Videodrome Movie Review
Videodrome Review
"Videodrome" Overview

Rating: R
1983
Cast and Crew
Director : David Cronenberg,David CronenbergProducer : Claude Héroux
Screenwiter : David Cronenberg
Starring : James Woods,Sonja Smits,Debbie Harry,Peter Dvorsky,Leslie Carlson
"It's just murder and torture. No plot. No characters."
That's James Woods describing Videodrome, the pirate TV show his programming
exec Max discovers being broadcast, ostensibly from Malaysia. The show features
people -- mostly naked women -- being electrocuted, beaten, and eventually
killed. That's the show. Woods's Max becomes obsessed with the show, which he
quickly discovers is real -- not make-believe. And it's not Malaysian, it's
from Pittsburgh. And there's something underneath the regular track...
something sinister that ultimately reveals a dark conspiracy.
Or is it all a hallucination?
Between bouts of rough sex with girlfriend Nicki (Blondie singer Deborah
Harry), Woods plays P.I. with a host of interesting and absurd characters.
Director David Cronenberg ultimately turns in a film that is frequently
nonsensical, but was years before its time. Not only is there a prescient story
about the perils of media overexposure and its desensitizing effect within,
Videodrome also forecasted the reality TV craze that would emerge a decade
later.
Videodrome is probably better known for its Rick Baker-designed special
effects, which are heavy on throbbing videotapes, tables, and televisions,
culminating in a man-meets-machine creep-out that defined a new genre of
horror/sci-fi. Cronenberg himself would borrow the ideas again in eXistenZ. The
Matrix is directly inspired by Videodrome's story and effects.
DVD extras on the two-disc set from Criterion include two commentary tracks --
one from Cronenberg and DP Mark Irwin, one from Woods and Harry -- plus a short
film called Camera, a handful of documentaries and interview clips, the
complete footage of the "Videodrome" tapes as seen in the film, and the usual
photos and trailers.
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Review by Christopher Null
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