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While the oeuvre of Toronto director David Cronenberg, the maestro of body horror, has inspired generations of Canadian ...
In The Shrouds, cult director David Cronenberg examines grief while asking questions about technology and human connection.
Environmental activism, corruption and technological invasion are all threaded through the story, representing fears about ...
“I really have a real resistance to being self-referential,” a ghostly-looking Cronenberg tells RadioTimes.com over Zoom. “I ...
Regardless of what might be going on in the world, it’s reassuring to know we can still rely on a new David Cronenberg film ...
Made as a way to cope with grief over losing his wife, legendary filmmaker David Cronenberg's latest movie looks at what happens when technology intrudes on the very human matter of death.
There is an eerie stillness to the film that says as much about loss as does the disturbing premise at its centre ...
Karsh also feels as Cronenberg does. He explains that his grief is not literary, nor intellectual – but visceral, a tangible ...
In this month’s Low Culture podcast John and Luke are grasping their fuelling nozzles, lubing up the big end, and casting ...
David Cronenberg would not be unhappy to see the term “body horror” retire. The film-maker is perfectly fine with plain “horror” and has often wondered why fellow practitioners, such as John Carpenter ...
Compared to the full-blooded nastiness of some of his enthusiastically lurid earlier works, this grave-digging horror feels inert and woolly ...
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