197 reviews
If you're interested in the author of the book or the director of this film you have either already watched this film or you're waiting for the right time to watch it.
If you found this film by accident all you need to know to decide if its for you is that it is both the most homosexual and meta contextual film ever made and a solid contender for one of the most surreal films.
Do not recommend for family movie night unless you have ulterior motives or you're related to film/literature nerds.
If you found this film by accident all you need to know to decide if its for you is that it is both the most homosexual and meta contextual film ever made and a solid contender for one of the most surreal films.
Do not recommend for family movie night unless you have ulterior motives or you're related to film/literature nerds.
In common with the writings of Burroughs this is innovative, inspiring and yet difficult. Difficult both to relate to and to fully sympathise, never mind the narrative flow that may or may not be there. I have to say the picture quality on my Blu-ray was stunning and once I had managed to remove the German subtitles as much a joy to watch as it was to listen to the wonderful soundtrack. It is just that this is so very strange and uncompromising in its celebration of homosexuality and drug taking that it can be an effort to stay with it. it was just about the only Cronenberg I had not seen and it was interesting to see, instead of machines and mechanisms merging into man, this was the other way around with machines becoming squishy. The animatronics were impressive and although the final set piece didn't work so well, the whole thing was well managed and I just wish I could have been more on board.
- christopher-underwood
- Dec 8, 2020
- Permalink
- JosephPezzuto
- Jun 30, 2015
- Permalink
Movies in the last years have become more uniform, more streamlined, particularly in the US. As a result, the film market is full of sleek, entertaining movies that the whole world goes to see, but these movies have nothing but harmless baby teeth. Fortunately, people like Lynch or Cronenberg still do movies that may be considered defective by most people, but that bite into the flesh with pointy canines. The Naked Lunch has very sharp teeth indeed. It's supposed to be an adaptation from a William Burrough's book, which doesn't make sense anyway. It starts as the story of a failed writer whose wife becomes addicted to an insecticide powder... It goes downhill after this relatively sane and normal beginning. It's a ride, a drug-induced nightmare full of horribly funny visions (the sort of visions that artists used centuries ago to represent hell). Anuses talk. Aliens sip alcohol in bars. People get impaled. Typewriters turn into bugs. Liquids ooze. You may say it's flawed, or disgusting, or ridiculous, or boring. I saw it with someone who absolutely hated it. But the fact that this person still keeps talking about it 8 years after seeing it says a lot about the Naked Lunch, at a time when we tend to forget blockbusters a few hours after watching them. The Naked Lunch is here - in your mind - to stay.
Naked Lunch seems to be just totally incomprehensible upon first viewing. However, after watching it again, you start to understand more and more. Upon multiple viewings, you really get a feel for what's transpiring before your eyes. The ultimate message is that it is really just a metaphor for heroin addiction, even though it's so much more deeper than that. It's an intricate study of a man, William S. Burroughs, who was a heroin addict, and among other things one of the most significant Beat authors ever. The film delves deeply into the psyche of Burroughs and takes you on a trip in his mind and your own. There are touches of reality and many flashes of paranoia, and it is all done with style and grace. Seriously one of the best films about an author, Naked Lunch will certainly stand the test of time against other films which may seem at first entertaining, but lose their luster upon multiple viewings. Whereas, Naked Lunch, in my opinion, never will. 10 out of 10.
- hohumdedum2
- Nov 19, 2003
- Permalink
It's vey, very difficult to adapt the written works of the Beat Generation, especially a piece composed of wandering, surrealist vignettes like William S. Burrough's Naked Lunch. This film did so as well as anyone possibly could.
If you enjoy surrealism, but also like a good story, check this one out. Peter Wellers is amazing, Cronenberg is... well, he does his thing. You know what I mean. This film has a lot of my favorite movie quotes in it, and I'll never forget the repulsive yet entrancing visual effects. This is a must see for the Cronenberg fan and the viewer who likes to be surprised and low-key horrified.
If you enjoy surrealism, but also like a good story, check this one out. Peter Wellers is amazing, Cronenberg is... well, he does his thing. You know what I mean. This film has a lot of my favorite movie quotes in it, and I'll never forget the repulsive yet entrancing visual effects. This is a must see for the Cronenberg fan and the viewer who likes to be surprised and low-key horrified.
- ianwagnerwatches
- Sep 20, 2021
- Permalink
"Exterminate all rational thought. This is the conclusion I have come to".
So says Bill Lee, the central character of David Cronenberg's adaptation of William Burroughs' bizarre novel "Naked Lunch". The film takes the novel, replaces the characters with Burroughs, his family, and his friends, and then gives them all the names of characters from the book anyway. Once you sort that conundrum out and stop thinking rationally you can begin to understand the film. But only begin. I don't think there is any way to fully understand "Naked Lunch".
Bill Lee is an exterminator who, along with his wife, has become addicted to bug repellent powder. One night, while on a bit of a bender, Bill accidentally shoots his wife, Joan, in the head during a game of William Tell. Following this, he uses the powder to go on a seemingly endless trip, ripe with sinister cabals, talking bugs, and journalistic endeavors.
What the film theorizes is that this is actually the tale of how Burroughs wrote the book "Naked Lunch". Indeed, Burroughs did shoot his wife the way Bill does in the movie, but one wonders if Burroughs actually went on the trip we see in the film. "Naked Lunch" is akin to "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" in it's over-the-top depiction of drug use as literary inspiration. "Naked Lunch" is actually a bit weirder to me than "Fear and Loathing", but I guess that's the same as saying one Queer Eye Guy is gayer than another. How can you be sure and, in the end, what's the difference? I'll skip over trying to compare Burroughs' trip to Dr. Thompson's. I think my brain would explode if I tried.
David Cronenberg, cinematic master of the macabre, struck gold with "Naked Lunch". Here we have one of Cronenberg's most fully realized fantasies. It's sick, disturbing, and confusing and, in these ways, it almost reaches the level of "VideoDrome", Cronenberg's true masterpiece and the most outright disturbing film I've ever seen. The creatures that Cronenberg dreamed up (based, of course, on Burroughs' warped ideas) are incredible. The seven-foot-tall Mugwumps (modeled after the physical appearance of Burroughs) creeped me out, and the half-beetle/half-typewriter creatures with talking sphincters are some of the grossest creatures I've ever seen on screen. These are things that Cronenberg delights in.
