David Cronenberg had to remove some shots of a sexual nature and shorten other, violent scenes in order to secure an R rating. Most notably, Max and Nicki's sex scene originally lasted much longer and included Max piercing Nicki's ear multiple times; the scene originally ended with Max fantasizing that the two are having sex on the Videodrome set. (Ironically, some of the sex scene was edited not for sexual content, but due to the torture sequence playing on the TV behind Max)
The unrated version of the film is fully uncut.
It is worth noting that there actually exists a third cut of the film, put together by Universal without Cronenberg's input, that aired at least once on Toronto television in the 1980s. While omitting all of the material that would normally be edited for a television broadcast, this version also includes deleted scenes that have never appeared in any cut of the film (or been made available on DVD), including an alternate version of Max's ride to Spectacular Optical, in which he is accompanied by a still-living Nicki Brand.
The unrated version of the film is fully uncut.
It is worth noting that there actually exists a third cut of the film, put together by Universal without Cronenberg's input, that aired at least once on Toronto television in the 1980s. While omitting all of the material that would normally be edited for a television broadcast, this version also includes deleted scenes that have never appeared in any cut of the film (or been made available on DVD), including an alternate version of Max's ride to Spectacular Optical, in which he is accompanied by a still-living Nicki Brand.
Quite possibly, that the girl has the Electra complex, which is the female equivalent to Freud's Oedipus complex. In a nutshell, she lusts after her father and resents her mother; wants to kill her. Vice versa for the Oedipus theory.
The old British VHS by CIC was cut by 3 minutes although it was based on the shorter R-Rated version anyway. Several scenes involving violence and/or sex were removed.
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- How long is Videodrome?1 hour and 27 minutes
- When was Videodrome released?February 4, 1983
- What is the IMDb rating of Videodrome?7.2 out of 10
- Who stars in Videodrome?
- Who wrote Videodrome?
- Who directed Videodrome?
- Who was the composer for Videodrome?
- Who was the producer of Videodrome?
- Who was the executive producer of Videodrome?
- Who was the cinematographer for Videodrome?
- Who was the editor of Videodrome?
- Who are the characters in Videodrome?Max Renn, Bianca O'Blivion, Nicki Brand, Harlan, Barry Convex, Brian O'Blivion, Masha, Bridey, Moses, Raphael, and others
- What is the plot of Videodrome?A programmer at a Toronto TV station that specializes in adult entertainment searches for the producers of a dangerous and bizarre broadcast.
- What was the budget for Videodrome?$5.952 million
- How much did Videodrome earn at the worldwide box office?$2.13 million
- How much did Videodrome earn at the US box office?$2.12 million
- What is Videodrome rated?TV-MA
- What genre is Videodrome?Drama, Horror, Sci-Fi, and Thriller
- How many awards has Videodrome won?3 awards
- How many awards has Videodrome been nominated for?10 nominations
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