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La Mouche poster

LA MOUCHE

The Fly

1986 • CA HMDB
août 15, 1986

Seth Brundle est un jeune biologiste très doué. Après avoir fait ses premières armes dans une brillante équipe, il se décide à travailler seul. Il met au point une invention qui doit révolutionner le monde : la "téléportation" qui consiste à transporter la matière à travers l'espace. Les essais sur un babouin sont peu convaincants et après des fuites dans la presse, il décide de se téléporter lui-même. Seulement il ne s'apercoit pas qu'une mouche fait partie du voyage.

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Equipe

Production: Stuart Cornfeld (Producer)Mel Brooks (Producer)
Scenario: Charles Edward Pogue (Screenplay)David Cronenberg (Screenplay)
Musique: Howard Shore (Original Music Composer)
Photographie: Mark Irwin (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Marco Castellini •
Le scientifique Brundle, expert en génétique, parvient à créer deux capsules de téléportation. Après les avoir testées avec quelques objets et des animaux, il décide de les essayer lui-même. La téléportation fonctionne parfaitement, mais peu de temps après, le chercheur commence à subir d'étranges mutations génétiques dont il découvrira bientôt la cause : une mouche s'était introduite dans la première capsule avec lui et, lorsque les cellules se sont recomposées dans la seconde cabine, l'ordinateur a mélangé les deux ADN. Le docteur devient maintenant un homme-mouche… Bien qu'il s'agisse d'un remake du célèbre film de science-fiction horrifique des années cinquante "L'Expérience du docteur K", le film est absolument "de Cronenberg". Le sujet permet au réalisateur de réinterpréter de manière tout à fait personnelle le cauchemar kafkaïen de la métamorphose et, comme c'est toujours le cas dans les films du cinéaste canadien, rien n'est laissé à l'imagination : mutations, fusions, corps qui se dissolvent… Le film, grâce surtout aux nouvelles possibilités offertes par les effets spéciaux plus modernes, parvient à être même meilleur que le déjà excellent film des années cinquante. Deux protagonistes d'exception comme Jeff Goldblum et Geena Davis et un grand réalisateur comme Cronenberg ne pouvaient que donner vie à un excellent film, et c'est ce qui a été fait. À voir et à revoir. Curiosité : le producteur du film est le comédien Mel Brooks, à sa deuxième intervention dans l'horreur, toujours en tant que "financier", après "Elephant Man" de Lynch. Cronenberg se réserve un bref caméo en interprétant le rôle du gynécologue qui opère Geena Davis dans la séquence du rêve-cauchemar pré-avortement.
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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (5)

Wuchak

Wuchak

6 /10

Slowly turning into a monster, aka slowly succumbing to age

An eccentric scientist living in a warehouse laboratory in a big city in the Northeast (Jeff Goldblum) discovers how to teleport objects, which draws the attention of a journalist (Geena Davis). Everything is going fine until he foolishly uses his invention on himself and a pesky fly inadvertently teleports with him. John Getz is on hand as the woman’s editor while Joy Boushel has a notable small role as Tawny.

"The Fly" (1986) has a lot of devotees presumably because of director/writer David Cronenberg, but I found it less effective compared to the 1958 version with Vincent Price. Despite the gory state-of-the-art effects, it’s just not as compelling or horrifying (especially that final scene in the original). The one-dimensional locations are also a turn-off: Excluding the great bar scene the whole movie takes place in a grungy lab or a swank office building.

The cast trilogy is exceptionally tall. While Goldblum (6’4½”) is serviceable and gives it his all, he’s not leading man material, although he’s fine in secondary roles. And I was never big on Davis, but she’s a’right I guess. At least the two absolutely look & act like they were meant for each other.

In its favor, the movie is a metaphor for how aging & disease slowly destroys the body. Despite the sickening visuals, it’s heartbreaking and tragic, which you might not expect in a sci-fi flick about a guy who morphs into a fly. It thankfully avoids the rut of camp and melodrama.

The film runs 1 hour, 36 minutes, and was shot in Toronto with studio work done in nearby Kleinburg.

GRADE: B-/C+

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

7 /10

Nobody could ever call Jeff Goldbum a versatile actor, but here he is very much in his element as "Brundle". A madcap scientist, he dreams of being able to teleport things just like Willy Wonka does in 1971. He is almost as keen on journalist "Veronica" (Geena Davis) and so offers her exclusive access to follow and film his research. That all goes remarkably well - first a scarf, then more animated objects before, finally, himself. Snag is - well a fly just happened to sneak into the pod before the transferal and next thing he and his new dipteral cousin start a journey to the symbiotic relationship from Hell. He can crawl on the ceiling; fly and most impressively - dissolve his victims in his own vomit! David Cronenberg is having great fun with this as is Goldblum. The dialogue is entertaining and there is the most bizarre degree of chemistry between him and Davis who turns in one of her career defining performances. The visual and make-up effects - especially towards the end - offer a fitting denouement to this gory and frequently amusing sci-fi horror film that is nearly, but not quite, as good as the version from 1958. Certainly worth watching on a big screen if you can - somehow it just looks so much better there.

GenerationofSwine

GenerationofSwine

10 /10

What was his electric bill and how did he not blow out every fuse in his building? Telepods must suck up a lot of juice.

Anyway, it's fun. It is the typical 80s flick, with a plot that takes all of 5 minutes to get rolling and a cast that was talented and still cheap enough to throw in a sci-fi horror flick.

But, you know, it's also mindless fun, it's not exactly deep, it's about science, and about the dangers of it, that never really manages to actually examine the dangers of science in any significant way... it's more along the lines of Kafka's Metamorphosis, which has already been examined.

But it doesn't matter, because you are watching it for mindless entertainment.

Chandler Danier

10 /10

The Fly is so good. Successful futurism. Seems the Fallout games benefitted.

The physical effects are amazing and fun. Do not watch if gore sensitive.

Why not build a smaller machine first to test on...flies, instead of going straight to human-sized machines and testing on baboons? They gotta be expensive. Mice? The ridiculous nature of the film is a delight. The performances entertain while enhancing the story (narrative). That guy is such an amazing douchebag. The film entertains and engages. Rare.

I'm high on science. Gena Davis is beautiful. Would bang if Brundleflymly.

FilmeRioD

FilmeRioD

10 /10

David Cronenberg’s The Fly is a grotesque, tragic, and strangely beautiful descent into body horror. What begins as a high-concept sci-fi romance slowly mutates much like its protagonist into something far more disturbing and unforgettable. One of my favorite movies!

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