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Existenz

Barcode 5060001621197
DVD

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Original price £9.21 - Original price £9.21
Original price
£9.21
£9.21 - £9.21
Current price £9.21

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Out of stock

Release Date: 25/03/2002

Edition: Widescreen
Genre: Sci-Fi
Region Code: Region 2
Certificate: 15
Label: Momentum Pictures
Actors: Callum Keith Rennie, Ian Holm, Don McKellar, Willem Dafoe, Christopher Eccleston, Robert A. Silverman, Sarah Polley, Oscar Hsu, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Jude Law
Director: David Cronenberg
Number of Discs: 1
Duration: 93 minutes
Audio Languages: English
Subtitle Languages: Hard of Hearing English

In the near future eXistenZ is the last word in virtual reality gaming technology. However, many have taken afront at the game's careless blurring of fantasy and reality, and some angry protestors have even taken to hunting down its inventor, Allegra (Jennifer Jason Leigh). Allegra's only protection from the mob is a young security guard (Jude Law), and when they are forced to go on the run together, the couple find they have no option but to take refuge in the one place they can remain safe: the computer generated world of the game itself.
Director David Cronenberg's eXistenZ is a stew of corporate espionage, virtual reality gaming, and thriller elements, marinated in Cronenberg's favourite Crock-Pot juices of technology, physiology and sexual metaphor. Jennifer Jason Leigh is game designer Allegra Geller, responsible for the new state-of-the-art eXistenZ game system; along with PR newbie Ted Pikul (Jude Law), they take the beta version of the game for a test drive and are immersed in a dangerous alternate reality. The game isn't quite like PlayStation, though; it's a latexy pod made from the guts of mutant amphibians and plugs via an umbilical cord directly into the user's spinal column (through a BioPort). It powers up through the player's own nervous system and taps into the subconscious; with several players it networks their brains together.

Geller and Pikul's adventures in the game reality uncover more espionage and an antigaming, proreality insurrection. The game world makes it increasingly difficult to discern between reality and the game, either through the game's perspective or the human's. More accessible than Crash, eXistenZ is a complicated sci-fi opus, often confusing, and with an ending that leaves itself wide open for a sequel. Fans of Cronenberg's work will recognize his recurring themes and will eat this up. Others will find its shallow characterisations and near-incomprehensible plot twists a little tedious. --Jerry Renshaw,

Special Features: Bonus Footage, Commentary: David Cronenberg (director). Peter Suschitsky (cinematographer). Jim Isaac (SFX)., Documentaries: 'The Secret World of Carol Spier' (53 min FX documentary)., Trailers