“‘Where did she go?”

19.06.2026

Buffy the Vampire Slayer, “The Body”.

This semester, in my Television Fiction course, I spent several weeks teaching Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997-2003), not only through individual episodes such as “Who Are You?” (4.16), “The Body” (5.16), and “Conversations with Dead People” (7.07), but also as a privileged case study for thinking about aesthetic form and seriality in television series.

That sustained work in class has now led me back to one of the most extraordinary episodes of the series. I will be presenting a paper titled “‘Where did she go?’: Theological Silence and the Problem of the Soul in ‘The Body’” at Slayage Conference 11, hosted by Illinois State University and organized by The Association for the Study of Buffy+. I am very glad to return to Buffy in this context and to think further about “The Body”, an episode that continues to unsettle the relationship between death, embodiment, grief, and theological meaning. Here is the abstract for my paper:

Within Buffy studies, Gregory Stevenson’s “Televised Morality” argues that Buffy the Vampire Slayer constructs a morally coherent universe grounded in a stable spiritual ontology. Souls are not metaphorical but real: detachable, restorable, and ethically decisive. At the same time, as Deborah Thomas has shown, the series unsettles epistemological certainty, inviting viewers to question what can be known and how meaning is produced. “The Body” (5.16), written and directed by Joss Whedon, brings these tendencies into alignment.

This paper argues that the episode does not suspend Buffy’s theology of the soul but reveals a tension between ontological certainty and experiential ambiguity. Joyce Summers’ death unfolds without supernatural mediation; she is repeatedly named “the body”, and Dawn’s question — “Where did she go?” — remains unanswered. In a series that provides clear accounts of the soul, what emerges is not the absence of belief, but the impossibility of accessing it.

To articulate this tension, I draw on Owen Flanagan’s account of the “problem of the soul” as a conflict between a materialist understanding of human life and a need for continuity and meaning. BUFFY sustains both perspectives, but “The Body” marks where they fall out of alignment.

The episode’s formal organization is crucial. Long takes stretch time into duration; the absence of non-diegetic music withdraws interpretive cues; and its spare mise-en-scène — empty spaces, fixed framings, the inert presence of the corpse — keeps attention on what remains. Following Adrian Martin’s insistence that meaning emerges from the material arrangement of the image, these choices shape an experience of grief defined less by revelation than by withdrawal.

In this sense, “The Body” approaches an apophatic limit: it does not deny the soul, but renders it inaccessible. Buffy’s cosmology remains intact, but its theological promise is suspended.

Mostra das Oficinas de Estudos Artísticos 2025/26

14.06.2026

Recensão de Exploring Film and Christianity

12.06.2026

É com alegria que partilho a recensão do Alfredo Teixeira (Universidade Católica Portuguesa) da coleção de ensaios Exploring Film and Christianity: Movement as Immobility, que co-editei com a Rita Benis. A recensão publicada na revista Cultura lê o livro como uma contribuição para pensar o cinema não apenas como veículo de narrativas religiosas, mas como um espaço de experiência, atenção, e pensamento teológico — onde o visível e o invisível, o movimento e a imobilidade, a imagem e a fé se encontram de formas sempre renovadas. Fico muito grato por este acolhimento crítico e por esta leitura generosa, que acompanham os vários percursos do volume. O texto está disponível aqui.

Sino-Portuguese Civilization Exchange and Mutual Learning Academic Forum

08.06.2026


Detailed information here.

Beatitudes of the Coalfields

06.06.2026

Matewan.

This year’s annual conference of the Working-Class Studies Association, of which I have been a member for nine years, takes place from 18 to 21 June in Laramie, Wyoming. The conference theme is “The Power of Working-Class Action and Thought.” I will be participating with the paper “Beatitudes of the Coalfields: Prophetic Christianity, Class Solidarity, and Working-Class Thought in Matewan (1987).” Here is the abstract:

John Sayles’s Matewan (1987) dramatizes the events surrounding the Battle of Matewan — an early episode in the West Virginia Coal Wars — through the intersecting lives of miners, families, and union organizers in a small Appalachian town. The film follows Joe Kenehan, an ex-Wobbly organizer who arrives to help miners confront the Stone Mountain Coal Company, alongside “Few Clothes” Johnson, a Black miner recruited as a strikebreaker, and Danny Radnor, a young miner and lay preacher whose moral voice frames the narrative. Amid wage cuts, evictions, and the threat of the Baldwin-Felts detectives, Matewan exposes the racism, xenophobia, and strategic fractures that threaten working-class unity, while insisting on the ethical stakes of collective action.

