twinmaker

Want a remake of The Fly? Look no further.

The internet is abuzz today with news of a remake of The Fly. It’s pleasing to see both film versions getting a nod, not just the 1982 Cronenberg but the original from 1958 as well. People seem generally excited by the prospect of another body-horror flick, given what modern effects can pull off. If that’s all the new movie has to offer, though, it’s almost certain to fail.

I’ve written extensively about the appeal of this story, which dates back to an even more chilling novella by George Langelaan. The terror of “The Fly” lies not just in the transformation of an unlucky inventor into a monster, but in the metaphor of modern technology making monsters of us all.

The movies (plus sequels and even an opera) more or less engage with this theme, sometimes buried under their own particular angles: Cronenberg’s, for instance, vividly explores decay caused by age or disease.

However, I would argue that no one has yet to bring this theme fully into the mainstream, and I include myself in a long list of failures. Through Twinmaker and its many side stories, such as one called “The Other Fly”, I’ve reached for a formula that would grab the masses by the lapels and force them to engage. Without a huge amount of success, alas, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t worth attempting again.

Maybe the new The Fly will do the trick. I hope so, and I wish Fox and J. D. Dillard the best of luck. (If they need a teleporter adviser, I’m their guy!) However the movie turns out, I’m very much looking forward to seeing it.

fly - plan

(Thanks to David Nelson for this delightful image.)

4 Comments

  1. David Nelson says:

    It’s Nelson, not Nelso! Lol

  2. Donald B Fuller says:

    Sean, I am retired and writing my first book and in my Education Chapter I want to use just a 75 word excerpt from an article cited to you titled, What the U.S. Could Learn from Polish Schools” My book title is “America’s Change Revolution”
    I have been trying to find you to ask permission. I don’t know whether this message will get to you. May I use your quoted words and cite them to you? My contact info is below. Thank You , Don Fuller
    tel/Text: 317-332-6439
    Email: donnancy.colorado@gmail.com