Crimes of the Future movie review (2022)


Based on this confidently uncanny opening alone, it makes sense to learn that it was towards the end of the 20th Century when Cronenberg conceived this story, in which our kind has mutated to grow new organs and evolved to make the notion of pain near-extinct. After all, that was the era that defined his carnal brand of cinema—namely, his preoccupations with the human body and the ways flesh intersects with the mechanisms and advancement of modern technology—and more or less ended with 1999’s “eXistenZ,” before concerns of the more visceral kind (of course, still with droplets of body horror) took hold of his filmography on this side of the 2000s. In that regard, “Crimes of the Future” (which shares a title and nothing else with a 1970 picture by the filmmaker) finds “the king of venereal horror” operate squarely in a universe that earned him this aforesaid label: you know, a world made up of the sliced torsos of “Videodrome,” the injured appendages of “Crash,” and the deliciously wicked eroticism that somehow flows through it all.

All these meaty graphic and psychological signifiers are also the blood and guts of “Crimes of the Future,” albeit a bit predictably sometimes. With imagery purposely and all-too-obviously reminiscent of some of the visuals that existed in the master’s previous work, one can’t unsee a certain banality on occasion or shake a fan-service-y inkling. Still, it’s irresistible to see Cronenberg pivot to his classic mode to dissect weighty anxieties around mortality and perhaps even humankind’s inevitable annihilation. If one feels no pain, if there is no cautionary system inherent to our bodies that warns us about our terminal limits, if unknown organs (or tumors) routinely sprout inside of our torsos, would we have a fighting chance to survive in the long run?

It’s a bit heady to consider all this existential apprehension in our (allegedly) post-Covid world where the talk of yet another imminent variant and possible surge is proving to be psychologically crippling. Perhaps all one can do is learn to live with and manipulate the unknown, like the rebellious performance artist Saul Tenser (a stony, mystical Viggo Mortensen) has done. While the celebrity showman confesses to his distaste for what’s been happening to his own body, he at least seems to have managed to make something of his condition in the interim, alongside the former trauma surgeon-turned Saul’s creative partner Caprice (a subtle and sophisticated Léa Seydoux, infusing the on-screen chaos with a swish of calm). Together, the duo have spun the whole process of surgeries into a performative exhibition, perhaps in order to find some meaning and assurance amid volatile unpredictability, or to leave something behind to counter the crippling sense of void. Often, the two conduct live, you-have-to-see-it-to-believe-it kind of surgeries on Saul in front of an in-person audience, pushing his body to its limit for the sake of art. More than once, you hear this process being deemed as a way to open the body up to new possibilities. The thesis goes something like this: if pain is archaic, then the body itself can be molded into art. And what is all that molding, all that operative modification of skin through human hands and inventive surgical machines, if not a new kind of intercourse? What’s an open wound if not an invitation for, well … oral sex?

You can view the original article HERE.

Jamie Lynn Spears Doesn’t Mind Britney’s Smack Talk, Just Glad She’s Alive
Revisiting Jennifer Lopez’s 2011 Album “Love?”
‘Bachelorette’ Star Jason Tartick Does Dinner with New Girlfriend
Nicki Nicole Shares How Rap Music Became Her Outlet
Interview with the Vampire Season 2 Review
‘I Won’t Say It Didn’t Sting’
Facets to Honor Academy Museum President Jacqueline Stewart at the 2024 Screen Gems Benefit | Chaz’s Journal
Jeanne du Barry Review | Johnny Depp and Maïwenn Have Royal Chemistry
VIVIZ 2024 ‘V.hind : Love and Tears’ tour: dates, tickets and more
Fontaines D.C. announce intimate surprise New York show for next week
Framed answer today – here’s the solution for May 1
Russ announces UK and European ‘It Was You All Along’ tour dates
A.J. Brown hopes to play rest of career with Eagles
North Carolina star Davis returning for 5th year
Dominate the Field: Essential Tactics for Establishing Your Presence in Polish Sports
Kabaddi Craze: Riding the Wave of Betting Excitement
Chicago PD Season 11 Episode 10 Review: Buried Pieces
Tulsa King Season 2 Adds Yellowstone’s Neal McDonough as Sylvester Stallone’s Latest Enemy
The Rookie Season 6 Episode 7 Review: Crushed
The White Lotus Star Teases Season 3: ‘It’s About Death’
Maya Rudolph’s Covergirl Moment, Banana Republic Taps Taylor Hill, & More!
Charlotte Stone Shoes Review With Photos
Watch! Highlights From The 8th Annual Fashion Los Angeles Awards
The Fashion Los Angeles Awards’ Top Red Carpet Moments