Videodrome: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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(no, not a "cable station", an OTA UHF 83 on the worst spot on the dial)
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A [[David Cronenberg]] film. A surreal movie, one of the poster children for [[Body Horror]]. Like all of Cronenberg's movies, it has a strong intellectual undercurrent. The film deals with Marshall McLuhan's philosophies and examines the relationship between television and its audience. Cronenberg was greatly influenced by McLuhan's theories.
A [[David Cronenberg]] film. A surreal movie, one of the poster children for [[Body Horror]]. Like all of Cronenberg's movies, it has a strong intellectual undercurrent. The film deals with Marshall McLuhan's philosophies and examines the relationship between television and its audience. Cronenberg was greatly influenced by McLuhan's theories.


More specifically, the film follows the CEO of a small cable station who stumble upon a broadcast signal that is broadcasting extremely violent and horrific things. He investigates. As you might expect from Cronenberg, [[It Got Worse|things get worse]]...
More specifically, the film follows the CEO of a small UHF station who stumble upon a broadcast signal that is broadcasting extremely violent and horrific things. He investigates. As you might expect from Cronenberg, [[It Got Worse|things get worse]]...
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{{tropelist}}
{{tropelist}}
* [[Affectionate Parody]] / [[No Celebrities Were Harmed]]:
* [[Affectionate Parody]] / [[No Celebrities Were Harmed]]:
** Brian O'Blivion is a parody of Marshall McLuhan, whose ideas are the central theme of the movie. He only exists in video tapes, parodying McLuhan's famous proclamation: "I refuse to appear on television, except on television."
** Brian O'Blivion is a parody of Marshall McLuhan, whose ideas are the central theme of the movie. He only exists in video tapes, parodying McLuhan's famous proclamation: "I refuse to appear on television, except on television."
** CIVIC-TV 83 is a parody of CITY-TV 79, which was a struggling UHF independent in its early days. There never was a TV originating station on North American UHF 80-83, and CITY likely survived only by being in the largest market (Toronto) transmitting from the highest possible location (the CN Tower). When the film was made (1983) channels 70-83 were being removed from TV to accommodate the new analogue cellular mobile telephones.
** CIVIC-TV 83 is a parody of CITY-TV 79, which was a [[Struggling Broadcaster|struggling UHF independent]] in its early days. There never was a TV originating station on UHF 80-83; all but a half-dozen of the North American OTA TV transmitters on UHF 70-83 were merely low-power "rebroadcasters" filling coverage gaps on the fringes of existing stations. CITY-TV survived by being in the largest market (Toronto) transmitting from the highest possible location (the CN Tower). When the film was made (1983) channels 70-83 were being removed from TV to accommodate the soon-to-be-introduced analogue cellular mobile telephones.
** CRAM (AM radio station) is likely also a parody of one of the Toronto locals.
** CRAM (AM radio station) is likely also a parody of one of the Toronto locals.
* [[Body Horror]]
* [[Body Horror]]
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* [[Deconstructor Fleet]]: For late '70s exploitation movies. Oddly enough, it is now [[Weird Al Effect|much better known]] than films like ''Mondo Cane'' or the first ''Faces Of Death''.
* [[Deconstructor Fleet]]: For late '70s exploitation movies. Oddly enough, it is now [[Weird Al Effect|much better known]] than films like ''Mondo Cane'' or the first ''Faces Of Death''.
* [[Double Entendre]]: "Civic TV, The one you take to bed with you."
* [[Double Entendre]]: "Civic TV, The one you take to bed with you."
* [[Exploitation Film]]: Civic TV's stock in trade ins exploitation ''TV''.
* [[Exploitation Film]]: Civic TV's stock in trade is exploitation ''TV''.
* [[Fantastic Aesop]]: Not used by the film itself, but by the bad guys, who figure that if they make a torture porn show that kills the viewer, nobody will watch torture porn anymore.
* [[Fantastic Aesop]]: Not used by the film itself, but by the bad guys, who figure that if they make a torture porn show that kills the viewer, nobody will watch torture porn anymore.
* [[Gorn]]: Played with.
* [[Gorn]]: Played with.
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* [[Smug Snake]]: {{spoiler|Barry Convex}}
* [[Smug Snake]]: {{spoiler|Barry Convex}}
* [[Spiritual Sequel]]: ''[[eXistenZ]]''. This is made particularly clear because it starts with a scene that looks very like the climax to this movie.
* [[Spiritual Sequel]]: ''[[eXistenZ]]''. This is made particularly clear because it starts with a scene that looks very like the climax to this movie.
* [[Struggling Broadcaster]]: Many of the early big-city UHF independents were this. As there were only three main commercial terrestrial networks at the time, there often wasn't enough viable content for every station in the largest markets.
* [[Snuff Film]]: Videodrome is snuff ''television''.
* [[Snuff Film]]: Videodrome is snuff ''television''.
* [[Surreal Horror]]: As Max's [[Through the Eyes of Madness|psychological descent steepens]], plot points and settings grow more and more absurd.
* [[Surreal Horror]]: As Max's [[Through the Eyes of Madness|psychological descent steepens]], plot points and settings grow more and more absurd.

