David Lynch - Classic or Dud

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Looked in the Films category for a discussion about him but suprisingly there doesn't seem to be one. So, Lynch, C or D?

Chris Lyons, Monday, 17 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

And is Mullholland Drive any good?

Chris Lyons, Monday, 17 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I used to really like him, but now think he's really hit or miss. I went to see "Mulholland Drive" expecting to hate it, and by the end of the movie I did. By the next day I changed my mind and now I love it.

Sean, Monday, 17 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'm mildly diffident on the Drive, leaning towards loathing. Lynch is just too darn "quirky". Bullshit complaint, I know, but that's what I think, and I'm sticking to that.

David Raposa, Monday, 17 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Nothing but love, so let's not talk about Dune, okay?

Nitsuh, Tuesday, 18 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I liked blue velvet. mostly because I like ROy ORbison , but the whole movie is pretty good escept for the ending

Mike Hanle y, Tuesday, 18 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Absolute classic, since his first ever student films. His work with Alan Splet? on Eraserhead gave sound designers a whole new box of tricks. His editing and use of sound create almost visual poetry, playing with silence and darkness, it's refined the grammar of cinema, in my opinion. With the exception of 'Wild at Heart', which I just don't 'get', I'd recommend every film he's made.

K-reg, Tuesday, 18 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Why not talk Dune?

K-reg, Tuesday, 18 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

What's wrong with Blue Velvet's ending?

Justyn Dillingham, Tuesday, 18 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

its a happy ending. i love david lynch films. yah a couple suck. but the good parts make up for all of it. hell mulholland drive makes up for dune tenfold.

chaki, Tuesday, 18 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I like Lost Highway,
The Straight Story, Blue Velvet.
Twin Peaks? That's great too.

Jeff W, Tuesday, 18 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Didn't he do Elephant Man too?

Wild At Heart is fantastic - reading the book might help if you don't get the movie. I have bits of dreams and real-life that seem to be directed by David Lynch. I'm not as sexy as Sherrilyn Fenn though, which is one of the many tradgedies of my life.

toraneko, Tuesday, 18 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Are you sure the ending of Blue Velvet is happy? It always seemed important to me that the bird was fake, and that the acting in the last scene is even more stilted than normal. Something about how happiness is defined.

Dan I., Wednesday, 19 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

one year passes...
Twin Peaks got so wayward, uresolved, sticking in the memory increasingly boringly. yet I can watch Mullholand Drive again and again.

with its Aussie soap stars, Mulholland Drive is like a lost episode, at least outdoingFire walk with Me me in episodic tension or edge (but to be fair, what can be expeced from a prequel)

Mulholland Drive is a great film for Lynch, yanking him out of his US weirdo cult niche and projecting world class ideas onto the world stage. I fail to see how it could stand a chance at BAFTA with Princess Ann on the board however (Oscars and Globes out-of-th-qn i assume).

His outsiderness, and his adoption finally by Cannes, like a Roman Polanski.

george gosset (gegoss), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 08:16 (twenty years ago) link

dune: classic or dud would be interesting.

amateurist (amateurist), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 08:21 (twenty years ago) link

I would love to say that David Lynch is a genius, who knows maybe he is, but he's just not for me. I have seen some of his stuff & I know it's meant to be weird & make you think about it, but it's too much. Blue Velvet, Mulholland Drive, you can keep them both.

Pinkpanther (Pinkpanther), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 09:12 (twenty years ago) link

Amateurist I watched Dune a couple of years ago (at a Lynch all-nighter in Paris, no less) & I was quite surprised at how much I was LOVING it, at least until the mid-point of the second act or so when it completely disintegrated.

s1utsky (slutsky), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 16:29 (twenty years ago) link

Wait - did David Lynch direct the OG Dune? Or are we talking about the recent redux? If we're talking about the OG I don't see how it could be anything other than KUHLASSICK.

nickalicious (nickalicious), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 16:42 (twenty years ago) link

Wait - did David Lynch direct the OG Dune?

Most certainly did -- his third film after Eraserhead and The Elephant Man.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 16:43 (twenty years ago) link

that movie really has some of the best production design ever. ever ever.

s1utsky (slutsky), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 16:44 (twenty years ago) link

Factoid: Jodorowsky was originally scheduled to direct Dune, but his projected budget, among other things, prevented him from doing so.

Francis Watlington (Francis Watlington), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 17:47 (twenty years ago) link

good

jones (actual), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 17:52 (twenty years ago) link

his fils can be classic or unclassic (straight story) or downright dud (wild at heart) but as a director and a persona he is never anything less than K-k-k-k-klassic!

Did anyone ever see that interview he did for scene by scene - i loved the bit where he's talking about "the eye of the duck" to describe the key scene in his films.

Also i highly recommend the book "Lynch on Lynch" - so much fun!

jed (jed_e_3), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 18:58 (twenty years ago) link

wild at heart rules!

s1utsky (slutsky), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 19:04 (twenty years ago) link

I watched The Straight Story again recently and realized it might be one of my favorite of his films (as opposed to the first time I watched it, where my reaction could be summed up as such: "WTF?"). It's very touching, and about as involving as a film with so little "action" gets.

nickalicious (nickalicious), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 19:11 (twenty years ago) link

i would've liked it if he'd arrived at harry dean stanton's house in the first reel and they spent the rest of the picture hanging out on the porch

jones (actual), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 19:15 (twenty years ago) link

(same goes for Chris Isaak in Fire Walk with Me)

Herbstmute (Wintermute), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 19:32 (twenty years ago) link

Mulholland Drive is a great film for Lynch, yanking him out of his US weirdo cult niche and projecting world class ideas onto the world stage. I fail to see how it could stand a chance at BAFTA with Princess Ann on the board however (Oscars and Globes out-of-th-qn i assume).

Umm. This movie is two years old. Why are we speculating on its award chances?

jaymc (jaymc), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 19:40 (twenty years ago) link


i had heard a rumor that lucas wanted lynch to direct one of the movies in the original trilogy, my guess would be return of the jedi. anyone else heard this? fact/fiction? if lynch had done one they might've been good.

*waiting for backlash*

Dean Gulberry (deangulberry), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 19:49 (twenty years ago) link

The ewoks would've drank coffee and there would've been creepy sax music.

nickalicious (nickalicious), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 19:51 (twenty years ago) link


creepy sex music would've been good too.

Dean Gulberry (deangulberry), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 19:52 (twenty years ago) link


i'm guessing the effects would've been worse too, if that's possible.

Dean Gulberry (deangulberry), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 19:53 (twenty years ago) link

yes lynch was supposed to direct return of the jedi, he turned it down and did dune instead.

anthony kyle monday (akmonday), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 20:27 (twenty years ago) link

Man, I might've actually liked a Star Wars movie. Wait, but I didn't like Dune. Oh well. I would've like to see have seen it done, though.

jaymc (jaymc), Wednesday, 29 October 2003 20:39 (twenty years ago) link

I love love love love Mulholland Drive.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 30 October 2003 00:35 (twenty years ago) link

Mulholland Dve, Elephant Man, Lost Hwy and Eraserhead are all great. Dune was shite (didnt Lynch have his name removed from it on re-release or something tho? Or am I confused). I wasn't a huge fan of Blue Velvet, and I never watched a second of Twin Peaks - I must be the only person in the world my age who hasn't!

Trayce (trayce), Thursday, 30 October 2003 00:46 (twenty years ago) link

Yes, Lynch had his name removed from Dune. As I mentioned above, I really thing Mulholland Drive was a return for Lynch; I think it's great.

Sean (Sean), Thursday, 30 October 2003 01:21 (twenty years ago) link

He had his name removed from the TV version, which did include a lot of extra footage that fanboy me appreciated (and which fleshed out the story a hell of a lot more readily). It was, however, a poor edit in technical terms, most notably with a complete hijacking of the musical score that made no sense.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 30 October 2003 01:22 (twenty years ago) link

only removed from the extended-for-TV version?

crosspost

RJG (RJG), Thursday, 30 October 2003 01:23 (twenty years ago) link

Dune is one of my favorite movies ever. Makes perfect sense if you read the book (and don't anybody come back with "it should stand on it's own" bs, etc.)

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Thursday, 30 October 2003 01:27 (twenty years ago) link

Makes perfect sense if you read the book

Yeah, quite right. I read the book a year before the movie came out so my timing was perfect there...

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 30 October 2003 01:28 (twenty years ago) link

Btw, Amazon describes the TV version as being 'shorter'.

Sean (Sean), Thursday, 30 October 2003 01:29 (twenty years ago) link

!?! Amazon is wrong.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 30 October 2003 01:29 (twenty years ago) link

yeah, I have both versions on DVD.

although, N. has had my copy of the cinema one for nearly a year, now.

RJG (RJG), Thursday, 30 October 2003 01:32 (twenty years ago) link

It's now on my Netfilx queue since I haven't seen it in years. (and what are they doing recommending Cher Live to me?? Just because I rented The Eyes of Laura Mars?)

Sean (Sean), Thursday, 30 October 2003 01:36 (twenty years ago) link

the recent TV Dune was unwatchable.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Thursday, 30 October 2003 01:38 (twenty years ago) link

you know the best bit of dune is when alicia witt sez "and how can this be? for he is the kwizzach hadarach!" and inexplicably pulls her bottom lip all the way across the side of her face on the 'be' or 'is', i forget which

cremaster's opulent mythboredom reminded me a lot of dune

prima fassy (bob), Thursday, 30 October 2003 08:23 (twenty years ago) link

cremaster 2 most indebted, obv

prima fassy (bob), Thursday, 30 October 2003 08:24 (twenty years ago) link

but not to dune

prima fassy (bob), Thursday, 30 October 2003 08:24 (twenty years ago) link

to other suburban lynch

prima fassy (bob), Thursday, 30 October 2003 08:25 (twenty years ago) link

that movie really has some of the best production design ever. ever ever.

absolutely. it's funny how the production design seems to be the central concern of the film for much of its length, but unlike other well-appointed films, the design is actually so rich it actually sustains interest.

this movie redeems dino dilaurentis's reputation from all the europudding he's made. (well, this movie and "blue velvet.")

the last half hour is a mess, yes, but it's compelling for being so incomprehensible. the ending, if you haven't read the book, is just quizzical--all the more so for being so terrifically bombastic and theatrical.

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 30 October 2003 11:43 (twenty years ago) link

I really like everything I've seen by David Lynch (Blue Velvet, Lost Highway, Mulholland Drive, Dune, Twin Peaks season one), except, oddly enough, for Eraserhead, wherein I was so creeped out by the bile-spitting preemie (I was watching it alone at night) that I couldn't watch the rest of it. I hadn't read Dune when I saw the movie (and still haven't actually), and was totally baffled but still enjoyed it, mainly due to design, special effects, and Kyle McLachlan.

NA (Nick A.), Thursday, 30 October 2003 12:59 (twenty years ago) link

I used to have some sort of movie-tie-in picture book of Dune when I was a kid. Imagine, if you will, some poor hack writer trying to distill the plot to a few short paragraphs per half and hour. Completely incomprehensible. I used to sit there and make up my own plot to the pictures.

FWWM, like Dune, does have a lot of extra footage still sitting there. As a fan of fractured, difficult art I'm not too bothered about seeing it restored. Pretty much all the series cast shot scenes.

Lynskey (Lynskey), Thursday, 30 October 2003 13:03 (twenty years ago) link

Taking on Dune was a crazy idea and the (heavily edited) film is riddled with flaws. Nonetheless it is a work of beauty, perhaps all the more loveable for it's faults. The heart plug scene is unforgettable cinema, Sting is absurd, the voice overs wonderfully bizarre, the visualisation of Frank H's ideas meticulous and inventive... I think it's a brilliant, sprawling mash up of a movie, amazing to look at and absolutely crammed with diverting details.

Err, Lynch incidentally is brain-crushingly classic.

Alex K (Alex K), Thursday, 30 October 2003 13:08 (twenty years ago) link

i'd love to see at least some of the fwwm stuff restored or at least assembled if it can't be edited in. the full script was wonderous (I'm sure it's still around on the web somewhere). FWWM gets a bad rap, it's a zany circus of a film with some excellent scenes (the Pink Room nightclub scene, the final shots in the black lodge, the entire opening sequence with Chris Isaak and Keifer).

anthony kyle monday (akmonday), Thursday, 30 October 2003 17:55 (twenty years ago) link

I used to have some sort of movie-tie-in picture book of Dune when I was a kid. Imagine, if you will, some poor hack writer trying to distill the plot to a few short paragraphs per half and hour. Completely incomprehensible

There's a much better book out there if you can find it at all -- The Making of Dune by Ed Naha. He was hired to essentially hang around on site during the entire length of filming and write a book about it all and did a fantastic job, I thought. While essentially uncritical about the final product itself, it actually doesn't talk about that so much as just the filming itself. Also laden with tons of photos.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 30 October 2003 18:00 (twenty years ago) link

Classic for pretty much everything he's made.

Here's ten, in order of "classicness":

1. Mulholland Drive
2. Eraserhead
3. Blue Velvet
4. Wild at Heart
5. Elephant Man
6. Twin Peaks
7. The Straight Story
8. Dune
9. Fire Walk with Me
10. Lost Highway

David A. (Davant), Thursday, 30 October 2003 23:49 (twenty years ago) link

i read the full script for FWWM and thought it was dumbly literal, and was mostly glad it had been chopped to bits for the final product.

amateurist (amateurist), Friday, 31 October 2003 10:45 (twenty years ago) link

The order in which i like them - not much to do with "classicsness" - wild at heart is the only one i actively dislike so it's not on there.

1. Mulholland Drive
2. Blue Velvet
3. Eraserhead
4. Elephant Man
5. Lost Highway
6. Fire Walk with Me
7. Twin Peaks
8. Dune
9.The Straight Story

jed (jed_e_3), Friday, 31 October 2003 11:29 (twenty years ago) link

Umm. This movie is two years old. Why are we speculating on its award chances?

sorry, jaymc, my aside has troubled you, AND i used the wrong tense in one sentence!
and it revived a discussion, how about that ?
but huh ?, you haven't commented on Princess Anne and the BAFTAs, which was what i was getting at. Or anything else beyond the semantics of said paragraph. What do YOU THINK ?

george gosset (gegoss), Friday, 31 October 2003 16:53 (twenty years ago) link

eleven months pass...
Wild At Heart is fantastic - reading the book might help if you don't get the movie

I'm not sure I'll ever get round reading the book so could somebody please summarize what it adds to the movie?

Baaderonixxx le Jeune (Fabfunk), Tuesday, 26 October 2004 15:20 (nineteen years ago) link

words

amateur!!st, Tuesday, 26 October 2004 16:35 (nineteen years ago) link

If George Gosset cares a year later, I apologize for being snarky. I thought maybe you didn't realize that Mulholland Drive wouldn't be eligible for a BAFTA in 2003, since it came out in 2001 (maybe 2002 in the UK, I'm not sure).