Peter Weller finally escaped from the shadow of "RoboCop" with this film. Ironically, the characters are similar. Both Robo and Bill Lee are monotone speaking, emotionless people. The difference being that Robo is made from forklift parts held together with duct tape and glue and Bill is human. Or at least I think he is. Nothing is certain in "Naked Lunch". Weller captures William Burroughs expertly. Judy Davis shows her range in the dual role of Joan Lee, Bill's wife, and Joan Frost, Bill's imagined lover. Joan Lee is drug-addled and loose; Joan Frost is uptight and needs to be taught how to be free. Davis makes the two women so different that it's almost impossible to tell it's the same actress in both parts.
If you like Burroughs, see this film. If you like Croneberg, see this film. If you want a simple, pleasant film...stay far away. :Naked Lunch" is a pornographically perverted look at the complexities of drug abuse and the difficulties of the writing process. I don't use the word pornographically lightly. This is as extreme a movie as I've ever seen, especially coming from the Hollywood system. It's icky, it's gross, it's disturbing. It's also a masterpiece.
So says Bill Lee, the central character of David Cronenberg's adaptation of William Burroughs' bizarre novel "Naked Lunch". The film takes the novel, replaces the characters with Burroughs, his family, and his friends, and then gives them all the names of characters from the book anyway. Once you sort that conundrum out and stop thinking rationally you can begin to understand the film. But only begin. I don't think there is any way to fully understand "Naked Lunch".
Bill Lee is an exterminator who, along with his wife, has become addicted to bug repellent powder. One night, while on a bit of a bender, Bill accidentally shoots his wife, Joan, in the head during a game of William Tell. Following this, he uses the powder to go on a seemingly endless trip, ripe with sinister cabals, talking bugs, and journalistic endeavors.
What the film theorizes is that this is actually the tale of how Burroughs wrote the book "Naked Lunch". Indeed, Burroughs did shoot his wife the way Bill does in the movie, but one wonders if Burroughs actually went on the trip we see in the film. "Naked Lunch" is akin to "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" in it's over-the-top depiction of drug use as literary inspiration. "Naked Lunch" is actually a bit weirder to me than "Fear and Loathing", but I guess that's the same as saying one Queer Eye Guy is gayer than another. How can you be sure and, in the end, what's the difference? I'll skip over trying to compare Burroughs' trip to Dr. Thompson's. I think my brain would explode if I tried.
David Cronenberg, cinematic master of the macabre, struck gold with "Naked Lunch". Here we have one of Cronenberg's most fully realized fantasies. It's sick, disturbing, and confusing and, in these ways, it almost reaches the level of "VideoDrome", Cronenberg's true masterpiece and the most outright disturbing film I've ever seen. The creatures that Cronenberg dreamed up (based, of course, on Burroughs' warped ideas) are incredible. The seven-foot-tall Mugwumps (modeled after the physical appearance of Burroughs) creeped me out, and the half-beetle/half-typewriter creatures with talking sphincters are some of the grossest creatures I've ever seen on screen. These are things that Cronenberg delights in.
Peter Weller finally escaped from the shadow of "RoboCop" with this film. Ironically, the characters are similar. Both Robo and Bill Lee are monotone speaking, emotionless people. The difference being that Robo is made from forklift parts held together with duct tape and glue and Bill is human. Or at least I think he is. Nothing is certain in "Naked Lunch". Weller captures William Burroughs expertly. Judy Davis shows her range in the dual role of Joan Lee, Bill's wife, and Joan Frost, Bill's imagined lover. Joan Lee is drug-addled and loose; Joan Frost is uptight and needs to be taught how to be free. Davis makes the two women so different that it's almost impossible to tell it's the same actress in both parts.
If you like Burroughs, see this film. If you like Croneberg, see this film. If you want a simple, pleasant film...stay far away. :Naked Lunch" is a pornographically perverted look at the complexities of drug abuse and the difficulties of the writing process. I don't use the word pornographically lightly. This is as extreme a movie as I've ever seen, especially coming from the Hollywood system. It's icky, it's gross, it's disturbing. It's also a masterpiece.
When I saw "Naked Lunch", I was left with a feeling that I love to have after watching a movie: Every inch of my body was screaming "What the F- ?". Unfortunately, during the movie, it was a mixture of "What the F-" and *yawn*.
Even with the extremely interesting, puzzling, abstract and meaningful imagery, the movie is very slow at parts. Fortunately, every time I thought I was about to lose interest, something happened that grabbed me again.
The plot is very weird and hard to follow at times, and by the end of the movie I've got to admit that I had about 30% of the whole thing figured out. Which isn't much now, is it? But (for me, at least) part of the fun of solving these types of movies, is the following investigation and discussion with other viewers. So, after watching this movie and finding out it was based on a very personal novel by William Burroughs, I looked up some information about him. Let's just say, if you're going to watch this movie and don't know anything about William Burroughs, check up some information about him first, I was disappointed I didn't do this before watching the movie, because, the meaning and my appreciation for the movie skyrocketed after reading about him. When I say "based on a personal novel", I mean really personal.
The actors do a good job overall, although none of them really stand out from one-another. Music was pretty good and jazzy, which is always a plus! And this movie screams "jazz" all over. Photography is good, although also a bit boring at times, and very dark, which I'm pretty sure was on purpose, due to the main theme of the movie. Visual effects are great. Puppetry is amazingly well done (movies nowadays need more of this instead of CGI), provocative, often disgusting.
Overall, it's a very good movie that can be very interesting and thought provocative and (unfortunately) very boring at times.
7 out of 10.
Even with the extremely interesting, puzzling, abstract and meaningful imagery, the movie is very slow at parts. Fortunately, every time I thought I was about to lose interest, something happened that grabbed me again.
The plot is very weird and hard to follow at times, and by the end of the movie I've got to admit that I had about 30% of the whole thing figured out. Which isn't much now, is it? But (for me, at least) part of the fun of solving these types of movies, is the following investigation and discussion with other viewers. So, after watching this movie and finding out it was based on a very personal novel by William Burroughs, I looked up some information about him. Let's just say, if you're going to watch this movie and don't know anything about William Burroughs, check up some information about him first, I was disappointed I didn't do this before watching the movie, because, the meaning and my appreciation for the movie skyrocketed after reading about him. When I say "based on a personal novel", I mean really personal.
