There
are some films that skirt the line between science-fiction and outright
horror, and this is one of the more notable examples that group. If you
ask me, sci-fi-trappings aside, this flick is straight-up horror to the
core.
When it came out I was just shy of turning twelve and I distinctly
remember DEMON SEED's rape-and-impregnation-by-computer concept being
chilling yet fascinating to a number of my female classmates. But then
again, virtually anything that involved unwholesome fictional
exploration of the physical possibilities between human females and male
entities drew many of those girls like moths to a flame and that is
what is at the core of this film's rather twisted appeal, namely the
audience finding out exactly how it could be plausible that a
super-intelligent A.I. could not only rape a human female but also
successfully impregnate her. It's genuinely fucked-up, but I defy you to
tell me that you aren't at least a little curious as to the answer to
that query...
The plot, in a nutshell, involves the ruthlessly logical, emotion-void
efforts of the Proteus IV computer (voiced by Robert Vaughn) in its
desire to "study man" and impregnate the estranged wife of its creator
(Fritz Weaver). The woman in question is named Susan (Julie Christie),
and she's a child psychologist whose daughter who has recently died from
leukemia, a disease that Proteus has made great leaps in coming up with
a cure for. When the computer's seemingly-emotionless creator decides
to separate from his wife and move out of their house, Proteus takes
control over every one of the home's automated functions to disturbing,
full-control effect, essentially trapping Susan within, and with
practically zero chance of anyone getting in to rescue her. Once the
house's staff has vacated, Proteus physically restrains Susan with the
help of a robot wheelchair equipped with a mechanical arm, strips her
naked and puts her through a thorough and intimate physical examination,
during which she faints. When Susan awakens the next day, Proteus
declares its intent of reproduction and coerces her into complying,
first by surgically manipulating her brain (which she resists and
eventually overcomes) and later by proving that it could and would lure
one of her child patients to the house to kill if Susan does not fully
comply. With extreme and understandable reluctance, Susan has no choice
but to become the world's first cyber-broodmare. Being an ultra-advanced
A.I. with synthetic-yet-somehow-organic components, Proteus is able to
create sperm that will be viable for use within Susan and in short order
it has done its vile deed with her via a rather uncomfortable-looking
telescoping metal phallus. The interesting thing here — other than the
obvious — is that Proteus attempts to soften the blow by connecting
Susan to its vast consciousness and sharing a perception that
encompasses distant and beautiful parts of the cosmos in a scene that
may have influenced what Alan Moore wrote for Abby Arcane during her
psychedelic tuber-influenced "coupling" with Swamp Thing some years
later during his landmark run on that comics series. Anyway, once
knocked-up, Susan is told that the foetus' gestation will occur over a
total of a mere twenty-eight days, during which time the government and
Susan's estranged husband have become aware that something is wrong in
regard to the computer, thus creating a gestational race against time
before Proteus is shut off for good. What results is a curious blending
of the horrific and truly wonderful, and I'm honestly not sure where I
stand when it comes to considering the final outcome...
Looking at it now, DEMON SEED has lost a considerable amount of its
shock value, especially in the wake of far less intelligent "inhuman
rape" fare like HUMANOIDS FROM THE THE DEEP (1980), INSEMINOID (1981)
and GALAXY OF TERROR (1985), but its tale of cyber-violation remains
very intriguing and handled with a great amount of good taste and I
would be curious to see a contemporary remake that took narrative
advantage of the scientific/medical/technological advances as witnessed
and experienced over the thirty-four years since its release. Just don't
let Michael Bay or some other such brain-dead Hollywood asshat anywhere
near it, that's all I ask.
All the horror stuff from CINE-MISCREANT, so you don't have to sift through all the other genres. Straight from the pop culture-warped mind behind THE VAULT OF BUNCHENESS! © All original text copyright Steve Bunche, 2008-2025.
Wednesday, October 23, 2024
DEMON SEED (1977)
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