David Cronenberg

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David Cronenberg at Cannes 2002
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David Cronenberg at Cannes 2002

David Paul Cronenberg OC, FRSC (born March 15, 1943) is a Canadian film director and occasional actor. He is one of the principal originators of what is sometimes known as the "body horror" genre or "venereal horror", which explore people's fears of bodily transformation and infection. In his films, the psychological is typically intertwined with the physical. In the first half of his career, he explored these themes mostly through horror and science fiction, although his work has expanded beyond these genres.

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[edit] Biography

He was born to a Lithuanian-Jewish family in Toronto, Ontario. Cronenberg's father was a journalist and his mother a pianist. He went to North Toronto Collegiate Institute when he was young and later graduated from the University of Toronto with a degree in literature, having switched from science. He has cited William S. Burroughs and Vladimir Nabokov as influences.

After two short sketch films and two short art-house features (the black and white Stereo and the colour Crimes of the Future) Cronenberg went into partnership with Ivan Reitman. The Canadian government provided finance for Cronenberg's films through the 1970s. Cronenberg alternated his signature "body horror" films such as Shivers with projects reflecting his interest in car racing and bike gangs. Rabid exploited the unexpected acting talents of porn queen Marilyn Chambers (Cronenberg's first choice was a young unknown called Sissy Spacek). Rabid was a breakthrough with international distributors and his next two horror features gained stronger support.

Over the arc of his career, Cronenberg's films follow a definite progression, a movement from the social world to the inner life. In his early films, scientists modify human bodies, which results in social anarchy (e.g. Shivers, Rabid). In his middle period, the chaos wrought by the scientist is more personal, (e.g. The Brood, Scanners, Videodrome). In the later period, the scientist himself is altered by his experiment (e.g. Cronenberg's remake of The Fly). This trajectory culminates in Dead Ringers in which a twin pair of gynecologists spiral into codependency and drug addiction. Cronenberg's later films tend more to the psychological, often contrasting subjective and objective realities (eXistenZ, M. Butterfly, Spider). Perhaps the best example of a film that straddles the line between his works of personal chaos and psychological confusion is Cronenberg's "adaptation" of his literary hero Burroughs' most controversial book, Naked Lunch. The book itself (widely accepted as Burroughs' masterpiece and a prime example of his "cut-up" technique) was considered "unfilmable" and Cronenberg acknowledged that a straight translation of the book to film would be impossible. Instead, Cronenberg--much like in his earlier film, Videodrome--consistently blurred the lines between what appeared to be reality and what appeared to be hallucinations brought on by the main character's drug addiction. Many of the book's "moments" (as well as actual incidents that occurred in Burroughs' life) are presented in this manner within the film.

Cronenberg has said that his films should be seen "from the point of view of the disease", and that, for example, he identifies with the characters in Shivers after they become infected with the anarchic parasites. Disease and disaster, in Cronenberg's work, are less problems to be overcome than agents of personal transformation. Similarly, in Crash (1996), people who have been injured in car crashes attempt to view their ordeal as "a fertilising rather than a destructive event". In 2006, Cronenberg would say that he was upset that Paul Haggis had chosen the same name for his Academy Award winning film Crash, feeling it was not only ethically wrong, but annoying as well. [1]

Aside from The Dead Zone (1983) and The Fly, Cronenberg has not generally worked within the world of big-budget, mainstream Hollywood filmmaking, although he has had occasional near misses. At one stage he was considered by George Lucas as a possible director for Return of the Jedi but was passed. Cronenberg also worked for nearly a year on a version of Total Recall but experienced "creative differences" with producers Dino de Laurentiis and Ronald Shusett. A different version of the film was eventually made by Paul Verhoeven. A fan of Philip K. Dick, the author of the short story ("We Can Remember it For You Wholesale") upon which Total Recall was based, Cronenberg related (in the biography/overview of his work, Cronenberg on Cronenberg) that his dissatisfaction with what he envisioned the film to be and what it ended up being pained him so greatly that for a time, he suffered a migrane just thinking about it, akin to a needle piercing his eye.

In the late 1990s Cronenberg was announced as director of a sequel to another Verhoeven film, Basic Instinct, but this also fell through. His most recent work, the thriller A History of Violence (2005), is one of his highest budgeted and most mass audience-accessible to date. He has said that the decision to direct it was influenced by his having had to defer some of his salary on the low-budgeted Spider, but it is one of his most critically acclaimed films to date.