The actors do a good job overall, although none of them really stand out from one-another. Music was pretty good and jazzy, which is always a plus! And this movie screams "jazz" all over. Photography is good, although also a bit boring at times, and very dark, which I'm pretty sure was on purpose, due to the main theme of the movie. Visual effects are great. Puppetry is amazingly well done (movies nowadays need more of this instead of CGI), provocative, often disgusting.
Overall, it's a very good movie that can be very interesting and thought provocative and (unfortunately) very boring at times.
7 out of 10.
- dawn-clover
- May 2, 2011
- Permalink
Lots of people will hate this film, and some will love it.
The bottom line is, if you enjoy, respect, or feel that you understand the work of William S. Burroughs, you should see this film. If you don't know what I am talking about, you should probably not see this film.
The following pedantic and potentially inflammatory review, like this film, pulls no punches and makes no apologies for itself. Read on if you dare.
_________
If any three of the following conditions apply see Naked Lunch:
YOU
1. ...know what the term "visual metaphor" means.
2. ...are a Burroughs, Kerouac or Ginsburg fan.
2a. ...are not a fan, but know and respect Burroughs, Kerouac or Ginsburg
3. ...can't see how the book Naked Lunch could make a good film.
4. ... believe that Peter Weller is an underrated actor.
5. ...thought any of the following films were 'lightweight': Lost Highway, Mulholland Drive, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, The Last Wave, Heavenly Creatures, Dead Ringers.
6. ...have lived in the New York area for 15 or more years.
7. ...know the relationship between improvisational jazz, poetry, and modern art.
8. ...think you understand what Andy Warhol was trying to do.
9. ... are curious about what the process of writing a novel is like.
10. ...spend a lot of time arguing with inanimate objects.
11. ...without knowing the content of this film, can see a potential relationship between sexual ambivalence, guilt, paranoia, addiction, typewriters and over-sized talking insects.
You should NOT see this film if any of the following apply:
YOU
1. ...consider homosexual love to be evil, wrong, and something you can not sympathize with or understand.
2. ...use the phrase "he's on drugs" to explain behavior and ideas that do not make sense to you.
3. ...do not like or respect Burroughs, Kerouac or Ginsburg, and you know who they are.
4. have a concept of challenging literature as the latest John Irving novel (no offense to Mr Irving intended - he's easily as great as Burroughs, just sort of mainstream and pop).
5. ..like films which you can walk away from easily.
6. ...don't want to see any film which requires a second viewing to feel as if you've really got any of it.
7. ...view films strictly as a form of entertainment.
8. ...without knowing the content of this film, you can not imagine a potential relationship between sexual ambivalence, guilt, paranoia, addiction, typewriters and over-sized talking insects.
9. ...don't care to understand most of the following review.
10. ...consider ambiguity and loose ends in a film to be "plot holes" and consider any film which has them to be 'flawed'.
_________________
William S. Burroughs is widely regarded as one of America's greatest writers of fiction. A friend and mentor to Jack Kerouac and Alan Ginsburg, Burroughs helped to create the genres of 'beat' - American literary high modernism, and/or post-modernism. He provides highly tactile ironic, seductively repulsive descriptions of the everyday which are at once accurate, fragmented and surreal - in other words - Burroughs recreates the feeling and mood of his time and his experience with hermeneutic precision.
Cronenberg's Naked Lunch is an amalgamation of Cronenberg's interpretation and experience of reading Burroughs, Burroughs own life, and Burrough's legendary novel, Naked Lunch. There are six or more plots operating in six or more interacting layers throughout the film, and the action centers exclusively on Burrough's alter-ego, Bill Lee, as he attempts to discover the relationships between all of these plots. The plots I identify (and an interested viewer will generally be able to identify many more that this) are Burrough's relationship with Joan, Lee's relationship with Joan, Lee's drug addiction, Burrough's drug addiction, Lee's investigations into the secret society of drug trafficking at the edge of the world in Interzone, Burrough's struggle to create/discover himself. However, the theme of the film is more an issue of the Lee/Burroughs character trying and, in the end, failing, to make sense of the connections between these plots.
It is a very self-conscious, personal, brilliantly developed and visually intense film. Yet, despite its self-exposure and openness, the film maintains a certain distance from its audience, as if it has taken on the life given it by Cronenberg and Burroughs and established its own unique personality, which will keep its audience at a certain distance. To really appreciate this, you must watch the film at least a few times.
It is especially significant that Burroughs gave his approval for this project. Burroughs' writing is intensely personal and artistic, and his willingness to allow Cronenberg to position himself and his experience of Burrough's work within the film, and to decenter Naked Lunch is as powerful a testimony to Burrough's own integrity as an artist as it is to Cronenberg's vision.
Most of the people who acted in this film really wanted to be involved in it and it shows. Ian Holm and Roy Scheider are always great. Peter Weller, a big Burroughs fan and a severely underrated actor gives what may be the performance of his lifetime, Judy Davis and Julian Sands are both perfectly cast and powerful in their roles.
This films imagery is necessarily disturbing, disorienting, and, at times, quite comic. Very much in keeping with the feel of Burrough's work.
See it. You don't have to like it to respect it.
The bottom line is, if you enjoy, respect, or feel that you understand the work of William S. Burroughs, you should see this film. If you don't know what I am talking about, you should probably not see this film.
The following pedantic and potentially inflammatory review, like this film, pulls no punches and makes no apologies for itself. Read on if you dare.
_________
If any three of the following conditions apply see Naked Lunch:
YOU
1. ...know what the term "visual metaphor" means.
2. ...are a Burroughs, Kerouac or Ginsburg fan.
2a. ...are not a fan, but know and respect Burroughs, Kerouac or Ginsburg
3. ...can't see how the book Naked Lunch could make a good film.
4. ... believe that Peter Weller is an underrated actor.
5. ...thought any of the following films were 'lightweight': Lost Highway, Mulholland Drive, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, The Last Wave, Heavenly Creatures, Dead Ringers.
6. ...have lived in the New York area for 15 or more years.
7. ...know the relationship between improvisational jazz, poetry, and modern art.
8. ...think you understand what Andy Warhol was trying to do.
9. ... are curious about what the process of writing a novel is like.
10. ...spend a lot of time arguing with inanimate objects.
11. ...without knowing the content of this film, can see a potential relationship between sexual ambivalence, guilt, paranoia, addiction, typewriters and over-sized talking insects.
