Pubdate: Thu, 29 Apr 2004 Source: Free Lance-Star, The (VA) Copyright: 2004 The Free Lance-Star Contact: http://fredericksburg.com/flshome Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1065 Author: Joe Holmes 'NAKED LUNCH' IS A TERRIFYING TRIP INSIDE THE WORLD OF A DRUG USER. Movies have an interesting power over people. Some can suggest the reality of actions onscreen, making one believe the things in the film are actually happening. Others can show a hallucinatory world where you are taken on an imaginative, escapist tour. One of the latter films I highly recommend is David Cronenberg's "Naked Lunch." Few films I have seen have been so creepily fantastic. It was adapted from a book that critics joked about, saying it was impossible to translate to the big screen. Cronenberg is up for the challenge, making for a confusing, crazy, crazy ride. This one is not for younger viewers. The plot revolves around a bug exterminator in the 1950s named Bill Lee. Lee is a recovering drug addict, and his junkie wife takes the powder used to kill the bugs and injects it. Lee makes the dangerous choice to do this with her--and begins seeing things no man should see. He is taken to a world known as the Interzone, a planet full of seedy bars and giant talking insects. He finds there many shady characters who make little sense and command him to do horrible things. Few films make as good anti-drug material as this one. Cronenberg and the author of the novel, William S. Burroughs, were both heavy users of all sorts of hallucinatory substances while making this, and it shows. Its impact comes from showing drug use from the inside out, instead of preaching about it from the outside--like the difference in impact between seeing a burnt-out hobo on the street, as opposed to your local friendly D.A.R.E. officer. The plot itself is obtuse and complicated, but the film is still very good due to the freakiness of its images. Sometimes not understanding what is happening makes the appearance of a giant cockroach commanding the protagonist much scarier. Please, kids. Don't do drugs. Joe Holmes is a junior at Stafford High School. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin