dwyhajlo said

ocMcCoy said:
Carpenter, no contest. I like Cronenberg, but his style is very detached and his movies can seem a little emotionless sometimes.
Isn't the lack of emotion intentional in a lot of his movies? It mirrors the detached, clinical perspective that pervades much of modern life. For example, doctors or scientists of some kind play the part of villain, antagonist, or at least instigator in so many of his movies:
Stereo,
Crimes of the Future,
Shivers,
Rabid,
The Brood,
Scanners,
The Fly,
Dead Ringers, and
eXistenZ. In a bunch of his other movies, that same emotionless feel mirrors various states of detachment or alienation from reality/society/whatever, i.e.
Videodrome,
Crash, and
Spider. You can even look at the cold, mechanical, totally brutal scenes of violence in
A History of Violence and see that same sort of detachment (from "self" or your own body/actions, whatever you want to call it).
So, while it can be alienating for the viewer, I think that it's wholly intentional. Cronenberg is probably one of the best popular examples of the idea of abjection in art.
Yes.
I would add that Cronenberg's movies all have heart, they have heat...it is always just bubbling underneath the surface. It makes for amazing tension and gives depth to what would otherwise be an Atom Egoyan film. Egoyan's films are very good examples of when detachment and lack of emotion do not work. Only he can make a busload of children dying as tragic as a parking ticket.
I actually think the Carpenter and Cronenberg comparison is a good one. Lynch is too psychological, even when things get really odd, you still feel like it's all in everyone's heads. With Carpenter and Cronenberg, there is a really feeling of the "other".