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 26 October 2004 16:38 (nineteen years ago) link

Region 1 Wild at Heart DVD is finally coming in December!

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Tuesday, 26 October 2004 16:49 (nineteen years ago) link

what does lynch mean by 'the eye of the duck'?

cºzen (Cozen), Sunday, 7 November 2004 13:09 (nineteen years ago) link

Mark Cousins: I don't know if you know the films of Ozu the Japanese, but this
is the Ozu scene in this film. In some interviews I've read, you've
used this phrase, the `eye of the duck' scene.

David Lynch: Well, you know, nature can teach us a lot of things, and there's
something about, in painting, you're working within a certain shaped
canvas and there's many things that you, you know, one does
intuitively, to move the eye, you know, there's repetition of shape,
there's repetition of colour, but when you start looking at a duck,
you see your eye is moving in a certain way, and you see textures and
colours and shapes and you start wondering about a duck, what it can
teach us about, you know, any kind of abstract, you know, painting, or
proportions or even sequences, scenes, and it always is interesting
that the eye is in the perfect place - if you move it to the body, it
would get lost, if you move to the leg or the beak, it's two, kind of,
fast areas competing, even though the eye is the fastest, it's the
little jewel.

Alba (Alba), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:07 (nineteen years ago) link

; )

RJG (RJG), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:08 (nineteen years ago) link

I wonder if Mark Cousins actually said "Ozu The Japanese".

Alba (Alba), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:09 (nineteen years ago) link

thanks alba. I have watched that cousins interview before and felt that cousins completely misrepresented lynch's silly little fantastic idea by asking him lynch what he thought were 'the eye of the duck' scenes in each of his movies. I always thought of it as a approach to the composition of the scene, pretty much how lynch explains it really, but also as a more generalised way of looking at things, through another lens, which could be something so silly as a duck eye. what do you think about the idea? like it?

cºzen (Cozen), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:11 (nineteen years ago) link

MC: Fast meaning what?

DL: Well, there's slow and fast. An empty room is a certain speed,
and a person standing there is another speed, and that proportion is,
you know, can be beautiful, if the room is a 2 and the person is a 7.
I think a person is around a 7; fire and electricity can go up to a 9,
for instance, or really intricately designed, you know, decorative
room is pretty disturbing, sometimes - it's too fast. But then if you
put something slow in it, it could work beautifully. A busy room and
a person, they fight each other. So...

MC: Is this to do with how fast our eye moves to scan it, to see
what's happening?

DL: It's a relationship thing, I think. Fast and slow areas.

MC: OK. What is the eye of the duck scene in Straight Story?

DL: I haven't thought about it. I have to think about it. I can't
just jump in and think, but I believe every film has the eye of the
duck scene. But, it can fool you. You know, which one it is - it
could be the scene we were talking about, I don't know.

MC: What's the eye of the duck scene in `Blue Velvet'?

DL: I used to know.

MC: Is it the `In Dreams' song.

DL: It's the eye of the duck, that's the eye of the duck, yes, yes.

[clip `in dreams']

MC: And what's the eye of the duck scene in Elephant Man?

DL: (laughs) I used to know.

MC: Is it the scene where he goes to the theatre? Near the end?

DL: No, I think, strangely, the eye of the duck scene is the ending.

RJG (RJG), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:11 (nineteen years ago) link

ozu the scottish.

cºzen (Cozen), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:11 (nineteen years ago) link

I used to know.

RJG (RJG), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:12 (nineteen years ago) link

(laughs)

cºzen (Cozen), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:12 (nineteen years ago) link

I fucking love that concept.

Andrew (enneff), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:13 (nineteen years ago) link

A duck is one of the most beautiful animals.  If you study a duck, you'll see certain things: the bill is a certain texture and a certain length; the head is a certain shape; the texture of the bill is very smooth and it has quite precise detail and reminds you somewhat of the legs (the legs are a little more rubbery).  The body is big, softer, and the texture isn't so detailed.  The key to the whole duck is the eye and where it is placed.  It's like a little jewel.  It's so perfectly placed to show off a jewel - right in the middle of the head, next to this S-curve with the bill sitting out in front, but with enough distance so that the eye is very well secluded and set out.  When you're working on a film, a lot of times you can get the bill and the legs and the body and everything, but this eye of the duck is a certain scene, this jewel, that if it's there, it's absolutely beautiful.  It's just fantastic.

- Lynch the American

Alba (Alba), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:14 (nineteen years ago) link

what speed are you?

cºzen (Cozen), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:14 (nineteen years ago) link

The fast.

http://www.dgp.toronto.edu/people/stam/suomi/stam/pics/duck_rabbit.gif

Alba (Alba), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:17 (nineteen years ago) link

feet of the duck.

RJG (RJG), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:18 (nineteen years ago) link

"eye of the duck" is a survivor/rick dees mashup no?

amateur!!st, Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:20 (nineteen years ago) link

I'm going out to look at ducks.

cºzen (Cozen), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:20 (nineteen years ago) link

http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/830000/images/_830435_ducksap300.jpg

Alba (Alba), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:21 (nineteen years ago) link

it's when you look at a duck, on water, and you look at where its body meets the water and what a meeting it is and the complete contrasts of texture and consistency--the light but layered and warm and soft and complexity with the heavy but fluid and cold and shiny and dark and reflective but it is the reflectiveness that helps to conceal and reveal a wonder. when you can look at a drawing, of the frame, of a cube and are able to see it in, at least, two ways and can almost pop, between one and the other--this is what, on a good day, is the wonder, of a duck, on water. you look at the duck, floating or swimming or being a duck, and you see this, often, fat and calm, above-water entity. if you look at the meeting, that we have discussed, and the light is appropriate, you will see a reflection of the fat and calm and of all of the attributes of the duck's composition, that we have discussed, but under a veil of all of the attributes of the water, that we have discussed. now, if the light is very appropriate and you have an angle, that is nice, you can see this--but, then, by looking, for a moment, in the right way, you can look through the water, like you had forgotten you could, to see the duck's thin legs, dangling from its floating mass. they are not, however, always dangling, and the viewer can be rewarded with some more final contrasts--the speed, of the little legs, with the calmness, of the floating mass--the duck's little legs, churning away with, often, not a flicker of movement, within the duck's floating mass.

RJG (RJG), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:38 (nineteen years ago) link

david lynch is kind of nutty isn't he?

amateur!!st, Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:47 (nineteen years ago) link

ilx is so good sometimes.

(x-post)

Gravel Puzzleworth (Gregory Henry), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:52 (nineteen years ago) link

david lynch is kind of nutty isn't he?

No, but maybe a little daffy.

Mooro (Mooro), Sunday, 7 November 2004 14:54 (nineteen years ago) link

: )

cºzen (Cozen), Sunday, 7 November 2004 17:38 (nineteen years ago) link

RJG, is that a lunch quote or your own spin on things?

"Lynch on Lynch" is one of the most entertaining books i have ever read.

jed_ (jed), Sunday, 7 November 2004 18:12 (nineteen years ago) link

oh, yeah, I wrote that.

RJG (RJG), Sunday, 7 November 2004 18:34 (nineteen years ago) link

you're daffy.

jed_ (jed), Sunday, 7 November 2004 18:35 (nineteen years ago) link

oh, yeah, I read that.

RJG (RJG), Sunday, 7 November 2004 18:37 (nineteen years ago) link

two months pass...
so many amazing things about 'blue velvet'

lynch's nuanced use of the widescreen frame above all.... his knowing evocations of the heyday of 'scope and the accompanying emotional registers

still i think it's less than the sum of its parts somehow, i'm never too interested in rewatching the whole thing

that's a problem w/lynch

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 7 January 2005 05:53 (nineteen years ago) link

i have the same birthday as lynch. and fellini. so, classic.

cutty (mcutt), Friday, 7 January 2005 05:57 (nineteen years ago) link

I can watch Wild At Heart over and over.

.adam (nordicskilla), Friday, 7 January 2005 06:14 (nineteen years ago) link

i lent my copy of wild at heart to a visiting film prof in college and the motherfucker never gave it back.

g--ff (gcannon), Friday, 7 January 2005 06:25 (nineteen years ago) link

I think it just got a DVD release!

.adam (nordicskilla), Friday, 7 January 2005 06:28 (nineteen years ago) link

Do you think David Lynch likes Man Ray?

.adam (nordicskilla), Friday, 7 January 2005 06:28 (nineteen years ago) link

it just got a really nice dvd release and the thing is cheap! it was like $13CAD at the store. why didn't i buy it again? also blue velvet is available for $10CAD now.

i am interested in the "business end" of motion picture filmmaking

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 7 January 2005 07:02 (nineteen years ago) link

i am interested in the "business end" of motion picture filmmaking

er

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 7 January 2005 07:13 (nineteen years ago) link

I am interesting in the "business end" of Harvey Weinstein's pudgy fist.

.adam (nordicskilla), Friday, 7 January 2005 15:53 (nineteen years ago) link

intesrested

oy!

.adam (nordicskilla), Friday, 7 January 2005 15:53 (nineteen years ago) link

forget it

.adam (nordicskilla), Friday, 7 January 2005 15:54 (nineteen years ago) link

You're always very interesting, Adam, no matter where you lay your hat. Or whatever you lay.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 7 January 2005 15:54 (nineteen years ago) link

four months pass...
From Variety:

Lynch invades an 'Empire'
Digital pic details a mystery

By ADAM DAWTREY
David Lynch is making a new movie with StudioCanal. In fact, he's already been shooting it under the radar for two years.

Titled "INLAND EMPIRE" (in capitals, though Lynch doesn't explain why), it stars Laura Dern, along with Justin Theroux, Harry Dean Stanton, Jeremy Irons and a host of others Lynch won't specify.

In fact, there's still very little the enigmatic Lynch is comfortable to reveal about the movie.

"It's about a woman in trouble, and it's a mystery, and that's about all I want to say about it," he comments diffidently.

The title refers to the bleak residential area on the edge of the desert near L.A. -- the antithesis of the tony locale of his last movie "Mulholland Drive."

Lynch has shot much of his latest film in Poland with local actors, after making friends with the organizers of the Camerimage festival in Lodz. He's now back shooting in and around Los Angeles.

Even at this relatively advanced stage of production, Lynch is cagey about when it will be finished. But it's understood that StudioCanal is aiming for a world preempreem at Cannes next year.

"Making a film is a beautiful mystery," Lynch says. "You go deep into the wood, and you don't want to come out of that wood, but the time is coming very soon when I will have to."

Lynch has financed the production to date from his own resources, with his wife and longtime artistic collaborator Mary Sweeney producing. The budget is unknown.

StudioCanal, which financed "Mulholland Drive""Mulholland Drive" and "The Straight Story," has come aboard "INLAND EMPIRE" to handle worldwide sales.

Digital convert

What Lynch will reveal -- and indeed, waxes lyrical about -- is the fact that he's shooting the movie on digital video.

"I started working in DV for my Web site, and I fell in love with the medium. It's unbelievable, the freedom and the incredible different possibilities it affords, in shooting and in post-production."

"For me, there's no way back to film. I'm done with it," Lynch says. "I love abstraction. Film is a beautiful medium, but it's very slow and you don't get a chance to try a lot of different things. With DV, you get those chances. And in post-production, if you can think it, you can do it."

DV has clearly given Lynch the freedom from having to clarify his intentions -- to financiers, or even to himself -- before he starts shooting.

"The explaining of things in words is always a huge problem," he confesses.

He characterizes the DV production process as a journey of "huge exploration" to discover what his film will be.

"I'm writing as I go," he says. "I believe in the unity of things. When you have one part, and then a second part that doesn't relate to that first part, it's very curious to find that they do relate after all. It's a most beautiful thing."

He also believes that it produces a different kind of performances from actors. "When you run out of film, you have to stop and reload, and during that time the heat sometimes goes off. But with this medium you can keep that heat, and it builds, and it's beautiful to see."

He says that Dern, in particular, has benefited from this freedom. "She's the most incredible actress. Some people get roles and do their thing, but some have a lot more inside and don't usually get the chance to show it."

As for the quality of the DV image, Lynch says, "It looks different. Some would say it looks bad. But it reminds me of early 35mm, that didn't have that tight grain. When you have a poor image, there's lots more room to dream."

"But I've done tests transferring DV to film, and there are all kinds of controls to dial in the look you want."

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:23 (eighteen years ago) link

rad!

charleston charge (chaki), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:26 (eighteen years ago) link

I love Laura Dern (and have some sort of feeling approaching something like fondness for Lynch.) It'll probably come out in 2015 though knowing him.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:27 (eighteen years ago) link

1) Obviously very excited for a new Lynch film. In fact, when I clicked on the thread, I thought, "I hope it's an announcement about a new film."

2) Skeptical about Lynch's fascination with DV. I really hope it looks good. Disappointed that he's abandoning film altogether.

3) I know it's Variety and all, but "world preempreem"? Gag.

jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:27 (eighteen years ago) link

"It's about a woman in trouble, and it's a mystery, and that's about all I want to say about it," he comments diffidently.

I'm glad to see he's breaking into new territory!

kyle (akmonday), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:31 (eighteen years ago) link

As for the quality of the DV image, Lynch says, "It looks different. Some would say it looks bad. But it reminds me of early 35mm, that didn't have that tight grain. When you have a poor image, there's lots more room to dream."

Gotta love him.

d'ngullberry (noisemeltdown), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:34 (eighteen years ago) link

re: jaymc's thoughts

1) very excited too, also wished/hoped this would be about a new film
2) very excited about this. i'd much rather see what lynch can do with this stuff than george freakin' lucas. also: collateral
3) wasn't sure if that was a cut&paste error but if not i love it

s1ocki (slutsky), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:34 (eighteen years ago) link

Skeptical about Lynch's fascination with DV. I really hope it looks good.

I was kinda worried about DV until I saw Collateral - in the hands of someone who knows what they're doing, format is increasingly becoming irrelevant.

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:37 (eighteen years ago) link

elvis knows what i'm saying.

s1ocki (slutsky), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:38 (eighteen years ago) link

slocki maybe if you start using that word people will think you're some "hollywood dude" who's "in the know"!

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:38 (eighteen years ago) link

Montreal is the way and truth, man.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:39 (eighteen years ago) link

oh I forgot about collateral! i love collateral!

jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:41 (eighteen years ago) link

this is fantastic news... however I was really hoping this was gonna be an announcement about complete Twin Peaks DVDs finally coming out.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:41 (eighteen years ago) link

Ha, Shakey Mo, you kidder. (Besides, it's only coming out in a double pack with The Complete Blade Runner.)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:43 (eighteen years ago) link

there was a blade runner tv show?

