Sunday, March 25, 2018

Videodrome (1983)

Videodrome (1983): written and directed by David Cronenberg; starring James Woods (Max), Sonja Smits (Bianca O'Blivion), Debbie Harry (Nicki), Peter Dvorsky (Harlan), Leslie Carlson (Barry Convex) , and Jack Creley (Dr. Brian O'Blivion): David Cronenberg's Lovecraftian tale of body horror, basic cable networks, sadomasochism, and transcending the body seems as fresh today as ever, even if the Toronto-based cable universe it depicts almost certainly seems quaintly foreign to most people under the age of 40. 

James Woods is tense and sweaty and confused as Cronenberg's semi-satirical take on Canadian TV pioneer Mose Znaimer, on the hunt in the early 1980's for the late-night soft-core pornography that pays the bills for his small TV station. In reality, these were City TV's Baby Blue Movies. In Videodrome, they become a gateway to another reality in which competing philosophies of New Humanity and its New Flesh are at war. 

Woods definitely delivers the greatest acting performance ever by someone playing a guy with a vaginal VHS slot in his stomach. Jack Creley is a hoot as Dr. Brian O'Blivion, Cronenberg's nod to the University of Toronto's media guru Marshall McLuhan, a media commentator who only appears on TV. That the malignant Videodrome signal emanates from Pittsburgh seems like another nod, to the hometown of horror/zombie-movie pioneer and visionary George Romero. Highly recommended.

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