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Crimes of the Future
Overlook Pick

Crimes of the Future

Surgery is the new sex.
60
User Score1,282 ratings
TMDB 6.016+20221h 47mEnglish
Science FictionHorrorThriller

Synopsis

With his partner Caprice, celebrity performance artist Saul Tenser publicly showcases the metamorphosis of his organs in avant-garde performances. An investigator from the National Organ Registry obsessively tracks their movements, which is when a mysterious group is revealed... Their mission — to use Tenser's notoriety to shed light on the next phase of human evolution.

Director
David CronenbergFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Serendipity Point Films8 production companies
Release
May 25, 2022Released
Box Office
$5MBudget $27M

Top Cast

8 of 17
Viggo Mortensen
Viggo Mortensen
Saul Tenser
Léa Seydoux
Léa Seydoux
Caprice
Scott Speedman
Scott Speedman
Lang Dotrice
Kristen Stewart
Kristen Stewart
Timlin
Welket Bungué
Welket Bungué
Cope
Don McKellar
Don McKellar
Wippet
Tanaya Beatty
Tanaya Beatty
Berst
Nadia Litz
Nadia Litz
Router

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
the_blueeyes
Jul 24, 2022

Nonsensical incoherent movie that was hard to watch, and i turned it off after 30 min. It clearly written with a good amount of shock value, but the only shock i got was my finger to press "off" button. Cronenberg has made some good body horror in the past, but this was just rubbish.

CinemaSerf
Sep 19, 2022

Whilst certainly nowhere near his best, this is still quite an intriguing drama from David Cronenberg. It all centres around "Saul Tenser" (Viggo Mortensen) who uses his own body to grow (or "cook") extra organs which he and his assistant "Caprice" (Léa Seydoux) extract as part of rather gruesome, but popular, theatrical performances. Meantime, "Dotrice" (Scott Speedman) is reeling from the suffocation of his young plastic-eating son (by his own wife) and so convinces the exhibitionists that an autopsy revealing the internal digestive organs of this most unusual of mutations would make for excellent viewing. Don McKellar ("Wippet") and his colleague "Timlin" (Kristen Stewart) run the government department for organ registration and needless to say they take a dim view on the legality of some or all of these activities... or do they? The concept is interesting and ethically highly dubious but sadly the execution is a bit lacklustre and there is way too much dialogue and, oddly enough here, too little use made of the special effects that are at times quite disturbing to watch and are, no pun intended, rather at the heart of the story. Stewart's very presence suggests her character has a more significant part in the proceedings but her appearances themselves are actually quite sparing which is always a bonus for me! It does take a while to get going, and somehow the ending is all rather underwhelming but it still has enough traces of the director's unique style and imagination to make it worth a watch - once

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