Toronto Star

Dark tale a sharp return to body horror genre

- SPECIAL TO THE STAR

Crimes of the Future

K (out of 4) Starring Viggo Mortensen, Léa Seydoux, Kristen Stewart, Scott Speedman, Welket Bungué, Don McKellar, Yorgos Pirpassopo­ulos, Tanaya Beatty and Nadia Litz. Written and directed by David Cronenberg. Opens June 3 at TIFF Bell Lightbox.107 minutes. STC

Welcome to the nightmare ahead, where people grow new organs as art, modify body parts for fashion and consume plastic for food.

“Crimes of the Future” presents a world to come that’s made all the more terrifying by David Cronenberg, master filmmaker and seer of dark visions.

His return to the body horror genre that made his name is in some ways a greatest hits collection of his macabre fascinatio­ns, with callbacks — all subconscio­us, he insists — to the Cronenberg­ian realms of “Videodrome,” “The Fly,” “eXistenZ,” “Dead Ringers” and others.

“Crimes of the Future” shares mostly just a title with an earlier Cronenberg film. Its essential DNA comes from the shelved “Painkiller­s” script of more than 20 years ago. Considerin­g what he’s conjured here out of a leftover idea, you have to wonder what other great stuff he’s been sitting on.

“Crimes” was filmed in and around Athens, where grungy interiors and bleak exteriors (a ruined and abandoned ship speaks of social disarray) create a noir atmosphere, courtesy of Carol Spier’s production design. Howard Shore’s score of gloom and wonder imparts a mood of impending revolution.

And revolution is indeed underway, in the person of hooded and hermitic performanc­e artist Saul Tenser (Viggo Mortensen). He has learned how to grow new organs within his body, hatching them while he sleeps inside a plugged-in sarcophagu­s that resembles a giant walnut shell.

These “neo-organs” are removed by Saul’s partner, Caprice (Léa Seydoux), a former surgeon, in public displays that resemble the art salons of old. (They’re not alone: other people engage in such knife blade antics, since pain and infection have been all but eliminated and “surgery is the new sex” for thrill seekers.)

The government of the day isn’t quite sure what to do about neoorgans and the “desktop surgery” fad, other than to control them. A National Organ Registry has been created, run by bureaucrat­ic voyeurs Wippet (Don McKellar) and Timlin (Kristen Stewart), who seek to avoid “insurrecti­onal” evolution that might destroy whatever remains of civilizati­on. Saul and Caprice are happy to assist them, tattooing Saul’s new organs so they can be easily logged and traced.

The cops are on the case, too, with a “New Vice Unit” represente­d by a detective played by Welket Bungué. He understand­ably wonders why Saul’s neo-organs are considered an art form akin to Picasso’s creations while the tumour on his own body is just a potentiall­y dangerous nuisance.

Another group, led by Scott Speedman’s Lang Dotrice, hovers in the shadows but seeks broader public attention. They are people who have learned how to consume plastics and other synthetic materials as food and who want more to join them. Lang is planning a public autopsy — on the body of his murdered eight-year-old son — to dramatize the cause.

There’s much happening here as Cronenberg sardonical­ly comments on cosmetic surgery, environmen­tal destructio­n and the feeling of all artists, himself included, that putting your work before the public is akin to being operated on in the city square.

If there’s any downside to “Crimes,” it’s that it introduces characters and story arcs that are somewhat unresolved, although that’s likely a deliberate move by Cronenberg. Like all great entertaine­rs, he leaves us wanting more, even if in this case satisfacti­on comes at the end of a scalpel.

Considerin­g what David Cronenberg has conjured here out of a leftover idea from 20 years ago, you have to wonder what other great stuff he’s been sitting on

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