10 Greatest Use Of Practical SFX In Horror Movies
10. Videodrome (1983)
Videdrome (1983) was one of the early David Cronenberg films to gain him recognition as the master of body horror. Part sci-fi with distinct undertones of psychological horror, it tells the story of TV executive Max Renn’s (James Woods) descent into madness, as he becomes obsessed with a mysterious program called Videodrome. Very quickly the lines of reality become blurred for both Max and the viewer, as hypnotic signals from Videodrome start to cause severe hallucinations for the character, allowing Cronenberg’s practical effects come to life.
As Max watches a transmission in one scene, a scar on his stomach begins itching. He scratches with a gun in his hand before the scar opens up and Max pushes his handgun inside the wound. He later reaches into his stomach and pulls out the gun which attaches itself to his hand with metal wires and screws, in a grizzly-shot sequence as the weapon becomes one with his body. This is Cronenberg at his best, as the film takes a dark and bizarre turn from here.
Later, a character attempts to push a pulsating videotape into Max’s stomach, but his body devourers the hand, leaving a bloody stump. At the film's climax, Max murders the head of Videodrome, and in a ghastly shot, the character's insides ooze out of his body. Finally, in the memorably-shot final scene, Max watches as he shoots himself in the head on TV with his conjoined hand weapon, before the TV explodes with brains and body matter flying out of the screen.