Showing posts with label the fly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the fly. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

TRAILER PARK; HAPPY CAKE DAY, DAVID CRONENBERG!

My favorite director David Cronenberg turned 74 today, so to celebrate this edition of Trailer Park is dedicated to his filmography. Enjoy, fiends!
Shivers 1975
Rabid 1977
Fast Company 1978
The Brood 1979
Scanners 1981
Videodrome 1983
The Dead Zone 1983
The Fly 1986
Dead Ringers 1988
Naked Lunch 1991
M. Butterfly 1993
Crash 1996
eXistenZ 1999
Spider 2002
A History Of Violence 2005
Eastern Promises 2007
A Dangerous Method 2011
Cosmopolis 2012
Map To The Stars 2014
And as a bonus, the trailer Cronenberg directed for his debut novel Consumed
2014
 
And a great scene from Clive Barker's Nightbreed featuring Cronenberg as the nefarious Dr. Dekkar



Monday, October 17, 2016

SWF'S FILMOGRAPHY SERIES PART TWO; DAVID CRONENBERG

Original art by Stephanie Murr 2016
Hands down my favorite director is David Cronenberg, by a country mile. Ever since I saw THE FLY it has been imperative for me to not just see, but own his films, especially anything from his body horror era. I was 10 when Siskel and Ebert reviewed THE FLY and the whole concept as well as the promise of a gory thrill ride was just too much for me to resist. Though I was still at a point where I was scared to death of a TV commercial of Friday The 13th, I had started watching TALES FROM THE DARKSIDE, re-runs of ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS, and I was just getting into NIGHT FLIGHT and COMMANDER USA'S GROOVY MOVIES. A slasher was still a year so away from something I could handle, but THE FLY captured my imagination in a way that FRANKENSTEIN had when I was much younger and got the Remco 8" action figure. Monsters were something I'd long since embraced and in my mind they weren't horror, at least not in the sense that Jason or Freddy were. Monsters were often misunderstood, like Frankenstein, and I knew about the original THE FLY (1958) and he was misunderstood as well. I was 11 when I finally got to rent THE FLY and it definitely didn't let me down, in fact I'd say it went much farther than I was expecting and shook me up pretty hard. There were deeper ideas and concepts that flew over my head and I never imagined something so gory could actually exist.
Over the years, I worked my way through Cronenberg's filmography and through his various eras and was nearly always impressed and entertained. For the purpose of this series, I'm looking specifically at his body horror work starting with SHIVERS, skipping FAST COMPANY, and ending with THE FLY. DEAD RINGERS could probably be added, but it lacks that specific sci-fi/horrorific/fantastic element of the films that preceded it. Then there's NAKED LUNCH, which I could also probably add, but really NAKED LUNCH stands out as a singular work and I already covered my relationship with both the film and William Burroughs book.
Starting with 1975's SHIVERS, Cronenberg's debut is a towering achievement for a first time director and would set the stage for themes Cronenberg would continue to explore beyond his horror work. Set in a suburban high rise, where the inhabitants are being turned into sex crazed zombies by a parasite that spreads through sexual contact, SHIVERS turns George Romero's Living Dead weirdly and grossly erotic. Also, there's a strange kinship to JG Ballard's novel HIGH RISE, which was published the same year. SHIVERS isn't a flawless achievement, however, it's cheap and there are certainly scenes that drag a bit, but it has, without a doubt, a pretty amazing ending. Right up there with INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS and NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD.

In 1977's RABID, Cronenberg takes the zombie threat outside the high rise. This time, the infection is being spread by a young woman with a thirst for blood after undergoing an experimental surgery. Her victims grow quickly plunging the city into madness. Starring Marilynn Chambers in her first non-porn role, RABID is a medical horror mashup of vampirism and zombies. With some similar themes carried over from SHIVERS, it ups the ante with production levels and better cinematography as well as better performances and a more thought out plot device. Chambers, known for her hardcore career, starring in films like BEHIND THE GREEN DOOR, showed some real acting skills, but I believe this was her only non-porn role. Between SHIVERS and RABID Cronenberg was treating us to a brand of horror we weren't used to-the monster wasn't out there, it wasn't 'the other', it was us, it was in us. These two films certainly helped inspire Dan O'Bannon while writing ALIEN.

