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Camera

  • 2000
  • 6m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2K
YOUR RATING
Camera (2000)
DramaShort

While a veteran actor laments the state of film and film acting, a group of young children sneak a Panavision camera into the apartment where the actor resides and decide to make a film with... Read allWhile a veteran actor laments the state of film and film acting, a group of young children sneak a Panavision camera into the apartment where the actor resides and decide to make a film with it.While a veteran actor laments the state of film and film acting, a group of young children sneak a Panavision camera into the apartment where the actor resides and decide to make a film with it.

  • Director
    • David Cronenberg
  • Writer
    • David Cronenberg
  • Stars
    • Leslie Carlson
    • Marc Donato
    • Harrison Kane
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Cronenberg
    • Writer
      • David Cronenberg
    • Stars
      • Leslie Carlson
      • Marc Donato
      • Harrison Kane
    • 17User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast10

    Edit
    Leslie Carlson
    Leslie Carlson
    • The Actor
    Marc Donato
    Marc Donato
    • Child
    Harrison Kane
    • Child
    Stephanie Sams
    • Child
    Kyle Kass
    Kyle Kass
    • Child
    • (as Kyle Kassardjian)
    Katie Lai
    • Child
    Natasha La Force
    • Child
    • (as Natasha LaForce)
    Danny Mags
    Danny Mags
    • Child
    • (as Daniel Magder)
    Chloe Randle-Reis
    • Child
    • (as Chloe Reis)
    Camille Shniffer
    • Child
    • Director
      • David Cronenberg
    • Writer
      • David Cronenberg
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.92K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    8gavin6942

    A Subtle Yet Brilliant Film From Cronenberg

    While a veteran actor (Leslie Carlson) laments the state of film and film acting, a group of young children sneak a Panavision camera into the apartment where the actor resides and decide to make a film with it.

    While I understand that the inspiration for this film comes from a childhood dream that Cronenberg had, I am not at all clear on why he apparently made it much later in life and threw it on as an extra for "Videodrome". But it is interesting to note that Cronenberg in 2000 is not the man he was in, say, 1980. He has increasingly moved away from experimental film and is today (2013) largely mainstream. This same film made in 1980 would have likely had a very different -- perhaps surgical -- feel to it.

    What is the message (if there is one)? Hard to say. Clearly it is about youth, aging, death, and the world of film and photography. But how does the camera affect aging? The common belief seems to be that photos keep us young forever, but the man in this film says almost the exact opposite...
    10ZiggyFloydZeppelin

    Cronenbergs short little masterpiece

    I saw this short on youtube and have watched it twice and probably will watch it again. Camera deals with an aging actor that has passed his prime, both in life and career vise. The old man talks to the screen about life, acting and the effects a camera that ,,the children" brought home will have on them all. He speaks about the camera as it were a curse that would destroy them all as the children make the camera and other film equipment ready to film the old man.

    In over six minutes Cronenberg manages smoothly to summon up the most common human flaw: fear, and its effect. As soon as the old man finishes talking about the terrible effect the camera will have on them and the children start filming the old man starts lying and the short film changes from being realistic to being a fraud.

    After watching this film I finally ,,discovered" Cronenberg and what it is that he has been trying to say with pretty much all of his films. Cronenberg has dedicated his career into revealing the ugliness behind mechanism by connecting it with monstrous things such as the scientist who becomes a fly, the victims of a car crash who become perverse, the TV producer who becomes illusional, computer game players who can't separate the game from reality, the exterminator who starts sniffing bug spray and also becomes illusional and can't separate truth from imagination, and most of his other work like in Dead Ringers, Scanners and The Dead Zone and probably in his older work that I have yet not reviewed. They are all trying to examine the horrifying side of machinery and the cause it will have on us in the end. Camera is the piece of film that made me realise the genius of David Cronenberg, even though I had loved most of the films I have seen by him I now have a more profound respect for him and I'm going to watch all of his work that I can get my hands into.

    Camera - 10 out of 10.
    10antoniomt_2000

    Some thoughts on the analytical point of view

    I just recently watched camera for the first time (there showing it on www.lovefilm.com for free).

    What i gathered that this film somewhere along the line parallels with cronenberg's life (just speculation). Les carlson (the old man) seems to talk about the anxieties of not working and that the thoughts/dreams or physicality of the film world keeps him motivated and feeling less anxious. we also see the kids (these are the secondary subject, or maybe the primary)as they plod along setting up the camera but not in a childlike or juvenile way, they rig, set up the mixing boards, set the lights and rig the camera completely. Some thoughts on this subject made me think of the new generation of filmmakers Cronenberg has to encounter (he also could be calling new filmmakers 'Kids', but this illustrates a more profound answer - maybe they are not, and they are taking over). I mainly state this as the solution to the old man talking as the kids are setting everything up around him - he doesn't notice whats going on, he's to busy talking about his own problems and the fact that he is a retired actor.

    you really have to watch the film to get what I mean.

    It could also just be a fragment of cronenbergs sense of humour.

    I hope more people watch this short film and offer their thoughts as to its subtext and maybe even symbolism.
    6movieman_kev

    Confronting mortality

    This 6 minute short film directed by David Cronenberg, which can be viewed on the Criterion Collection 2-disc DVD of "Videodrome" has an elder actor (Genre great Leslie Carlson) coming to terms with his own waning mortality after a group of young children find an old Panavision camera and wish to film him with it. He goes into a monologue about how he distrusts this camera equating it with death. For some reason I felt it was Cronenberg himself trying to express his thoughts and fears. The short itself is a tad impenetrable and difficult to derive any specific meaning from and although I did think it was good. it's not one of his better works. Despite (or maybe because of) this short being so introspective) or perhaps I just wasn't used to this kind of work to come from David.

    My Grade: C+
    Sammahel

    Brilliance

    This is an extraordinary fable about aging and about film-making.

    This old actor, unhappy with the route of his career is also the symbol of the great problem faced by the elder ones: looking back and not finding something to be proud about.

    However youth comes to rescue him, giving him a chance to always be remembered by spectators and to feel useful to a new generation.

    Especially well achieve by Cronenberg is the camera motion and positioning, which seems that of a child discovering all the potential of the found camera.

    Pure brilliance!

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    Related interests

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    Short

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      David Cronenberg was inspired to make this short film by a dream he had when he was a child in which he was watching a movie in a theater and growing old quickly while watching it.
    • Quotes

      The Actor: When you record the moment, you record the death of the moment. Children and death are a bad combination.

    • Alternate versions
      The entire film was shot in digital except for the final shot, which was filmed using the same Panavision camera featured in the movie. Director David Cronenberg assumed that audiences would easily be able to tell the difference, but as it turns out, most of the people in the premiere audience didn't notice the switch. For subsequent screenings, Cronenberg added music to the shot to give it additional emphasis, although audiences still had trouble.
    • Connections
      Edited into Short6 (2001)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 2000 (Canada)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Камера
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 6m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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