Transfer (1966 film) explained

Transfer
Director:David Cronenberg
Producer:David Cronenberg
Cinematography:David Cronenberg
Editing:David Cronenberg
Runtime:7 minutes
Country:Canada
Language:English
Budget:$300

Transfer is a 1966 short film written, shot, produced, edited and directed by David Cronenberg. It features Mort Ritts and Rafe Macpherson and has a runtime of 7 minutes.

Plot

A psychiatrist and his patient - at a table set for dinner in the middle of a field covered in snow. The psychiatrist has been followed by his obsessive former patient. The only relationship the patient has had which has meant anything to him has been with the psychiatrist. The patient complains that he has invented things to amuse and occasionally worry the psychiatrist but that he has remained unappreciative of his efforts.

Cast

Production

Cronenberg wrote, shot, directed, and edited the film in 1966 using $300 . Margaret Hindson and Stephen Nosko, two of his friends, recorded the sound. Cronenberg stated that the title of the film came from Sigmund Freud's concept of transference.

Reception

The Globe and Mail criticized the film as "a pathetic effort" that was "horribly acted and scarcely directed". It also accused Cronenberg of stealing the idea from a Nichols and May sketch.

Home video

The short was included along with Cronenberg's other early films on a bonus disc in Arrow Video's 2015 UK Blu-ray release of Videodrome.[1] This bonus disc, entitled David Cronenberg's Early Works was later released on its own a year later.[2]

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Videodrome UK Blu-ray Release Detailed . Blu-ray.com . June 20, 2015 . 2018-04-19.
  2. Web site: Upcoming Arrow Video Blu-ray Releases . Blu-ray.com . May 6, 2016 . 2018-04-19.