![splice creature splice creature](https://i1.wp.com/aftercredits.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/SpliceFeat.jpg)
Here, the movie's sophisticated visual effects - a blend of traditional prosthetics and digital manipulation, imaginatively engaging without waving their price tags at us - begin to unfold. Clive is reluctant, but he finally agrees to press the fusion button, and soon there's a bizarre new resident in their outsize laboratory incubator - a being that starts evolving toward maturity at breathtaking speed. Unbeknown to their creators, these grotesque creatures have suddenly mutated, and soon, the shareholders are splattered with blood (or whatever) and possibly reconsidering their investment strategies.īack in the couple's lab, Elsa keeps pushing for the human-animal DNA mix - if they don't do it, she says, citing the default scientific rationale, somebody else will (and will reap all the glory. Things start going wrong early on, when Clive and Elsa unveil their latest animal creations - two big slug-like entities they've nicknamed Fred and Ginger - at a meeting of the pharmaceutical company's shareholders. The main characters' names are a cute nod to Colin Clive and Elsa Lanchester, the stars of the 1935 "Bride of Frankenstein," and at one point in this film someone actually shouts - like Colin Clive in the previous 1931 "Frankenstein" - "It's alive!" But Natali follows the traditional nightmare premise - mere humans playing God in a quest to create life - into morally complex areas, from the deluded hubris of such a quest to issues of nature versus nurture, the sanctity of life versus the seemingly justifiable need to terminate it, and - most creepily - interspecies sexual attraction. The Frankenstein template is frankly acknowledged by director and co-writer Vincenzo Natali ("Cube"). So Clive and Elsa decide to secretly create a human-animal hybrid on their own. But when they approach the pharmaceutical company that funds their work with a proposal to add human DNA into the mix, the company, fearing public outrage, forbids them to do it. Clive (Adrien Brody) and Elsa (Sarah Polley) are two hotshot genetic engineers (and lovers) who've earned their reputations by splicing animal DNA to create strange new creatures to produce new proteins that can be patented for medical use. The picture seems like a simple Frankenstein tale at the outset.
#SPLICE CREATURE MOVIE#
"Splice" is a surprising sci-fi movie that raises more unsettling issues than you'd expect - it keeps raising new ones past the point where you'd think the filmmakers would have run out of them.