound settings and switch whichever one you have enabled off. You can do this by following these steps. Screenshot: PC Invasion Press the Windows key and open your Settings. Navigate to the System tab and open Sound. Click on the playback device you are using; this will open the options. Scroll to the section labelled Spatial Sound and Select the Off option...
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How to fix Blooming Deep Lost Sector rewards not appearing in Destiny 2 The Final Shape
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How to fix Blooming Deep Lost Sector rewards not appearing in Destiny 2 The Final Shape

The Final Shape is finally here in Destiny 2, and the new Pale Heart destination is packed with secrets and Lost Sectors for Guardians to discover as they prepare for the final confrontation with the Witness. One new Lost Sector in particular, though, has some issues. Located within the Pale Heart destination, the Blooming Deep Lost Sector isn’t giving rewards or loot to players who complete it. This issue isn’t affecting every Destiny 2 player, but a large percentage of Guardians are leaving this Lost Sector empty-handed due to a bug. If you’re suffering from lost loot in this Lost Sector, here’s what you can do to claim your rewards from the Blooming Deep in Destiny 2. How to Get Blooming Deep Lost Sector Loot in Destiny 2 The Blooming Deep Lost Sector is currently suffering from a bug in Destiny 2 The Final Shape where players will not receive any loot upon completion if they do not open the final chest before the cutscene plays. If you want to get t...
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Baldur’s Gate 3 official mod support is getting a closed alpha and beta — Here’s how to sign up
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Baldur’s Gate 3 official mod support is getting a closed alpha and beta — Here’s how to sign up

BG3 fans rejoice, we’re finally getting official mod support with Patch 7! Larian Studios announced in a community update that official mod support is coming to Baldur’s Gate 3, but before that, it’s getting a closed alpha and beta. Here’s how you can sign up to participate. How to sign up for Baldur’s Gate 3 official mod support closed alpha and beta Arriving this September is Patch 7 of Baldur’s Gate 3 which’ll bring alongside official mod support for both PC and console. But before this arrives, Larian Studios is holding a closed alpha and beta for players to test out the official mod program. Currently, you won’t be able to sign up for the closed alpha that began on June 3, but you will get the chance to register for the closed beta in July. The two testing phases of the BG3 official mod support program started with the closed alpha June 3 as Larian Studios has invited mod authors to partake. Over this period it will invite m...
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All Destiny 2 The Final Shape known issues: Knock ‘Em Down, Glacial Harvest, Bladefury, and more
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All Destiny 2 The Final Shape known issues: Knock ‘Em Down, Glacial Harvest, Bladefury, and more

The Final Shape expansion has finally arrived in Destiny 2, and while Bungie has ensured a mostly smooth launch thanks to a short delay that gave life to the excellent Into the Light update, there are still some minor issues with this DLC that players should expect to encounter during their initial playthroughs. While there’s nothing seriously wrong with The Final Shape, Bungie has released a list of known issues affecting the expansion ahead of launch so players know what to expect and how to avoid any potential mishaps. Most of them involve incorrect perk descriptions or certain abilities not working properly, but others can prevent your campaign progress from tracking or worse. All Final Shape Known Issues in Destiny 2 Here are all of the known issues that Bungie is working on fixing in Destiny 2 The Final Shape. Players progressing through The Final Shape campaign in a fireteam should avoid joining missions in-progress or swapping characters during the ...
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Biden: Israel May Have Committed War Crimes, and Netanyahu Wants War to Keep Power
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Biden: Israel May Have Committed War Crimes, and Netanyahu Wants War to Keep Power

Biden: Israel May Have Committed War Crimes, and Netanyahu Wants War to Keep Power
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Onanism at the Washington Post
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Onanism at the Washington Post

Onanism at the Washington Post
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Your Excuses For Eating Meat Are Predictable And Wrong, Study Finds
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Your Excuses For Eating Meat Are Predictable And Wrong, Study Finds

