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The Brood
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Directed by David Cronenberg
Canadian director David Cronenberg followed his graphic vampire variation Rabid with this multi-layered, speculative horror film which addresses the way the repressed demons of the psyche can force their way to the surface. Psychologist Dr. Raglan (Oliver Reed), director of the controversial Psychoplasmic Institute and author of the book "The Shape of Rage," encourages his patients to outwardly manifest their anger and fear (aided by some experimental drugs), which then takes physical shape as actual sores, cancers or strange new organs. One of Raglan's more successful patients (from his point of view, anyway) is Nola Carveth (Samantha Eggar), who is undergoing therapy following a painful divorce from her husband Frank (Art Hindle). When Frank discovers evidence that Nola may have injured their daughter Candice (Cindy Hinds), he begins to suspect Raglan's techniques but is unprepared for the most horrifying by-product of her rage: a progeny of sexless, dwarflike mutants who are born for the sole purpose of acting out her violent fantasies of revenge. Containing only enough energy to carry out their murderous tasks, the brood is dispatched to kill Nola's parents, then a woman she believes is having an affair with Frank. By the time Frank discovers the origins of the tiny offspring, they have already abducted Candice and taken her to the institute, where Frank must confront Nola in person. Although it contains one of the most visceral and nauseating scenes in movie history (during the film's climax), this nevertheless remains the most subtle of Cronenberg's early horror projects, with a strong subtext about the devastating effects of divorce. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian The Brood (1979, Canada, David ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"The Brood is the sort of movie that would work better as a novel or maybe a silent film. It is a horror movie with some real ideas to it, but the matter-a-fact way that they are treated in the movie means that the ridiculous situations those ideas give rise to often cause laughter, some of which are intended, but most of which are not. It is fair to say that the movie is better written than it " [More]
analogzombieanalogzombie The Brood
by analogzombie in analogzombie Blog
is neutral about it.
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"David Cronenberg's third film, The Brood, is his first movie to appeal to a large cinema going audience. The story concerns a husband trying to protect his daughter from the oddly childlike assailants eminating from his wife's psychiatric retreat. The head doctor has developed psychoplasmics, a radical new type of therapy meant to completely expunge all pent up rage and aggression. Unfortunately for " [More]
Dr_GorDr_Gor Re:Top 5 weirdest movies
by Dr_Gor in Top 5
"[quote user="seely"] Nice choices... I sometimes forget that 'weird' was invented before 1995! [quote user="LonesomeRhodes"] The two Jodorowsky films which I have seen, El Topo and Holy Mountain, make David Lynch-type weirdness seem tame. I would include those two and [More]
seelyseely Re:Top 5 weirdest movies
by seely in Top 5
"Nice choices... I sometimes forget that 'weird' was invented before 1995! [quote user="LonesomeRhodes"] The two Jodorowsky films which I have seen, El Topo and Holy Mountain, make David Lynch-type weirdness seem tame. I would include those two and [More]
LonesomeRhodesLonesomeRhodes Re:Top 5 weirdest movies
by LonesomeRhodes in Top 5
"The two Jodorowsky films which I have seen, El Topo and Holy Mountain, make David Lynch-type weirdness seem tame. I would include those two and Eraserhead as the three which leap to mind as incomprehensible (to me a " [More]
PuhnnerPuhnner Re:Top 31 Horror films of the p ...
by Puhnner in HORROR MOVIES 101
"Revised List of 31 from 76 through07Mommie Dearest and Red Dawn co-winners of No. 1and wished I could have included:1988 Blood Orgy of the Leather Girls ( have not seen it, but the title is terrific and I ca " [More]
divinemsjunebugdivinemsjunebug Re: Alice Sweet Alice and Other ...
by divinemsjunebug in HORROR MOVIES 101
"Has anyone ever seen Don't Look Now? It's the first one on the list. I just saw this about a year ago. It is such a creepy little movie. No gore at all, just a lot of chills and goosebumps. I really enjoyed it. There is another movie that is not on this list but I think it is in the top 100 movies, it is called the [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Throughout his career, David Cronenberg has uncovered new, often grotesque ways of externalizing the repression and alienation of contemporary life. Rarely, though, has he taken as restrained a route as he does with The Brood. The director introduces the central premise of his story -- mutation as therapy -- in the first sequence, but its full implications are mapped out only in stages, culminating in a truly chilling finale that veers from stark, otherworldly suspense to set piece gross-out. Shivers, Cronenberg's feature debut, moved at a similarly deliberate pace, but it was full of violence and gore almost from the start. In The Brood, Halloween-style point-of-view sequences build a sensation of lingering unease while jump cuts and cutaways help maintain dramatic tension during the action sequences. Cindy Hinds, as the pale, blank-faced Candice, echoes the scary children of Village of the Damned and anticipates the similarly hapless heroine of Steven Spielberg's Poltergeist. Samantha Eggar's haughty, self-obsessed Nola, meanwhile, establishes the Cronenberg ice-queen archetype that Genevieve Bujold would fill so indelibly in Dead Ringers. Although hardly the most influential of the director's early and mid-period horror exercises, The Brood stands up as a fully realized study of modern discontent given terrifying shape. The stars, special effects, and larger budgets of his later films sometimes give his messy subtexts too slick a sheen, but here the naturalistic production values and affectless art direction complement a storyline of slowly unfolding dread. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 

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