You should NOT see this film if any of the following apply:
YOU
1. ...consider homosexual love to be evil, wrong, and something you can not sympathize with or understand.
2. ...use the phrase "he's on drugs" to explain behavior and ideas that do not make sense to you.
3. ...do not like or respect Burroughs, Kerouac or Ginsburg, and you know who they are.
4. have a concept of challenging literature as the latest John Irving novel (no offense to Mr Irving intended - he's easily as great as Burroughs, just sort of mainstream and pop).
5. ..like films which you can walk away from easily.
6. ...don't want to see any film which requires a second viewing to feel as if you've really got any of it.
7. ...view films strictly as a form of entertainment.
8. ...without knowing the content of this film, you can not imagine a potential relationship between sexual ambivalence, guilt, paranoia, addiction, typewriters and over-sized talking insects.
9. ...don't care to understand most of the following review.
10. ...consider ambiguity and loose ends in a film to be "plot holes" and consider any film which has them to be 'flawed'.
_________________
William S. Burroughs is widely regarded as one of America's greatest writers of fiction. A friend and mentor to Jack Kerouac and Alan Ginsburg, Burroughs helped to create the genres of 'beat' - American literary high modernism, and/or post-modernism. He provides highly tactile ironic, seductively repulsive descriptions of the everyday which are at once accurate, fragmented and surreal - in other words - Burroughs recreates the feeling and mood of his time and his experience with hermeneutic precision.
Cronenberg's Naked Lunch is an amalgamation of Cronenberg's interpretation and experience of reading Burroughs, Burroughs own life, and Burrough's legendary novel, Naked Lunch. There are six or more plots operating in six or more interacting layers throughout the film, and the action centers exclusively on Burrough's alter-ego, Bill Lee, as he attempts to discover the relationships between all of these plots. The plots I identify (and an interested viewer will generally be able to identify many more that this) are Burrough's relationship with Joan, Lee's relationship with Joan, Lee's drug addiction, Burrough's drug addiction, Lee's investigations into the secret society of drug trafficking at the edge of the world in Interzone, Burrough's struggle to create/discover himself. However, the theme of the film is more an issue of the Lee/Burroughs character trying and, in the end, failing, to make sense of the connections between these plots.
It is a very self-conscious, personal, brilliantly developed and visually intense film. Yet, despite its self-exposure and openness, the film maintains a certain distance from its audience, as if it has taken on the life given it by Cronenberg and Burroughs and established its own unique personality, which will keep its audience at a certain distance. To really appreciate this, you must watch the film at least a few times.
It is especially significant that Burroughs gave his approval for this project. Burroughs' writing is intensely personal and artistic, and his willingness to allow Cronenberg to position himself and his experience of Burrough's work within the film, and to decenter Naked Lunch is as powerful a testimony to Burrough's own integrity as an artist as it is to Cronenberg's vision.
Most of the people who acted in this film really wanted to be involved in it and it shows. Ian Holm and Roy Scheider are always great. Peter Weller, a big Burroughs fan and a severely underrated actor gives what may be the performance of his lifetime, Judy Davis and Julian Sands are both perfectly cast and powerful in their roles.
This films imagery is necessarily disturbing, disorienting, and, at times, quite comic. Very much in keeping with the feel of Burrough's work.
See it. You don't have to like it to respect it.
The whole jazzy 90's intro credits definitely has a beatnik vibe to it. Wow, I was not expecting to see Roy Scheider in this movie lol. But it's cool to see him. Cronenberg really nails the 50's feel with all the aesthetic in the costumes and set pieces. I really liked Peter Weller's performance in this movie. Of course in great Cronenberg fashion, this movie is very bizarre, grotesque and weird. Something I've always respected about Cronenberg is that when he has an idea, he sees it through to the end. Doesn't matter how outlandish or bizarre it may be.
Maybe Bill shooting his wife in the head was a metaphor for him freeing himself so that he can pursue his homosexual desires towards men. This is my theory since Bill is short for William and the character Bill is probably based on William S. Burroughs, the author who wrote the book, and he was gay. The report that he's having to type up is a metaphor he's created in his head as a way to keep a journal and log everything that's been going on in his life - everything that he's been thinking. That scene with all the people on typewriters at the cafe gave me a good idea for a meme lol. The fleshy face hugger creature with tentacles and the butt was one of the most disturbing and weirdest things I've seen in a Cronenberg movie.
Anyone going into this movie without knowing anything about Burroughs, his background or the Beatnik Generation will probably be completely lost. And even if you know something about him, you'd probably be turned off by how weird it is. I can't relate with all the homosexual subject matter in the movie, but I kept watching. I kept watching to see if things would get weirder or if the story would get more interesting, and to try to piece together any metaphors or symbolism. The movie has strong hedonistic qualities to it, some of which were a turn off.
Naked Lunch is basically a loose self biography of Burroughs experiences with drug addiction, homosexuality and history with his wife. It's not a necessarily pleasurable or enjoyable watch. Rather, it's more of a look inside the mind of a depraved and twisted man. It's a very well shot, well made movie that pays a lot of attention to detail. The cinematography and use of color is beautiful. It's quite a thought-provoking movie that has many scenes that stay in your mind, that you look back on. It scars the brain, which could be a good or bad thing depending on who you are. Unfortunately, the story was kind of all over the place and it's just too weird, it felt like a bad fever dream. I was kind of ready for the movie to be over once I got midway through. I'd only watch this movie again if I were in the right mindset and mood. It's definitely not a movie for everyone, not for most people. It's for a more niche crowd. But for those willing to take the plunge into the bizarre madness, I respect it.
Maybe Bill shooting his wife in the head was a metaphor for him freeing himself so that he can pursue his homosexual desires towards men. This is my theory since Bill is short for William and the character Bill is probably based on William S. Burroughs, the author who wrote the book, and he was gay. The report that he's having to type up is a metaphor he's created in his head as a way to keep a journal and log everything that's been going on in his life - everything that he's been thinking. That scene with all the people on typewriters at the cafe gave me a good idea for a meme lol. The fleshy face hugger creature with tentacles and the butt was one of the most disturbing and weirdest things I've seen in a Cronenberg movie.