This paper argues that Matewan treats religious language and communal ritual not as incidental background but as a mode of working-class thought formed through struggle. Sayles juxtaposes church preaching, personal faith, and moral storytelling with union meetings, racial tension, and the dilemma of whether solidarity can survive escalating violence. Drawing on scholarship on Christianity and labor politics in America’s coal country, as well as studies of working-class cinema, I show how Matewan frames religion as an idiom through which workers interpret exploitation, contest division, and imagine interracial organizing. The film ultimately demonstrates how working-class action and working-class thought emerge together — through speech, ritual, and moral decision-making under pressure.

Fogo do Vento: Sessões Especiais

26.05.2026

A Imagem em Movimento como Investigação

19.05.2026


Na passada sexta-feira, foi lançado o livro The Ongoing Lecture no Colégio das Artes da Universidade de Coimbra. O volume foi coordenado pela minha colega Ana Rito, verdadeira força motriz deste seminário, que já contou com duas edições, ambas integradas nesta publicação. Fiz parte da Comissão Científica do evento e assinei um dos ensaios incluídos na secção dedicada aos “Contextos”: “A Imagem em Movimento como Investigação”.

Manoel de Oliveira e Fernando Lopes

19.05.2026

O Delfim.

Amanhã será mostrado O Delfim (2002) de Fernando Lopes, com apresentação minha, integrado no terceiro ciclo sobre Manoel de Oliveira e o cinema português. Mais informação sobre esta sessão na Casa do Cinema Manoel de Oliveira no Porto aqui.

A Lógica do Indeterminado no Cinema

13.05.2026

Caché.

No XV Encontro Anual Congresso Internacional da AIM, que decorre atualmente em Mirandela, na Escola Superior de Comunicação, Administração e Turismo (EsACT) do Instituto Politécnico de Bragança, apresentarei amanhã uma comunicação intitulada “A Lógica do Indeterminado no Cinema”, a partir das seguintes linhas:

Esta comunicação reflete sobre o cinema enquanto prática de escolha, entendida não apenas como decisão autoral consciente, mas como processo que inclui acidentes, desvios, e efeitos não inteiramente controlados ou controláveis. Partindo da noção de lógica do indeterminado, argumenta-se que a indeterminação não constitui um défice de sentido, mas um modo rigoroso de organização do sensível, no qual a relação entre intenção, forma, e efeito ético permanece instável. Em diálogo com Jacques Rancière, Stanley Cavell, e Vivian Sobchack, defende-se que a dimensão ética do cinema emerge menos da clareza moral e mais da forma como o filme redistribui o sensível (Rancière), convoca uma ética da atenção e do reconhecimento (Cavell), e envolve o espectador enquanto corpo situado na experiência fílmica. A indeterminação resulta de escolhas formais que recusam a coincidência imediata entre ver, compreender e julgar, abrindo um espaço de atenção e envolvimento ativo. Nada a Esconder (Caché, 2005) de Michael Haneke será analisado como exemplo de uma poética da expressão na qual a indeterminação nasce tanto de decisões autorais como da recusa de resolução narrativa, confrontando o espectador com uma culpa sem origem identificável e uma responsabilidade sem resposta estabilizada. Neste sentido, a lógica do indeterminado permite pensar o cinema como espaço privilegiado para interrogar a ética das escolhas — não apenas as conscientes, mas também as inconfessadas e ambíguas.