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:44 (eighteen years ago) link

when's the preempreem for that?

s1ocki (slutsky), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:44 (eighteen years ago) link

Anyone see the piece he did for the Lumiere film? God, that's one of the most jolting shorts ever.

Jay Vee (Manon_70), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:44 (eighteen years ago) link

Yes, a friend of mine has done some postproduction on this and he just told me that the working title was actually "TEH INLAND EMPIRE!!!!!!!!!11111111111!!!!!!!!!!".

Mallett McFlatFlat, Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:44 (eighteen years ago) link

yes, it was called "Max Headroom" (bah, xxpost)

kyle (akmonday), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:44 (eighteen years ago) link

the lumiere short he did was the JAM!!! that was awesome!


worst one: peter greenaway who totally cheated!!

s1ocki (slutsky), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:45 (eighteen years ago) link

yeah, his was the best short! actually that sort is one of my favorite things in the world.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:47 (eighteen years ago) link

short

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:47 (eighteen years ago) link

so amazing & perfect.

s1ocki (slutsky), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:47 (eighteen years ago) link

you can download it off the interweb, you know...

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:50 (eighteen years ago) link

i like the "early cinema" staging/framing/camera distance in the last "scene"--lynch has a great (intuitive i think) sense for how to evoke feelings through the use of antiquated stylistic devices. (see also the french impressionist film pastiches in "elephant man.)

god, i love lynch.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:52 (eighteen years ago) link

that page is wrong, those aren't cuts, it's one long take!

s1ocki (slutsky), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:52 (eighteen years ago) link

i know--he placed scrims and black boards in front of the camera to effect "cuts" i think.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:55 (eighteen years ago) link

that whole description is totally dubious. "There is no dialogue so it is totally abstract."

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:56 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm excited for this film!

Remy (x Jeremy), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:58 (eighteen years ago) link

The title refers to the bleak residential area on the edge of the desert near L.A.

This kind of blanket description annoys me.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:58 (eighteen years ago) link

I don't think Collateral's going to be a good reference point. He references the lack of tight grain in early 35mm which sounds like there's going to be a good deal of digital noise and 'ugliness' (to some).

Collateral had almost no noise and it would be hard to argue that it didn't look pretty close to 35mm film.

milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:59 (eighteen years ago) link

sort of...although it registered fast motion and light (esp. low light and quick light changes) very differently from 35mm.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:02 (eighteen years ago) link

What's with the 35mmism, ILX? Surely one of Full Frontal, Pieces of April, Tadpole, Festen, Chuck and Buck, or Dancer in the Dark can sway you? Hasn't this argument long been settled?

Remy (x Jeremy), Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:50 (eighteen years ago) link

The Inland Empire is where Shakey Mo Collier is from!

As well as incredibly legendary skate spots, a decent arts colony, and home of a one-time interesting music scene - Refrigerator, Nothing Painted Blue, Diskothi-Q and (file-them-in-the-Where-Are-They-Now?-Category) the Mountain Goats.

gygax! (gygax!), Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:57 (eighteen years ago) link

Haha wait all those movies looked pretty terrible.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:57 (eighteen years ago) link

I think Festen and Tadpole both look good!

Remy (x Jeremy), Thursday, 12 May 2005 22:01 (eighteen years ago) link

New David Lynch film = best news of my day. And I even bought awesome new sandals this afternoon, so. Also, in the syllogistic-premonition category: Poland is great, so this film will be great.

rrrobyn (rrrobyn), Thursday, 12 May 2005 22:04 (eighteen years ago) link

Haha wait all those movies looked pretty terrible.

Alex took the words out of my mouth! Dancer in the Dark, as much as I like it story and music-wise, looks awful; I never wanted a movie to be in Cinescope so much.

kyle (akmonday), Thursday, 12 May 2005 22:08 (eighteen years ago) link

Yeah, Dancer is easily the poorest looking Von Triers movie.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 12 May 2005 22:10 (eighteen years ago) link

BTW I like DV just fine (and the idea of Lynch using a DV too.) I just don't think the above are good examples of fine looking DV movies.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 12 May 2005 22:12 (eighteen years ago) link

festen looks good in its particular one-chip way.

s1ocki (slutsky), Thursday, 12 May 2005 22:34 (eighteen years ago) link

Pieces of April didn't look completely terrible, but the gritty/doc feeling of the cinematography didn't work with the subject at all.

milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Thursday, 12 May 2005 23:36 (eighteen years ago) link

A Lynch film on HD (ala Collateral) could be incredible, though, with the amount of color work he could do in post. When I think of my fave Lynch films there's a certain visual lushness that would be lost on noisy/flat DV.

milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Thursday, 12 May 2005 23:38 (eighteen years ago) link

what i like about Lynch's special effects is that they are actually achieved right there in front of the camera or with film effects (for example the transformation of bill pullman into balthazar getty in Lost highway which seems to be acheived with speeded up footage and overlapped film) and don't have that fake sheen that digital effects often have. I'm still psyched about this and keen to see what he does with the medium, of course.

jed_ (jed), Thursday, 12 May 2005 23:53 (eighteen years ago) link

most of lynch's "special effects" are like weird lighting shifts and fucked-up industrial noises. but yeah when he does do a more traditional "effect" it often has a sort of homegrown quality that calls attention to itself in an appealing way.

i really adore him without thinking any of his films are exactly perfect or even my favorites. although the short film mentioned above and the final episode of twin peaks are pretty close to perfect.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:17 (eighteen years ago) link

man i gotta do the whole twin peaks thing again sometime soon.

amateurist have you seen the "pilot" version of mulholland drive ever?

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:20 (eighteen years ago) link

not am, but I have.

gygax! (gygax!), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:21 (eighteen years ago) link

how do you know he hasn't?

just kidding. what was it like?

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:22 (eighteen years ago) link

and how did you get it? ebay? torrent?

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:22 (eighteen years ago) link

amateurist have you seen the "pilot" version of mulholland drive ever?

yes, my roommate ca. 2000 had it.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:25 (eighteen years ago) link

I got it from superhappyfun, weak VHS dub (plus two Lynch-directed commercials). It was almost exactly what you'd expect it to be from watching the movie (same plot, no lezzing up, minus the twist, monster (I think), silencio, etc.).

milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:27 (eighteen years ago) link

surely not the SAME plot.

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:28 (eighteen years ago) link

so i guess everyone in the world but me has seen it. well that's just great. i hope you guys ENJOYED it.

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:28 (eighteen years ago) link

Very disappointing that it wasn't made into a series. It could have been fantastic, based on the performances and setting. I don't know where it would have gone as a series, though - Laura Palmer-esque season-long investigation? Hott blonde and brunette detective agency?

milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:29 (eighteen years ago) link

ding ding ding on that last one.

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:30 (eighteen years ago) link

If I can find my DVD-R, I'll mail it to you. I kind of doubt that I'll ever have the overwhelming desire to watch it again.

milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:30 (eighteen years ago) link

ding ding ding on that one too! thanks!

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:31 (eighteen years ago) link

am!st and s1ocki, tell me more about why you like the Lumiere film so much.

jed_ (jed), Friday, 13 May 2005 01:34 (eighteen years ago) link

i think i'll write on essay on it one of these days.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 13 May 2005 03:58 (eighteen years ago) link

sorry, that's not a good answer, but it's all i've got at the moment.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 13 May 2005 03:59 (eighteen years ago) link

Inland Empire is very overdue as a cinematic setting on such a ...scale....so hurrah. this is v exciting.

Vichitravirya XI, Friday, 13 May 2005 04:09 (eighteen years ago) link

i really adore him without thinking any of his films are exactly perfect or even my favorites.

totally.

jaymc (jaymc), Friday, 13 May 2005 04:09 (eighteen years ago) link

I remember there was this series of I think French cigarette commercials or something by various famous directors and Lynch's was really amazing!

Dan I. (Dan I.), Friday, 13 May 2005 04:12 (eighteen years ago) link

I'd be interested in reading that essay, am, you shill.

I still haven't seen all of twin peaks and I think I really need to.

cozen (Cozen), Friday, 13 May 2005 08:15 (eighteen years ago) link

this is awesome and i am excited!

latebloomer: the rebel sound of grits and bacon (latebloomer), Friday, 13 May 2005 11:01 (eighteen years ago) link

i love how he says "all kinds of controls to dial in the look you want", like his DV setup has a big soviet-era panel with knobs and levers all over it.

jones (actual), Friday, 13 May 2005 14:46 (eighteen years ago) link

he uses a lot of antiquated phrases like "dial in." i.e., "peachy keen."

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 13 May 2005 15:39 (eighteen years ago) link

I think he could totally do some cool things with the "ugliness" of DV.

n/a (Nick A.), Friday, 13 May 2005 15:54 (eighteen years ago) link

two weeks pass...
finally found the DVD-R, if you still want it Slocki. e-mail me your address and I'll put in the mail this week.

milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Monday, 30 May 2005 22:02 (eighteen years ago) link

Why a duck?

Pete Scholtes, Tuesday, 31 May 2005 17:23 (eighteen years ago) link

What I've seen:
Eraserhead - classic
The Elephant Man - undeniably classic
Blue Velvet - halfway-to-classic
Wild At Heart - rather odd, but it gets more classic as it progresses
Twin Peaks first season - undoubtedly classic



Therefore, Lynch = classic so far.

Ian Riese-Moraine's exploding hamster zeppelin! (Eastern Mantra), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:04 (eighteen years ago) link

I watched Mulholland Drive again last night and was amazing by how much it actually makes sense.

Jordan (Jordan), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:05 (eighteen years ago) link

yes, i thought the same when i watched it for about the 5th time last week.

jed_ (jed), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:07 (eighteen years ago) link

these days I think his only not-very-successful film is Lost Highway and at least that one looks cool

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:14 (eighteen years ago) link

And has good music.

Jordan (Jordan), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:15 (eighteen years ago) link

Explain to me how Mullholland Drive makes sense if it's a loop that begins where it ends.

Unfortunate Prankster (Unfortunate Prankster), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:16 (eighteen years ago) link

i think "Wild at Heart" is awful.

jed_ (jed), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:16 (eighteen years ago) link

Or am I thinking of Lost Highway?

Unfortunate Prankster (Unfortunate Prankster), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:16 (eighteen years ago) link

who said it was, Unfortunate Prankster?

xposts

jed_ (jed), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:18 (eighteen years ago) link

Mulholland Drive and Lost Highway share a structure, I think he just did it better in Mulholland Drive.

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:18 (eighteen years ago) link

i've said that before. (xp)

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:18 (eighteen years ago) link

i suppose Lost Highway is that to an extent.

jed_ (jed), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:18 (eighteen years ago) link

(it doesn't make any sense to me but i still like it)

jed_ (jed), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:19 (eighteen years ago) link

One of these movies is a damn loop, right? I remember watching one thinking it was pretty good and wondering how it was going to end and then all of a sudden it was back at the beginning scene and the movie was over, which pretty much invalidated everything in between the beginning and the, uh, beginning.

Unfortunate Prankster (Unfortunate Prankster), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:20 (eighteen years ago) link

i think lost highway is more explicit about it, iirc.

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:22 (eighteen years ago) link

but Mulholland Drive isn't a Loop.

jed_ (jed), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:24 (eighteen years ago) link

Double feature idea — Lost Highway and Head.

Rock Hardy (Rock Hardy), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:24 (eighteen years ago) link

The imdb review of Lost Highway simultaneously spoiled and explained it to me! Never even thought of that!

Unfortunate Prankster (Unfortunate Prankster), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:25 (eighteen years ago) link

yes, that's an excellent review!

jed_ (jed), Tuesday, 31 May 2005 19:40 (eighteen years ago) link

here's a quicktime .mpg of the Lumiere short.

http://s15.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=2NS8O0JGU9TKG240R4ERQ14KVV

jed_ (jed), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 01:15 (eighteen years ago) link

i have a wmv of that that i dowloaded somehwere called "premonitions following an evil deed" (credited to "tulse luper"), and it has a couple segments before yours begins.

g e o f f (gcannon), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 01:54 (eighteen years ago) link

er that is i think the thing you uploaded there is incomplete

g e o f f (gcannon), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 01:54 (eighteen years ago) link

I have the Lumiere DVD if I can figure out how to copy part of it to MPG

milozauckerman (miloaukerman), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 03:06 (eighteen years ago) link

you can find the short online for download! it's pretty easy.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 03:47 (eighteen years ago) link

i also found a hi-res version on limewire. it's really short, so it's not a big download.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 03:48 (eighteen years ago) link

you're right, g e o f f, it's missing the cops sequence from the beginning. strange.

jed_ (jed), Tuesday, 14 June 2005 13:11 (eighteen years ago) link

the best review of The Straight Story I've read. Now I think he's a little more classic than before.

Also, has anyone noticed that the twins in the movie are "the Olsen twins"?

gabbneb (gabbneb), Saturday, 18 June 2005 14:49 (eighteen years ago) link

"Shut up, Danny!"

gabbneb (gabbneb), Saturday, 18 June 2005 14:54 (eighteen years ago) link

four months pass...
Lynch is on his T.M.-related speaking tour and appears at UCI tonight; my friend who is helping put this on has info about how you can tune in if you'd like:

---

David Lynch live tonight from UC Irvine. Probably one of the smaller venues this tour has been at. (424 capacity). We're also hosting an overflow lecture hall next door with a live video feed of the event for those that can't get seats. For all of you out here worldwide, there's a live radio remote on KUCI.org

http://www.kuci.org/

supposedly also a video stream at

rtsp://128.195.138.185/dLynchlg.sdp

and a small version at
rtsp://128.195.138.184/dLynchsm.sdp

http://www.davidlynchfoundation.org

http://www.davidlynchtour.org

Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 5 November 2005 23:58 (eighteen years ago) link

(Presentation begins at 7:30 PM Pacific Time, though he is one of three speakers in total and I'm not sure how the presentation itself is organized.)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 5 November 2005 23:59 (eighteen years ago) link

four months pass...
Why do people hate Wild at Heart so much? I was on TV last night, and I caught the second half. I love that movie! Even my normally stodgy roommate liked it. Are ya'll just grossed out by the greasiness of it all?

Special Agent Gene Krupa (orion), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 18:47 (eighteen years ago) link

I just get tired of it - its narrative leaps are nonsensical, there's no "forward motion" in the plot, and I don't care about the lead characters. I blame the source material - not a big fan of the way Gifford structures his stories.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 18:49 (eighteen years ago) link

also, ilx be hating Nic Cage

Yawn (Wintermute), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 18:51 (eighteen years ago) link

people hating nic cage must not understand just how fantastic raising arizona is.

