Videodrome (1983)

James Woods and Debbie Harry star in David Cronenberg’s mind-melting sci-fi about media domination.

David Cronenberg’s mind-bending mixture of Marshall McLuhan-inspired media theory and grotesque bodily transformation remains one of the 1980s’ ultimate outré extremes. When TV producer Max Renn (James Woods) discovers the pirate broadcast of a seemingly real torture show, he becomes drawn into a dangerous and increasingly hallucinatory conspiracy to indoctrinate the North American viewing public.

Renn’s sense of reality becomes further fractured once two rival, shadowy organisations begin reprogramming him by inserting organic ‘videotapes’ into the gaping orifice he’s developed in his abdomen. With its images of sadomasochism and graphic fusion of man and machine, Videodrome may be one of David Cronenberg’s most visually extreme experiences, but it’s also his most influential and intelligent. And while the videotape-based technology featured in the film may have dated, its ideas around media proliferation and viral dissemination remain as relevant as ever.

1983 Canada
Directed by
David Cronenberg
Produced by
Claude Héroux
Written by
David Cronenberg
Featuring
James Woods, Sonja Smits, Debbie Harry
Running time
89 minutes

Ranked in The Greatest Films of All Time poll

Sight and Sound

Who voted for Videodrome

Critics

Pablo Conde
Argentina
Steve Gravestock
Canada
Dominik Kamalzadeh
Austria
Josh Lewis
Canada
Sebastian Lindvall
Sweden
Michel Lipkes
Mexico
Katherine McLaughlin
UK
Jelena Mišeljić
Montenegro
Mark Pilkington
UK
Ronald Rovers
Netherlands
Stephen Thrower
UK
Pete Tombs
UK

Directors

Jerónimo Atehortúa
Colombia
Edgar Pêra
Portugal

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