Chicago Sun-Times

ARTISTIC IN THE EXTREME

The commentary’s sharp and so are the scalpels in the year’s freakiest film

- RICHARD ROEPER rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

You might have heard about the polarizing audience reaction at the Cannes Film Festival to David Cronenberg’s spectacula­rly gruesome and deeply disturbing noir body horror film “Crimes of the Future,” with Variety reporting some viewers walked out while those who stayed to the end voiced their approval with a seven-minute standing ovation.

Having experience­d Cronenberg’s uniquely creepy, dystopian nightmare, which includes several

graphic scenes of body-slicing surgery among other horrific images, I can understand why some viewers would opt out early on, while others might be repulsed and yet fascinated. My reaction was somewhere in between: While there are times when Cronenberg seems to be indulging in his trademark gross-out visuals for the sake of shock, “Crimes of the Future” is darkly funny and consistent­ly thoughtful — and, for all its moments of extreme horror, offers legitimate commentary on issues such as body dysmorphia and the extreme measures taken by some real-world individual­s in order to carve, sculpt and tattoo their bodies as evolving canvasses of expression.

I’ll freely admit to wincing a few times and audibly groaning on one occasion at the intense grotesquer­ies

transpirin­g onscreen, and I’m not clamoring to see this one again while munching on a big bowl o’ snacks — but there’s no denying the effectiven­ess of this dark, provocativ­e and memorably unsettling story from the 79-year-old Cronenberg, who has been serving up classic shockand-splatter moments since the days of “Rabid” (1977), “Scanners” (1981), “The Fly” (1986) and “Dead Ringer” (1988). This isn’t the best film of 2022, but it’s definitely the freakiest so far.

“Crimes of the Future” was filmed in Greece but seems to be set in some sort of undefined nearfuture, vaguely steampunk world in which towns are sparsely populated, abandoned ships lie on their sides in the sea and the technology is a cross between 1980s camcorders and bizarro beds and chairs

that seem a lot more torturous than comfortabl­e. We’re never told exactly how the Earth was ravaged (one surmises it was tied to climate change), but what’s left is a dark and strange place where the relatively few that have survived seem to have morphed into beings that don’t feel pain or pleasure, at least not in convention­al ways, and some people are growing new body parts internally and experienci­ng strange mutations externally, due to a condition known as Accelerate­d Evolution Syndrome.

Cronenberg stalwart Viggo Mortensen (“A History of Violence,” “Eastern Promises”) delivers a magnificen­tly stoic and simmering performanc­e as one Saul Tenser, who along with his partner Caprice (Léa Seydoux) form a popular performanc­e duo and let’s just say they ain’t exactly the Captain and Tennille. Their act consists of Caprice manipulati­ng a remote control that controls the scalpels that slice open Saul as she massages, tattoos and removes the new organs that keep forming in Saul’s body. (Given the heaving breathing and even moaning that accompanie­s the procedures, it’s clear “surgery is the new sex,” as one character puts it.)

This is just one of the ways in which the human body is adapting and mutating in strange and disturbing ways; in a subplot that eventually careens head-on with the story of Saul and Caprice, a woman has killed her 8-year-old son because he has developed the ability to eat and digest plastic, and she considers the boy to no longer be human.

We meet a handful of oddball

characters along the way, including the weirdly cheerful Wippet (Don McKellar), who heads the underfunde­d National Organ Registry, and his tightly wound assistant Timlin (Kristen Stewart), who is attracted to Saul, and a couple of wisecracki­ng and dangerous operatives (Tanaya Beatty and Nadia Litz) who will just as casually disrobe as they’ll stick power drills in your skull and instantly end you.

Many of the loose (and grisly and blood-soaked) ends in “Crimes of the Future” are tied together in the climactic sequences, and there’s a moment of pure cinematic poetry when a close-up of Mortensen looks lifted from a classic German expression­ist film from a century ago. Body horror abounds in “Crimes of the Future,” but through Cronenberg’s skilled direction and the powerful performanc­es of the cast, there’s something almost soulful about these people trying to somehow adapt to and even celebrate the hellish world they’ve inherited.

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 ?? NEON ?? In the performanc­es of Saul (Viggo Mortensen) and Caprice (Léa Seydoux), she slices him open and removes his unwanted organs in “Crimes of the Future.”
NEON In the performanc­es of Saul (Viggo Mortensen) and Caprice (Léa Seydoux), she slices him open and removes his unwanted organs in “Crimes of the Future.”

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