Skip to main content

CNN CNN Entertainment

Review: 'Splice' is cheeky creature feature

By Lisa Schwarzbaum, EW.com
t1larg.splice.warner.jpg
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • "Splice" can trace its cinematic ancestry back to Frankenstein
  • Adrien Brody and Sarah Polley bring attractive intelligence to the characters
  • Dren is played to novelty perfection by French actress Delphine Chanéac
RELATED TOPICS

(EW.com) -- Like an exciting experimental genetic strain bred of time-tested DNA, the cool, unwieldy sci-fi horror-thriller "Splice" (in theaters June 4) can trace its cinematic ancestry back to Frankenstein.

Yet as co-written and directed with obsessive passion by Vincenzo Natali (Cube), the movie is a cheeky, great-looking, thoughtfully loopy creature feature about the lure and dangers of cutting-edge gene splicing.

Adrien Brody and Sarah Polley bring intensity and attractive intelligence to the characters of Clive and Elsa (a little joke allusion to "Bride of Frankenstein"), romantically linked hotshot genetic engineers who, when thwarted by the pharmaceutical company that funds them, conceive their greatest hybrid experiment in secret.

And behold, their test-tube fiddling gives life to Dren, a creature that's part human and part...thing, with long, hinged bird legs and retractable wings.

EW: See all of this week's reviews

Played to novelty perfection by French actress Delphine Chanéac, Dren (another wink -- that's ''nerd'' backward) is everything amazing and unholy about the human ability to mess with creation.

The outstanding creature effects by Howard Berger only get more astonishing as Splice splits into an eerie horror picture, then divides again into something out of "Rosemary's Baby."

EW's grade: A-

Limited Release: June 04, 2010
Rated: R
Length: 104 Minutes
Genre: Sci-fi
With: Adrien Brody and Sarah Polley

CLICK HERE to Try 2 RISK FREE issues of Entertainment Weekly

© 2010 Entertainment Weekly and Time Inc. All rights reserved.

Quick Job Search