Anyone going into this movie without knowing anything about Burroughs, his background or the Beatnik Generation will probably be completely lost. And even if you know something about him, you'd probably be turned off by how weird it is. I can't relate with all the homosexual subject matter in the movie, but I kept watching. I kept watching to see if things would get weirder or if the story would get more interesting, and to try to piece together any metaphors or symbolism. The movie has strong hedonistic qualities to it, some of which were a turn off.
Naked Lunch is basically a loose self biography of Burroughs experiences with drug addiction, homosexuality and history with his wife. It's not a necessarily pleasurable or enjoyable watch. Rather, it's more of a look inside the mind of a depraved and twisted man. It's a very well shot, well made movie that pays a lot of attention to detail. The cinematography and use of color is beautiful. It's quite a thought-provoking movie that has many scenes that stay in your mind, that you look back on. It scars the brain, which could be a good or bad thing depending on who you are. Unfortunately, the story was kind of all over the place and it's just too weird, it felt like a bad fever dream. I was kind of ready for the movie to be over once I got midway through. I'd only watch this movie again if I were in the right mindset and mood. It's definitely not a movie for everyone, not for most people. It's for a more niche crowd. But for those willing to take the plunge into the bizarre madness, I respect it.
This is not an adaptation of William S. Burroughs' 1959 novel "Naked Lunch". Cronenberg uses elements from the works and the life of WSB and turns them into a very strange, appropriate tale. He does this quite well. Still, true to his subject, it's ultimately very boring, obscure and disgusting.
In the 1950s WSB wrote predominantly about his life as a drug addict - and about his lust for boys in South America and North Africa. It's quite drastic and depraved stuff, sometimes an actual horror story. He mixed reality with drug-induced hallucinations, peppering it with elements from the at that time still prevalent pulp fiction literature. In "Naked Lunch" WSB used the "cut-up technique" - the mostly random rearranged of text passages - to destroy every meaning that was still left, to turn his text into art, into the kind of literature professional critics liked. He did to literature what abstract expressionist, who dominated the art world in the 1950s, did to paintings. It was a street to nowhere, at that time labeled as "avantgarde".
Thankfully Cronenberg doesn't go there. He is doing the pulp fiction thing. On the surface, his film is about conspiracies, agents and aliens. The real story is the one of WSB's junkie life told in the world of his fever dreams as a drug addict.
The only reason why this film gets labeled as "Science Fiction" are the aliens, and these aliens are no aliens at all, they are demons. WSB was a true believer and practitioner of magic, and for many of such devotees UFOs and aliens are just explanations of demonic manifestations for a less religeous age. Cronenberg obviously did understand this. The two kinds of demons (aliens) are personifications of the two parts of the male anatomy WSB was fixated on.
A lot of thoughts went into the production of this movie. There are probably many allusions and innuendoes to discover, many symbols to decipher. But is it worth it? WSB as described by himself was a terrible human being, really the worst. Hating everybody, only living for his addictions, "accidentally" shooting his wife - yeah, that's the good life! Later on he actually wrote that this killing - that happened in 1951 in Mexico and for that he was never punished - did turn him into a writer. The movie promotes this idea in a way that's evil, demonic. The human sacrifice made him an author (Totally worth it!).
The book is not only much worse than the movie, having read it and knowing about WSB has a real negative impact on the perception of Cronenberg's work. It is no longer seen as being just strange and enigmatic. It's nothing less than repugnant. Sometimes art dies from knowledge.
The title sounds interesting - until it is explained by WSB himself: "naked lunch, a frozen moment when everyone sees what is on the end of every fork." It's nigh on impossible to talk more pretentious and silly than this. It gets worse than ridiculous: WSB repeatedly stated that he didn't love the drugs or their "kicks", he loved the addiction itself. Art for art's sake. Addiction for addiction's sake. He went through hell and he loved it, he felt right at home. And why not? After all, he wasn't a square or something. He was the avantgarde. Cronenberg's "Naked Lunch" is a movie from hell.
In the 1950s WSB wrote predominantly about his life as a drug addict - and about his lust for boys in South America and North Africa. It's quite drastic and depraved stuff, sometimes an actual horror story. He mixed reality with drug-induced hallucinations, peppering it with elements from the at that time still prevalent pulp fiction literature. In "Naked Lunch" WSB used the "cut-up technique" - the mostly random rearranged of text passages - to destroy every meaning that was still left, to turn his text into art, into the kind of literature professional critics liked. He did to literature what abstract expressionist, who dominated the art world in the 1950s, did to paintings. It was a street to nowhere, at that time labeled as "avantgarde".
Thankfully Cronenberg doesn't go there. He is doing the pulp fiction thing. On the surface, his film is about conspiracies, agents and aliens. The real story is the one of WSB's junkie life told in the world of his fever dreams as a drug addict.
The only reason why this film gets labeled as "Science Fiction" are the aliens, and these aliens are no aliens at all, they are demons. WSB was a true believer and practitioner of magic, and for many of such devotees UFOs and aliens are just explanations of demonic manifestations for a less religeous age. Cronenberg obviously did understand this. The two kinds of demons (aliens) are personifications of the two parts of the male anatomy WSB was fixated on.
A lot of thoughts went into the production of this movie. There are probably many allusions and innuendoes to discover, many symbols to decipher. But is it worth it? WSB as described by himself was a terrible human being, really the worst. Hating everybody, only living for his addictions, "accidentally" shooting his wife - yeah, that's the good life! Later on he actually wrote that this killing - that happened in 1951 in Mexico and for that he was never punished - did turn him into a writer. The movie promotes this idea in a way that's evil, demonic. The human sacrifice made him an author (Totally worth it!).
The book is not only much worse than the movie, having read it and knowing about WSB has a real negative impact on the perception of Cronenberg's work. It is no longer seen as being just strange and enigmatic. It's nothing less than repugnant. Sometimes art dies from knowledge.
The title sounds interesting - until it is explained by WSB himself: "naked lunch, a frozen moment when everyone sees what is on the end of every fork." It's nigh on impossible to talk more pretentious and silly than this. It gets worse than ridiculous: WSB repeatedly stated that he didn't love the drugs or their "kicks", he loved the addiction itself. Art for art's sake. Addiction for addiction's sake. He went through hell and he loved it, he felt right at home. And why not? After all, he wasn't a square or something. He was the avantgarde. Cronenberg's "Naked Lunch" is a movie from hell.
