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Crimes of the Future poster

Surgery is the new sex.

Crimes of the Future (2022)

May 25, 20221h 47mEN
6.0

1.3K votes

Official Site

Overview

With his partner, a celebrity performance artist publicly showcases the metamorphosis of his organs in avant-garde performances. An investigator from the National Organ Registry obsessively tracks their movements, which is when a mysterious group is revealed... Their mission — to use the artist's notoriety to shed light on the next phase of human evolution.

Where to Watch

Streaming availability for India

Stream

MUBIMUBI Amazon Channel

Rent

Amazon Video
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Top Billed Cast

Status

Released

Original Language

Spanish

Budget

$27.0M

Revenue

$4.6M

Production Companies

Serendipity Point FilmsTéléfilm CanadaIngenious MediaArgonauts ProductionsRocketScienceWiffle Films

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User Reviews

the_blueeyes

Nonsensical incoherent movie that was hard to watch, and i turned it off after 30 min. It clearly written with a good amount of shock value, but the only shock i got was my finger to press "off" button. Cronenberg has made some good body horror in the past, but this was just rubbish.

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

6.0

Whilst certainly nowhere near his best, this is still quite an intriguing drama from David Cronenberg. It all centres around "Saul Tenser" (Viggo Mortensen) who uses his own body to grow (or "cook") extra organs which he and his assistant "Caprice" (Léa Seydoux) extract as part of rather gruesome, but popular, theatrical performances. Meantime, "Dotrice" (Scott Speedman) is reeling from the suffocation of his young plastic-eating son (by his own wife) and so convinces the exhibitionists that an autopsy revealing the internal digestive organs of this most unusual of mutations would make for exc…

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Manuel São Bento

7.0

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://www.msbreviews.com/opinion-pieces/what-do-both-dont-worry-darling-and-crimes-of-the-future-have-in-common "Personally, I believe that cinematic narratives with multiple plot points and questions related to the world itself are too often confused and envisioned as character studies driven by a single protagonist. Both Olivia Wilde and David Cronenberg complete their movies when the main character fulfills the minimum requirements of their arc, consequently renouncing all other equally significant issues worthy of in-depth exploration. In the case of Don'…

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