This Canadian production is the most ambitious film to date by
Canada’s highly idiosyncratic Vincenzo Natali. It suffers from a
somewhat haphazard narrative but is still one of most memorable films of
2010.
The Package
SPLICE is the fourth feature directed by Vincenzo
Natali, who previously helmed the low budgeters
CUBE (1997), CYPHER (2002) and
NOTHING (2003).
SPLICE is among the few Natali films to feature actual (C-list) movie
stars, in the form of Adrien Brody and Sarah Polley (with Natali regular
David Hewitt in a supporting role), and also some big name producers:
Guillermo del Toro, Joel Silver and Don Murphy.
SPLICE premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, where
it was purchased by Warner Bros in one of the festival’s most high
profile pick-ups. Its theatrical release in the Spring of ‘10 was highly
anticipated, garnering generally positive reviews, yet for whatever
reason the film did very little business.
The Story
Clive and Elsa are genetic engineers looking to create
a human-animal hybrid by splicing together various DNA strands. When the
corporation funding them nixes this experiment, Clive and Elsa go about
creating the creature on their own. They wind up with a mass of
insectoid slime that breaks open to reveal an armless creature with long
legs and a spiked tail, which ages extraordinarily fast. Figuring the
critter will die soon, Elsa suggests keeping it around until then.
Dren (Nerd spelled backwards), as the thing is
christened, quickly develops arms and grows into a bald half girl-half
bird creature that brings out all of Elsa’s motherly instincts. But then
Dren begins mutating, evincing amphibious lungs and even sprouting
wings.
Elsa and Clive decide to relocate Dren to an abandoned
farmhouse owned by Elsa’s deceased mother. There Dren grows increasingly
bored and difficult to control. She also begins to develop sexually, and
seduces Clive.
This only deepens the already-strained relationship
between Dren and Elsa, who takes some drastic steps to correct Dren’s
behavioral problems. But then Dren unexpectedly falls sick and dies--yet
is she truly dead or does her current state herald a much scarier final
mutation?
The Direction
Vincenzo Natali does a good job directing this film,
which is to say he stays out of the way of his partially authored script
and the work of his special effects technicians. The latter have created
a marvelously lifelike creature in Dren, powerfully portrayed by actress
Delphine Chaneac with heavy prosthetic makeup and digital enhancement.
The non special effect-enhanced performers Adrien Brody and Sarah Polley
aren’t bad either, although their roles are largely reactive, and
secondary to Chaneac’s.
Regarding SPLICE’S script, it evinces, in common with
Natali’s other films, a near-compulsive determination to explore its
concept’s every conceivable permutation. The possibilities of mutation,
inter-species carnality and gender change on the part of Dren are all
faced up to in admirably unflinching fashion. Of course, this makes for
an overstuffed and oft-disjointed narrative whose protagonists have a
tendency to change their behavior and personalities based on the
dictates of the ever-mutating plot.
A traditional horror movie this isn’t. It is, however,
absorbing, curiously touching and repellant, with enough blood and slime
to fill three David Cronenberg movies.
Vital Statistics
SPLICE
Warner Bros. Pictures/Dark Castle Entertainment
Director: Vincenzo Natali
Producer: Steven Hoban
Screenplay: Vincenzo Natali, Antoinette Terry Bryant, Doug Taylor
Cinematography: Tetsuo Nagata
Editing: Michele Conroy
Cast: Adrien Brody, Sarah Polley, Delphine Chaneac, Brandon McGibbon,
Simona Maicanescu, David Hewlett, Abigail Chu