A ‘Castlevania Homage’, Cursed ‘Animal Crossing’, and More In ‘Horror Bytes’ [Safe Room Podcast]

Horror

Long Live The New Flesh, Bitch!

And just like that, we’re into February. After starting the new year with a redo of our episode on The Perfection, followed by AIDS metaphor Safe, del Toro’s Gothic Romance Crimson Peak and slasher remake House of Wax, Trace and I are settling into our birthday month with four weeks of ‘Weird Sex’ films.

First on the docket: David Cronenberg‘s iconic body horror film Videodrome, which just celebrated its fortieth anniversary last week. In the film, Max Renn (James Woods) works at a Toronto TV station that programs sexy, violent content and he’s always on the hunt for new fare. Enter Videodrome: a pirated signal originally thought to originate from Malaysia (but is actually from Pittsburgh) that is basically snuff.

The trouble is that Videodrome is also a weapon, causing physical changes in the body of viewers (tumors), as well as vivid hallucinations. While Max’s kinky new girlfriend Nicki (singer Debbie Harry) sets off to audition for the show, Max is pulled into a conflict between Spectacular Optical, headed by Barry Convex (Leslie Carlson), and media prophets, the O’Blivions – father Brian (Jack Creley) and daughter Bianca (Sonja Smits). Can Max trust what he’s seeing, or is he merely a pawn in a larger philosophical battle of wills?

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Episode 215 – Videodrome (1983)

Ready for invagination? For the first week of ‘Weird Sex Month,’ we’re returning to Canada to discuss David Cronenberg’s Videodrome (1983), just in time for its 40th anniversary.

Expect body horror courtesy of FX master Rick Baker, communications theory courtesy of Marshall McLuhan, and oversharing about anatomy courtesy of Trace Thurman.

Plus: wanting more Debbie Harry, feminist and trans readings of Max’s situation, talk of the alternate ending, Canadian history lessons, and just how many Americans have guns?


Cross out Videodrome!

Coming up on Wednesday: Weird Sex month continues with Andrzej Żuławski’s histrionic ode to the dissolution of marriage in Possession (1981).

P.S. Subscribe to our Patreon for more than 226 hours of additional content! This month, we’ve got episodes on Roxanne Benjamin’s There’s Something Wrong with the Children, Brandon Cronenberg’s Infinity Pool, Elizabeth Banks’ Cocaine Bear, and an M. Night Shyamalan double bill: Knock at the Cabin, complemented by an audio commentary on The Village.

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