Eating too much meat is bad for you, bad for the environment, and fatal for the animals involved. Those are straight facts, indisputable and proven through years of study. But counterpoint: have you considered that vegans are annoying?If the comments section under just about any media promoting a vegetarian or vegan diet is anything to go by, the answer to that question is probably “yes”. And, in any case, what about all the poor plants, huh? You okay with murdering them, IFLScience? The blood of countless… uh, cabbages on your hands?All things considered, people are really, really good at coming up with excuses for eating more meat than ever. And the weirdest thing? According to a new study, which followed six focus groups with Danish consumers about their attitudes towards their diets and the environment, we kind of know it’s all bullshit – and we tie ourselves in a variety of predictable mental knots to justify it anyway.“All of the participants – predominantly meat eaters – agree that one of the best things a person can do to be a more climate-minded eater is to eat less meat,” said Thomas Skelly, a Ph.D. fellow at the Department of Food and Resource Economics at the University of Copenhagen, and first author of the study, in a statement on the findings. “But when addressing their own meat consumption, other mechanisms kick in,” he added. Oh yeah. Prepare to feel seen.Playing dumbImagine you knew a way to cut your carbon footprint by more than half; it was easy, required no real major sacrifice on your part, and would even make you healthier and maybe improve your love life. Imagine you then decided not to do it. That would be, well, kind of stupid, wouldn’t it?"There is certainly enough ambiguity in public discourse and the media for people to make these justifications without sounding completely ignorant in social settings."Thomas SkellyAnd yet, according to the research, that’s precisely what many of us are doing. “When all of the focus groups point to reduced meat consumption as one of the most climate effective things people can do, it demonstrates the existence of a collective knowledge,” Skelly pointed out.“But on the other hand, this knowledge can be problematized,” he continued, “and the results demonstrate that it is socially acceptable to problematize it.”What does that mean? Well, you’ve no doubt seen this tactic in the wild: it’s what’s happening whenever someone tells a vegan about the environmental cost of avocados or meat substitutes like soy, or points to the supposed necessity of meat in a human diet. “With this notion, the participants confirm to each other that their food practices are not more problematic than food practices among people who have cut out meat entirely,” Skelly explained. It’s not actually justified: “The truth is that red meat has a far greater climate footprint than both avocados and vegan products,” Skelly pointed out, “and vegans do not necessarily eat more avocados or processed products than meat eaters” – but that doesn’t really matter, according to the paper. It’s just truthful enough, with the details just obscure enough, that for someone already looking for excuses for their meat consumption, it can be elevated to a fact on equal footing with years of scientific research behind it.“We are unable to conclude whether this is because people actually don't know [the truth], or because not knowing is convenient,” Skelly said. “But there is certainly enough ambiguity in public discourse and the media for people to make these justifications without sounding completely ignorant in social settings.”Look over there!So, what about when these things are pointed out to the meat fans? Well, when in doubt, there was one tactic that seemed to pop up time and time again. Whether consciously or not, the participants chose to simply divert the conversation, and talk about something else.Cutting out meat entirely was seen as an absurd position – and one only taken by haughty stick-in-the-muds.“They [would] come up with various excuses and justifications or try to shift the focus onto something else,” explained Kia Ditlevsen, an associate professor in the Department of Food and Resource Economics and one of the co-authors of the study. “People quickly derail the topic,” she said, “and begin talking about other things, such as how they seek to avoid food waste and plastic packaging.”You might think this would be an obvious ploy – after all, packaging, retail, and even transport of food typically has a much lower carbon footprint than the food itself. But within the group studied, it was seen as totally legitimate: “Within the group, people are mutually supportive of such derailments,” Ditlevsen said. “Our interpretation is that this is because these things are more culturally neutral and harmless to relate to. No one really has much of an identity attached to plastic disposal.” But you know what definitely isn’t seen as neutral? Going vegan. Cutting out meat entirely was seen as an absurd position – and one only taken by haughty stick-in-the-muds, Ditlevsen explained. “There was a tendency for them to […] scold vegans for being extremists,” she noted.In other words: despite being a perfectly reasonable way to reduce your personal climate impact – one which the focus group participants clearly knew and understood the effectiveness of – adopting a vegan diet was just kind of written off as impossible. “For example, when a participant states that he or she doesn't intend on going vegan, the other participants laugh,” Skelly said. “In doing so, they confirm to one another that veganism would be a ridiculous solution.”The importance of messagingSo, what’s the solution? How do we reconcile a clear desire to reduce our environmental impact with this dilly-dallying on one of the most effective methods to do so? Well, part of the answer might lie in combatting the mixed or counterproductive messaging coming from politicians and corporations. That may not be easy: in the US, meat and dairy companies have spent hundreds of millions of dollars lobbying to block climate legislation over the past couple of decades, with evermore aggressive marketing campaigns targeting new consumer blocs.If there is to be more clarity and less confusion among consumers, […] it becomes more difficult to come up with socially acceptable excuses and justifications.Kia DitlevsenOver in Europe, the situation is more clear-cut – but not by a whole lot. “We have politicians who say, for example, that Danes should keep on eating spaghetti and meat sauce, [and] it helps support the notion that we can simply carry on with our meat consumption,” Ditlevsen pointed out. “At the same time, the Danish Official Dietary Guidelines say that we should eat significantly less meat […] This is also something that the European Union emphasizes.”This causes a discrepancy between the messages that people receive, she explained – and that confusion is where these justifications for excessive meat consumption sneak in and take hold. In response, “clear statements from politicians and authorities must be made,” recommended Ditlevsen, “messaging that unequivocally supports the importance of cutting back on meat consumption.” Would it be enough? Probably not, she said – but it would at least be a start.“If there is to be more clarity and less confusion among consumers, […] it becomes more difficult to come up with socially acceptable excuses and justifications,” Ditlevsen said. “This alone probably won't do, but it could help get people moving in the right direction.”The study is published in the Journal of Consumer Culture.
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Company Behind World's Tallest Building Plans To Turn Skyscrapers Into Gravity Batteries
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Company Behind World's Tallest Building Plans To Turn Skyscrapers Into Gravity Batteries

