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SPLICE
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Normally a Frankenstein tale such as this would be quick to dole out the roles of antagonist and protagonist, but the positions constantly shift as Dren is a small experiment gone awry who becomes the protagonist while Polley's wicked performance as Elsa goes from maternal and loving to insane and often times megalomaniacal. He ultimate motive for Dren remains very ambiguous throughout the story as she posits many pieces of the puzzle for the audience to assemble. As Dren (the lovely Delphine Chanéac) finds her role as the female counterpart in the triangle going from child, to angry teenager, to hormonally charged sexual being whose own unusual features and raw unabashed sexual curiosity keeps Clive coming back to discover if he wants to be a paternal protector or a lover. Dren is an utterly fascinating character one who is both enticing and rather lethal with intentions you can never pin point no matter how much you think you may know her in certain instances. Where vulnerability enters, her temper tantrums leave a path of innocent bodies, and once she forms in to this unique creature, she is fully aware of her motives. Like Dren, our human characters know what their objective is in the beginning and as they blossom, they're emotionally and physically confused to where their loyalties and urges lie. Dren is unfortunately a symbol for the mysteries of humanity and when posed as a combination of DNA from other species it becomes almost a Lovecraftian figure, something of grace and beauty that's also insanely deadly with a talon like stinger that poses as a form of protection and as a phallic element that holds the key to what Dren's ultimate intent is in the end that isn't revealed until the final scene. What dumbfounded these geniuses amounts to nothing more than simple human function. With the shadow of the pharmaceutical industry as a symbol for the cause of Dren's erratic tendencies, "Splice" is a rather engrossing and compelling dissection of parenting in the hands of two utterly mad individuals whose own lack of identity lead them down a path of pure hell and unbridled violence.
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