Jeremy Clarke reviews
Videodrome: Director's Cut
Distributed by
Pioneer LDCE
Cast:
James Woods (Contact, The Hard Way, Salvador )
Sonja Smits
Debbie Harry
A
decade and a half on and still retaining its incredible power to
shock, this is the film in which David Cronenberg first coined his
battle cry, "Long Live the New Flesh." .
If a clear lineage can be traced in his films from Shivers ' aphrodisiac turds
through to Crash 's orgasmic collision of swingers and twisted metal,
Videodrome remains unique in Cronenberg's oeuvre - a black joke, a come
on to the censor.
Just suppose, runs the pitch, violent porno (television signals) directly
affected people causing them to hallucinate. This is the fate which
befalls sleazoid Channel 83 cable television executive Max Renn (a young
James Woods in his best - and edgiest - role to date) who tells porno
programme sales agents their merchandise is "too SOFT. I'm looking for
something HARD." (He stubs out his cigarette.)
Not for Channel 83 the oriental softcore Samurai Dreams, featuring geisha and
dildo - Renn's interested lies rather in what illicit programming his basement
technical whizzkid and self-styled pirate of the airwaves Harlan can
track down by satellite. And Harlan has locked on to a signal called
Videodrome. Nil production values - just continuous beatings and torture
for an hour. Renn is impressed.
Meanwhile, Max is also being seduced by radio talk show host Nicky Brand
(Debbie Harry) whose reaction on discovering that illicit VHS Videodrome
tape in Renn's collection at home contains, in his words, mutilation and
torture, is that of arousal. "Not exactly sex," he says. "Says who?",
she replies. What Renn doesn't realise is that he's being hooked on the
Videodrome signal.
Soon he starts to hallucinate (for instance, hitting his P.A. girl
Friday who temporarily - in his head and in our heads - becomes Nicky as
if the film is momentarily hopping from one TV channel to another and
back again).
As a series of pulsating VHS cassettes containing programming from rival
interest groups are inserted into the vagina-like slit that appears in Renn's
stomach, he finds himself sprouting metal tendrils connecting his arm and hand
to his revolver which turn him into an assassin.
The narrative descends into ever-increasing madness and characters turn up
bearing such names as Brian O'Blivion ("not my real name - the one I was born
with - but my television name"), his protective daughter Bianca ("I am my
father's screen") and their arch rival Barry Convex ("Why would anyone watch a
scum show like Videodrome? Why did YOU watch it, Max?").
Derelicts hole up at the Cathode Ray Mission to pathetically watch TV sets in
little cubicles, guns distort television screen membranes to shoot (or
"deprogramme") people and Renn finds himself literally burying his head in an
image of Nicky's lips on an organically expanding television screen.
The extremely icky hallucinations - with the majority on a commendable
CAV second side - are pretty weird even by Cronenberg's standards, the
director only returning to this sheer quantity and variety of extreme
and grotesque imagery in his adaptation of William Burroughs' Naked
Lunch. And in this Director's Cut of Videodrome, they're more extreme
than I can ever remember seeing them before. (The Samurai Dreams
sequence, for instance, here contains a lengthy shot of a fleshy dildo
while the late sequence of a man splitting open and sprouting cancerous
growths runs to several shots which add much to the immediate gore
quotient but little to the overall emotional impact of the movie.)
For those who expected an extra ending scene of Renn himself in the
Videodrome Arena, rumoured to have existed in an early cut of the film,
it's not here - but again, would it really have added much? After all,
Videodrome hangs together by dint of some bizarre subliminal logic -
what ultimately makes Cronenberg's film so disturbing isn't the
superficial gore (unsettling though that is) but rather the underlying
emotional journey of its protagonist that affects the viewer on a far
deeper level.
And the ending of the film as it appears here - which is as it has previously
appeared in UK cinemas and PAL VHS before - seems to represent the perfect
conclusion of that journey.
Most of the visual action is concentrated towards picture centre, with
very little happening off to pic sides - consequently widescreen
presentation adds surprisingly little (though obviously in terms of
composition it's preferable to a fullscreen version, so we're certainly
not complaining).
However, the sound mix (especially the score) is improved no end by this
disc's digital audio presentation (the film was made, incidentally, in mono).
Chaptering is more than adequate (nineteen on side one, nine on side two).
While it's true that subject matter about inserting VHS cassettes into
first VCRs and later hitherto unknown human orifices loses something
when you have to load an LD not a VHS into your living room hardware
beforehand, it's equally true that the viewing experience is enhanced
over the VHS experience by LD's sound/picture quality (not to mention
the little snippets of additional footage found in this version.)
In the end, though, widescreening and extra footage are, as it were, merely
icing on the cake. But what a cake! Even Crash - impressive though it
undeniably is and with all the controversy it generated to boot - isn't
quite up there with this extraordinary, earlier outing. Fifteen years
on, Videodrome remains Cronenberg's masterpiece - and Pioneer are to be
congratulated for this timely and superb release on LD.
Film: 5/5
Picture: 5/5
Sound: 5/5
Review copyright © Jeremy Clarke, 1997.
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