- xroo-73772
- Feb 4, 2023
- Permalink
This film of 'Naked Lunch' is the first of Cronenberg's Trilogy
of filming three of the most challenging literary works of the
20th Century, and arguably the most difficult... as anyone who's
read Burroughs' 1959 novel can attest, in conventional terms it
is a book without a cohesive plot or even structure, largely
assembled from the paranoid rambling letters of the world's most
notorious drug addict. Cronenberg's approach to the material is
ingenious in that he attempts to fictionalize the circumstances
under which the book was written rather than trying to weave a
storyline from the mass of twisted plot threads which comprise
the text. The cast is impeccable, particularly Peter Weller and Judy Davis
as the leads, Ian holm as a psuedo-Paul Bowles, and Cronenberg
regulars Robert A. Silverman as Hans and Nicholas Campbell as
Kerouac-ish Hank. Julian Sands and Roy Scheider don't quite
infuse their roles with the ridiculousness of their counterparts
from the novel, but their cameos are brief and don't detract
from the overall effect. The overall effect being a hypnotic, schizophrenic blend of
biography and folklore, equal parts Cronenberg and Burroughs, a
self-tortured portrait of the creative process. To the
director's credit, he relies on the script (his own) and the
performances over visual trickery or stock travelogue scenery to
set the mood and propel the action. The astonishing soundtrack,
by the superb Howard Shore, underscores the drug-filled malaise
of this Tangerine dream perfectly... it lacks any musical sense
of time and therefore hangs over the proceedings like a
mysterious haze. Haunting, powerful cinema... but most
definitely not for everyone. Wise up the marks before laying
this on them.
of filming three of the most challenging literary works of the
20th Century, and arguably the most difficult... as anyone who's
read Burroughs' 1959 novel can attest, in conventional terms it
is a book without a cohesive plot or even structure, largely
assembled from the paranoid rambling letters of the world's most
notorious drug addict. Cronenberg's approach to the material is
ingenious in that he attempts to fictionalize the circumstances
under which the book was written rather than trying to weave a
storyline from the mass of twisted plot threads which comprise
the text. The cast is impeccable, particularly Peter Weller and Judy Davis
as the leads, Ian holm as a psuedo-Paul Bowles, and Cronenberg
regulars Robert A. Silverman as Hans and Nicholas Campbell as
Kerouac-ish Hank. Julian Sands and Roy Scheider don't quite
infuse their roles with the ridiculousness of their counterparts
from the novel, but their cameos are brief and don't detract
from the overall effect. The overall effect being a hypnotic, schizophrenic blend of
biography and folklore, equal parts Cronenberg and Burroughs, a
self-tortured portrait of the creative process. To the
director's credit, he relies on the script (his own) and the
performances over visual trickery or stock travelogue scenery to
set the mood and propel the action. The astonishing soundtrack,
by the superb Howard Shore, underscores the drug-filled malaise
of this Tangerine dream perfectly... it lacks any musical sense
of time and therefore hangs over the proceedings like a
mysterious haze. Haunting, powerful cinema... but most
definitely not for everyone. Wise up the marks before laying
this on them.
If "Naked Lunch," the novel by William S. Burroughs, represents ultimate literary freedom (it would make the Marquis de Sade blush), David Cronenberg's "Naked Lunch" is a violent reaction to it. Freedom, not the book. The book is a beautiful work of art that exists outside the invented notions of law, religion, and reticence, just as much as it exists separate from past, present, or future. Any sense of guilt or shame experienced while reading the book is purely in the reader's mind, not on the page.
The movie is a different story. Since Burroughs wrote the book with an, er, "enhanced" mind, I figured I'd read it under the same conditions. So, maybe the plot in the movie is somewhere in the book, I just don't recall it. Anywho, the movie plot is a great springboard into the disparate shapes and pea soup- colored haze known as "Interzone." Cronenberg clearly is sharing his own experience of reading the book, mixing it with his knowledge of Beat history (including the world of Paul Bowles, the American ex-pat, living in Morocco, not an intimate part of the Beat generation) and his personal issues regarding sexuality. While Burroughs and his colleagues embraced homosexuality without much hesitation, Cronenberg isn't quite as comfortable with it, and makes it clear in his film. Not that Rev. Falwell or his ilk are putting it on their top 10 lists next to certain Mel Gibson or Charlton Heston projects. The movie is still sexy and seductive, mostly thanks to Weller, Davis, and, as always, the reliable Mr. Sands.
The movie is a different story. Since Burroughs wrote the book with an, er, "enhanced" mind, I figured I'd read it under the same conditions. So, maybe the plot in the movie is somewhere in the book, I just don't recall it. Anywho, the movie plot is a great springboard into the disparate shapes and pea soup- colored haze known as "Interzone." Cronenberg clearly is sharing his own experience of reading the book, mixing it with his knowledge of Beat history (including the world of Paul Bowles, the American ex-pat, living in Morocco, not an intimate part of the Beat generation) and his personal issues regarding sexuality. While Burroughs and his colleagues embraced homosexuality without much hesitation, Cronenberg isn't quite as comfortable with it, and makes it clear in his film. Not that Rev. Falwell or his ilk are putting it on their top 10 lists next to certain Mel Gibson or Charlton Heston projects. The movie is still sexy and seductive, mostly thanks to Weller, Davis, and, as always, the reliable Mr. Sands.
I was really looking forward to this movie, based on the trailer and what I had heard about Burroughs' writing (never read it myself though). And with Cronenberg and a great lead player, how can one go wrong??
Well, I tried hard -- twice, in fact -- but just couldn't get interested in it enough to stay awake. Cronenberg's special effects were imaginative and well-done, but it just wasn't enough to carry it off. For me, at least.
I don't know what went wrong. I did lots of drugs in the 60s, I love Cronenberg's work and I really wanted to like this one. Maybe it's me, but don't get your hopes up on this one. See it when it's free.
Well, I tried hard -- twice, in fact -- but just couldn't get interested in it enough to stay awake. Cronenberg's special effects were imaginative and well-done, but it just wasn't enough to carry it off. For me, at least.
I don't know what went wrong. I did lots of drugs in the 60s, I love Cronenberg's work and I really wanted to like this one. Maybe it's me, but don't get your hopes up on this one. See it when it's free.
