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David Paul Cronenberg (born March 16, 1943 in Toronto, Ontario) 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, which
explores 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 long since moved beyond these genres.
He was born to a Lithuanian-Jewish family in Toronto, Cronenberg's father
was a journalist and his mother a pianist. He graduated from the University
of Toronto with a degree in literature, and has cited William S. Burroughs
and Vladimir Nabokov as influences.
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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 - arguably his
greatest achievement - 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).
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. This
perspective is illustrated in The Fly when the hero discovers that he has
been genetically fused with an insect. Rather than saying "My teleport
machine went wrong", he says "My teleport machine turned into a gene-splicer".
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".
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. 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 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. 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'd ever seen, which was a motivating factor to work
with him on Dead Ringers.
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 or 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, and he can also be glimpsed
among the sex-crazed hordes in Shivers.
In 2002, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada. |
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DAVID CRONENBERG PICTURES |
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