Special Agent Gene Krupa (orion), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 18:56 (eighteen years ago) link

I honestly don't get Lynch's appeal - I find his films cold, uninvolving, meaningless and boring.

Having said that I liked Twin Peaks, mostly because it was funny.

xpost - yeah he's great in that. And in Adaptation.

chap who would dare to be a stone cold thug (chap), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 18:58 (eighteen years ago) link

i personally love wild at heart!

s1ocki (slutsky), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 19:03 (eighteen years ago) link

The Straight Story gets better and better; in its quiet way, as subversive as Mulholland Drive. What beautiful music – some of the best scoring I've heard in modern film.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 19:06 (eighteen years ago) link

wild at heart is a comedy.

Special Agent Gene Krupa (orion), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 19:07 (eighteen years ago) link

http://www.skaityta.lt/img/KingStand.jpg

Yawn (Wintermute), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 19:10 (eighteen years ago) link

wrong thread!

Yawn (Wintermute), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 19:11 (eighteen years ago) link

and while lynch's films are, perhaps, cold & meaningless they're certainly not uninvolving or boring!

Special Agent Gene Krupa (orion), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 19:12 (eighteen years ago) link

wild at heart is hot

senseiDancer (sexyDancer), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 19:25 (eighteen years ago) link

don't jump back so slow, i thought rabbits were supposed to be fast.

Special Agent Gene Krupa (orion), Wednesday, 15 March 2006 19:28 (eighteen years ago) link

this is rockin good news

account settings (account), Thursday, 16 March 2006 00:26 (eighteen years ago) link

my dog barks some

kyle (akmonday), Thursday, 16 March 2006 00:33 (eighteen years ago) link

Enough jibber jabber, get me one (1) trailer for Inland Empire

Should've Never Give Jimmy Mod Money (The Famous Jimmy Mod), Thursday, 16 March 2006 00:41 (eighteen years ago) link

He has a new animation DVD out, but I have a hard time paying money for some crappy Flash series he put together learning the program.

Erick Dampier is better than Shaq (miloaukerman), Thursday, 16 March 2006 00:44 (eighteen years ago) link

wild at heart is a comedy.

i've thought of it as a david lynch airplane! movie, gags every 30 seconds. not all of them connect, but the ones that do are boffo. and since it's a lynch airplane!, it's also scary-weird, but that's just a different kind of gag. sherilynn fenn picking her brains out -- funny, disturbing or just icky? all of the above.

it's his Pop movie. i love it.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Thursday, 16 March 2006 01:18 (eighteen years ago) link

also, i think only some of his movies are "cold." eraserhead, maybe, although that's too dreamy to really be cold. dune is chilly, he didn't really engage with that one. and lost highway is definitely cold, which is what i don't like about it -- it's the only one of his movies that really feels nasty to me, and egregiously. blue velvet and mulholland drive are warm and dark.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Thursday, 16 March 2006 01:22 (eighteen years ago) link

gypsy -- sherilyn fenn involved in any kind of picking is hot.

killy (baby lenin pin), Thursday, 16 March 2006 01:35 (eighteen years ago) link

hot, right, that was the other option.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Thursday, 16 March 2006 01:39 (eighteen years ago) link

lynch should work with harry dean stanton again.

kephm (kephm), Thursday, 16 March 2006 01:47 (eighteen years ago) link

also, i think only some of his movies are "cold." eraserhead, maybe, although that's too dreamy to really be cold. dune is chilly, he didn't really engage with that one. and lost highway is definitely cold, which is what i don't like about it -- it's the only one of his movies that really feels nasty to me, and egregiously. blue velvet and mulholland drive are warm and dark.

-- gypsy mothra (meetm...), March 16th, 2006.

otm

latebloomer aka rembrandt, the fifth ninja turtle (latebloomer), Thursday, 16 March 2006 07:49 (eighteen years ago) link

i watched the long ass dune i taped off tv back in the day. its like 4 hours or something. it was kickin ass.

chaki (chaki), Thursday, 16 March 2006 08:04 (eighteen years ago) link

Kephm, good news: Harry Dean is in INLAND EMPIRE.

WitchBaby (witchy), Thursday, 16 March 2006 15:42 (eighteen years ago) link

I'd guess this was the DVD mentioned a little earlier:

Room to Dream

Sez it's free, though -- and apparently there's Inland Empire behind the scenes footage on it.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 17 March 2006 18:48 (eighteen years ago) link

one month passes...
oh um, no... oh wow, maybe.

http://youtube.com/watch?v=JLVH4BXlPc4&search=david%20lynch

jed_ (jed), Thursday, 4 May 2006 13:39 (eighteen years ago) link

one month passes...
I finally saw Eraserhead for the first time last night. I mean, holy shit, probably the most unsettling thing ever. I loved though the classic Lynch trick of have-a-wtf-noise-going-for-the-duration-of-a-scene-then-tie-off-the-scene-by-showing-us-what-was-making-that-noise (a la the suckling puppies).

mummy wrapped in bacon (nickalicious), Monday, 12 June 2006 19:55 (seventeen years ago) link

It was also like painfully funny in a couple places; Mary's chipper dad, the eraser factory scene, etc.

mummy wrapped in bacon (nickalicious), Monday, 12 June 2006 19:56 (seventeen years ago) link

Holy shit, imdb says Jack Nance was MURDERED!?!?

mummy wrapped in bacon (nickalicious), Monday, 12 June 2006 20:01 (seventeen years ago) link

yeah, he was shot by someone he got into an argument with i think. in a donut shop or something like that, IIRC.

latebloomer (latebloomer), Monday, 12 June 2006 20:04 (seventeen years ago) link

http://www.lynchnet.com/absent/nancepre.html

gabbneb (gabbneb), Monday, 12 June 2006 20:08 (seventeen years ago) link

there's something peculiarly Lynchian about getting murdered via a brawl with the patrons of a donut shop.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 12 June 2006 20:18 (seventeen years ago) link

Eraserhead had it's moments, but was also boring and art studenty. I think these days I appreciate Lynch's straight movies the most, i.e. Elephant Man and Straight Story. He should do more of those.

Tuomas (Tuomas), Monday, 12 June 2006 21:27 (seventeen years ago) link

dude it invented "art studenty"

s1ocki (slutsky), Monday, 12 June 2006 21:30 (seventeen years ago) link

I rewatched Polanski's The Tenant a couple of weeks ago, and there was a definite Lynch-like vibe in it. If he ever saw it, it must've given him an idea or two.

Tuomas (Tuomas), Monday, 12 June 2006 21:36 (seventeen years ago) link

same with N Young's "Human Highway"

Total Fucking Darkness (sexyDancer), Monday, 12 June 2006 21:38 (seventeen years ago) link

cf: Blake Edwards' "Experiment In Terror"

Steve Shasta (Steve Shasta), Monday, 12 June 2006 21:39 (seventeen years ago) link

cf: Blake Edwards' "Skin Deep"

s1ocki (slutsky), Monday, 12 June 2006 21:41 (seventeen years ago) link

i liked twin peaks but not much else.

jeffrey (johnson), Monday, 12 June 2006 22:45 (seventeen years ago) link

Movie-maker David Lynch has filed for divorce from his wife of a month. The Twin Peaks visionary and Mary Sweeney wed in May after years spent working together on movies like Blue Velvet, Mulholland Drive and The Straight Story, which Sweeney co-wrote, edited and produced. Lynch filed for divorce, citing "irreconcilable differences" on Monday after separating from Sweeney at the weekend. The couple has a teenage son, Riley. The month-long wedding was Lynch's third.

Steve Shasta (Steve Shasta), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 17:11 (seventeen years ago) link

"month-long wedding"? that's a long ceremony.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 17:16 (seventeen years ago) link

Human Highway is too hilarious to be Lynchian.

electro-acoustic lycanthrope (orion), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 17:18 (seventeen years ago) link

it's a deeper connection than style. lots of actors that would become part of Lynch's stable are in that film.

Total Fucking Darkness (sexyDancer), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 17:32 (seventeen years ago) link

go back to film school.

electro-acoustic lycanthrope (orion), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 17:33 (seventeen years ago) link

what's your problem?

Total Fucking Darkness (sexyDancer), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 17:33 (seventeen years ago) link

JUST A BIT OF FUN, LET'S BE COOL.

electro-acoustic lycanthrope (orion), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 17:36 (seventeen years ago) link

Human Highway has Dennis Hopper, Dean Stockwell, Russ Tamblyn, concerns surrealistic small-town goings-on, and was filmed four years before "Blue Velvet." I'd wager Lynch was one of the only people to see this film when it came out.

Total Fucking Darkness (sexyDancer), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 17:41 (seventeen years ago) link

i just watched the 1st episode of on the air last night and it has to be the strangest thing ever on tv. the part at the end when the cavemen walk by with the inflatable raft slayed me.

jhoshea (scoopsnoodle), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 17:43 (seventeen years ago) link

Yeah, I think the first episode is brilliant, beautifully absurd slapstick. It's the only episode Lynch directed, though, and the rest is pretty mediocre. Though the last episode (which he wrote) is quite special, and probably even stranger than the first.

Orange (Orange), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 23:24 (seventeen years ago) link

the rest is pretty mediocre

YOU ARE WRONG WRONG WRONG

The Jazz Guide to Penguins on Compact Disc (Rock Hardy), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 23:31 (seventeen years ago) link

:(

Damn, Atreyu! (x Jeremy), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 23:43 (seventeen years ago) link

Well, it's definitely amusing, but after the first one I was let down a bit.

Orange (Orange), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 23:43 (seventeen years ago) link

Did anyone else see the adverts he directed for the Playstation 2?

S- (sgh), Thursday, 15 June 2006 07:57 (seventeen years ago) link

five months pass...
Pretty decent article about Lynch at 24liesASecond

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Sunday, 19 November 2006 20:14 (seventeen years ago) link

ten months pass...

David Lynch's Middle East Peace Plan

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 16 October 2007 16:32 (sixteen years ago) link

An Airbus?

Alba, Tuesday, 16 October 2007 19:46 (sixteen years ago) link

seriously guys, click on the correct video link and watch this. it is mindboggling.

jessie monster, Tuesday, 16 October 2007 19:54 (sixteen years ago) link

lolz @ INXS ringtone - way to go douchebag

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 16 October 2007 19:55 (sixteen years ago) link

yes, the man is down for TM.
This is known.

sexyDancer, Tuesday, 16 October 2007 19:56 (sixteen years ago) link

his HAIR. IT'S FULL OF STARS.

jessie monster, Tuesday, 16 October 2007 19:56 (sixteen years ago) link

amazing how a genius director can talk in such a shallow,banal ways about new age cliches that will of course bring peace to the world...

Zeno, Tuesday, 16 October 2007 20:28 (sixteen years ago) link

I am more just entranced by the way he stares into the crowd when INXS ringtone goes off. and his hair.

jessie monster, Tuesday, 16 October 2007 20:44 (sixteen years ago) link

Guess who's back with a new film

Alba, Sunday, 28 October 2007 12:42 (sixteen years ago) link

like 20 years after her last one! i think boxing helena's faults are generally attributable to youth and inexperience (and casting Julian Sands)

akm, Sunday, 28 October 2007 14:28 (sixteen years ago) link

David Lynch and Donovan, together at last

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 31 October 2007 15:51 (sixteen years ago) link

They already teamed up for a speaking tour earlier this year. I'm guessing this will be the first university to include the word "Invincible" in its name though (not including Invincible Iron Man Junior College).

Chris L, Wednesday, 31 October 2007 16:41 (sixteen years ago) link

i saw the donovan concert on pbs hosted by david lynch. it was SO BAD. mike love came out at the end and sang a song as crappy as a man could. i posted about it somewhere.

chaki, Wednesday, 31 October 2007 17:50 (sixteen years ago) link

Mike Love is such a dick he named one of his kids Christian (his kids seem nice though)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 31 October 2007 18:02 (sixteen years ago) link

three months pass...

I wonder what Lynch's eulogy will be like

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 5 February 2008 23:59 (sixteen years ago) link

I have yet to see Inland Empire all the way through but man do I dig it.

da croupier, Wednesday, 6 February 2008 00:07 (sixteen years ago) link

the last 15 minutes or so are really something else. I've watched it twice and its fantastic but a real undertaking.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 February 2008 00:10 (sixteen years ago) link

four months pass...

Ok, this has to be a joke.

mehlt, Saturday, 5 July 2008 09:44 (fifteen years ago) link

it is not - that's been out for a couple years at least

Shakey Mo Collier, Saturday, 5 July 2008 17:13 (fifteen years ago) link

yeah, they were selling it at the IFC center when IE was playing. didn't actually buy any tho.

impudent harlot, Saturday, 5 July 2008 17:16 (fifteen years ago) link

seven months pass...

anyone care to recommend some movies by other directors I might like given I really like David Lynch?

Local Garda, Monday, 9 February 2009 13:04 (fifteen years ago) link

Carnival Of Souls

Zelda Zonk, Monday, 9 February 2009 13:14 (fifteen years ago) link

The Tenant by Roman Polanski. It predates Lynch but has a very similar feel to his more surreal stuff, could even be that he was influenced by it.

Tuomas, Monday, 9 February 2009 13:29 (fifteen years ago) link

i couldn't think of anything but Polanski is a good answer, actually. Repulsion, The Tennant and even Rosemary's Baby all have aspects in common with Lynch.

jed_, Monday, 9 February 2009 13:49 (fifteen years ago) link

Maybe some of the Val Lewton films - The Seventh Victim for instance

Zelda Zonk, Monday, 9 February 2009 13:57 (fifteen years ago) link

Is Hitchcock too obvious?

(*゚ー゚)θ L(。・_・)   °~ヾ(・ε・ *) (Steve Shasta), Monday, 9 February 2009 14:08 (fifteen years ago) link

Three Women

Chris L, Monday, 9 February 2009 15:27 (fifteen years ago) link

this.

also, if you can find it, "black moon" by louis malle. surreal psychosexual alice in wonderland stuff; includes at least one scene that i'm convinced was the basis for something in wild at heart.

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Monday, 9 February 2009 15:33 (fifteen years ago) link

Wizard of Oz duh

Courtney Love's Jew Loan Officer (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 9 February 2009 16:31 (fifteen years ago) link

try these:

safe
audition
the spirit of the beehive
come and see
the holy mountain
persona
a tale of two sisters
choses secrètes

鬼の手 (Edward III), Monday, 9 February 2009 16:42 (fifteen years ago) link

Woman in the Dunes

Chris L, Monday, 9 February 2009 16:49 (fifteen years ago) link

You might also enjoy movies by Julio Medem, especially The Red Squirrel and Tierra, as they're both surreal films about passions lurking beneath calm surfaces.

Tuomas, Monday, 9 February 2009 16:53 (fifteen years ago) link

pauline kael nailed it in her blue velvet review: "Lynch might turn out to be the first populist surrealist - a Frank Capra of dream logic."

