One of the best films i have seen
one of my absolute favorites!
It's not great by any means, but it's a pretty good movie that didn't leave me filled with regret for investing time in it.
View MoreIt really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.
View MoreToo similar to Shivers, which has superior special effects and builds tension with more skill. Of the nine Cronenberg features I've seen, Rabid is easily the worst. Rabid contains a scene that denigrates Native Canadians for no point other than a cheap and lousy gag.
View MoreI'm a fan of director David Cronenberg (The Fly especially, but also Videodrome), but Rabid didn't do a whole lot for me, honestly, despite going into it with high hopes. As always, Cronenberg deals heavily in deeper themes than simple horror, injecting sexuality and desperation for an interesting twist on an almost vampiric outbreak.It starts off with Rose (porn star Marilyn Chambers) getting in a motorcycle accident with her boyfriend, Hart (Frank Moore), in the Quebec countryside. She's in critical condition and brought to a remote clinic nearby where Dr. Dan Keloid (a brilliant name, played by Howard Ryshpan) performs experimental surgery on her using morphogenetically neutral skin grafts in order to repair her terrible burns. When she finally wakes from her coma, it becomes clear pretty quickly that surgery didn't go quite as planned. She has a phallic stinger-like protrusion in her armpit that is thirsty for blood, and everyone she feeds from turns frenzied and rabid (ah-ha!). Soon the infection has spread from Quebec into Montreal and no one is sure how to stop it.It definitely has the aspect of slow dread to it — but the keyword here is "slow". I definitely found myself bored at times waiting for things to happen. But Cronenberg is undoubtedly skilled at merging a cold, clinical atmosphere with hysteria and paranoia. This movie doesn't focus quite as much on the chaos — you learn about much of the growing outbreak from TV clips and radio — but on Rose's journey.The aspect of sexual independence (and fear of sexuality) — especially when paired with a lead female character played by a well-known porn star — is awesome. Many of Rose's victims deserve what they have coming — the old farmer who is all too happy for the chance to rape her in his barn, the sleazy movie theater goer who "accidentally" brushes against her — and it's some kind of satisfying to watch her lull them into a false sense of seduction before stabbing her strange, phallic friend into them. Though she is clearly driven by a deeper force, as she also has many victims who are innocently in the wrong place at the wrong time.Again, playing into the overwhelming dread, there are some scenes that fit well into the classic set-up of a world gone mad: the doctor cutting off the nurse's finger in the middle of surgery, the man biting a fellow diner patron, the chaos on the subway (one of the best scenes of the whole movie). At some point, a doctor is giving the public some info during a news interview and says "What I am saying is very simple and it may not be palatable for your viewers: shooting down the victims is as good a way of handling them as we have got". I think the very real fear of an epidemic spiraling out of control is utilized well, and the desperation that goes along with it. The scene at the mall — with Santa getting gunned down — is another highlight, with something as mundane as kids visiting Santa turning into a bloodbath. The boyfriend at one point is driving around and a rabid person attacks his car. A sniper picks off the attacker from a rooftop and men in hazmat suits just casually come over, spray down his bloody windshield, and wordlessly wave him on. CHILLS, man.The boyfriend doesn't seem too concerned about her throughout the movie — he spends almost the whole thing just trying to find her and, despite the fact that things are crashing down around him, he never gets quite as frantic as you'd expect someone to be in that situation. He knew she was in critical condition — in a coma, for god's sake — and now she's roaming free on the streets and he always just seems minorly determined to find her, like if it didn't work out he'd just shrug it off and go back to his garage. His ONLY redeeming scene in the movie is at the end when he is screaming at her through the phone to get out of the apartment.There was one bit of the music — "Hideout" by Brian Bennett — that gave me a serious John Carpenter vibe. It worked really well with the overall creeping vibe of the movie.The ending is also KILLER. I feel like an ending can make or break a movie in some cases, but this one delivered in an even more hopeless and shocking way than I imagined. Awesome. There's a remake in the works by the Soska sisters which supposedly has a 2017 release date — I will definitely be checking that out!
View MoreAn effective early effort from director David Cronenberg, RABID is a disturbing tale of a city overtaken by disease and fear. A cast of unknowns work hard to make this film seem as morally depressing and hauntingly realistic as possible, and the low, almost documentary style film making and the use of Canadian cities as a setting really work in its favour. The film deals with the subject of disease - something akin to rabies in this case - spreading through a city. It starts off with small isolated attacks but soon the city is put under martial law and the infected people are being shot on sight. Disease films are a frequent fixture in Hollywood - take OUTBREAK for example - and RABID is stylish and entertaining enough, in a low budget way, to warrant repeat viewings.Marilyn Chambers I found at first to be pretty annoying. A former porn star (as the box so proudly proclaims), she has a habit of removing her top in this film, but displays precious few acting talents. However her performance grew on me as the film progressed and she even becomes quite moving at the end of the tale; her offbeat acting style makes her in some ways quietly unforgettable. The rest of the cast have little to do, while the male lead looks strangely like Christopher Walken (who went on to star in Cronenberg's THE DEAD ZONE in 1983). However all involved turn in performances that are at the least adequate.The special effects are kept to a minimum in this film, with the 'star' of the show being a strange, pulsating tube which comes out of Chambers' armpit to suck the blood of her victims. This typical Cronenbergian image is pretty sick to watch but it's what you come to expect when you're a fan of the director. There are a few explosions and shootings to keep things moving along (the shootings are all violent scenes - the best taking place in a police station and involving a contaminated police officer and his companions all armed with shotguns - it's quick, blunt, and cuts straight to the point).The attacks on unsuspecting strangers by rabid, foaming maniacs are perpetrated throughout the film and are all handled with such style that you can't help but look forward to the next one (as sick as that may sound). All this and a downbeat ending help to make RABID a small, but nonetheless powerful, outing for Cronenberg, which is a must see for any fan of his. The film is at its best when it focuses on the spread of the disease and it does pack lots of horrifying vignettes into the running time, like the bit with the machine-gunned Santa Claus. I find that it outdoes Romero's THE CRAZIES in terms of pure effectiveness.
View MoreRose (Marilyn Chambers) is injured in a motorcycle accident. Doctor Dan Keloid performs an experimental grafting surgery. A growth in her armpit becomes a dangerous stinger which she uses to suck the blood. Her victims turn into crazed flesh eating zombies who then spreads the disease. Soon she escapes the hospital and it spreads into the city.This is an earlier Cronenberg. It's got some of his body horror style. While the armpit monster gets the headlines, the leg skin is actually quite gruesome. Marilyn Chambers' acting is better than expected but it's by no means great. She's good enough to be in a B-horror. None of the other characters stand out and it's hard to feel the horror.
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