- smokehill retrievers
- Jan 26, 2002
- Permalink
I'm always dubious when books I love are made into movies. They never QUITE translate and something is always lost. The idea of filming 'Naked Lunch' is even more difficult than usual, because it isn't really a novel with a coherent, chronological narrative, more a sequence of surreal, absurdly dark and funny "skits". As such it would be impossible to make a successful movie out of the raw material Burroughs created. Luckily Cronenberg (and who would have been better equipped to make this?) has cannily blended scenes from the book with incidents inspired by William Burroughs real life, and made it work. Very well.
Fans of Burroughs are sure to be more satisfied with this than the more literal and less imaginative 'Beat'. Non-fans will hopefully be inspired to read Burroughs' work after watching this. Peter Weller is perfectly cast as Bill Lee, and the supporting cast are also fine. I like most of Cronenberg's output, and I would rate 'Naked Lunch' as one of his most successful movies, and the best depiction so far of the Beat sensibility.
Fans of Burroughs are sure to be more satisfied with this than the more literal and less imaginative 'Beat'. Non-fans will hopefully be inspired to read Burroughs' work after watching this. Peter Weller is perfectly cast as Bill Lee, and the supporting cast are also fine. I like most of Cronenberg's output, and I would rate 'Naked Lunch' as one of his most successful movies, and the best depiction so far of the Beat sensibility.
I find it difficult to comment this movie, honestly. Without revealing anything, that is. This applies to comments only,as the evaluation would mostobviously be 10/10. You see, having read in one of the other comments here, that the movie contained an implication on heroin addiction, I expected to find something similar to "Requiem to a Dream" - a movie that leaves one single message and a bouquet of associated feelings in a viewer, with the message being DRUGS ARE BAD, in big friendly letters. I was wrong.
I guess those who enjoy psychedelic music will understand what I want to say better - this movie has a high. Not literally of course, but it does leave you in a different world, with lots of ideas, without any definite beginning or end. It is very, very weird, in the most positive, awesome meaning of the word. Definitely not another conformist movie with a moralistic message behind it. Which is a good thing, really, because we don't get a lot of that nowadays, and 1991 isn't that far away....
The only thing about it is that you either love it or hate it. Nothing in between.
I find it quite impossible to add anything without revealing the plot. Therefore the only thing I'm going to say is: watch it! Not the best movie in the world, but most certainly the strangest one, at least from my point of view.
I guess those who enjoy psychedelic music will understand what I want to say better - this movie has a high. Not literally of course, but it does leave you in a different world, with lots of ideas, without any definite beginning or end. It is very, very weird, in the most positive, awesome meaning of the word. Definitely not another conformist movie with a moralistic message behind it. Which is a good thing, really, because we don't get a lot of that nowadays, and 1991 isn't that far away....
The only thing about it is that you either love it or hate it. Nothing in between.
I find it quite impossible to add anything without revealing the plot. Therefore the only thing I'm going to say is: watch it! Not the best movie in the world, but most certainly the strangest one, at least from my point of view.
A writer becomes addicted to bug powder, and accidentally kills his wife, who was also heavily addicted to the nocuous substance.
I'll be honest, the recent, tragic death of the late Julian Sands brought me here, I always think of him when I watch this film, and he plays an important role in this curious tale.
What appears on the surface as a film about bizarre alien creatures, strange drugs and a bizarre reality, is actually more profoundly about addiction, it has taken me many years to understand exactly what's going on.
I do think the appeal of this film is slightly more 'niche' than general, it's not one with mass appeal, it will very likely frustrate the casual viewer, but I applaud the originality, and let's be honest, the source material is not what you'd call light reading.
There is no way on Earth this film looks like it was made over thirty years ago, it still looks incredible, it defies time.
I've gained an appreciation for this film in recent years.
7/10.
I'll be honest, the recent, tragic death of the late Julian Sands brought me here, I always think of him when I watch this film, and he plays an important role in this curious tale.
What appears on the surface as a film about bizarre alien creatures, strange drugs and a bizarre reality, is actually more profoundly about addiction, it has taken me many years to understand exactly what's going on.
I do think the appeal of this film is slightly more 'niche' than general, it's not one with mass appeal, it will very likely frustrate the casual viewer, but I applaud the originality, and let's be honest, the source material is not what you'd call light reading.
There is no way on Earth this film looks like it was made over thirty years ago, it still looks incredible, it defies time.
I've gained an appreciation for this film in recent years.
7/10.
- Sleepin_Dragon
- Sep 2, 2023
- Permalink
A lot of people have already covered all the bases on why the movie is good. Now I'd like to express why the 37 dollar price tag is worth it.
Firstly, the finest and most movie enhancing directer commentary ever made. Cronenberg and Weller are entertaining and informative, and they left me wanting to watch the movie again, equipped with a deeper understanding of this classic film. You also get a whole second disk of special features including hundreds of photos from the movie and of Burroughs and friends,The making of the movie, and Naked lunch read by Burroughs himself in all its obscene glory. This DVD is a class act and truly it is how any great movie should be treated.
Criterion also uses the finest in today's technology to restore and transfer the original masters to DVD. They went as far as to consult the director for his approval. The sound is also perfected to crystal clarity.
In conclusion... You aren't getting ripped off for 37 dollars. In fact, you are getting such an amazing deal it's beyond words.
Firstly, the finest and most movie enhancing directer commentary ever made. Cronenberg and Weller are entertaining and informative, and they left me wanting to watch the movie again, equipped with a deeper understanding of this classic film. You also get a whole second disk of special features including hundreds of photos from the movie and of Burroughs and friends,The making of the movie, and Naked lunch read by Burroughs himself in all its obscene glory. This DVD is a class act and truly it is how any great movie should be treated.
Criterion also uses the finest in today's technology to restore and transfer the original masters to DVD. They went as far as to consult the director for his approval. The sound is also perfected to crystal clarity.
In conclusion... You aren't getting ripped off for 37 dollars. In fact, you are getting such an amazing deal it's beyond words.
- chefpasta1
- Jun 19, 2005
- Permalink
This movie IS NUTS! But I live for it, anyway. Cronemberg is a god, but I got dizzy on this acid trip. This movie is really metaphoric, confusing, and abrasive. It definitely needs to be watched more than once and also needs to be studied.
