DVD: Videodrome

David Cronenberg's vision of body horror and video sleaze retains its power

I walked out of Videodrome into Soho’s neon in 1983, and felt the film’s hallucinatory visions had infected the street. It’s one of a handful of times a film has shifted my mind. David Cronenberg’s crowning achievement before, as critic Kim Newman notes in a documentary extra, he diluted his work by adapting others’, it retains a cohesive, grubby surreality.

We are in the early days of VCRs, clandestine cable networks and easily transmitted, contraband imagery. Max Renn (James Woods) is on the hunt for filth to get ratings for his low-budget channel, and is passed a sadomasochist snuff tape. His new lover, radio relationship-counsellor Nikki Brand (Debbie Harry), disappears to Pittsburgh hoping to participate, and Max, slipping in and out of hallucinations since viewing the tape, inserts a gun into a vaginal slit in his stomach, taking sides as video puritans and evangelists battle over secret, cancerous transmissions.

Max, slipping in and out of hallucinations, inserts a gun into a vaginal slit in his stomach

James Woods is feral, wired and wisecracking in Cronenberg’s most hiply funny film. Debbie Harry, hoping to fulfil childhood dreams of film stardom as Blondie faded, became gamely notorious for stubbing a cigarette on her breast, and adds the seductiveness Cronenberg wanted his extreme ideas to have. Documentaries taken from a previous Criterion release recall this as a golden age of mechanical and make-up effects, physically constructing the alarming new sights of Videodrome, its exact contemporary The Thing, and An American Werewolf in London. Like Clive Barker, just starting as a short story writer, Cronenberg felt his “new, unimagined imagery” had to be shown. It represents TV and video as “a giant hallucination machine” cracking open “the neural floodgates”. Our digitised reality’s clean, bodiless surface completes the Videodrome project.

Arrow’s dual format reissue also digitally remasters a disc of Cronenberg’s first four short films. They contain the seeds of more famous work, though mostly lacking the visceral, dirty power of the body horror films which climaxed with Videodrome. All are worth seeing, and the latest early work, Crimes of the Future, is already gripping and transgressive.

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
James Woods is feral, wired and wisecracking in Cronenberg’s most hiply funny film

rating

5

explore topics

share this article

more film

Joachim Lang's docudrama focuses on Goebbels as master of fake news
The BFI has unearthed an unsettling 1977 thriller starring Tom Conti and Gay Hamilton
Estranged folk duo reunites in a classy British comedy drama
Marianne Elliott brings Raynor Winn's memoir to the big screen
Living off grid might be the meaning of happiness
Tender close-up on young love, grief and growing-up in Iceland
Eye-popping Cold War sci-fi epics from East Germany, superbly remastered and annotated
Artful direction and vivid detail of rural life from Wei Liang Chiang
Benicio del Toro's megalomaniac tycoon heads a star-studded cast
Tom Cruise's eighth M:I film shows symptoms of battle fatigue
A comedy about youth TV putting trends above truth
A wise-beyond-her-years teen discovers male limitations in a deft indie drama