Amazon.com Essentials: David Cronenberg's 1986 remake of the science fiction classic about a scientist who accidentally swaps body parts with a fly is both smart and terrifying: an allegory for the awful processes of slow death and a monster movie with a tragic spin. Jeff Goldblum gives a masterful performance as a sweet, nerdy scientist whose romance with a writer (Geena Davis) makes him more fully alive. Next thing you know, a tiny oversight in an experiment causes him to transmogrify, gradually, into something more like an insect than a human. This is Cronenberg (Scanners, Videodrome) country, so expect The Fly to be a gross-out, but in the way that disease corrupts the body and can make a loved one unrecognizable on every level. This is one of Cronenberg's best films, and certainly one of the important movies of the 1980s. --Tom Keogh
Amazon.com video review:
The Fly
David Cronenberg's 1986 remake of the science
fiction classic about a scientist who accidentally swaps body parts with a fly
is both smart and terrifying: an allegory for the awful processes of slow death
and a monster movie with a tragic spin. Jeff Goldblum gives a masterful
performance as a sweet, nerdy scientist whose romance with a writer (Geena
Davis) makes him more fully alive. Next thing you know, a tiny oversight in an
experiment causes him to transmogrify, gradually, into something more like an
insect than a human. This is Cronenberg (Scanners, Videodrome)
country, so expect The Fly to be a gross-out, but in the way that disease
corrupts the body and can make a loved one unrecognizable on every level. This
is one of Cronenberg's best films, and certainly one of the important movies of
the 1980s. --Tom Keogh
The Fly II
Chris Walas, the effects whiz who turned Jeff
Goldblum into the gooey, grotesque Brundle-Fly in David Cronenberg's The
Fly, makes his directorial debut in this equally icky sequel. Eric Stoltz is
Brundle's genetically diseased offspring, a boy genius brought up in an
experimental laboratory by a nefarious foster father eager to see what his
inevitable metamorphosis will bring. No surprise here: like father, like son.
Daphne Zuniga is his sweet young girlfriend, and John Getz reprises his role
from the first film as a bitter alcoholic with a very bad fake beard. This cut-
rate "Son of the Fly" knockoff pales next to Cronenberg's classic, degenerating
into a gory revenge flick. Walas strains under a limited budget, and many of the
more elaborate creatures (a monstrously mutated dog, the skeletal fly monster
leaping about the warehouse-like lab) are rather shabby. The makeup is suitably
gooey, slathered in ooze and pus, and the mayhem-filled finale is a nasty but
impressive over-the-top frenzy of blood and gore climaxing in the nastiest piece
of poetic justice since Freaks. The opening birth scene (with a
look-alike subbing for mom Geena Davis) is an homage to Larry Cohen's It's
Alive. --Sean Axmaker