sette; his TVheaves and moans in concupiscent ecstacy, its tion between herself and embodied experience. Only
screen bulging toward his waiting lips. extreme pain can bring her back to her physical body; cell by
Surrendering to the postmodern madness of a world in cell, she is being replaced by the new flesh, the video flesh-
which distinctions between this and that side of the TVscreen as are we all, in cyberculture.
are no longer meaningful, Renn killshimself-or, as the Obviously, Cronenberg and Ballard travel the same psycho-
technophilic Heaven's Gate cultistswho recently committed geography, and. Crash Ithe screen versionl is the predictable
suicide would have it, abandoned his "vehicle." His hand site of their head-on collision. LongtimeBallardians will miss
morphs into a gun made of molten, marbled flesh Ireality? the astringent wit of the novel's deadpan narration, its apho-
video hallucination? both?1 and he blows his head off with the ristic one-liners I"The world was beginning to flower into
posthumanist rallying cry, "Longlive the new flesh!" In an I wounds"!, the deviant beauty of its surreal imagery I"The pas-
eerie premonition of the flying saucer theology of the senger compartment enclosed us like a machine generating
Heaven's Gate cultists, Renn takes his own life so that he may from our sexual act an homunculus of blood, semen, and
be born again as disembodied simulacrum-what O'Blivion's engine coolant"l. LongtimeCronenbergians will miss
daughter calls "the video word made flesh." Scanners' tangled web of conspiracy, Dead Ringers' psychot-
Watching Videodrome, we cannot help but think of Ballard's ic break with reality, The Fly's mutagenic technologies and
chilling observation, in his introduction to Crash, that we are uncontrollable flesh. Strangely, the movie lacks the book's
witnessing the "demise of feeling and emotion." True to her sexual frisson, exuding a lunar cool that detractors will liken
name, Nicki Brand, the deadpan, affectless media personality to Joop! cologne ads and devotees will compare to the moon-
in Videodrome, derives sadomasochistic pleasure from sear- lit tableaux of the Surrealist painter land Ballard passionl Paul
ing her bare flesh with a cigarette. "We live in overstimulat- Delvaux. Even so, it's a filmthat must be seen lat least twice,
ed times," she asserts; like Crash's narrator, she has been according to Cronenberg!, an indispensable road map to the
deadened by the nonstop shock treatment of postmodern cul- late-night highways of the millennial mind.
ture, distanced by the multiplyinglayers of electronic media-
RAGESEPTEMBER
1997 .
MARK DERY: IN HIS INTRODUCTION TO THE FRENCH EDITION OF Crash,
BALLARD CALLS THE NOVEL "AN EXTREME METAPHOR FOR AN EXTREME
SITUATION, A KIT OF DESPERATE MEASURES ONLY FOR USE IN EXTREME
CRISES." Is Crash AN APPROPRIATE METAPHOR FOR OUR AGE OF AERIAL
DC:Yeah. ButI do sensethat someof the things that I deal with in Crash, at a 25-year remove fr<
when Ballard was writing the novel, are significantly different from what has gone before, and one
thesethings is the nature of sexuality, which I really think is changing-changing in a way that we I
not seen before. The fact that we can now reproduce without sex is a huge moment in human histor
M D: You MEAN THROUGH CLONING, IN-VITRO FERTILIZATION?
T
DC:Right.One can anticipate a time maybe not too far in the future, ;
andeggs. The question then becomes, "What is sex?" It has never, for humans, been a simple
ter of reproduction. In fact, there have been culturesthat didn't even connect sex with reproduction 'J
,
Now, we're at a point where we consciouslysee sex being cut free from its biological imperatives, I
demanding to be redefined, reinvented-a very existential development that forces us to take respo
bility for deciding what sex will be. It's a very powerful force, still very much inbuilt in us, but it no t
longer has the purpose that it had before. And whereas sex has always been used in various ways, ...
from weaponry to performance art, it's now demanding to be profoundly redefined, and it's techno ". J
cal developmentswhich have caused this. I don't think it's just a conceptual change; I think eventu(
it'll be a very functional difference.
M D: WHAT, EXACTLY, DO YOU MEAN BY THAT?
DC: Well, I think that more and more people will use sex less and less for reproduction. This isn't
Brave New World warning that sex will be controlled for genetic breeding purposes; I just think tha
the natural course of things there will be less haphazard, natural child-creating and more controlled
child-creating, which will make it more obvious that sex has become a new thing.
M D: SHOULD WE BE SO QUICK TO DISMISS HUXLEY'SWARNING? FOLLOWING The Bell Curve, THERE SEEM
BE A STEALTHOPERATION UNDERWAYTO REHABILITATEEUGENICS AND SOCIAL DARWINISM:CHRISTOPHER BR.
A SELF-STYLED "SCIENTIFIC RACIST" WHO LECTURES AT EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY, RECENTLY SUGGESTED THAT
GLE MOTHERS SHOULD MATEWITHHIGH-IQ MALESTO IMPROVE THE G
POOL. SO rr's NOT ENTIRELYALARMIST...
DC: Oh, I would never suggest that there won't be large mass
energy devoted to that craziness; I'm just saying that it's not
inevitable that one thing leads to the other. What I'm saying is
now that we have seized control over our own evolution, natur<
selection in the definitive Darwinian sense does not exist with
human beings. I mean, is it the guy who makes enough money jI
. '"
t
~
,
.
;
J ition in creating a world which you
have to say to yourself Iknowing it to
be a lie) is a hermetically sealed world
:0. that you will then take the audience
,. 1:" into. I certainly find people having for-
mal problems with the movie, not
ti j ,1t
understanding how to deal with the
structure of it. It looks like it might
work like, you know, Fatal Affraction-
comparing the film and the
novel. You've really got to
'f {f..¥f
you've got this attractive, upper-middle- let go and let the movie be
"
what it is. Of course
~ ,i~
" --:~ t class couple who don't have to worry
about money, they're having affairs-
but then it doesn't work out any way
you're going to want to
discussit vis-a-visthe book,
you could imagine. They get com- but it is its own thing.,.
pletely confused and disconnect. In a
way, the very structure of Crash is as
much a problem as the whole question MarkDery
of affect. (markdery@well.com) is a
M D : WHAT'S YOUR RESPONSE TO THAT? cultural critic whose byline
DC: My response is that you just have has appeared in Rolling
to let go of all that stuff. I've found Stone, the New York Times,
,j
,., .
,.
'. .
'. that, for many people, it becomes a
different movie the second time they
see it. The first time, especially if
Wired, and the Village Voice.
He is the author of Escape
Velocity: Cyberculture at the
you're familiar with the book, you're End of the Century, a critique
constantly analyzing your reactions, of fringe computer culture
(http://www.well.com/user/ma
rkderyl). He also edited the
essay collection Flame Wars:
The Discourse of
Cyberculture, and is currently
at work on The Pyrotechnic
Insanitarium, a book about
madness and mayhem in mil-
lennial America (Grove
Press, 1998).
RAGESEPTEMBER
1997 .