- Fernando-Rodrigues
- Mar 23, 2021
- Permalink
- marshallwang
- Mar 3, 2020
- Permalink
I'm a huge fan of Hunter S Thompson, but found the film of Fear and Loathing to be a poor substitute for the book, and have wondered ever since whether the "unfilmability" of such craziness is inherent.... Perhaps because one's own mental images will always trump someone else's visual interpretations?
I'm less fond of William Burroughs, but *have* read and enjoyed Naked Lunch and, despite also being a big Cronenberg fan felt very much the same way with this film version. It's "ok" but I was often bored and finding it difficult to ascribe some narrative to it, while enjoying some of the visuals. It's been 40 years since I read the book, so I really don't know how faithful to the book I feel it is but, just like the effect of watching other people get off their faces on something, it really didn't engage me.
Glad I've finally seen it - but not recommended, really.
I'm less fond of William Burroughs, but *have* read and enjoyed Naked Lunch and, despite also being a big Cronenberg fan felt very much the same way with this film version. It's "ok" but I was often bored and finding it difficult to ascribe some narrative to it, while enjoying some of the visuals. It's been 40 years since I read the book, so I really don't know how faithful to the book I feel it is but, just like the effect of watching other people get off their faces on something, it really didn't engage me.
Glad I've finally seen it - but not recommended, really.
- derek-duerden
- Dec 4, 2022
- Permalink
- poolandrews
- May 2, 2009
- Permalink
An exterminator becomes addicted to the substance that he uses to kill bugs, and accidentally ends up murdering his own wife. This leads to him becoming involved in a secret government plot in a port town in North Africa, seemingly orchestrated by giant bugs.
William S. Burroughs is one of those three influential writers known collectively as the Beat Generation (the other two being Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac), and this film – and the book its adapted from – is one of the reasons why. Partly autobiographical, partly the absurdity of Burroughs imagination, 'Naked Lunch' is an excellent film.
As you watch the film, it's difficult not to be taken aback by its sheer zaniness and surreal nature; however, it's fascinating to find out that, under those layers of fantasy, Burroughs is recounting stories from his own life. Drug addiction; the accidental murder of his wife; the need to escape from the glare of city life – these were all things that Burroughs endured himself and subsequently penned down. But in pure Burroughs fashion, the author adds some mutant bugs and a crazy plot to spice it up.
And then you add Cronenberg to the equation, who himself is famed for his outrageous and sometimes ridiculous films. Cronenberg manages to bring Burroughs' vision to life in a very strong way, keeping the film moving at a frenetic pace and never really letting the viewer feel like they finally have a grasp of what is going on. At each turn, the film takes a new, unexpected twist, and we're all the better for it.
But the best thing about the film is Paul Weller. Between typewriter-shaped cockroaches and insane hallucinogenic experiences, Weller somehow instils a level of gravitas. Maybe it's his everyman good looks, or his ability to seemingly move through every scene with a quiet presence, but Weller (as lead character Bill) makes you believe in the world. Through everything that he does, you stay on his side, and that gives this strange film it's emotional core.
This is not Cronenberg's best film, I think, but 'Naked Lunch' definitely ranks up there as one of the better ones. The absurdity of it all had the potential to be off-putting; but bring together the intimacy of Burroughs' writing, the imaginative Cronenberg direction, and Weller's grounded performance, and you have a brilliantly made movie. Watch it.
William S. Burroughs is one of those three influential writers known collectively as the Beat Generation (the other two being Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac), and this film – and the book its adapted from – is one of the reasons why. Partly autobiographical, partly the absurdity of Burroughs imagination, 'Naked Lunch' is an excellent film.
As you watch the film, it's difficult not to be taken aback by its sheer zaniness and surreal nature; however, it's fascinating to find out that, under those layers of fantasy, Burroughs is recounting stories from his own life. Drug addiction; the accidental murder of his wife; the need to escape from the glare of city life – these were all things that Burroughs endured himself and subsequently penned down. But in pure Burroughs fashion, the author adds some mutant bugs and a crazy plot to spice it up.
And then you add Cronenberg to the equation, who himself is famed for his outrageous and sometimes ridiculous films. Cronenberg manages to bring Burroughs' vision to life in a very strong way, keeping the film moving at a frenetic pace and never really letting the viewer feel like they finally have a grasp of what is going on. At each turn, the film takes a new, unexpected twist, and we're all the better for it.
But the best thing about the film is Paul Weller. Between typewriter-shaped cockroaches and insane hallucinogenic experiences, Weller somehow instils a level of gravitas. Maybe it's his everyman good looks, or his ability to seemingly move through every scene with a quiet presence, but Weller (as lead character Bill) makes you believe in the world. Through everything that he does, you stay on his side, and that gives this strange film it's emotional core.
This is not Cronenberg's best film, I think, but 'Naked Lunch' definitely ranks up there as one of the better ones. The absurdity of it all had the potential to be off-putting; but bring together the intimacy of Burroughs' writing, the imaginative Cronenberg direction, and Weller's grounded performance, and you have a brilliantly made movie. Watch it.
- jafar-iqbal
- Nov 27, 2013
- Permalink
I didn't think a movie's vibes could be quite this bad, so for that, I guess I have to have a small and begrudgingly amount of respect for Naked Lunch. It's effectively bizarre and unpleasant to sit through, but also does that in a way that I found weirdly boring. It's the sort of movie where I couldn't wait for it to be over, because I wasn't getting anything out of it, beyond the baseline "this is making me feel uncomfortable/bad."
It's the kind of Cronenberg film I really don't like, and the sort that makes me wonder how I've liked other films of his in the past (we're going back some years now, so maybe I've changed). He's a filmmaker who I find too frustrating; his movie's too stiff and annoyingly vague to the point where I sometimes wonder whether he is trying to say anything, and if he was, if he could say it a little clearer.
Speaking of speaking clearly, Peter Weller sure loved not doing that throughout this film. The mumbling drove me nuts. Made me wish I'd had subtitles.
It's the kind of Cronenberg film I really don't like, and the sort that makes me wonder how I've liked other films of his in the past (we're going back some years now, so maybe I've changed). He's a filmmaker who I find too frustrating; his movie's too stiff and annoyingly vague to the point where I sometimes wonder whether he is trying to say anything, and if he was, if he could say it a little clearer.
Speaking of speaking clearly, Peter Weller sure loved not doing that throughout this film. The mumbling drove me nuts. Made me wish I'd had subtitles.
- Jeremy_Urquhart
- Aug 26, 2023
- Permalink