David Cronenberg's SPIDER - Bleak Week at the Music Box
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*One Show Only - Saturday June 13th at 11:45pm*
Presented in 35mm
Part of BLEAK WEEK: CINEMA OF DESPAIR. Visit our website for Full Schedule: https://musicboxtheatre.com/series-and-festivals/bleak-week-cinema-of-despair
Adapted by Patrick McGrath from his novel of the same name, Spider is told from the skewed perspective of Dennis “Spider” Cleg (Ralph Fiennes), a mentally disturbed outpatient now inhabiting a London halfway house. Aimlessly roaming the desolate streets, Spider finds himself assailed by memories of his traumatic 1950s childhood, including the ostensible murder of his mother (Miranda Richardson) by his father (Gabriel Byrne), and her replacement by his father's mistress (also played by Richardson).
Though presenting yet another of the director’s isolated, alienated protagonists and continuing his fascination with doubling, twisted sexuality and the fine line between reality and illusion, Spider represents another important transitional point in Cronenberg’s oeuvre. Though never entirely absent from his previous films (just think of The Brood), Spider’s prominent thematic focus on the family lays important groundwork for A History of Violence. Furthermore, while Byrne’s vicious patriarch fits the mold of Cronenberg’s previous demonic fathers, the greater role accorded Richardson’s victimized wife indicates a new engagement with the feminine that, aside from certain particularly strong women characters (Geena Davis in The Fly, Geneviève Bujold in Dead Ringers, Jennifer Jason Leigh in eXistenZ), had been largely absent from Cronenberg’s work to that time.
Presented in 35mm
Part of BLEAK WEEK: CINEMA OF DESPAIR. Visit our website for Full Schedule: https://musicboxtheatre.com/series-and-festivals/bleak-week-cinema-of-despair
Adapted by Patrick McGrath from his novel of the same name, Spider is told from the skewed perspective of Dennis “Spider” Cleg (Ralph Fiennes), a mentally disturbed outpatient now inhabiting a London halfway house. Aimlessly roaming the desolate streets, Spider finds himself assailed by memories of his traumatic 1950s childhood, including the ostensible murder of his mother (Miranda Richardson) by his father (Gabriel Byrne), and her replacement by his father's mistress (also played by Richardson).
Though presenting yet another of the director’s isolated, alienated protagonists and continuing his fascination with doubling, twisted sexuality and the fine line between reality and illusion, Spider represents another important transitional point in Cronenberg’s oeuvre. Though never entirely absent from his previous films (just think of The Brood), Spider’s prominent thematic focus on the family lays important groundwork for A History of Violence. Furthermore, while Byrne’s vicious patriarch fits the mold of Cronenberg’s previous demonic fathers, the greater role accorded Richardson’s victimized wife indicates a new engagement with the feminine that, aside from certain particularly strong women characters (Geena Davis in The Fly, Geneviève Bujold in Dead Ringers, Jennifer Jason Leigh in eXistenZ), had been largely absent from Cronenberg’s work to that time.
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Where is it happening?
Music Box Theatre, 3733 N Southport Ave,Chicago, Illinois, United States
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