Cronenberg has hired Howard Shore to compose the soundtrack to nearly all of his films (see List of noted film director and composer collaborations). Other regular collaborators include actor Robert Silverman, art director Carol Spier, sound editor Bryan Day, film editor Ronald Sanders, his sister, costume designer Denise Cronenberg, and, from 1979 until 1988, cinematographer Mark Irwin.

Since 1988's Dead Ringers, Cronenberg has worked with cinematographer Peter Suschitzky on each of his films (see List of noted film director and cinematographer collaborations). Suschitzky was the director of photography for Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back, and Cronenberg has repeatedly said that Suschitzky's work in that film made it the most beautiful sci-fi film he had ever seen, which was a motivating factor to work with him on Dead Ringers.

Coupled with the loyalty he shows to his key personnel, Cronenberg remains a staunchly Canadian filmmaker, with nearly all of his films (including major studio vehicles The Dead Zone and The Fly) having been filmed in his home province Ontario. Notable exceptions include M. Butterfly and Spider, most of which were shot in China and England, respectively. Also, Rabid and Shivers were shot in and around Montreal. Most of his films have been at least partially financed by Telefilm Canada, and Cronenberg is a vocal supporter of government-backed film projects, saying "Every country needs [a system of government grants] in order to have a national cinema in the face of Hollywood." [2]

Cronenberg has also appeared in the films of other directors as an actor. Most of his roles are cameo appearances, as in Into The Night, Jason X, To Die For, and Alias, but on occasion he has played major roles, as in Nightbreed or Last Night. He has not played major roles in any of his own films, but he did put in a brief appearance as a gynaecologist in The Fly; he can also be glimpsed among the sex-crazed hordes in Shivers; he can be heard as an unseen car-pound attendant in Crash; his hands can be glimpsed in eXistenZ; and he appeared as a stand-in for James Woods in Videodrome for shots in which Woods' character wore a helmet that covered his head.

[edit] Honors

In 1999, Cronenberg was inducted onto Canada's Walk of Fame. In 2002, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada. In 2006 he was awarded the Cannes Film Festival's lifetime achievement award, the Carrosse D'or. [3] In 2006, he was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, the senior national body of distinguished Canadian scientists and scholars. [4]

Cannes Award winner Martin Scorsese cited that David Cronenberg makes movies like nobody else in the industry. [citation needed]John Carpenter, the director of the cult classic Halloween, stated that "Cronenberg is better than all of us combined.".[citation needed]

[edit] Trivia

In the overview of his work (Cronenberg on Cronenberg) several interesting bits of trivia are detailed:

  • Both Cronenberg and Martin Scorsese recall a humorous moment when the two first met. Scorsese, having experienced some backlash after making Taxi Driver and finding that some people assumed that he must be a maniacal, Travis Bickle-like figure, ironically noted that--as much as he admired the work--he was initially too scared to meet Cronenberg after seeing his films, assuming the Canadian director himself must be a wild, horrific figure ("like Renfield from Dracula," Cronenberg noted).
  • Cronenberg stated that while writing the screenplay for Naked Lunch, he felt a moment of synergy with the writing style of William S. Burroughs. He felt the connection between his screenwriting style and Burroughs' prose style was so strong, that he jokingly remarked that should Burroughs pass on, "I'll just write his next book."
  • Cronenberg relates that he was asked by Geena Davis to be the gynecologist during that particular scene in his remake of The Fly, as she felt safe with the director spending a large amount of shooting time around her in what was essentially a very close and intimate fashion. Cronenberg remarked that after he decided to do the cameo scene, he felt that "if I didn't like my performance, I could always get (Robert DeNiro) to dub my voice".

[edit] Filmography

[edit] Further reading

  • Thomas J. Dreibrodt (2000): Lang lebe das neue Fleisch. Die Filme von David Cronenberg - von 'Shivers' bis 'eXistenZ'. (academic; in German) (ISBN 3-932872-05-3)
  • Serge Grünberg, ed. (2006): David Cronenberg (interviews) (ISBN 0-85965-376-5)
  • Piers Handling (1983): The Shape of Rage: The Films of David Cronenberg (ISBN 0-7736-1137-1)
  • Kim Newman (1989): Nightmare Movies: A Critical History of the Horror Film 1968-1988 (ISBN 0-517-57366-0)
  • Drehli Robnik, Michael Palm, eds. (1992): Und das Wort ist Fleisch geworden. Texte über Filme von David Cronenberg. Vienna, PVS: 1992. ISBN 3-901196-02-1
  • Chris Rodley, ed. (1996): Cronenberg on Cronenberg (ISBN 0-571-19137-1)

[edit] Bibliographies

[edit] External links

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