I saw 1979's THE BROOD on USA, not knowing it was a Cronenberg, and it scared the shit out of me. I was probably 11 or 12 and those deformed kids in the snow suits were just frightening. THE BROOD is about divorce and the physical manifestation of rage. A creepy slow burn, more personal and nuanced than the previous films. (Less Lee More has a great review HERE.) Starring Oliver Reed and Samantha Eggar, THE BROOD, on it's surface is about a father trying to protect his daughter from her mother who has been subjected to radical, experimental psychotherapy, but as with most Cronenberg films, the surface plot is window dressing for the subtext, which is always more creepy and enthralling.

Since the first time I watched 1981's SCANNERS I've wanted to see Cronenberg take on THE X-MEN, which he sort of does with this film anyway. Scanners are people with telepathic/telekinetic abilities, caused by a lab experiment. Michael Ironside stars as Darryl Revok, the film's Magneto, who leads an underground group of Scanners. THE PRISONER's Patrick MacGoohan is the film's Professor X, sort of, he created the Scanner's and enlists another Scanner, Cameron Vale, played by Stephen Lack, to stop Revok. It's a hell of a good story and spawned a franchise, which Cronenberg had nothing to do with. There were two direct sequels and two spin off films, SCANNER COP I and II. Like with many franchises, SCANNERS suffers from the law of diminishing returns, but that doesn't hurt the original, which stands head and shoulders above many other genre flicks for being such a unique experience, not to mention with probably the greatest exploding head scene in the history of cinema. I took on SCANNERS  in My Heroes Have Always Been Monsters Part 35.

1983's VIDEODROME is a subversive, hallucinogenic,  and philosophical masterpiece. It was Cronenberg's most ambitious film to date with some amazing special FX from Rick Baker and touches of the avant garde.  The story follows Max Renn (James Woods), a sleazeball TV producer looking for sleazier programming to satisfy his viewers' tastes. He discovers a strange program called Videodrome, which opens his world to a bizarre conspiracy. Also starring Debbie Harry, Videodrome is possibly Cronenberg's most rewatchable and quotable movie. The film has nightmarish layers that peel back as the film winds deeper  and deeper into it's creepy and bizarre brand of body horror-this time though, inanimate objects come to life, merging with the human form. The practical effects look so amazing. The idea that these guys were doing these things, like making a TV come to life, in camera is still amazing. The behind the scenes documentary that comes with the Criterion edition is really fascinating.

Also, from 1983, Cronenberg stepped away from body horror to adapt Stephen King's THE DEAD ZONE, starring Christopher Walken. Walken plays Johnny Smith who after spending five years in a coma awakens to discover he can see into the future. He uses his power to help the cops, but when he meets a slimy politician, played by Martin Sheen, and sees a horrifying vision of the future, he's forced to make some very difficult decisions. THE DEAD ZONE doesn't look or feel like a Cronenberg film, at least none produced up to that point. The horror is subdued, there is little bloodshed, and certainly none of his signature from-within horror. Even the small town Maine setting is a bizarre choice, yet THE DEAD ZONE is still a solid film, showing how versatile Cronenberg will become in his post-body horror era.

And that brings us to 1986's THE FLY. It's hard to express just how much I love this movie. This is the exact kind of science fiction I really dig. Spaceships and future-scapes are fine, but I like sci-fi when it's our world, with just a tweak-just a little off. Robocop and Alien Nation are good examples. With THE FLY, it's Seth Brundle's teleportation pods. The film stars Geena Davis and Jeff Goldblum. Goldblum plays an eccentric scientist working on a revolutionary invention, the aforementioned pods. When he tests it on himself, something goes awry; a common house fly gets in the machine with him. Once the machine teleports him, his DNA gets mixed with the fly's and he begins to mutate, becoming more and more monsterous. Like VIDEODROME, THE FLY is inventive in the SFX department, from a rotating room to give the impression of Brundle actually walking up the wall and across the ceiling, to the sickening slow transformation Goldblum goes through. The film is elevated by the wonderful acting talents of Davis and Goldblum, not to mention their great on-screen chemistry (they also worked together on EARTH GIRLS ARE EASY and TRANSYLVANIA 65000). THE FLY is a remake of the 1958 film of the same name, starring Vincent Price. That film spawned two sequels. Cronenberg's only one, although I once read that Davis had planned to produce a second sequel entitled FLIES.

