

Crash Blu-ray
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Arrow Films
Technology and sexuality meet in a head-on collision in Crash-director David Cronenberg's controversial adaptation of writer J.G. Ballard's hugely transgressive 1973 novel starring James Spader and Holly Hunter.
Spader stars as James Ballard, a film producer whose deviant sexual desires are awakened by a near fatal automobile accident with Dr. Helen Remington (Hunter). Soon the pair, alongside Ballard's wife Catherine (Deborah Kara Unger), are drawn into an underground world of car crash fetishism presided over by renegade scientist Vaughan (Elias Koteas). Danger, sex and death become entwined as eroticism and technology join together in a disturbing, deadly union.
Awarded the Special Jury Prize at the 1996 Cannes Film Festival for originality, daring and audacity, Crash remains an incredibly subversive and confrontational piece of cinema-Cronenberg himself describes it as "a dangerous film"-now refurbished in a stunning 4K restoration.
Special Features
- 4K restoration of the uncut NC-17 version, supervised by director of photography Peter Suschitzky and approved by director David Cronenberg
- High Definition Blu-rayTM (1080p) presentation
- 5.1 and 2.0 Stereo DTS-HD Master Audio
- Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
- Audio commentary with film scholar Adrian Martin
- Interviews with Suschitzky, executive producer Jeremy Thomas, composer Howard Shore and casting director Deirdre Bowen
- 2019 Q&A with Cronenberg and actor Viggo Mortensen at TIFF
- 1996 Q&A with Cronenberg and source novel writer J.G. Ballard at the National Film Theatre in London
- Behind-the-scenes footage and contemporary press interviews
- Architect of Pain: The Cronenberg Project- video essay by Caelum Vatnsdal on Cronenberg's use of architecture and location
- Crash! (1971, 18 mins)- short film originally broadcast as part of the BBC's Review series, starring J.G. Ballard and loosely adapted from his 1970 novel The Atrocity Exhibition
- Two short films inspired by Ballard and the novel Crash: Nightmare Angel (Zoe Beloff, 1986, 33 mins) and Always (crashing) (Simon Barker and Jason Wood, 2016, 14 mins)
- Two Cronenberg short films: The Nest (2013, 10 mins) and At the Suicide of the Last Jew in the World in the Last Cinema in the World (2007, 4 mins)
- Original Trailers
- Reversible sleeve featuring original and newlycommissioned artwork by Gilles Vranckx
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Customer Reviews
Top Customer Reviews
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Crash, one the two 'unfilmable' novels Cronenberg reimagined for celluloid, draws the viewer into a strange, 'overlit realm' where sex, death and technology form an unholy trinity. Ballard's jaded sophisticates, who revel in auto–erotic destruction, use the potent metaphor of celebrity car–crash deaths to amplify their own perverse pleasures. Cronenberg sticks pretty faithfully to the original plot structure of Ballard's novel, while adding a few distinctly cronenbergian touches along the way. The end result is a sumptous looking film with an amazing, hypnotic score by Howard Shore. The overall effect recalls David Lynch's best work, in the viewer enters a strange, dream–like world governed by its own weird logic. Arrow's transfer of the film looks amazing and is complemented by one of the most original movie scores since the Third Man. The fact that you also get to watch the NC17/Director's Cut version on this release is a real plus, giving the viwer the chance to see Cronberg's original vision of the completed film. Crash was originally the subject of a lot of hysteria and controversy back in the 1990s and a general release at that time required a number of cuts. In addition to the uncut version of the film you also get a disc full of extras, focussing on both JG Ballard and Cronenberg. So, if you're a fan of Ballard, Cronenberg (or both) or just someone that enjoys strange and provocative films, this one's definitely for you.
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