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Videodrome on Blu Ray

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A special Blu Ray edition of Videodrome by David Cronenberg has been released by Criterion Collection.

videodrome blu ray david cronenberg

Special Features
Restored high-definition digital transfer of the unrated version
Audio commentary – David Cronenberg w/ director of photographywith Mark Irwin
Audio commentary – actors James Woods and Deborah Harry
Camera (2000), a short film by Cronenberg
Forging the New Flesh, a half-hour documentary
Effects Men, an audio interview
Bootleg Video: the complete footage of Samurai Dreams
Fear on Film, a roundtable discussion from 1982
Original theatrical trailers and promotional featurette
Stills gallery featuring rare behind-the-scenes production photos
PLUS: A booklet featuring essays

Love it or loathe it, David Cronenberg’s 1983 horror film Videodrome is a movie to be reckoned with. Inviting extremes of response from disdain (critic Roger Ebert called it “one of the least entertaining films ever made”) to academic euphoria, it’s the kind of film that is simultaneously sickening and seemingly devoid of humanity, but also blessed with provocative ideas and a compelling subtext of social commentary. Giving yet another powerful and disturbing performance, James Woods stars as the operator of a low-budget cable-TV station who accidentally intercepts a mysterious cable transmission that features the apparent torture and death of women in its programming. He traces the show to its source and discovers a mysterious plot to broadcast a subliminally influential signal into the homes of millions, masterminded by a quasi-religious character named Brian O’Blivion and his overly reverent daughter. Meanwhile Woods is falling under the spell, becoming a victim of video, and losing his grip–both physically and psychologically–on the distinction between reality and television. A potent treatise on the effects of total immersion into our mass-media culture, Videodrome is also (to the delight of Cronenberg’s loyal fans) a showcase for obsessions manifested in the tangible world of the flesh. It’s a hallucinogenic world in which a television set seems to breathe with a life of its own, and where the body itself can become a VCR repository for disturbing imagery. Featuring bizarre makeup effects by Rick Baker and a daring performance by Deborah Harry (of Blondie fame) as Wood’s sadomasochistic girlfriend, Videodrome is pure Cronenberg–unsettling, intelligent, and decidedly not for every taste. –Jeff Shannon

Product Description
When Max Renn goes looking for edgy new shows for his sleazy cable TV station, he stumbles across the pirate broadcast of a hyperviolent torture show called VIDEODROME. As he unearths the origins of the program, he embarks on a hallucinatory journey into a shadow world of right-wing conspiracies, sadomasochistic sex games, and bodily transformation. Renn’s ordinary life dissolves around him, and he finds himself at the center of a conflict between opposing factions in the struggle to control the truth behind the radical human future of “the New Flesh.” Starring James Woods and Deborah Harry in one of her first film roles, VIDEODROME is one of writer/director David Cronenberg’s most original and provocative works, fusing social commentary with shocking elements of sex and violence. With groundbreaking special effects makeup by Academy Award-winner Rick Baker, VIDEODROME has come to be regarded as one of the most influential and mind-bending science fiction films of the 1980s, and The Criterion Collection is proud to present it in its full-length unrated edition.

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Posted by on Monday, January 10th, 2011. Filed under Movies. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

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