Revision as of 17:26, 15 January 2020

Television can change your mind... Videodrome will change your body!


"Death to Videodrome! Long live the New Flesh!"

A David Cronenberg film. A surreal movie, one of the poster children for Body Horror. Like all of Cronenberg's movies, it has a strong intellectual undercurrent. The film deals with Marshall McLuhan's philosophies and examines the relationship between television and its audience. Cronenberg was greatly influenced by McLuhan's theories.

More specifically, the film follows the CEO of a small UHF station who stumble upon a broadcast signal that is broadcasting extremely violent and horrific things. He investigates. As you might expect from Cronenberg, things get worse...


Tropes used in Videodrome include:
  • Affectionate Parody / No Celebrities Were Harmed:
    • Brian O'Blivion is a parody of Marshall McLuhan, whose ideas are the central theme of the movie. He only exists in video tapes, parodying McLuhan's famous proclamation: "I refuse to appear on television, except on television."
    • CIVIC-TV 83 is a parody of CITY-TV 79, which was a struggling UHF independent in its early days. There never was a TV originating station on UHF 80-83; all but a half-dozen of the North American OTA TV transmitters on UHF 70-83 were merely low-power "rebroadcasters" filling coverage gaps on the fringes of existing stations. CITY-TV survived by being in the largest market (Toronto) transmitting from the highest possible location (the CN Tower). When the film was made (1983) channels 70-83 were being removed from TV to accommodate the soon-to-be-introduced analogue cellular mobile telephones.
    • CRAM (AM radio station) is likely also a parody of one of the Toronto locals.
  • Body Horror
  • Brown Note: Videodrome itself. We get to see why, and it's as horrible as it is said to be.
  • Deconstructor Fleet: For late '70s exploitation movies. Oddly enough, it is now much better known than films like Mondo Cane or the first Faces Of Death.
  • Double Entendre: "Civic TV, The one you take to bed with you."
  • Exploitation Film: Civic TV's stock in trade is exploitation TV.
  • Fantastic Aesop: Not used by the film itself, but by the bad guys, who figure that if they make a torture porn show that kills the viewer, nobody will watch torture porn anymore.
  • Gorn: Played with.
  • Good People Have Good Sex: Sort of averted. No one has "good" sex, but then again few of them are "good".
  • I Just Shot Marvin in the Face: Done on purpose for extreme horror. At one point James Woods basically has sex with the cancerous vagina growing out of his own belly with a gun.
  • Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: Yes, they're visions, but... is that really Nicki talking to him beyond the grave, or just his own psychosis?
  • Mind Screw: The blurring between fiction and reality only increases during The Climax.
  • Moral Guardians: The purity league headed up by Barry Convex.
  • New Media Are Evil: Deconstructed
  • Non-Actor Vehicle: Deborah Harry
  • Organic Technology
  • Punny Name: Brian O'Blivion? Barry Convex? Is this a comedy? No. Possibly a Shout-Out to Thomas Pynchon. Justified in the first instance because Brian O'Blivion has explicitly renamed himself.
  • Science Is Bad / New Media Are Evil: The seeming surface moral is that modern information technology is eeevill. But, later it turns out: not so much.
  • Shout-Out: To several famous exploitation movies.
    • That, and CIVIC-TV is a play on City-TV (a Toronto-area station that played porn movies at the time when Videodrome was made).
      • It still does, only now it's not just a "Toronto-area" Station, but has a City-Tv Vancouver, Montreal, etc.
  • Show Within a Show
  • Smug Snake: Barry Convex
  • Spiritual Sequel: eXistenZ. This is made particularly clear because it starts with a scene that looks very like the climax to this movie.
  • Struggling Broadcaster: Many of the early big-city UHF independents were this. As there were only three main commercial terrestrial networks at the time, there often wasn't enough viable content for every station in the largest markets.
  • Snuff Film: Videodrome is snuff television.
  • Surreal Horror: As Max's psychological descent steepens, plot points and settings grow more and more absurd.
  • The Tape Knew You Would Say That: TV prophet Brian O'Blivion communicates solely through videotaped messages--even in order to participate in an interview early on in the film.
  • The Television Talks Back: Nicki disappears when going to check out Videodrome, then appears to Max in his TV, and asks for a kiss. He does...and then things start to get really bizarre. Brian O'Blivion also starts to directly converse with Max in this way later on.
  • There Are No Therapists: The only person coming close in the movie gets corrupted the fastest.
  • Through the Eyes of Madness: The film is shown from the perspective of the protagonist, Max Renn, who has certainly gone batty at some point. Everything up to the first Brian O'Blivion tape he watches can be assumed to be real as he's still only slightly affected by the signal. But when Bianca tells him that his life could become "100% video hallucination", suddenly it looks more and more likely that the bizarre plot twists (i.e. an evil conspiracy operating out of an opticians', his best friend being part of this conspiracy, murdering people with flesh/metal hybrid weaponry) is all part of a massive psychotic break triggered by the Videodrome signal. Maybe.
  • Unreliable Narrator: See Through the Eyes of Madness, above.
  • Vagina Dentata: Just about the only trope played straight. Except that it's on a man. In his abdomen.