鬼の手 (Edward III), Monday, 9 February 2009 16:59 (fifteen years ago) link

that was a random thought about lynch, apropos of nothing

鬼の手 (Edward III), Monday, 9 February 2009 16:59 (fifteen years ago) link

werner herzog is probably also a good idea ... esp. even dwarfs started small.

Ein kluges Äpfelchen (Eisbaer), Monday, 9 February 2009 16:59 (fifteen years ago) link

OTM

I've never found the proper entry point for him, so I can't make recommendations, but: luis buñuel

鬼の手 (Edward III), Monday, 9 February 2009 17:02 (fifteen years ago) link

Holy Mountain? I don't see that connection (unless yr thinking of the Dune angle)

Courtney Love's Jew Loan Officer (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 9 February 2009 17:11 (fifteen years ago) link

their tones are totally diff but the wacky transgressive surrealism would appeal to a lynch fan methinks

鬼の手 (Edward III), Monday, 9 February 2009 17:13 (fifteen years ago) link

The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari & other German Expressionist films.

Ricky Apples (Pillbox), Monday, 9 February 2009 17:20 (fifteen years ago) link

Last Year at Marienbad

Might be difficult to find, but worth it.

circa1916, Monday, 9 February 2009 20:34 (fifteen years ago) link

Criterion is releasing it this year.

Chris L, Monday, 9 February 2009 20:57 (fifteen years ago) link

Optimum released it in 2006 I believe.

Le Bateau Ivre, Monday, 9 February 2009 21:18 (fifteen years ago) link

Thanks for all these, just watching the Tenant now. I particularly like the way Lynch uses music if that makes a difference to recommendations.

Local Garda, Monday, 9 February 2009 21:23 (fifteen years ago) link

ronan: here's a clip from herzog's even dwarfs started small, if you haven't seen it already (i also think herzog makes interesting use of music in his films). so i guess that if you like this, then you should rent this film:

Ein kluges Äpfelchen (Eisbaer), Monday, 9 February 2009 21:38 (fifteen years ago) link

a PETA film of the month favorite

鬼の手 (Edward III), Monday, 9 February 2009 21:52 (fifteen years ago) link

I enjoyed The Tenant, though it was sort of less postmodern than maybe what I was looking for. I mean actually I'm sure lots of these films I will enjoy, but I get a huge kick out of Lynch using pop music or modern music in really weird contexts, or the kind of humorous weirdness of eg the woman dancing on the car in Blue Velvet.

I will keep checking out the above recommendations though.

Local Garda, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 14:22 (fifteen years ago) link

Cronenberg always strikes me as Lynch's nearest point of comparison.

zero learnt from nero (Neil S), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 14:32 (fifteen years ago) link

SCORPIO RISING by Kenneth Anger seems like the most obvious precursor to Lynch in terms of use of pop music, colour, occult iconography

Ward Fowler, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 14:34 (fifteen years ago) link

^^^Yes absolutely
Kustom Kar Kommandos, Scorpio Rising, Rabbit Moon

Courtney Love's Jew Loan Officer (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 16:34 (fifteen years ago) link

, but I get a huge kick out of Lynch using pop music or modern music in really weird contexts

Have you seen much Dennis Potter?

Alba, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 16:37 (fifteen years ago) link

LGarda: Bunuel

Dr Morbius, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 16:39 (fifteen years ago) link

re: music yeah Potter is another good reference point, my personal favorite is "Lipstick on Your Collar" (feat. super-young Ewan MacGregor!) but the most Lynch-like is definitely the og Pennies from Heaven.

Courtney Love's Jew Loan Officer (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 16:40 (fifteen years ago) link

werner herzog is probably also a good idea ... esp. even dwarfs started small.

And "Kaspar Hauser", if you're a fan of "The Elephant Man"

Vicious Cop Kills Gentle Fool (Tom D.), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 17:08 (fifteen years ago) link

I think maybe Blackeyes is Potter's most Lynchian, but not his best.

Alba, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 17:17 (fifteen years ago) link

Potter wrote a screenplay adaptation of the DM Thomas novel The White Hotel for David Lynch in 1990, apparently.

Alba, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 17:19 (fifteen years ago) link

I have a Potter boxset. Have seen about half of it.

Local Garda, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 19:31 (fifteen years ago) link

i was going to suggest "syndromes and a century" but that's not particularly lynchian in the way that Ronan is geting at, it's pretty singular. the problem is that i can't think of anything that is lynchian in that way other than his own films.

jed_, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 19:42 (fifteen years ago) link

^ this is sort of seals the deal on lynch's greatness for me (not that the door really needs sealing for me, but still). no matter who he may have been influenced by, and after decades of being remarkably successful and influential in the weirdo art movie game, there just aren't any other "lynch-like" movies out there. he stands alone.

this is a good parody, though:

get drunk and do legos (contenderizer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 19:47 (fifteen years ago) link

miracle mile does that cheerful cardboard americana turning into utter nightmare thing from blue velvet pretty well.

, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 21:40 (fifteen years ago) link

the Anthony Edwards movie?

Courtney Love's Jew Loan Officer (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 21:46 (fifteen years ago) link

this is a good resource if you're looking for movie recommendations based on other movies you like: clerkdogs.com

Ages 8 to 80, Tuesday, 10 February 2009 21:48 (fifteen years ago) link

I enjoyed The Tenant, though it was sort of less postmodern than maybe what I was looking for. I mean actually I'm sure lots of these films I will enjoy, but I get a huge kick out of Lynch using pop music or modern music in really weird contexts, or the kind of humorous weirdness of eg the woman dancing on the car in Blue Velvet.

most of the ones I listed are similar to lynch in that they're terrifying films but they aren't horror movies, they work on the axes of social fear and loathing, gothic absurdity, and transgressive behavior. their use of music is pretty standard except for safe, which has some ironic diagetic 80s tunes sprinkled throughout.

have you seen richard elfman's forbidden zone?

鬼の手 (Edward III), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:13 (fifteen years ago) link

has anyone ever ever seen this film? and if so, is it even vaguely Lynchian? crispin glover was in wild at heart, after all.

Ein kluges Äpfelchen (Eisbaer), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:44 (fifteen years ago) link

no and I would like to. What Is It? I'd also love to see

Courtney Love's Jew Loan Officer (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 10 February 2009 22:54 (fifteen years ago) link

The Shining strikes me as sharing a certain tone with Lynch's films. The bearsuit blowjob scene comes to mind.

Maybe Eyes Wide Shut too.

Alba, Wednesday, 11 February 2009 15:37 (fifteen years ago) link

The Shining strikes me as sharing a certain tone with Lynch's films. The bearsuit blowjob scene comes to mind.

and that's quite deliberate -- if wikipedia is to be believed, stanley kubrick had the cast of the shining watch eraserhead in order to get them in the mood for what he was trying to accomplish with the shining.

Ein kluges Äpfelchen (Eisbaer), Wednesday, 11 February 2009 15:43 (fifteen years ago) link

Never knew that - thanks.

Alba, Wednesday, 11 February 2009 15:53 (fifteen years ago) link

this has probably been posted many times before: Lynch's adert for Parisienne cigarettes

jed_, Wednesday, 11 February 2009 16:05 (fifteen years ago) link

which totally of reminds me of fischi and weiss's der lauf der dinge:

jed_, Wednesday, 11 February 2009 16:08 (fifteen years ago) link

fischli & Weiss *

jed_, Wednesday, 11 February 2009 16:11 (fifteen years ago) link

movies that have been at the top of my to-see list for a long time for reasons not unrelated to their possible Lynchian-ness:

Tetsuo The Iron Man
The Reflecting Skin
Greaser's Palace
Night Dreams (nsfw googling as this is a porn film)
Liquid Sky (??? prolley not ???)

has anyone seen these? can they attest to the possible affinities to that which is Lynch-esque?

also:

Egoyan's The Adjuster REALLY freaked me out

you might do worse than ot check out certainanime titles. I'm thinking of FLCL and especially Revolutionary Girl Utena: The Movie which is fascinating in its nonlinearity...familiar with only the bare essentials of the original teen girls' anime series, but apparently the movie is related to the series the same way that Fire Walk With Me* is related to Twin Peaks...

*didn't FWIW top the box offices in Japan when it first came out?

googling 'Ineedagirlfriend.com' (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 12 February 2009 04:03 (fifteen years ago) link

the movie is related to the series the same way that Fire Walk With Me is related to Twin Peaks...

actually not true, the movie is not a prequel, but an alternate reality set-up with the lesbian overtones amped up and the themes all turned on their head...still good stuff though...

googling 'Ineedagirlfriend.com' (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 12 February 2009 04:04 (fifteen years ago) link

FWIW = FWWM of course

googling 'Ineedagirlfriend.com' (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 12 February 2009 04:05 (fifteen years ago) link

Lynch id the producer of the new Herzog movie:
My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1233219/

looks promising

Zeno, Thursday, 12 February 2009 04:09 (fifteen years ago) link

also,more surprising, the Alejandro Jodorowsky comeback movie:
"king shot" with Nick Nolte,Asia Argento and Marilyn Manson,
now THAT i want to see!!
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0892411/

Zeno, Thursday, 12 February 2009 04:10 (fifteen years ago) link

"The story is to be set in a casino in the desert. The film involves gangsters, the discovery of a man as big as King Kong, and Marilyn Manson is said to portray a 300 year old pope. "

Zeno, Thursday, 12 February 2009 04:12 (fifteen years ago) link

tetsuo is rad. no similarity to lynch other than that it's weird and super alienated - plus b&w like eraserhead & elepant mans

the reflecting skin is surreal & creepy coming of age thing, about the evil that lurks under the skin of the everday, so blue velvety, but not deeply so

greaser's palace is more like "zany" wokka-wokka american version of jodorowsky

night dreams is a new-wavey, very self-consciously surreal porn flick, but pretty cool for what it is. cafe flesh by the same crew might be better. they also made the erotic but non-pronographical dr. caligari. all are arty student film awkward, but also unique, campy and fun. probably closer to forbidden zone than to lynch (but nowhere near as relentlessly zany)

liquid sky is another new-wave artifakt, and by far the most low-budget flick on the list. none of these last three even remotely resemble lynch, but i love em all.

noticing the cloud come (contenderizer), Thursday, 12 February 2009 04:17 (fifteen years ago) link

right on contenderizer. i thank you. :)

googling 'Ineedagirlfriend.com' (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 12 February 2009 04:21 (fifteen years ago) link

the adjuster is pretty much follows yr description of reflecting skin, except there are no scifi overtones that i can remember...also super-alienated...but with egoyan's trademark revealing style giving it the frame work...

(not saying you haven't seen it though...just for the record...)

googling 'Ineedagirlfriend.com' (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 12 February 2009 04:24 (fifteen years ago) link

i don't remember whether or not i've seen the adjuster. i think not. i think i've only seen family viewing and the sweet hereafter. maybe one more? anyway, i should go back and watch all the egoyan i missed. love the two i can remember. anyway, no sci-fi in the reflecting skin, either. tetsuo, liquid sky and night dreams are the sci-fi-ier ones.

noticing the cloud come (contenderizer), Thursday, 12 February 2009 05:39 (fifteen years ago) link

the reflecting skin is surreal & creepy coming of age thing, about the evil that lurks under the skin of the everday, so blue velvety, but not deeply so

The Passion of Darkly Noon, Philip Ridley's second film also has Lynchian qualities, though the drama is more straightforward and there isn't as much humor. It's well worth the watch anyway, don't be scared by the fact that it co-stars Brendan Fraser.

Tuomas, Thursday, 12 February 2009 09:56 (fifteen years ago) link

oh, i thought some lady was like a vampire and there were weird guys riding around in limousines stealing children...who were also vampires...or something...for some reason i got the impression that the reflecting skin had a really dour donnie darko vibe to it...

i heard of the passion of darkly noon...that sounded really goo too...i think these movies are pretty unknown in the states...?

Internet is teh suck (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 12 February 2009 12:45 (fifteen years ago) link

they aren't on dvd here

akm, Thursday, 12 February 2009 14:24 (fifteen years ago) link

you can dl the reflecting skin from here:

http://www.cultrararevideos.com/forgottenflixr.html

鬼の手 (Edward III), Thursday, 12 February 2009 14:59 (fifteen years ago) link

thank you!

Internet is teh suck (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 12 February 2009 15:16 (fifteen years ago) link

don't wanna ruin TRF for folks that haven't seen it, but it's not at all clear what "she" is. protagonist imagines that she and her boys are vampires...

noticing the cloud come (contenderizer), Thursday, 12 February 2009 16:43 (fifteen years ago) link

what bunuel would be good to start with?

Local Garda, Sunday, 22 February 2009 23:20 (fifteen years ago) link

I don't see much connection between Buñuel and Lynch at all, besides some vague common theme of surrealism. Buñuel is much more playful and leftist/liberal than Lynch. Belle du Jour is the best one of his that I've seen, but it's also one of his less surreal movies.

Tuomas, Sunday, 22 February 2009 23:36 (fifteen years ago) link

Possible Worlds - I'd forgotten about this until this thread jogged ye olde memorybanks: A 2000 French-Canadian film featuring a pre-stardom Tilda Swinton I saw at a film festival years ago. If you dig the parallel realities/intersecting identity crises side of Lynch, this does a respectable job with similar themes.

2 ears + 1 ❤ (Pillbox), Sunday, 22 February 2009 23:52 (fifteen years ago) link

Alba, Tuesday, 3 March 2009 16:49 (fifteen years ago) link

Found via http://twitter.com/DAVID_LYNCH

Alba, Tuesday, 3 March 2009 16:51 (fifteen years ago) link

that might be the coolest thing i've ever seen! good work Alba!

they dont know bout us and theyve never heard of drugs (Drugs A. Money), Wednesday, 4 March 2009 17:39 (fifteen years ago) link

three months pass...

ASIAN MAN KILLED IN SEATTLE!!

ian, Saturday, 13 June 2009 04:50 (fourteen years ago) link

two months pass...

^^^ no idea wtf i was on about with that last revive.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKiIroiCvZ0

ian, Saturday, 29 August 2009 23:43 (fourteen years ago) link

<3

Mordy, Sunday, 30 August 2009 01:44 (fourteen years ago) link

Hahaha, that was amazing.

kshighway, Sunday, 30 August 2009 02:58 (fourteen years ago) link

he is weirder than his movies are.
i love it.

Zeno, Sunday, 30 August 2009 03:01 (fourteen years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ddp012WOO7A&feature=related

Zeno, Sunday, 30 August 2009 03:06 (fourteen years ago) link

four months pass...

I think as a sort of rule, anytime you're at a bar with people, whenever one of them orders a heineken you should be obliged to yell "Heineken! what the fuck is that shit, Pabst Blue Ribbon!" and punch them in the stomach.

