Atria35 wrote:^ ooooh, I love movies that have Frankensteinian- and his monster- themes in them. I think I'll movie this up my to-watch list!
Right on!
ClosetOtaku (post: 1400643) wrote:A great assessment. I'm wondering if you'd consider this film a cousin to Eraserhead -- it's the visceral reaction I had to the early forms of Dren, and comparing her to the 'baby' in that film -- although there, the notion of alienation belonged to the main character and not to the 'monster'.
Thank you very much. Yes, beyond a doubt the director saw David Lynch's
Eraserhead, the film even pays homage to it in shots and story elements. The main difference between the films is that
Eraserhead is a surrealist art house film, which is to say that it tries to translate the contents of the unconscious directly into the film, whereas
Splice represents a kind of cinema verite rationalism that projects the elements of myth into the world by means of the magic of genetics. I tend to think David Lynch's films deal with the sort of feeling of "Dear God, why am I such a freak?" This is where a lot of the
pathos of the deformed baby of
Eraserhead or Joseph Merrick in
The Elephant Man comes from. By contrast, Dren isn't aware that she is a "freak", because nothing in her environment tells her so. It's just something is incongruous about her, something she herself can't account for. She's receiving mixed messages that tell she's normal, and that she's nowhere near normal. David Lynch's game is to show up the assumed norms of American life for being quite bizarre. As such, the project of the two films is not all that different, even if their formal approach is.