Kings College London
Film Studies Research
  • Awards
  • Books/Edited Volumes
  • Articles
  • Podcasts
  • Creative Practice
  • Research Seminars
  • Events
Search
9 December, 2022

Retroframing the Future: Digital De-aging Technologies in Contemporary Hollywood Cinema

Retroframing the Future: Digital De-aging Technologies in Contemporary Hollywood Cinema
9 December, 2022

Chris Holliday, “Retroframing the Future: Digital De-aging Technologies in Contemporary Hollywood Cinema,” JCMS: Journal of Cinema and Media Studies 61, no. 5 (2021-2022): 210-237.

An emergent current of contemporary Hollywood cinema’s virtual population is the digitally age-regressed body, whereby computer animation “de-ages” star performers in feats of astonishing technological expressivity. This article examines the critical implications of virtual de-aging processes as both an institutional shift and a set of regularized formal practices. While the computerization of stardom by visual effects studios permits the aged star to transcend the limitations of their flesh-and-blood bodies, de-aging technologies intervene into critical discussions surrounding computer-mediated acting and digital performance; Hollywood’s increasingly “puzzling” narrative structures; gendered representations of aging in popular cinema; and the historical relationship between cinema, physiognomy, and memory.

Latest posts

  • Daniel Mann’s Film ‘The Recce’ Premiered at 2026 Berlinale
  • Special Issue on Ageing in Journal NECSUS edited by Belén Vidal, Luis Freijo, and Asja Makarević
  • Exhibition ‘No Master Territories: Feminist Worldmaking and the Moving Image’ Curated by Erika Balsom
  • Former King’s PhD Student Jacob Engelberg’s Book ‘Cinemas of Bisexual Transgression’ Published By Duke University Press
  • Erica Carter’s AHRC-funded project ‘Unhousing Restitution: African audiovisual heritage between displacement and return’ launches January 2026

Upcoming events

No event found!

Upcoming Research seminars

No event found!

Main King's College London site

King's College London Film Studies Department

© King's College London.