EDB, Tuesday, 19 January 2010 19:35 (fourteen years ago) link

Here's to your fuck, Frank.

Fox Force Five Punchline (sexyDancer), Tuesday, 19 January 2010 20:32 (fourteen years ago) link

http://interviewproject.davidlynch.com

those short interviews of U.S small-town-locals are the most humanistic (along with The Straight Story) things he done, and one of his best projects in general imo.
great job.

Zeno, Tuesday, 19 January 2010 23:43 (fourteen years ago) link

ok, it's directed by his son - Austin, but still, it's great.like father , like son.

Zeno, Tuesday, 19 January 2010 23:53 (fourteen years ago) link

one month passes...

OK, does anyone here watch The Cleveland Show? This past Sunday's episode featured Lynch in an extended voice role as a bartender. When the character showed up, I was like, "Is that guy supposed to be David Lynch?" And the more he talked, I realized it really was him. Utterly weird. It's at Hulu if you want to see it.

El Poopo Loco (Pancakes Hackman), Thursday, 25 February 2010 01:33 (fourteen years ago) link

Yeah, I watched that last night and had the exact same reaction. Bizarre.

a black white asian pine ghost who is fake (Telephone thing), Thursday, 25 February 2010 17:50 (fourteen years ago) link

three months pass...

saw blue velvet at a cinema last night with prob the worst audience possible - they just found pretty much everything about it totally hilarious.

truffle-flavoured french fry (titchyschneiderMk2), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:38 (thirteen years ago) link

there's a fair bit of comedy and as I said elsewhere it works really well as a satire of wholesome 50's Americana but to giggle throughout is coarse

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:40 (thirteen years ago) link

at the Prince Charles? Have a bit of a love/hate relationship with that cinema..

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:43 (thirteen years ago) link

I saw it coincidentally a couple of nights before his death was announced, on dvd. It was fabulous, of course.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:44 (thirteen years ago) link

giggling i can understand, sure, but not riotous laughing. i couldnt tell if it was film nerds showing how clever clever they were or just stupid people unable to treat it seriously. it was at the pcc yeah. i do like that cinema a lot, but sometimes you get some really fucking weird people there. eg - when i saw funny games one guy (maybe he was there last night too) just kept laughing at some of the most disturbing moments!

truffle-flavoured french fry (titchyschneiderMk2), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:46 (thirteen years ago) link

laughing at david lynch is not even on the same scale of inhumanity as eating at nandos

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:47 (thirteen years ago) link

What about Chipotle? They opened one up on Charing Cross road recently, and embarrassing as it may be for myself, the food was awes for what is what.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:49 (thirteen years ago) link

*what it was.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:50 (thirteen years ago) link

i know nothing about chipotle

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:50 (thirteen years ago) link

not tried that chipotle yet but i plan too soon
hopefully it wont be as bland as the mexian places in angel though

truffle-flavoured french fry (titchyschneiderMk2), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:51 (thirteen years ago) link

oh I went to one of those! just opposite the station. it wasn't BAD.

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:52 (thirteen years ago) link

Thought it was better than Benito's Hat/El Burrito on Goodge, if you've been there.

My own barbecue slays Nando's anyday, but I do have a soft spot for the sauces on that counter.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:52 (thirteen years ago) link

Back to Lynch...I watched Twin Peaks s1 the other week. I mean it was good and certainly kooky but far from amazing....worlds worse than say Soprano/Wire/Mad Men class of 00s.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:54 (thirteen years ago) link

pfft.

circa1916, Saturday, 5 June 2010 19:58 (thirteen years ago) link

david lynch's film in general can be VERY funny -- and yes, this includes blue velvet (and yes, even some of the more disturbing moments). if anything, this is one of the reasons why i've come to love lynch's films so much.

(whether it's reason for people to laugh HYSTERICALLY at anything, though, that's another matter.)

about as twee as a being beaten with a phone book (Eisbaer), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:01 (thirteen years ago) link

Tad! Sorry I didn't respond to your ILXmail; suffice to say I've gotten off my arse and have stuff in the pipeline now. Hope you're kicking on!

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:04 (thirteen years ago) link

not a problem, acoleuthic :-) glad that you're doing what you're supposed to do ... i kid you sometimes, but you're good people!

now back to david lynch ...

about as twee as a being beaten with a phone book (Eisbaer), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:06 (thirteen years ago) link

which one should I see next if I've only seen BV and MD and regard both as titanic (esp latter)

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:07 (thirteen years ago) link

definitely get eraserhead. which can be pretty funny too, if you look at it a particular way.

about as twee as a being beaten with a phone book (Eisbaer), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:08 (thirteen years ago) link

ok, I've heard I'd probably love that one too

Inland Empire is the one I really want to see though

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:10 (thirteen years ago) link

^^I've got that, waiting for the perfect time to watch it though.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:11 (thirteen years ago) link

double-date imo

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:11 (thirteen years ago) link

i hated that

though like most DL things i might like it more now

though watching BV on a big screen yesterday just made me think id still rather watch lynch direct a film thats made on er film rather than DV

truffle-flavoured french fry (titchyschneiderMk2), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:12 (thirteen years ago) link

Naomi Watts + Laura Elena Harring double-date

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:13 (thirteen years ago) link

Definitely would've been amazing to watch Inland Empire at the bfi or somewhere with a rapt audience. In fact, I'm surprised they haven't done a Lynch retrospective season yet.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:14 (thirteen years ago) link

hahahaha you want me to corrupt my principles here dontcha

also what happens when they end up making out with each other

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:15 (thirteen years ago) link

we make a DIY Mulholland Drive 2: North West London

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:16 (thirteen years ago) link

Holloway Rd

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:17 (thirteen years ago) link

actually i think IE might be better suited to watching at home on dvd
actually no, youtube is probably a better medium
watching it at the cinema i think is what made me hate it more

truffle-flavoured french fry (titchyschneiderMk2), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:17 (thirteen years ago) link

oh wait North West

Uxbridge Rd

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:17 (thirteen years ago) link

Exactly, what is London's Mulholland Drive/Sunset Blvd? Haverstock Hill?

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:21 (thirteen years ago) link

Either way, ILM is one of the most effective procrastination tools on planet Earth. :/

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:22 (thirteen years ago) link

West Cross Way?

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:22 (thirteen years ago) link

Holland Park Ave

^^^Ave can also be Latin for 'hai' and Average, DOUBLE MEANINGS, also Holland is in the initial title

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:23 (thirteen years ago) link

let's do this, where are attractive lesbians, sinister cowboys and expert mimes

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:24 (thirteen years ago) link

Only know NW + around my uni well, dude. There actually is a London in Literature module on my course but I liked the sound of Literary Linguistics more.

Holland Park def has a ring! Nandos is where the creepy man behind the car park lives.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:25 (thirteen years ago) link

Oh man that cowboy...what was his significance. do you think? Sent a chill up my spine when he appeared in that party sequence near the end.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:26 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah and where Naomi Watts really works (I always thought the barista in the opening 20 minutes and her either WERE the same actress, or should have been)

xp

Cowboy's significance? To deliver a fucking amazing speech, and to signify Classic Hollywood as a sort of ancient mafia, employing its own grandiose fixers to protect its fantastical domain?

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:28 (thirteen years ago) link

and to signify Classic Hollywood as a sort of ancient mafia, employing its own grandiose fixers to protect its fantastical domain?

yeah this, film probably opens up and deepens some kind of resonance if you've lived or spent a lot of time in Hollywood. It is Wilder's Sunset Blvd's nightmare twin.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:31 (thirteen years ago) link

I wrote a lot about this interpretation of the film in the Mulholland Drive thread - it definitely is about the idea of 'the classic Hollywood movie' - showing the frail scaffolding of the concept and yet being one

am watching Youtubes of this guy's talks on Transcendental Meditation - is this shit as potent as he makes out?

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:33 (thirteen years ago) link

SB is much worse though and delivers nowhere near the same mystical punch.

I'm interested though in films which present a similar vibe and setting to this, though. How about Robert Altman's Short Cuts?

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:34 (thirteen years ago) link

xpost I'll seek out that thread. MD is definitely a film to savor and grow old with, but one of my own cinephile philosophies is that for every film you watch for a second or third time you could watch something new. Hah maybe that seems quite entry-level but I hate to be the guy who's seen MD 134 times.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:37 (thirteen years ago) link

I almost always find once is enough, for films. Maybe I'm weird.

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:39 (thirteen years ago) link

Although to refute that, I love watching a real favourite film with a guest, for the dual motion of personally introducing them to something new, and enjoying the screening with them. I saw MD with my 17 year old brother recently and alas he hated it!

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:39 (thirteen years ago) link

Anyway, gotta get to work. Your degree is good at the moment?

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:40 (thirteen years ago) link

Although to refute that, I love watching a real favourite film with a guest, for the dual motion of personally introducing them to something new, and enjoying the screening with them.

yeah true, my best friend often rewatches a film with me present and I have been known to do the reverse. some of the greatest films I've seen...of course I'd see them again in different company. FEMALE COMPANY

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:41 (thirteen years ago) link

My degree is OK, and I'm off to Dungeness for an interview tomorrow!

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:42 (thirteen years ago) link

oooh with who? Or is it confidential? Hope to rack up some interviews this summer myself..

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:44 (thirteen years ago) link

with a dude who runs a Bird Observatory there, and moonlights in a Top 40 indie-dance act

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:45 (thirteen years ago) link

Sounds very good, post MA...I guess this is like the true beginning of adulthood.

Davek (davek_00), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:48 (thirteen years ago) link

lololol this IS my MA

post MA I don't have a fucking clue except that I'm starting a band

always changing, always the same (acoleuthic), Saturday, 5 June 2010 20:49 (thirteen years ago) link

five months pass...
one month passes...

65 today. It helps to speak backwards Italian:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YJ4ai_W9BzI&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1&safe=active

I'll be showing the English, non-Simpsons version to my grade 6s today. After giving some background on the show, I always promise them that "this is going to completely freak you out." It never does, but it's always very dramatic when I announce that it will.

clemenza, Thursday, 20 January 2011 12:46 (thirteen years ago) link

Happy Birthday David Lynch! :D

amphetamine enhanced scholar (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 20 January 2011 14:25 (thirteen years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atJuCtm6kgI

Blazes Boyband (Pillbox), Thursday, 20 January 2011 15:01 (thirteen years ago) link

one month passes...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=go98Oa10QR4

StanM, Friday, 18 March 2011 20:17 (thirteen years ago) link

don't think there's been enough wtf in response to this

http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y176/edwardiii/duran_duran_by_lynch.jpg

I am sorry for my insensitive tweet (Edward III), Monday, 21 March 2011 15:43 (thirteen years ago) link

one month passes...

http://vimeo.com/21939919

it's time for the fish in the perculator (Steve Shasta), Wednesday, 27 April 2011 19:10 (thirteen years ago) link

two months pass...

These last couple of days I've been timing & color correcting deleted scenes from Blue Velvet. It's a beautiful trip down memory lane.

!!

winoa ryder sexes creatures of the night (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 28 June 2011 18:03 (twelve years ago) link

Man, that badassdigest link hints at an actual extended cut by the look of it. STOKED.

Bill A, Tuesday, 28 June 2011 18:27 (twelve years ago) link

seriously doubt that happening, prolly just standard deleted scenes

snowball's epc in hell (Edward III), Tuesday, 28 June 2011 19:00 (twelve years ago) link

one month passes...

We've been hearing about it for a long time, and now it's finally here: David Lynch's solo album of electronic pop. Here's the first thing you need to know about this album: It's called Crazy Clown Time.

http://pitchfork.com/news/43525-david-lynch-announces-his-debut-album-featuring-the-yeah-yeah-yeahs-karen-o/

(markers) (markers) (markers) (markers) (markers), Monday, 15 August 2011 16:04 (twelve years ago) link

He's also in the Pearl Jam documentary.

a 'catch-all', almost humorous, 'Jeez' quality (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 15 August 2011 16:07 (twelve years ago) link

i like that song!

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Monday, 15 August 2011 16:12 (twelve years ago) link

the David Lynch track from Return from Planet Dub:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nL_CSYHAUKk

los lowblows (Drugs A. Money), Monday, 15 August 2011 16:51 (twelve years ago) link

he ripped off crispin glover!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rH6b_lSQst0

I love obscure members of the Athrotheiria mammal genus and... (Latham Green), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 16:12 (twelve years ago) link

surprised they dont steal from each other more often tbh

los lowblows (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 16:20 (twelve years ago) link

stop all this crap and make another movie.

jed_, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 17:38 (twelve years ago) link

^^^

that mellow wash of meh (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 17:40 (twelve years ago) link

I'm a bit nervous that Inland Empire will be his last one.

Moodles, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 18:28 (twelve years ago) link

the world won't need film after crazy clown time drops

markers, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 19:32 (twelve years ago) link

hey what happneed to my teenwolf!!

I love obscure members of the Athrotheiria mammal genus and... (Latham Green), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 19:40 (twelve years ago) link

Just listened to "Catching the Big Fish", his audio book. He keeps talking about how awesome Transcendental Meditation, but of course not once does he actually explain how to do it. Well that's not entirely true, at one point he says he was introduced to it, some lady gave him a mantra, he sat down and started meditating on it and was instantly in a realm of bliss.

Does anyone know about TM? Seems to me like you have to have someone give you a special mantra, that not any mantra will do, but it has to be special and unique to the individual. I think this is one of the things the Beatles always thought was suspicious during their stay in the late 60s. Who can give you this mantra? Does it have to be a TM licensed guru?

Telephoneface (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 19 August 2011 15:05 (twelve years ago) link

mantras aren't necessary for meditation but it is kind of central to Lynch's specific discipline - you get your mantra from a guru, yeah

that mellow wash of meh (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 19 August 2011 15:32 (twelve years ago) link

I think TM is not any different than just sitting there and listening to some nice music with your eyes closed for 15 minutes - he is crazy to start a corporation for people to meditate all day

Goth Cruise to Lynch Land (Latham Green), Friday, 19 August 2011 15:35 (twelve years ago) link

Yeah but wouldn't a specific sound be able to match your unique vibration, or something like that? I could see the use in a personalized mantra, though yeah for transcendence obviously nothing is ultimately required.

Telephoneface (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 19 August 2011 15:47 (twelve years ago) link

It was created by Maharishi mahesh yogi or whatever who is seen as kind of a huckster? Just do regular meditation, it doesn't cost 10,0000 bucks.

50000000 elves (blank), Friday, 19 August 2011 15:48 (twelve years ago) link

I mean, the fact that they're asking fit so much money is enough for me to call bullshit.

