There is no denying that Meir Zarchi's I Spit on Your Grave (1978)
deserves its title as one of the most controversial films ever made.
While many condemn it as misogynistic, others praise it for raising
uncomfortable issues about sexual violence. While its reputation as a
cult film has undoubtedly been cemented by its unique position in the
1970s/80s exploitation era and the "video nasties" scandal, it has also
become mythologized by its own official and unofficial franchises.
David Maguire examines why the film still continues to provoke fierce
debate forty years on, not only investigating the historical, social,
and political landscape into which the film was first released--and
condemned--but also examining how it is has inadvertently become ground
zero for the rape-revenge genre because of its countless imitators. The
book explores how academic study has reevaluated the film's importance
as a cultural statement on gender, the conflicting readings that it
throws up, the timeless appeal of its story as examined through folklore
and mythology, and its updating to reflect contemporary issues in a
post-9/11 world of vengeance and retaliation.