Materialidades da Criação no Cinema

07.05.2026


O livro electrónico Materialidades da Criação no Cinema: Matérias e Ofícios da Imagem em Movimento saiu recentemente e vai ser apresentado no XV Encontro Anual e Congresso Internacional da AIM, na Escola Superior de Comunicação, Administração e Turismo (EsACT) do Instituto Politécnico de Bragança (Campus do Cruzeiro), no dia 13. O livro foi inicialmente coordenado pela Caterina Cucinotta, o Alfonso Palazón, e por mim, a quem se juntaram a Mirian Nogueira Tavares e a Patrícia Dourado, numa parceria entre o CIAC - Centro de Investigação em Artes e Comunicação e a Universidad Rey Juan Carlos. O meu capítulo tem o título “Jordan Peele, Autor Negro: Foge (2017), da Página ao Ecrã”. A publicação pode ser descarregada gratuitamente aqui.

CFP Metafictional Horror Cinema: The Screen as Mirror

13.04.2026

Scream (1996).

Edited by Sérgio Dias Branco (University of Coimbra, Portugal) and Ana Maria Acker (Ritter dos Reis University Center, Brazil)

We invite chapter proposals for an edited collection titled Metafictional Horror Cinema: The Screen as Mirror, to be submitted to the UWP Horror Studies series. The volume explores how horror cinema reflects on its own formal strategies, lays bare its narrative and technological mechanisms, and confronts viewers with unsettling modes of self-awareness.

The volume will explore the role of metafiction within horror cinema, from postmodern genre revisions and reflexive found-footage films to avant-garde and hybrid works that fracture narrative logic, collapse diegetic boundaries, break the fourth wall, or explicitly implicate the viewer in acts of spectatorship and violence.

Metafictional horror draws attention to the constructed nature of cinema, often blurring boundaries between fiction and documentary, performance and possession, audience and victim. By making genre conventions visible, these films challenge the stability of horror itself. At the same time, self-reflexivity does not necessarily diminish the intensity of the horror experience. Instead, it often produces new forms of affect in which intellectual awareness and visceral response coexist.

We seek contributions that analyse films and audiovisual works in which horror becomes self-aware or formally reflexive, including — but not limited to — the following areas:

• genre parodies and deconstructions (Scream, The Cabin in the Woods, Behind the Mask);
• reflexive found footage and mockumentaries (Lake Mungo, The Poughkeepsie Tapes);
• avant-garde or experimental horror (Inland Empire, Skinamarink, Antrum);
• horror narratives centered on authorship, narrative collapse, or recursive storytelling;
• spectatorship, diegesis, and medium-awareness as mechanisms of fear;
• meta-possession, performance, and the body as sites of narrative rupture;
• horror across digital and multi-platform environments, including desktops, smartphones, surveillance systems, livestreams, and AI-mediated or algorithmic perspectives.

We especially welcome contributions addressing global, transnational, and underrepresented traditions of metafictional horror cinema, expanding discussion beyond dominant Western canons.

Abstracts Due: 8 May 2026 (250–300 words)

Include a short bio (100 words) and institutional affiliation (if applicable).

Notification of Acceptance: 29 May 2026.

Submit proposals or inquiries to: sdiasbranco@fl.uc.pt and ana_acker@yahoo.com.br

Colóquio 221, “Camões: Novas Artes, Novo Engenho”

30.03.2026


Já saiu o último número da revista Colóquio da Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian. Este número é dedicado a Luís Vaz de Camões, “Camões: Novas Artes, Novo Engenho”. Inclui um artigo meu: “O Canto e o Olhar: Luís de Camões e o Cinema Português”. Um agradecimento à equipa da revista, em especial à diretora Joana Matos Frias e à Ana Marques Gastão.

Two Conference Papers Accepted

11.03.2026

Matewan.

Two recent papers accepted for conference presentation:

• “A Lógica do Indeterminado no Cinema” [“The Logic of the Indeterminate in Cinema”] to be presented at the XV AIM (Association of Moving Image Researchers) Annual Meeting and International Conference in May;

• “Beatitudes of the Coalfields: Prophetic Christianity, Class Solidarity, and Working-Class Thought in Matewan (1987)” to be presented at the annual conference of the WCSA (Working-Class Studies Association) in June.