50000000 elves (blank), Friday, 19 August 2011 15:49 (twelve years ago) link

^^^

that mellow wash of meh (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 19 August 2011 15:50 (twelve years ago) link

Yeah but wouldn't a specific sound be able to match your unique vibration, or something like that?

well, it has to be a sound that you can personally can make and repeat. the repetition (and the mind-numbingness of repeating something endlessly) is part of how it works.

that mellow wash of meh (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 19 August 2011 15:51 (twelve years ago) link

I'd like to get a hold of Lynch and teach him the REAL eternal truths of the universe

Goth Cruise to Lynch Land (Latham Green), Friday, 19 August 2011 15:57 (twelve years ago) link

Yeah but wouldn't a specific sound be able to match your unique vibration, or something like that?

This presupposes that people have a "unique vibration," that a sound can "match" it, and that there's some benefit to matching that vibration. I'm with blank, it sounds like a way to separate Westerners with too much money from some of said money.

nickn, Saturday, 20 August 2011 18:49 (twelve years ago) link

Just listening to the natural rhythm of the breath is probably the best technique, I'd guess.

Telephoneface (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 20 August 2011 19:29 (twelve years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vAICnFZA6I

Ok the other thread was open at the same time, so im posting this here. Tell David I caught a small fish.

Telephoneface (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 20 August 2011 19:31 (twelve years ago) link

I went to David Lynch and Donovan's TM tour a couple of years ago. One of the strangest, and ultimately hilarious, nights I've ever witnessed. Lynch was cool. His car pulled up just as I got to the Glasgow Film Theatre. He was very friendly, saying hello to everyone as his minders ushered him in. It was announced that he'd be giving an unprepared q & a session and we could ask whatever we wanted. So naturally plenty of people asked about what happened to Dale Cooper, if Ronnie Rocket would ever be made etc. 'Gee, I dunno' was his general answer, before he turned it round to talking about how great TM was. "BLISS!! SERENITY!!!" he kept repeating, spreading his arms in a breast stroke motion. It was rather ridiculous, but he still came across as a dude, albeit one who was trying to peddle the joys of TM. Now I recall, he did talk about having a mantra and how this brought "BLISS! JOY! SERENITY!".
After half an hour of this we got a ridiculous hour + of Donovan being cringingly awful.

Count Palmiro Vicarion (Stew), Saturday, 20 August 2011 20:49 (twelve years ago) link

haha, i was there too. bizarre night but amazing to see lynch in the flesh.

jed_, Saturday, 20 August 2011 20:51 (twelve years ago) link

Shill or not, I don't doubt it is something that he uses in all his films for decades now.

Telephoneface (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 20 August 2011 21:54 (twelve years ago) link

Hope it's not true:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/filmblog/2011/aug/19/has-david-lynch-retired

Moodles, Sunday, 21 August 2011 01:28 (twelve years ago) link

I don't doubt that meditation aids his creative process. I'm just suspicious of any religion or cult that only offers enlightenment in return for wads of cash.

Count Palmiro Vicarion (Stew), Sunday, 21 August 2011 14:08 (twelve years ago) link

Why are celebs such suckers for religious/spiritual/self-help practices that demand lots of $$$? I'm with Telephoneface: Follow your breath! It's free.

Vendo Caramelos A Veces Sin Dinero (Capitaine Jay Vee), Sunday, 21 August 2011 20:20 (twelve years ago) link

one month passes...
three weeks pass...

whole thing is on NPR

Waxahachie Swap (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Monday, 31 October 2011 03:57 (twelve years ago) link

More on the Blue Velvet reissue:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/nov/03/blue-velvet-flaming-nipple-deleted-scenes

Ned Raggett, Friday, 4 November 2011 03:08 (twelve years ago) link

Guardian is all over Lynch it seems. This is also a nice interview, about his music, inspiration, coffee and talking fish:

David Lynch: 'Sometimes the fish talks back to you'

Y Kant Lou Reed (Le Bateau Ivre), Friday, 4 November 2011 08:06 (twelve years ago) link

This is where you can hear him talk about the album.
Still have to hear a single note. Also, I'm at episode 13 of my first Twin Peaks rerun since the series ran. Awesome! Totally forgot how very funny it all was. Back then I was mostly scared instead of amused, it seems :)

willem, Friday, 4 November 2011 10:36 (twelve years ago) link

The album is surprisingly good.

Matt DC, Friday, 4 November 2011 10:40 (twelve years ago) link

Whoa thanks for the link Willem! Saving it for the dark night to listen to that! :)

Y Kant Lou Reed (Le Bateau Ivre), Friday, 4 November 2011 10:49 (twelve years ago) link

The Blue Velvet reissue was released last month in belgium and the netherlands, I found out after this thread was revived. Just received the Blu-ray, and wow - that 51 minutes of lost footage is in high definition as well, and has a score and everything! (no subtitles though)

StanM, Tuesday, 8 November 2011 11:17 (twelve years ago) link

The Dutch Dune Blu-Ray really does say "Dino De Laurentiis presents a film by David Lunch" :

http://i39.tinypic.com/2lww47o.jpg

StanM, Tuesday, 8 November 2011 19:19 (twelve years ago) link

two months pass...

David has his own line of coffee: http://www.javadistribution.com/coffee/david-lynch-signature-cup-organic-coffee/

calstars, Friday, 20 January 2012 19:44 (twelve years ago) link

The album with Chrysta Bell is on Spotify.

He sure has a type.

America's Mobile, Friday, 20 January 2012 19:59 (twelve years ago) link

66 today. As always, showed my students Cooper's dream.

clemenza, Friday, 20 January 2012 21:06 (twelve years ago) link

Do your students enjoy your Culture Corner bits, or do they tolerate them with lols and eyerolling?

Steamtable Willie (WmC), Friday, 20 January 2012 21:09 (twelve years ago) link

Sure does (x^2p)

The Koozebane Kronikles (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 20 January 2012 21:15 (twelve years ago) link

Depends. Some stuff they're genuinely interested in--the Kennedy assassination, anything to do with the Beatles, Spielberg, etc. Things like the Jefferson Airplane, or Eisenhower, they're not much interested in. How interested I am has a lot to do it with sometimes; I don't think they'd normally be the least bit interested in Nixon or Scorsese, but I really make a big production out of it with them, and it carries over. For most of the Twin Peaks clip, they were giggling--with it, at it, who knows? I do know the 5 or 10 minutes I take up with this stuff is far and away the high point of the day for me. Teaching place value can be a bit of a comedown afterwards.

clemenza, Friday, 20 January 2012 21:17 (twelve years ago) link

two months pass...

amazing sense of dread in this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tbf8PMuphqo

jed_, Friday, 13 April 2012 00:20 (twelve years ago) link

yeah, great little film. shows more than anything else that he's always been very attuned to sound and music in generating his effects.

BEMORE SUPER FABBY (contenderizer), Friday, 13 April 2012 00:35 (twelve years ago) link

technically his first film is "six men getting sick," but that was part of an installation so...

is it just me or does he seem to have descended back into self-parody for most of his endeavors since inland empire?

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Friday, 13 April 2012 04:03 (twelve years ago) link

make a movie again ffs

Matt Armstrong, Friday, 13 April 2012 05:49 (twelve years ago) link

I have a feeling Lynch won't ever make another feature length film.

Moodles, Friday, 13 April 2012 14:15 (twelve years ago) link

He should make a feature length animation.

Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 13 April 2012 14:16 (twelve years ago) link

I have a feeling Lynch won't ever make another feature length film.

i have heard this speculation several times now. why do you think he's done w film? i expect at least one more feature from him.

BEMORE SUPER FABBY (contenderizer), Friday, 13 April 2012 14:54 (twelve years ago) link

he's pretty old and doesn't seem to be actively working on any film projects, he appears to be focusing his energy on different types of art

Moodles, Friday, 13 April 2012 15:16 (twelve years ago) link

coffee iirc

jungleous butterflies strange birds (Eric H.), Friday, 13 April 2012 16:02 (twelve years ago) link

no one knew he he had been working on INLAND for years until a few months before it was released.

jed_, Friday, 13 April 2012 19:06 (twelve years ago) link

well, not "no one", obviously. i'm sure the actors and crew knew.

jed_, Friday, 13 April 2012 19:31 (twelve years ago) link

that's not true. i heard reports about it many months before it came out.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Friday, 13 April 2012 19:51 (twelve years ago) link

not that long before it was released at any rate.

jed_, Friday, 13 April 2012 20:08 (twelve years ago) link

really? I remember reading about lynch making a movie w/ jeremy irons and some other folks in inland empire (before the film had that name) and then spending a while wondering when it would come out.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Saturday, 14 April 2012 05:42 (twelve years ago) link

I recall that the copy of Lynch on Lynch that I have mentions something about him being at work on IE.

A revised edition was published by Farrar Straus & Giroux on March 16, 2005 (ISBN 0-571-22018-5)

btw, for the uninitiated, that book is def worth seeking out.

picture jean rollin (Pillbox), Saturday, 14 April 2012 06:22 (twelve years ago) link

one month passes...

dunno if this has been posted elsewhere, but here's basically an hour of deleted/lost/etc scenes from Blue Velvet (!)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzDnWDKBhjk

Carnage of PJ Soles (Pillbox), Monday, 11 June 2012 19:49 (eleven years ago) link

so, these are different from the deleted scenes that showed up on the new bluray release I take it?

original bgm, Monday, 11 June 2012 20:23 (eleven years ago) link

Sounds like it is basically the same batch of stuff

Altogether, 50 minutes of never-before-seen footage have been re-edited – supervised by Lynch – into an extra on a new DVD celebrating the film's 25th anniversary (available early next year in the UK).

from this article: http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/nov/03/blue-velvet-flaming-nipple-deleted-scenes

Carnage of PJ Soles (Pillbox), Monday, 11 June 2012 20:31 (eleven years ago) link

On a B. K1te kick. Did this ever get linked upthread?

http://www.bfi.org.uk/news/remain-light-mulholland-dr-and-cosmogony-david-lynch

He’s singularly brave and direct in his approach to heightened emotion, which makes him a rare creature in a modern movie menagerie that generally prefers to peer into such areas through thickets of irony. His approach is stylised but not mocking, though his proclivity for searching for new tones through the contrast of disjunctive elements – say Deputy Andy’s crying fit on the discovery of Laura Palmer’s body in the Twin Peaks pilot (1990) – frequently lands somewhere hard to peg.

old people are made of poop (Eric H.), Tuesday, 19 June 2012 17:57 (eleven years ago) link

eight months pass...

Well now I'm hungry

Ned Raggett, Monday, 11 March 2013 21:04 (eleven years ago) link

goin with the ears

Donkamole Marvin (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 11 March 2013 21:10 (eleven years ago) link

friends made me a blue velvet cake for my birthday one year (with icing laura dern on top)

steaklife (donna rouge), Monday, 11 March 2013 21:19 (eleven years ago) link

omg this was five years ago but it was still a VG halloween costume, i think:

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v369/colinohara/58206629_05e51b13b9.jpg

jed_, Monday, 11 March 2013 23:48 (eleven years ago) link

three months pass...

“It’s a very depressing picture. With alternative cinema—any sort of cinema that isn’t mainstream—you’re fresh out of luck in terms of getting theatre space and having people come to see it. Even if I had a big idea, the world is different now. Unfortunately, my ideas are not what you’d call commercial, and money really drives the boat these days. So I don’t know what my future is. I don’t have a clue what I’m going to be able to do in the world of cinema.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/waxing-lyrical-david-lynch-on-his-new-passion--and-why-he-may-never-make-another-movie-8665457.html

playwright Greg Marlowe, secretly in love with Mary (Dr Morbius), Monday, 24 June 2013 16:54 (ten years ago) link

i've been on a huge lynch kick recently. i'm certainly not a pro (haven't even seen inland empire or lost highway yet), but i'm putting together a 2013 david lynch summer series where we watch almost ALL of his work, chronologically, across 13 weeks. gathering together the tangent ephemera - the angriest dog in the world comic strip, essays, the Morricone-esque song by early 70s prog group Tractor that features about 2/3 of the way through The Grandmother - has been a treat! i'm trying to identify the most lynchian drink possible to serve up each night - PBR? certainly not heineken, that would be a faux pas.

Z S, Saturday, 6 July 2013 23:39 (ten years ago) link

Coffee

Moodles, Sunday, 7 July 2013 00:15 (ten years ago) link

coffee's a great call but it's going to be 8pm on a weekday for most of these screenings. and decaf is...unacceptable.

Z S, Sunday, 7 July 2013 00:25 (ten years ago) link

PBR is prolly the way to go.

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 7 July 2013 00:29 (ten years ago) link

lol at the coffee commercial tribute.

if anyone else has links to anything lynch, post 'em here! before, in between, and after screenings i'm planning on showing things like commercials, music videos, etc.

Z S, Sunday, 7 July 2013 00:32 (ten years ago) link

I just read this Film Quarterly piece on The Straight Story and it, well, blew my mind. A completely different brilliant take...

Anthony Lane of The New Yorker dismissed The Straight Story as a "comic coda to Lost Highway." Although the film is clearly not comic at its heart, it does, like its predecessor, use one story to mask another, more sinister, one. Lost Highway's protagonist Fred represses all memory of having murdered his wife in a jealous rage; he only glimpses himself howling over her dismembered corpse on grainy videotape, and, in the film's second half, re-imagines his story as a pulpy film noir with himself as the unwitting dupe of his wife (reincarnated as a femme fatale)--instead of as the villain he truly is. (As he tells two detectives in the film's first half, "I like to remember things my own way.") Similarly, Alvin Straight never brings himself to tell the straight story of his own past; he tells, instead, incomplete and disguised versions of it to the strangers he meets, hears echoes of it in the stories they tell him, and sees distorted reenactments of it in one scene after another.

The real story of The Straight Story turns out not to be very straightforward at all, but involuted and hidden--buried, as in Lost Highway, within the ostensible narrative like a repressed memory. This movie is about how a mean drunk named Alvin Straight lost his daughter's children to the state because he let one of them get burned in a fire. This is the only way the film makes sense as a unified whole, as anything other than the meandering picaresque most reviewers thought it was. Alvin Straight is riding his mower with its wagon all those hundreds of miles along highway shoulders not on an errand of forgiveness, but as an ordeal of atonement. There is darkness here beneath the bright autumn colors, and evil concealed in Alvin's heart. There is the history of a family destroyed by alcoholism and abuse. There is fire and death.

Is this all really unexpected? The Straight Story is a David Lynch film, after all.

Elvis Telecom, Sunday, 7 July 2013 01:23 (ten years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ioKyxGkBRro

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 7 July 2013 01:40 (ten years ago) link

His great sitcom Rabbits, as seen in Inland Empire is a good choice.

