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- Duration: 3:34
- Published: 29 Nov 2008
- Uploaded: 25 Jun 2011
- Author: HowlingMads
Name | Videodrome |
---|---|
Caption | Theatrical release poster |
Director | David Cronenberg |
Producer | Claude HérouxPierre DavidVictor Solnicki |
Writer | David Cronenberg |
Starring | James WoodsDeborah HarrySonja SmitsPeter DvorskyLeslie CarlsonJack Creley |
Music | Howard Shore |
Cinematography | Mark Irwin |
Editing | Ronald Sanders |
Studio | Canadian Film Development Corporation (CFDC) |
Distributor | Universal StudiosThe Criterion Collection (region-1 DVD) |
Released | February 4, 1983 |
Runtime | 89 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Budget | $5,952,000 |
Gross | $2,120,439 |
Genre | television punk |
Max dates Nicki, who is sexually aroused when he shows her an episode of Videodrome and coaxes him into having sex with her while they watch it. Max goes once again to Harlan's office, where Harlan informs him the signal delay which caused it to appear to be coming from Malaysia was a ploy by the broadcaster. In fact, Videodrome is being broadcast out of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Max tells Nicki of his discovery and she excitedly goes to Pittsburgh to try and audition for the show. When Nicki fails to return to Toronto, Max contacts Masha (Lynne Gorman), a softcore feminist pornographer with long-standing ties to the porn community, and asks her to help him find out the truth about Videodrome. Through Masha, Max learns that not only is the footage in Videodrome not faked, but Videodrome is the public "face" of a political movement with unspecified but apparently violent goals. Masha further informs him that Brian O'Blivion knows about Videodrome.
Max tracks down O'Blivion's office to The Cathode Ray Mission, a mission where homeless individuals are provided food, shelter, and clothing, and encouraged to engage in marathon sessions of television viewing. He discovers the mission is run by O'Blivion's daughter, Bianca (Sonja Smits), with the goal of helping to bring about her father's vision of a world in which television replaces every aspect of everyday life. Later, Max views a videotape in which O'Blivion informs him that "the Videodrome" is a socio-political battleground in which a war is being fought for control of the minds of the people of North America. Shortly thereafter, Max begins experiencing disturbing hallucinations in which his torso transforms into a bloody, gaping hole that functions as a VCR. Bianca tells him these are side-effects from having viewed Videodrome, which is in fact the carrier of a malicious broadcast signal that causes the viewer to develop a malignant brain tumor. O'Blivion helped to create it as part of his vision for the future, but when he found out it was to be used for malevolent purposes, he attempted to stop his partners; they used his own invention to kill him. In the year before his death, O'Blivion recorded tens of thousands of videos, which now form the basis of his television appearances.
Max is contacted by Videodrome's producer, the Spectacular Optical Corporation, an eyeglasses company that acts as a front for a NATO weapons manufacturer. The head of Spectacular Optical, Barry Convex (Leslie Carlson), has been working with Harlan to get Max to broadcast Videodrome as part of a crypto-government conspiracy to morally and ideologically "purge" North America, giving fatal brain tumors to "lowlifes" fixated on extreme sex and violence. Under Convex's influence, Max murders his colleagues at CCTV, and later attempts to murder Bianca O'Blivion, who is successful in reprogramming him. On her orders, Max kills Harlan, then tracks Convex to a trade show, where he shoots him to death in front of a horrified crowd. Afterwards, Max takes refuge on a derelict boat in an abandoned harbour, where Nicki appears to him on television. She tells him he has weakened Videodrome, but in order to completely defeat it, he has to "leave the old flesh." The television then shows an image of Max shooting himself in the head, which causes the set to explode, splattering the deck of the ship with bloody, human intestines. Imitating what he has just seen on TV, Max says his final words, "Long Live the New Flesh", and then he pulls the trigger.
As a young man, Cronenberg attended the University of Toronto—first studying science, but eventually gaining his degree in Literature. Marshall McLuhan was a lecturer in media studies at the University during the same time (the early 1970s), and is often credited as an influence on Cronenberg's ideas for Videodrome.
Videodrome pioneered the flicker-eliminating technology used to film a television screen's images; before, film images were superimposed onto blank television screens.
Videodrome used Betamax videotape cassettes because VHS videotape cassettes were too large to fit the faux abdominal wound. The score was composed to follow Max Renn's descent into video hallucinations, starting out with dramatic orchestral music that increasingly incorporates, and eventually emphasizes, electronic instrumentation. To achieve this, Shore composed the entire score for an orchestra before programming it into a Synclavier II digital synthesizer. The rendered score, taken from the Synclavier II, was then recorded being played in tandem with a small string section. The resulting sound was a subtle blend that often made it difficult to tell which sounds were real and which were synthesized.
The soundtrack was also released on vinyl by Varèse Sarabande and was rereleased on compact disc in 1998. The album itself is not just a straight copy of Howard Shore's score, but rather a remixing. Howard Shore has commented that while there were small issues with some of the acoustic numbers, that "on the whole I think they did very well."
Videodromes cult film status has made it a popular source for sampling and homage in Electro-industrial, EBM, and heavy metal music. It ranks tenth on the Top 1,319 Sample Sources list and has been sampled in dozens of songs.
Category:1983 films Category:1980s horror films Category:1980s science fiction films Category:Canadian horror films Category:Canadian science fiction films Category:English-language films Category:Films directed by David Cronenberg Category:Biopunk films Category:Dystopian films Category:Films about television Category:Films set in Toronto Category:Films shot in Toronto Category:Psychological thriller films Category:Science fiction horror films Category:Surrealist films Category:Tech noir films Category:Universal Pictures films
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