Of The Future(1970): Crimes
Our guide through this bizarre landscape is , the director of a dermatological clinic called the "House of Skin". As he searches for his disappeared mentor, Antoine Rouge, Tripod encounters a series of increasingly grotesque biological adaptations:
: Some men begin growing new, functionless organs—a recurring Cronenberg theme.
: The body starts revolting against itself in "artistic" ways. Crimes of the Future(1970)
Set in a desolated 1997, the film depicts a world where a plague known as has wiped out all sexually mature women. Caused by modern cosmetics, the disease leaves behind a society of men struggling to navigate a womanless existence .
: A mysterious, compulsive foam excreted by the sick that others feel compelled to ingest . An Austere Aesthetic Our guide through this bizarre landscape is ,
Unlike his later visceral spectacles, the 1970 Crimes is austere and detached . Shot silently with a monotonous retroactive narration , the film feels more like a clinical report or an anthropological study than a traditional narrative. The setting—cold, concrete modernist buildings—underscores the emotional sterility of this future. Why It Matters Crimes of the Future (1970) | Alex on Film
Before the Gore: Revisiting David Cronenberg’s Crimes of the Future (1970) Set in a desolated 1997, the film depicts
Decades before Viggo Mortensen declared that "surgery is the new sex," a young David Cronenberg was already dissecting the human form in his 1970 experimental feature, . While it shares a title with his 2022 film, the two are not remakes; rather, the 1970 version is a surreal, 63-minute arthouse trip that laid the foundational "biological horror" for which he became famous. The World Without Women