A leading architecture and engineering firm behind the world's tallest building – among other major projects – has teamed up with startup Energy Vault in order to design skyscrapers that incorporate gravity batteries into their design.As the planet moves towards renewable energy, we are faced with the problem of storage. The problem is that the wind doesn't blow and the Sun doesn't shine at precisely the time when people want to consume their power. On particularly windy or sunny days, too much electricity can be generated, potentially leading to a situation where consumers are paid to consume electricity rather than overload the grid. Cheap, clean energy is, of course, a good thing, but power that isn't used becomes lost.It would be better if we could store that energy away for later use. Gravity batteries are one way of doing that.Despite the cool name, the idea behind gravity batteries is really simple. During times when energy sources are producing more energy than the demand, the excess energy is used to move weights (in the form of water, or sometimes sand) upwards, turning it into potential energy. When the power supply is low, these objects can then be released, powering turbines as our good friend (and deadly enemy) gravity sends them toward the Earth. Though generally gravity batteries take the form of reservoirs, abandoned mines moving sand or other weights up when excess power is being produced are also being created. The latest idea is to incorporate gravity batteries into the design of tall buildings.“Since our founding, [architecture and engineering firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill] has pushed the boundaries of architecture and engineering, redefining what buildings can do for cities and communities,” Adam Semel, Managing Partner of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, said in a statement. “This partnership with Energy Vault is a commitment not only to accelerate the world’s transition away from fossil fuels, but also to explore, together, how the architecture of renewable energy can enhance our shared natural landscapes and urban environments."Incorporating gravity batteries into the design of future skyscrapers will give them multi-GWh of gravity-based energy storage, enough to power them and adjacent buildings, according to the teams. By incorporating the hydro system into buildings, they hope to minimize disruption to wildlife ecosystems associated with other energy storage systems.
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