David Cronenberg's 1986 remake of THE FLY is frequently cited as one of the best movie remakes ever. The original is a good and cheesy '50s bug horror movie that ends on a surprisingly poignant note, but the Cronenberg cranks everything about that to a delightfully disgusting and seriously heart-wrenching 11. Honestly, this movie has one of the most devastating endings ever, and it's bombastic in a way that is just on the brink of being unintentionally funny, but then is not. It's just brutal. People mostly remember it for its Academy Award-winning makeup utilized in creating the nauseatingly gruesome transformation of brilliant scientist Seth Brundle (Jeff Goldblum) into a giant mutant housefly. Brundle is introduced as a socially inept but genius scientist-inventor who persuades a skeptical journalist named Veronica Quaife (Geena Daivs) to come back to his warehouse home/laboratory where he shows off his latest work: a pair of "telepods" that can instantaneously transfer physical matter from a pod on one side of the room to the other. He offers her the exclusive scoop, but the telepods aren't yet ready, and still can't successfully transfer living tissue. As their working relationship develops, he continuing to work on the machines and she recording the process for her story, Seth and Veronica begin an intimate relationship as well. One night, while drunk, he decides to finally test the telepods with himself, but he doesn't notice the tiny housefly that has slipped into the pod with him. While his atoms are broken down in the pod, so are the fly's, and both are reintegrated together on a molecular level when they come out the other side, but he doesn't recognize it at first. He feels strong, healthy and powerful, and he is much stronger, with his stamina having increased exponentially. All he wants to do is have sex and eat. He believes the teleportation process has had a 'purifying' effect on his body, and he desperately wants Veronica to try it too, but she refuses. Then, he starts getting himself into trouble, what with ruthlessly snapping a man's arm during an arm wrestling contest, and he develops lesions while fingernails, teeth and other body parts start to fall away. He's losing his human empathy and reason, while the fly's primitive instincts take over, and eventually, he'll be unrecognizable as a human.
Meanwhile, Veronica is stuck with the situation of having had so much sex with the "Brundlefly" when she thought he was regular Brundle, and now she's pregnant.
In the most "Cronenbergian" scene of the movie, Veronica has a gruesome nightmare where she gives birth to a giant, human baby-sized maggot, and understandably, she makes a beeline to a doctor's office in the middle of the night to have an abortion. Yeesh, abortion; is there a more polarizing topic than that? Politicians and activists divide themselves up into "pro-life" and "pro-choice", because no reasonable but otherwise uninformed person is going to hear the words 'life' or 'choice' and be against either? C'mon! The pro-life position, or "anti-choice" as their opponents sometimes call them, is a fairly easy one to make and basically comes down to being against murdering babies. They might as well be protesting people sodomizing puppies. No healthy human being is in favor of sodomizing puppies, and no normal human being is in favor of murdering babies. However, life is complicated, and situations of rape, incest, risk to the mother or, in rare cases, impregnation by Brundlefly do occur, and those are solid arguments on the the pro-choice side, or as their opponents might call them, baby murderers. 'Choice' as an issue is trickier to defend if you're not a woman who genuinely feels the need to have an abortion right now. Practically every person is intensely in favor of their own individual right to choose for themselves, but we're all a lot stricter when it comes to the choices of others.
Now, it may have only been a nightmare, but in a movie where a man is gradually transforming into a giant fly, there's a healthy chance that Geena Davis is carrying a horrifying giant maggot in her womb. This is just a guess, but I suspect even most anti-abortion hardliners probably wouldn't be against this particular abortion, but we're working with metaphors here, so bear with me.
