Year of Release: 1996
Director: David Cronenberg
Screenplay: David Cronenberg, based on the novel Crash by J. G. Ballard
Starring: James Spader, Holly Hunter, Elias Koteas, Deborah Kara Unger, Rosanna Arquette
Running Time: 100 minutes
Genre: Drama
Film producer James G. Ballard (Spader) and his wife Catherine (Unger) lead very active but dull sex lives where they each indulge in numerous casual affairs which they recoup in detail to each other. On his way back from the studio, James is involved in a violent car crash, in which the driver of the other car is killed. The dead man's wife, Dr. Helen Remington (Hunter), was in the passenger seat and is badly hurt. In the hospital, James encounters Helen and they begin an affair. They encounter a strange man named Vaughn (Koteas) who leads them into a strange subculture of people who are sexually aroused by car crashes, and recreate famous crashes.
This is an adaptation of British author J. G. Ballard's cult 1973 novel Crash, and like. a lot of Cronenberg films deals with the complex relationship between humanity and technology. The topic here is broken machinery and broken bodies and the connection between the two. In an early scene we see Ballard in hospital, with his leg in a complex surgical splint, and we see a close up of his badly bruised, broken leg penetrated by the metal of the apparatus. Rosanna Arquette plays a character who wears metal braces, designed almost like fetish wear. Despite the frequent sex scenes it's a surprisingly dispassionate films, almost clinical, it often feels like a kind of strange scientific documentary, the characters are never judged but the film merely observed. There is little to no chemistry between the actors, which is intentional. They are all isolated, lonely people trying to find some kind of connection. The imagery is cool, set largely around wintery Toronto motorways and anonymous high rise buildings, garages and parking lots. Even the colours seem washed out, with greys, and pale blues predominating. The film was hugely controversial even though, despite it's explicit content, it is in no way pornographic, more chilling than arousing. The film won a Special Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival for "Originality, Daring and Audacity". In 1996 the notorious British tabloid press whipped itself up into a vehement campaign to get the film banned, although it was released uncut in the UK in June 1997. In the USA the film was released in both an uncut NC-17 version and an R-rated version with ten minutes cut.
Needless to say, this won't be to everyone's taste, but if you're in the mood for something challenging and provocative, this is well worth a test drive.
No comments:
Post a Comment