Conversa sobre Ominous Homelands in World Cinema

22.02.2026


Informações detalhadas sobre este livro recente e relevante da minha colega da Faculdade de Letras, Susana Araújo, aqui.

Slowness as Antidote

13.02.2026

Sarah Lahm (University of Leeds) has written a insightful article on Pluribus (2025-present) and slowness for the Critical Studies in Television online blog, in which she references my recent piece on Steven Zaillian’s Ripley (2024) for the same publication. It is well worth reading here.

Slow Television, Vivid Crime

06.02.2026

Ripley.

My new essay on Steven Zaillian’s Ripley (2024) for the Critical Studies in Television online blog is out. Read it here.

The Hand That Feeds and the Hand That Starves

03.02.2026

November.

November (2017) is an acclaimed Estonian folk horror film written and directed by Rainer Sarnet, based on Andrus Kivirähk’s best-selling novel Rehepapp ehk November (“Old Barny aka November”). It is a tale of unrequited love and untamed violence populated by possessed machines (kratts), spirits, werewolves, plagues, and the Devil. In general, critical acclaim focused on its stylistic qualities, particularly the peasant scenes in vast landscapes reminiscent of Pieter Bruegel’s paintings, and the alluring black-and-white cinematography by Mart Taniel, which received the Spotlight Award from the American Society of Cinematographers. These combined features create a haunting atmosphere that matches the existential angst permeating the film, not unlike that found in Béla Tarr’s post-1988 cinema.

The film can be easily read through the prisms of religion and politics. Sarnet’s social portrait mixes Estonian paganism, the rooted beliefs of peasants, with Lutheranism, the Christian denomination brought by German aristocrats. Yet Lutheranism is also understood and lived in peculiar ways by the rural population—e.g., the pastor is described as “the hand that feeds”, but also as someone who must be turned “stupid” by dark magic. The narrative takes place in the nineteenth century, when Estonian national identity began to emerge in the region between the Baltic Sea and its easternmost arm, the Gulf of Finland—what is called the Estonian Age of Awakening (Ärkamisaeg). At the time, the land was known as the Governorate of Estonia, a province of the Russian Empire where the peasantry was ruled by the German aristocracy. The film connects the emergence of Estonian identity with the popular rejection of a small foreign elite, the German upper class, which lives in a decadent manor where a large table is successively set for banquets that are never shown while the peasants starve outside. It is not just the small farmers who suffer. Class exploitation extends indoors to the housekeeper, who steals dresses from the baroness to sell them, as well as to other servants at the manor. “Capital is dead labour, which, vampire-like, lives only by sucking living labour, and lives the more, the more labour it sucks”, wrote Karl Marx in Capital, Volume 1, chapter 10, section 1. November draws on the tradition of Gothic Marxism exemplified in this passage by employing syncretic religiosity along with supernatural elements to render the dying days of feudalism and the rise of capitalism.

World Poll

26.01.2026

Sinners.

Issue 116 of Senses of Cinema is now out, and I’ve contributed to the World Poll, highlighting ten films from 2025 in alphabetical order.

No Other Choice (Eojjeolsuga eobsda, Park Chan-wook, 2025)
A House of Dynamite (Kathryn Bigelow, 2025)
The Life of Chuck (Mike Flanagan, 2024)
One Battle After Another (Paul Thomas Anderson, 2025)
The Phoenician Scheme (Wes Anderson, 2025)
The Shrouds (David Cronenberg, 2024)
Sinners (Ryan Coogler, 2025)
Sirât (Oliver Laxe, 2025)
Wake Up Dead Man (Rian Johnson, 2025)
It Was Just an Accident (Yek tasadof-e sadeh, Jafar Panahi, 2025)

