Possessor: Son of Cronenberg directs one of this year’s most jarring films

Review: Self is a precarious, ill-defined thing in this movie with Sean Bean and Jennifer Jason Leigh

Melting faces, gory murders and alienated sex scenes augment an already unsettling science fiction.
Melting faces, gory murders and alienated sex scenes augment an already unsettling science fiction.
Possessor
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Director: Brandon Cronenberg
Cert: Club
Genre: Sci-Fi
Starring: Andrea Riseborough, Christopher Abbott, Rossif Sutherland, Tuppence Middleton, Sean Bean, Jennifer Jason Leigh
Running Time: 1 hr 44 mins

Bodily betrayals marry tech conspiracy theories in this unnerving second feature from Brandon Cronenberg.

Tasya Vos (Andrea Riseborough) is the star employee at a shadowy company that uses body-possessing biotechnology to enact corporate assassinations. The cracks begin to show after a hit leaves a young possessed black woman gunned down by police. Tasya’s supervisor (Jennifer Jason Leigh) wonders why she used a knife instead of a gun in a recent hit. A visit to her estranged husband and young son requires Tasya to rehearse her lines in order to play herself.

Her latest assignment – to take over the body of Colin Tate (Christopher Abbott), the future son-in-law of corporate rival James Parse (Sean Bean) – further jeopardises Tasya’s grasp on reality. In Colin, she finds a dangerous adversary, one who is willing to do battle to maintain his identity even after she has possessed him.

Cinematographer Karim Hussein’s striking post-Argento red-drenched visuals help make this a movie for the daring of mind, not the faint of heart.
Cinematographer Karim Hussein’s striking post-Argento red-drenched visuals help make this a movie for the daring of mind, not the faint of heart.

Melting faces, gory murders and alienated sex scenes augment an already unsettling science fiction. Sean Bean has never been more intimidating, Riseborough is as jittery as the freaky dream visuals. Christopher Abbot (It Comes at Night, Piercing) is remarkable as the beleaguered host body.

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It’s impossible not to think of the writer-director’s father, David Cronenberg, and such groundbreaking body horrors as Videodrome and Existenz. (That overlap is amplified by the presence of Jennifer Jason Leigh, who headlined Existenz.)

As with those films, the younger Cronenberg plays with the interfaces between madness, method and modernity. Self is a precarious, ill-defined thing in Possessor. Never mind the technobabble: this is a new tweak on the older nightmares found in everything from James Hogg’s Confessions of a Justified Sinner to The Manchurian Candidate.

Cinematographer Karim Hussein’s striking post-Argento red-drenched visuals, Jim Williams jump-making score, subliminal edits, and old-school spurting practical effects make this one of this year’s most jarring viewing experiences. For the daring of mind, not the faint of heart.

Tara Brady

Tara Brady

Tara Brady, a contributor to The Irish Times, is a writer and film critic