Contains spoilers.
If you'd asked me
whether this film would have made my zombie blog a couple of years ago I'd
emphatically responded with a no. I'd feasted on the diet of rotting flesh
supplied in abundance by Romero then maintained as a familiar western trope and
was fully invested that dead meant dead. Today? I've come to embrace the notion
that deadness is so much more than not having a pulse and being a great home for maggots; that the fundamental
attribute of zombie is loss of will, of self, of control. That the concept is
fluid and necessarily ambiguous and can be reasonably applied to all manner of
people and situations where a new almost external hunger drives the host to
behave in a way that's less than who they authentically are.
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Shivers is an
exciting film full of avant-garde ideas, striking and disturbing images and
real depth, yet the premise on the surface sounds simple and almost laughably
b-movie. The brilliant yet disturbed Dr. Emil Hobbes (Fred Doederlin), has had
an epiphany or total psychotic break down, depending on how you look at it,
and has utilised his years researching parasites to cure mankind of its swing from flesh and instinct to rationality
by introducing a cleverly engineered foreign organism into the wild.
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Despite no corpses
pulling themselves from the earth Shivers has all the hall marks of a zombie
film. There's ground zero, there's the slow but exponential spread; there's
confusion, screaming, violence and in the end total pandemonium and inescapable
hopelessness. The parasite, a combination of venereal disease and aphrodisiac, on symbiotic infection consumes the host with an insatiable psychosis to
procreate so that it can itself procreate. Those infected lose that which
made them who they are, and are now for all intents and purposes mindless zombies driven by forces not of their
own will. They retain their memories and knowledge, but that which stops from
them acting against increasing physical and moral degeneration has gone. Sexual coercion turns into rape, rape turns into attacks, attacks turn into murder and
cannibalism as the new hosts give in to deeper and darker primal desire, free from all conscience and societal consequence. Under Cronenberg's control the
journey is dark, disturbing and utterly compelling. Never is it farce or amateurish but always tight, tense and intelligent.
Steven@WTD.
NICE! I love when people have an open mind about what is or isn't a zombie film. I need to check this one out! Rabid was one of my favorites ever.
ReplyDeleteI've seen many a so called zombie film that's far less zombie than Shivers. It's brilliant too.
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