Movies News Talk
Although Dren's genes can help to explain some of her aggressive impulses, many of them came from the abuse she experienced from both Elsa and Clive. Clive considered Dren as an experiment from the time she was born, independent of her human DNA and personality. He is possessive, terrified of her, and has no problems about destroying her should it be needed. Actually, it's not quite clear if Clive meant to drown Dren when the couple discovered she had amphibious DNA and evolved gills to breathe underwater.
On the other hand, Elsa sees Dren as her own child right away upon displaying humanistic personality qualities. Sadly for Dren, Elsa had a terrible upbringing with a negligent mother and starts to show violent behavior against Dren as soon as Dren rebels. By the end of the film, Elsa has turned to view Dren as an experiment and Clive has grown sympathetic to her predicament. Dren finds this frustrating since she thinks of herself as a youngster. In a contentious scene the director refused to delete, Dren turns resentful towards Elsa and sexually attracted to Clive.
Though some of Dren's aggressive behavior stems from Nature vs. Nurture, she most certainly might have been violent anywhere. Elsa and Clive believe Dren has passed away, but in fact she is changing from her feminine form into a masculine one, which is intrinsically more hostile. The audience is taught this through the attempts at breeding two animals Elsa and Clive produced for medicinal uses early in the movie: Fred and Ginger. Ginger changes into a male instead of reproducing; the two kill one another in a bloody fury.
Making Splice motivated Director Vincenzo Natali by the actual Vacanti mouse experiment. The Massachusetts-based experiment included a genetically modified mouse meant for medical study to develop an ear-shaped disc from its body. Dren shared with Fred and Ginger similar DNA, which helped her to change into a masculine form. She shifts, kills two more guys right away, turns angry toward Clive, and starts trying to mate with Elsa. Dren and Ginger vary primarily in that Dren's human DNA makes her acts look more deliberate than they would from natural inclinations. But given the innately aggressive impulses of the male DNA in Dren, her aggressive behavior was most likely unavoidable. The same is true when people attempt to tame naturally hostile animals like big, dangerous cats.
One of the most unresolved issues about 2009's Splice is whether Dren's personality might change under loving treatment. Added to Max's streaming platform, the 15-year-old Sci-Fi Horror film has lately enjoyed a comeback in popularity as it soon became a trending title. Viewers have considered it as the ideal match for 1931's Frankenstein and get particularly fascinated in the hybrid creature known as Dren, who was genetically produced by the main characters of the film, Elsa and Clive (Sarah Polley and Adrien Brody.).
Dren gets more hostile throughout the movie, even to the point of turning into a killer and luring Clive in Splice's most divisive scene with her pheromones. Looking at the age-old Nature vs. Nurture argument, one can't help but wonder whether her personality would have veered in another route if the two heroes treated Dren in somewhat different ways from the minute she was born. Though Dren's character dies in the last act of the movie, the finale leaves open questions and hints a sequel never realized.
It begs the questions of whether Dren could lead a normal life with appropriate care or if her killing instinct and inherent aggressiveness would overcome her.
Created by Guillermo del Toro, Splice stars Adrian Brody and Sarah Polley as a young scientist couple who, with the introduction of human DNA into their work with genetic splicing, produce a human-animal hybrid entity known as Dren, who grows to be like the couple's child. First glad they may raise Dren as their daughter, the couple quickly discovers Dren's nature is considerably more sinister than first apparent.
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