Being of the not-a-woman persuasion, I'm particularly unlikely to ever personally want an abortion myself, but that doesn't mean haven't given some thought to the issue. It's a pain though, because if you haven't already dug yourself in with the talking points of either end of the spectrum, it's so easy to become caught in a never-ending loop of moral relativism and moral equivalences. If it's about when life begins, I start thinking about the TV commercial for anti-bacterial Kleenex tissues where a stereotypical Himalayan monk sneezes into a tissue and is horrified to realize how many living creatures he just killed. Technically, a fertilized egg is a form of human life in that it's comprised of multiplying cells with human DNA, but human cells multiply into a lot of things, tumors, for instance. The difference is that these zygotes, embryos and fetuses all have the potential to develop into a viable human being. So do sperms and eggs for that matter, and then you fall into that weird "Every Sperm is Sacred" territory. It just goes on and on and on.
Geena Davis's character is so desperate, she calls up her skeezy ex to take her to the doctor, and the doctor is bewildered, asking why it's so urgent that she requested to seem him in the middle of the night. "Because I don't want it in my body! I don't want it inside my body!" she shouts between sobs. I was watching that, and it suddenly clicked for me. Their bodies. Like, holy crap. I've heard the arguments that laws restricting abortion were made by old white men trying to legislate women's bodies, but it hadn't resonated for me the same way until this moment while watching this ultra-gory monster movie. This is about something inside and using up a woman's body, something she didn't want, maybe which she can't afford either financially, emotionally or physically, and should she be forced (mind you, not merely encouraged to but forced) to provide herself as a human life support system?
I mean, it's still a complicated issue, but even then, no matter how hard you try, you can't actually force that on anyone. People will try to find an alternative, so that alternative needs to be safe and available. People don't have abortions for abortions' sake; in this increasingly bizarre world, I suppose there may be an exception out there, but women don't intentionally get pregnant so that they can have an abortion. I suppose you could say that if they can't afford to have a child then they shouldn't be having sex, but then again, if you can't afford a car accident, maybe you shouldn't be driving anywhere. It's a cruel and vindictive argument, and a standard that most people would not hold themselves to. If it's practical for a woman to carry a pregnancy to term and then give the child up for adoption, that's probably a more desirable option than terminating the pregnancy, but if it isn't practical, it's not right to put that all on the individual woman."Should a woman be forced to provide her own body as a life support system?"
The idea of heavily discouraging the abortion option is troubling too, because there are cases where it really is the best option for a person, and they shouldn't be made to feel bad for doing what's right in their situation. The issue of what constitutes sentient human life between gametes, zygotes, embryos and fetuses is still a frustrating one, and while it would open a whole new massive and absurd can of ethical worms, if fetuses not viable outside the uterus could be sustained in an artificial womb, maybe that would be more desirable (that's a huge-ass 'maybe', I recognize the risibility of this hypothetical). As long as it's entirely reliant on the woman's body, though, it has to come down to the individual woman. When a person is being kept clinically alive by a life support system, we trust the family or whoever to determine whether or not to maintain life support, and heaven knows where the line between life and death in regards to a beating heart and an inactive brain. A healthy pregnancy that a woman may feel the need to terminate is different, admittedly, in that a continued course will naturally lead to viable life, but a woman should probably be allowed to decide whether her body will be used as a life support system at whichever time. But I'm only talking about abortions in respect to otherwise healthy pregnancies. In cases of pregnancies that risk the life to the mother, I'm all for it and trying again another time. For now, people who claim to be "pro-life" should be in favor of responsibly caring for life throughout its course and not only in its creation, and the falsehoods and blatant manipulations will only hurt their cause in the long run. Anyway, that's what I took away from THE FLY."If you can't afford a car accident, maybe you shouldn't be driving anywhere either."
THE FLY
(HORROR/SCI-FI, 1986)
Directed by David Cronenberg
Written by Charles Edward Pogue & David Cronenberg
Starring: Jeff Goldblum, Geena Davis, John Getz, Joy Boushel, Leslie Carlson, George Chuvalo, Mike Copeman, David Cronenberg, Carol Lazare, Shawn Hewitt
Rated R for unspecified reasons (disturbing violent content and gore, sexuality and language).
96 minutes