David Cronenberg’s The Shrouds is a chilling, introspective dive into grief, technology, and the human body, cementing his legacy as the maestro of body horror. Set in a near-futuristic Toronto, the film follows Karsh (Vincent Cassel), a widower and tech entrepreneur who invents GraveTech, a system allowing the bereaved to watch their loved ones’ bodies decompose via high-tech shrouds equipped with cameras. Inspired by Cronenberg’s personal loss of his wife to cancer, the film is both a deeply personal meditation and a cerebral thriller, wrapped in the director’s signature unsettling aesthetic.

The film opens with Karsh, who envisions his late wife Becca’s (Diane Kruger) decaying corpse, only to awaken in a dentist’s chair, where he’s told, “Grief is rotting your teeth.” This sets the tone—a blend of body horror and humor. The film’s early scenes, particularly a cringe-inducing blind date where Karsh asks, “How dark are you willing to go?” establish its provocative premise with unsettling clarity.
Cronenberg’s visual style, crafted with cinematographer Douglas Koch, is stark and clinical, yet tinged with warmth, like a body struggling to cling to life. The GraveTech cemetery, with its sleek headstones displaying live feeds of rotting corpses, is both futuristic and grotesque, a testament to production designer Carol Spier’s ability to merge the sterile with the organic. The narrative weaves a conspiracy thread when GraveTech’s tombstones are vandalized and its feeds hacked, prompting Karsh to enlist Maury (Guy Pearce), his paranoid ex-brother-in-law and the system’s coder.

Diane Kruger shines in dual roles as Becca and her twin sister Terry, embodying both the spectral memory of Karsh’s love and a living, erotically charged complication. Her dreamlike flashbacks, depicting Becca’s cancer-ravaged body are among the film’s most powerful moments. Cronenberg’s refusal to shy away from the physical toll of illness—stitches, amputations, and brittle bones—makes these scenes both heartbreaking and horrifying, a stark contrast to Hollywood’s sanitized depictions of death.
Compared to Cronenberg’s earlier masterpieces like The Fly or Crash, The Shrouds lacks the punch and narrative drive of his prime, yet it compensates with raw emotional honesty. It’s less about shocking audiences with grotesque imagery—though it delivers plenty, from severed fingers to CGI-rendered decay—than about confronting the horror of absence. It’s not Cronenberg’s best, but it’s among his most personal, a love story cloaked in a shroud of techno-paranoia.
The Shrouds arrives at Luna Palace Cinemas 3rd of July.
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