The Fly Syndrome Analysis

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The Fly and Videodrome are movies directed by David Cronenberg. David is well-known in the horror cinema for his obsession with the flesh to evoke terror. Flesh is used in a grotesque way to repudiate audience yet catch their eye on a new way of horror. This technique is David’s speciality, but instead of constantly using the worst of it through most of the movie, David shows how the transformation from human to a flesh monster. The techniques is mostly used in The Fly, rather than Videodrome.
In The Fly, the story tells us the life of Seth Brundle, a smart scientist, who meets with Veronica Quaife, a science journalist, at an event. In this event Seth explains about his new revolutionary experiment. Seth invites Veronica to his place to
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Seth succeeds to teleport a monkey and they decide to celebrate, but in a combination of Veronica leaving him celebrating alone plus Seth being drunk, he decides to try to teleport himself with any precaution. Because of this fatal mistake a fly enters to the telepod at the same time of the teleportation causing problems to the computer to succeed.
The computer, which just processed flesh teleportation, was not able to analyse and process two different objects at the same time, and instead of making a separate teleportation, the computer decided to combine them.
Seth’s flesh starts becoming one with the fly. Even though he had some incredible powers of strength and resistance, the transformation was inevitable. Instead of having a fully transformation with the Fly, David decided to make him go through a destiny worse than death, damnation. Seth suffered every step of his transformation from head to feet, suffering incredible pain and the harsh reality of becoming a fly. Seth’s body gets gross and gives audience a combination of empathy and revulsion. Especially in the last scene when Seth is totally transformed and the only thing he wants is to die. Even though the director is evoking terror of his appearance, the director is also making the audience feel some empathy over his cruel