Ten films are hardly enough to account for a year of cinematic art – and I am still catching up with important titles such as The Secret Agent (O Agente Secreto, Kleber Mendonça Filho, 2025), The Mastermind (Kelly Reichardt, 2025), or I Only Rest in the Storm (O Riso e a Faca, Pedro Pinho, 2025). Other films, including Drop (Christopher Landon, 2025), Souleymane’s Story (L’histoire de Souleymane, Boris Lojkine, 2024), or Young Mothers (Jeunes mères, Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, 2025), also came close to making the list – and are well worth seeking out. These ten titles highlight particularly compelling examples of fiction cinema released in 2025. I limited the scope to fiction films not because documentary is less important, but because I wanted to focus on constructed worlds, where meaning emerges through mise en scène, image, sound, and genre rather than direct record. The selection is guided by clear stylistic imprint and a strong sense of variety: they look, sound, move, and think differently. Several work through genre – thriller, horror, mystery, action – using recognisable frameworks to process power, belief, race, violence, and collective anxiety. Others move in the opposite direction, toward austerity or contemplation, privileging duration, landscape, and bodily presence over narrative payoff. Ways of looking at people – and of staying with them – recur throughout the list. What matters is not only who these films attend to, but how that attention is shaped aesthetically. Some articulate a reparative mode, grounded in attention, ritual, music, and communal survival. Others push toward harsher, tragic registers, where choices are constrained and loss takes hold. Taken together, these films suggest cinema as a humanist endeavour that remains plural, contested, and driven by form.

You can read other picks and observations here.

Review of James Lorenz’s The Theological Power of Film

23.01.2026

The latest issue of the Irish Theological Quarterly includes a book review I wrote of James Lorenz’s The Theological Power of Film, which I describe as “a confident and meticulously argued contribution to the increasingly sophisticated field of theology and film”. It is available here.

João Botelho: “Filmo um texto como se fosse um rosto”

08.01.2026


Recebi hoje a minha cópia do livro João Botelho: “Filmo um texto como se fosse um rosto”, organizado por Golgona Anghel, a quem muito agradeço o empenho e a perseverança na publicação desta obra. Esta colecção de ensaios tem um conjunto de contribuições relevantes para o estudo da obra cinematográfica de João Botelho na sua relação com a literatura, nomeadamente um texto de um colega do meu departamento na Universidade de Coimbra, Manuel Portela, sobre a montagem do livro em Filme do Desassossego (2010). Inclui ainda capítulos de Alexandra Lopes, António Guerreiro, Daniel Ribas, Elisabete Marques, Fernando Cabral Martins, Fernando Guerreiro, João Dionísio, Maria Brás Ferreira, Mário Avelar, Paulo Cunha, Ricardo Vieira Lisboa, e Susana Nascimento Duarte. O meu capítulo tem o título “Uma Personagem na História: Filmar O Ano da Morte de Ricardo Reis”.

Apresentação de Justa

07.01.2026


Apresentarei amanhã o filme Justa (2025) de Teresa Villaverde, às 21:30, no Centro de Artes e Espetáculos na Figueira da Foz.

Religião e Cinema

05.01.2026

No limiar do novo ano, e ainda com data de 2025, foi publicado um número da REVER: Revista de Estudos da Religião, editada pela PUC São Paulo, coeditado por mim e por Alfredo Teixeira (Universidade Católica Portuguesa), sob o título “Religião e Cinema”. O volume reúne dez artigos que mostram a diversidade e a relevância contemporânea desta área interdisciplinar, hoje particularmente fértil no cruzamento entre estudos religiosos, estudos fílmicos, e cultura visual. Está disponível aqui.

Entre os textos incluídos, há um artigo assinado por mim e por Sofia Cardetas Beato que analisa um conjunto singular de produções audiovisuais no contexto do diálogo inter-religioso entre as comunidades judaicas e católicas no Porto. O número integra ainda o artigo da autoria de Inês Mariano, uma brilhante estudante do Mestrado em Estudos Artísticos cuja dissertação tenho o prazer de orientar, que propõe uma leitura rigorosa e sensível do gesto contemplativo na obra de Wassily Kandinsky e Andrei Tarkovsky.

Intermedialidades: “Contado por Mulheres”

05.01.2026