Cronenberg didn't completely abandon horror after THE FLY, there certainly touches of it through films like DEAD RINGERS, NAKED LUNCH, SPIDER, A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE, and MAPS TO THE STARS, but he moved on and has tried other things. Usually it works. For me though, I have no desire to rewatch his last three films, because they don't speak to me with the same intensity and vigor that VIDEDROME does. I think it would be great in Cronenberg would return to his roots one more time, but we should feel very lucky to have what we have, because no one else would have made these films.
***Also worth a mention is eXistenZ, while it features some signature body horror and some glorious set pieces, it really is more science fiction than horror, arriving in 1999, 13 years after THE FLY. It comes in between CRASH (adapted from another Ballard novel) and SPIDER (a psychologocal thriller) and feels like an odd choice in vehicles for Cronenberg since it seemed like he had moved away from this sort of storytelling.  In a way, it's VIDEDROME'S bad ass little sister, with it's fast and loose handling of reality and bio-tech fetishism.

        

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

WHAT'S IS DAVID CRONENBERG'S BEST FILM, FIENDS?

As I've said on a number of occasions, David Cronenberg is my hero. I love his films, regardless of era, regardless of subject. I saw The Brood on USA when I was a kid and it scared the piss out of me. Later I got Scanners from one of the little video stores, by then there were two sequels (that Cronenberg had nothing to do with). The Fly and Naked Lunch blew my mind and then I saw Videdrome.
My writing rarely reflected much of a Cronenbergian influence, but being floored by each of his movies definitely drove me to be better. My latest e-novella Conspiracy Of Birds couldn't exist without his inspiration (along with my love of Dario Argento's films).
I just rewatched The Brood for the first time in years, with my wife who'd never seen it. It was such a great experience to come back to my first Cronenberg film after so long, seeing it on a restored (but bare bones) DVD and seeing it in a whole new light and still being just as moved by the experience. Like I said, the movie scared the piss out of me the first time and I'll be damned if it's not still disturbing.
But what's my favorite Cronenberg film? I cautiously say Scanners. It may not be as conceptually strong as Videdrome or The Fly, but it has an emotional edge over the other films for me. It was the one I rented over and over again. I liked the urban exploitation X-Men feel of it. Then again Videodrome is endlessly quotable and The Fly is, well, have you seen The Fly? It's a masterpiece of gore and bio- philosophical horror. Then there are the newer films, Cosmopolis, Eastern Promises, and History of Violence? And what about the mid period, Dead Ringers, Crash, Spider..?
I think Cronenberg's body of work has been far more consistent than many of his peers. It's a career that deserves a multi-volume examination.
So, dear fiends...what's your favorite Cronenberg film?


Friday, July 26, 2013

SWF's Favorite Monster Designs

There may be no shortage of monster movies these days, but how many of them are actually good? This is no way meant to be an exhaustive list, just a sampling of some of my all time favorite monsters in film.
Cronenberg's The Fly remake was chock full of amazing special effects created by Chris Walas. The fully realized Brundle Fly at the climax was sick.
 Likewise, Rob Bottin made a several crazy effects for the shape shifting creature in Carpenter's The Thing. The spider head has creep factor of 10.
Special effects all star Stan Winston made his directorial debut with Pumpkinhead. Though it wasn't well received upon release, Winston's backwoods monster/revenge tale is pretty effective.
 Godzilla may be the king of monsters, but you can't f- with Giger's Alien. Even in the worst sequel, the xenomorph itself remains a king hell bad ass. Weird and sleek, vicious and uncompromising.
 And so the king of all monsters, Godzilla is about to get another American reboot, and by the reports so far it sounds like this one is going to do it right. Godzilla served as a metaphor for the real nuclear devastation that Japan had suffered in WWII. Through the years and several films, the big guy evolved into sleeker meaner versions, look to the left to see one of my favorite takes.
 Of all the versions of Frankenstein's monster to grace the screen since Edison's silent I'd call Christopher Lee's take in Hammer's first Franken- film the best.
 After Frankenstein's monster, the Creature From The Black Lagoon is my favorite monster of all time. There have been few man-in-a-suit monsters that have been as original and cool as the creature. (the version in the Monster Squad rivals the original, for sure.)













After Leia's slave outfit, the best part of Return Of The Jedi has to the Rancor monster. A hulking carnivorous beast that's apparently immune to Jedi powers, but not big doors.
What's yours, fiends?