(continued from Part I)
As for the reality to this fiction, sex plays a big part in the film’s ideology. It seemed to me at first glance simply a misdirect for the bigger plot points. I had assumed that Cronenberg wanted the audience to think the film was about the horrors of snuff films, and trying to define the line between pleasure and pain, only to surprise us all the more with the TV drugs and assassinations. I was wrong.The sex was important.
Famous singer, Deborah Harry, plays Nicki Brand, Max’s lover. Ten or so minutes into the film we see healing cuts on Nicki’s shoulder, and soon after, during a sex scene, we watch Max piercing Nicki’s ear with a pin and lick the blood off of it. The sexual experiments of these characters and the nature of their professions (both, in their way, make money off of the extreme needs and emotions of many people at a distance from them), make them the perfect characters for this scenario.
In an article by Kat Mcgowan called “The Neuroscience of the Seven Deadly Sins,” she has interviewed a research consultant at Northwestern University, Adam Safron, about pornography’s relationship to the brain. He hypothesizes that watching pornography calls upon the brain’s regions associated with reward and sensory interpretation and visual processing. It also enlists the amygdala and the hypothalamus, which deal with emotional information. “The most notable thing about lust is it sets the whole brain buzzing,” he writes.
This is why the combination of sex and torture are used to distribute the viral signal into the victim’s brain in Videodrome. It is the most efficient way to ensure the reception of the signal. The video content and the signal are “toxic together”, much in the way studies show when heart disease and depression are combined, the risk of death doubles. The emotional and reward centers of the brain are the same that are activated with other addictive drugs, as well as sexual urges. As Nicki says in one hallucination, “What are you waiting for lover, let’s perform. Let’s open those neural floodgates.”
The brain has a complex set of checks and balances and what makes the case for Videodrome all the more real are the hallucinations. Its not just a frivolous excuse for cool make-up and blood effects, it is useful to the video virus. Studies of fiction and poetry and their effects on the brain show that metaphors combining the body and the mind demonstrate that the mind uses the body as an extension of itself to help make sense of abstractions. Several studies show one of the many variables to agreeability in a social situation can be as simple as temperature. Drinking a hot beverage makes you feel more ‘warm’ about the people around you then a cold drink. Other abstractions include loss of control, say, of an arm lost in an accident. A victim such as this experiences Phantom Limb pain. Yet, that pain will subside if a mirror can trick the eye to think the body is whole.
To quote Cronenberg’s Naked Lunch, “An unconscious agent is an effective agent, Bill!” Max can excuse control over to his hallucinations in a similar system that beats the brain’s checks and balances, making his addiction transitions more efficient and making it easier to control him as Videodrome calls out, “Kill your partners and give us channel 83!”
In recent years, what we’ve learned in studying the brain about sexual stimuli, perception alteration, and media’s effects on the wiring of neurons, is nothing new. It’s what Cronenberg was playing off of to begin with. However, the data of sex can now be seen in the brain, perceptions can be altered to ease distress, and with hackers and bloggers plugging in on one side and computers rewiring users on the other side, technology is moving towards (buzz word) a singularity. As these different aspects of science begin to apply to each other, Videodrome approaches possible. The accelerating pace of change as displayed in Time magazine in February showed 8,000 years between Agricultural Revolution and Industrial Revolution, 120 years later came the light bulb, another 90 years passed and we landed on the Moon, only 22 years before the World Wide Web, and 9 years later the Human genome was sequenced.
Somewhere between the moon landing and the web is Videodrome.
Concluded Thursday with Part III - The Viewer’s Visceral Floodgates
Ben Olsen 9/13/11