David Cronenberg's latest is a sad, strange elegy to his late wife.
Read MoreAfter eight years, David Cronenberg returns with an entertaining, haunting, deeply-weird picture that casts an entrancing spell with its provocative ideas and imagery.
Read MoreAlbert Shin’s neo-noir set in Niagara Falls is a perceptive look at Canadian rot.
Read MoreAren caps off the David Cronenberg Retrospective with a ranking of his films.
Read MoreThe last review in our Cronenberg Retrospective considers his bizarre Gothic Hollywood satire.
Read MoreThis darkly comic adaptation of Don DeLillo’s novel, Cosmopolis, is a thematically rich and rewarding examination of the late capitalist system we all live in.
Read MoreA self-portrait and manifesto that captures the psychological concepts that define David Cronenberg and his work.
Read MoreCronenberg grafts his favoured themes of body horror and metamorphosis onto the mob genre to stunning effect.
Read MoreA History of Violence is one of the best neo-noirs of the 2000s and a perceptive deconstruction of the American hero.
Read MoreIn Spider, David Cronenberg offers perhaps one of his most sympathetic portraits in this literary adaptation of a tale of schizophrenia featuring a powerful performance from Ralph Fiennes.
Read MoreIn the summer of The Matrix David Cronenberg made another virtual reality film that continued his explorations of bodies and technology, challenging our notions of the flesh and machine.
Read MoreAn explosive work that interrogates sex in ways that cinema rarely manages and captures the profound atomization of our modern world.
Read MoreDavid Cronenberg’s most-forgotten film is a dramatic powerhouse and an insightful deconstruction of misogyny and Orientalist notions of China.
Read MoreDavid Cronenberg’s adaptation of William S. Burroughs’ most-famous novel is a perceptive look at the artist, but also a repulsive and disorienting work.
Read MoreDead Ringers is a profound work of alienation and a beguiling tragedy.
Read MoreThe Fly is a perfect fusion of Cronenberg’s esoteric body horror and a more conventional romantic tragedy.
Read MoreCronenberg’s adaptation of Stephen King’s The Dead Zone is one of his more mainstream efforts, but still an enjoyable, melodrama-thriller.
Read MoreThis is genre fare operating at the top level in terms of both entertainment value and artistic significance.
Anders takes a look at Cronenberg’s enduring science fiction thriller, Scanners: it’s more than just exploding heads.
Read MoreAren explores the stylistic, narrative, and thematic evolution of David Cronenberg’s filmmaking in his early works.
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