This Is Not An ILX Username (LaMonte), Sunday, 7 July 2013 16:04 (ten years ago) link

love that FQ piece, alex. it's been so long since i saw the straight story (during its theatrical run) that i can't now remember whether or not that reading occurred to me. either way, it's fascinating and makes me want to watch the film again.

Me and my pool noodle (contenderizer), Sunday, 7 July 2013 17:11 (ten years ago) link

sorry, alex elvis

Me and my pool noodle (contenderizer), Sunday, 7 July 2013 17:12 (ten years ago) link

I haven't seen Rabbits yet (or Inland Empire!), but it's on my viewing schedule for night #11, along with Dumbland, Boat, Lady Blue Shanghai and I Touch a Red Button.

Z S, Sunday, 7 July 2013 19:19 (ten years ago) link

and thanks for the link to that Straight Story review E T! i've only seen it once, in high school in some lazy May afternoon class when the students no longer want to learn and the teacher no longer wants to teach. i had no idea who david lynch was and thought it was some nauseating family friendly disney shit. definitely can't wait to watch it again with a new angle.

Z S, Sunday, 7 July 2013 19:21 (ten years ago) link

love the one minute film Lynch made with a restored Lumiere camera

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MFGroZJnklY

( X '____' )/ (zappi), Sunday, 7 July 2013 20:07 (ten years ago) link

^ yeah, i remember that being the standout piece. just watched it again, still astounding. one shot!

Me and my pool noodle (contenderizer), Sunday, 7 July 2013 20:40 (ten years ago) link

Yeah wow

the gospel of meth (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 7 July 2013 20:48 (ten years ago) link

that's "Premonitions Following an Evil Deed", right?

Z S, Sunday, 7 July 2013 20:52 (ten years ago) link

i remember how pissed off i was at the greenaway one in that series, he used all sorts of cuts and post effects and stuff

we're up all night to get (s1ocki), Sunday, 7 July 2013 22:22 (ten years ago) link

Going to watch Straight Story again this week.

Elvis Telecom, Sunday, 7 July 2013 23:51 (ten years ago) link

yeah that's definitely an interesting take and has made me keen to see it again. cheers for the link.

i lost my shoes on acid (jed_), Monday, 8 July 2013 00:19 (ten years ago) link

You definitely need to show his early animations. "Six People Getting Sick" and "The Alphabet". This is a good source:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Short_Films_of_David_Lynch

Plus "The Cowboy and the Frenchman" is on it, which I remember was pretty funny.

Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 8 July 2013 14:46 (ten years ago) link

I have my full list of viewings in a text file at home (god, i just realized i'm getting old because a teenager probably would have put it on google drive or something. my flesh...is decaying...my face...the wrinkles widen...*close-up of flame*), but the first night is going to be Six People Getting Sick, The Alphabet, The Grandmother, the Amputee, and then Eraserhead. I'm trying to straight-up chronological, as much as I can. Once it gets into the 90s and 2000s I'm going to have to be a little bit more selective, though. It's already at 13 nights, 2+ hours each, and that's with leaving out some things.

My main dilemma is whether to show the pilot ep. of Twin Peaks (American version), pilot episode (Intl. version that has the weird grafted on "ending"), or Fire Walk with Me.

Z S, Monday, 8 July 2013 15:16 (ten years ago) link

I'm already planning on showing a few related clips (the coffee commercials, maybe the SNL sketch with Kyle MacLachlan and Phil Hartman doing a hilarious Leland), so showing both the pilot episode + Fire Walk with me would be overkill.

Z S, Monday, 8 July 2013 15:17 (ten years ago) link

but but but you gotta! both the pilot and fwwm are essential documents, much more so than the related ephemera.

twerking for obvious reasons (contenderizer), Monday, 8 July 2013 15:20 (ten years ago) link

i don't know why i'm worrying about it anyway, by the 7th night of the series it's just going to be me, alone

Z S, Monday, 8 July 2013 15:22 (ten years ago) link

I'm kinda leaning toward the Pilot only, and maybe just the American version. The thing is, both Fire Walk with Me and the intl. version of the pilot would reveal the Bob/Leland connection, and that might the entire show for people who haven't seen it yet.

Z S, Monday, 8 July 2013 15:31 (ten years ago) link

fair enough. fwwm is probably my least favorite of lynch's feature length films, so if you gotta cut one...

twerking for obvious reasons (contenderizer), Monday, 8 July 2013 15:37 (ten years ago) link

Missing words in my posts, case log #2134:

forgot to include the word "ruin" between "might" and "the entire show"

Z S, Monday, 8 July 2013 15:40 (ten years ago) link

two months pass...

so, i'm still working my way through his oeuvre, chronologically. last night was Hotel Room (1993), next week is Lost Highway.

Hotel Room. made for HBO, 3 episodes (the first two are 30 minutes, the last is 40). Lynch directed the first and last. Each episode takes place in the same hotel room (and the outside hallway), but with a different cast (except for the bellboy, who is the same age and has the same appearance even though the three episodes span 60 years of time). The middle episode has some random director that they brought in at the last minute, and it's not worth mentioning. the first is compelling in its own way and has a really nice performance from harry dean stanton.

but the third episode, "black out"...very much worth watching. it takes place in 1936, and crispin glover is just fantastic in it. he plays a husband from oklahoma that's shepherding his mentally disturbed wife in a trip to NYC to visit a doctor. they talk and talk. it's wonderful. check out the first episode if you have time, but if not, invest 40 minutes in this, it's worth it if you're a lynch fan (skip to 53:40 for the third episode):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CI_I6ewm-FY

Z S, Friday, 13 September 2013 03:41 (ten years ago) link

and if you're concerned about the quality of the video/audio, the youtube clip is about as good as it gets. it was released on VHS only, never on DVD (at least in the US), and it's long out of print.

Z S, Friday, 13 September 2013 03:45 (ten years ago) link

alicia witt is so fuckin good in that

socki (s1ocki), Friday, 13 September 2013 05:02 (ten years ago) link

This doc is pretty good (NB: I'm only 10 mins in):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=td5u4gW0g54

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Saturday, 14 September 2013 05:47 (ten years ago) link

that lumiere short is seriously one of the most impressive things he's done, and the best short in that "lumiere and company" film for sure. i also fondly recall the one by idrissa ouedraogo:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-bFITC5Kb5g

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Saturday, 14 September 2013 08:50 (ten years ago) link

xpost

great doc! I hadn't seen that one before. It is interesting to see Lynch asked some difficult questions and get challenged on some of his answers.

Moodles, Sunday, 15 September 2013 00:00 (ten years ago) link

is that the one where he talks about "the eye of the duck"?

i lost my shoes on acid (jed_), Sunday, 15 September 2013 12:53 (ten years ago) link

I don't like wind on my collarbone.

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Sunday, 15 September 2013 15:53 (ten years ago) link

xpost it is!

Z S, Sunday, 15 September 2013 16:40 (ten years ago) link

That eye of the duck stuff is amazing. Slow and fast rooms. "Maybe an empty room is 2. A person is a 7. Fire/electricity takes it up to 9..."

Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 15 September 2013 16:43 (ten years ago) link

You guys, that is just standard TM talk... :-\

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Sunday, 15 September 2013 17:08 (ten years ago) link

what's TM?

i lost my shoes on acid (jed_), Monday, 16 September 2013 00:19 (ten years ago) link

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transcendental_Meditation

Number None, Monday, 16 September 2013 00:21 (ten years ago) link

Does TM really talk about the eye of the duck?

Moodles, Monday, 16 September 2013 00:42 (ten years ago) link

i imagine that's pretty much the level of discourse you're going to get at those TM conferences that david lynch frequents

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Monday, 16 September 2013 10:05 (ten years ago) link

one month passes...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b03d114j/The_Sound_of_Cinema_The_First_Time_with_David_Lynch/

nice show about sounds which influenced him as he grew up.

Legitimate space tale (LocalGarda), Monday, 21 October 2013 14:27 (ten years ago) link

six months pass...

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BnsD7gJIgAAMgyq.jpg

Οὖτις, Thursday, 15 May 2014 16:21 (nine years ago) link

four months pass...

DL on Eraserhead and Philly

It was a film that was inspired by the city of Philadelphia, and it’s an industrial world. It’s a smokestack-industry world. It’s factory-worker homes tucked away out of time. It has a certain feel, and the sounds have to marry to that feel, and [sound editor] Alan Splet and I just would work until we got the thing to feel correct.

I went there a couple of years ago, and the city is completely different. It felt very normal to me, not like it was then. It was brighter and cleaner and it had graffiti. And graffiti has ruined the world....

It’s defaced the beauty of the architecture, and you can’t film anywhere without the patinas on the bricks on the buildings. It’s been ruined. It happened in all the places I already love, like factories and railroad lines and bridges. All these places have been so badly defaced.

http://www.vulture.com/2014/09/david-lynch-interview-eraserhead-midnight-movies.html

son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 17 September 2014 16:02 (nine years ago) link

three weeks pass...

“Not that it should surprise anyone who’s seen how Lynch depicts ostensibly idyllic small-town America, but the director’s avowed love for his adoptive hometown is hardly reflected in his work.” In “Muted Golden Sunshine: David Lynch’s Los Angeles,” a piece for the Los Angeles Review of Books, Michael Nordine considers Lost Highway (1997), Mulholland Drive (2001) and Inland Empire (2006).

http://lareviewofbooks.org/essay/muted-golden-sunshine-david-lynchs-los-angeles#

son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 18:45 (nine years ago) link

i was surprised that thom andersen didn't address any of those films in his "Los Angeles Plays Itself"

there's definitely a current in lynch's work that rhymes with the whole Reaganite "morning in America" stuff even though surface readings of e.g. Blue Velvet and Twin Peaks would seem to indicate the opposite. but Lynch seems to consistently conflate poverty, filth, and moral rot in a way that could be read as reactionary.

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 21:46 (nine years ago) link

poverty? really?

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 8 October 2014 21:57 (nine years ago) link

you don't think so?

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:10 (nine years ago) link

I'm at a loss to recall any particular instance of some kind of classist snobbery in his work. In Twin Peaks the working class guys (Big Ed, Truman, Hawk, James) are the good guys. The Straight Story also has a certain dignity-of-the-working-class tone to it. IE, MD, and LH I would have a hard time identifying any of the central characters belonging to any specific economic strata (I guess Naomi Watts is obviously not as rich as Justin Theroux - but the latter is a clueless asshole whereas the former is deluded but more sympathetic). Dune is all about aristocracies until you get to the Fremen, who are obviously salt-of-the-earth types, and the ones responsible for redeeming the universe. Eraserhead is just about industrial wasteland in general, seems like everybody is poor and suffering in that movie unless there's some kindly rich character I'm forgetting.

the filth and moral rot seem to operate at all levels of society for him afaict.

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:21 (nine years ago) link

Blue Velvet it seems like everybody is from the same middle class social strata, some people are just more psychotic than others lol

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:22 (nine years ago) link

it's not as simple as classist snobbery. he's not a snob in that sense. there's a kind of middle-class, middle American distaste for both the rich and the poor. a sense of moral rot at both extremes, though it often seems more visceral when connected to poverty. i'm thinking of the trailer parks in twin peaks, much of the underworld that jeffrey encounters in blue velvet, the homeless guy in mulholland drive, some other stuff that i can't immediate bring to mind.

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:41 (nine years ago) link

i think the veneration (?) of the working-class types is not inconsistent with a visceral disgust (i wouldn't exactly call it hatred) of the idle poor.

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:42 (nine years ago) link

this was not an uncommon critique of lynch ca. twin peaks, btw. maybe it's off base, but it always seemed at least partially correct to me.

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:42 (nine years ago) link

i think the veneration (?) of the working-class types is not inconsistent with a visceral disgust (i wouldn't exactly call it hatred) of the idle poor.

btw this is where "reagan democrats" and morning in america, etc. come in...

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:43 (nine years ago) link

i was surprised that thom andersen didn't address any of those films in his "Los Angeles Plays Itself"

I went to a screening of Mulholland Drive last month, introduced by the author of this new book, The Architecture of David Lynch. He brought up the fact that Thom Anderson left Lynch out, and claimed Anderson had said it was because Lynch sees LA as a tourist, which didn't interest him.

Alba, Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:50 (nine years ago) link

i'm thinking of the trailer parks in twin peaks, much of the underworld that jeffrey encounters in blue velvet, the homeless guy in mulholland drive

I'd say almost all of these (w the exception of Blue Velvet) are balanced out by extremes of evil at the other end of the economic strata in the respective films/shows. Blue Velvet is weird, I dunno what signifiers indicate that any of the underworld types are poor. They're weird and creepy, but they aren't living in housing projects. I guess you could read a lot into the Heinekin/Pabst Blue Ribbon thing (a pair of signifiers which have oddly switched places since).

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:53 (nine years ago) link

oh i think there are plenty of indications that frank's milieu, esp. the place where dorothy's son is being held, is on the wrong side of town, so to speak.

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:56 (nine years ago) link

it's amazing how vividly i recall details of that film w/o having seen it for years, btw.

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:56 (nine years ago) link

Here you go, re: Thom Andersen and Lynch:

It may say something that Mulholland Drive is a movie often cited by people who live outside of Los Angeles, but never by people who live here. Maybe it’s because Lynch’s vision of Los Angeles remains that of a tourist, although he has lived here for many years.

From Collateral Damage: Los Angeles Continues Playing Itself

Andersen's attitude seems to have softened since then, however:

I liked Inland Empire, my favorite David Lynch film … With Inland Empire what I had first regarded as arty in his work I began to realize was vulgar. I started to appreciate his films more after seeing that.

http://parallax-view.org/2011/03/24/screening-los-angeles-an-interview-with-thom-andersen/

Alba, Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:57 (nine years ago) link

thanks for that!!

i think andersen can be really dogmatic when it comes to films depicting L.A., as the first quote kind of indicates (cited in what? for what? by whom?)--i still like his essay film though.

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 22:59 (nine years ago) link

i think even lynch would probably admit to seeing L.A. somewhat like a tourist. but that doesn't invalidate his vision! L.A. is, among other things, a major tourist destination.

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 23:00 (nine years ago) link

Yeah, that was the attitude Richard Martin (the speaker) expressed: that it was all the better for it being an outsider's (Betty's) view.

Alba, Wednesday, 8 October 2014 23:02 (nine years ago) link

i think maybe lost highway could be seen as more problematic, but lynch's films are so hermetic and strange that objecting to its view of los angeles seems sort of beside the point. i do think he's obviously admiring of aspects of L.A.'s built environment.

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 23:05 (nine years ago) link

in twin peaks and blue velvet there's a sense of boundaries (moral boundaries linked to geographical ones)that are being invaded from outside or that one chooses to cross but in the l.a. films evil has a home everywhere; there's no sanctuary or innocence left to corrupt. imo.

slugbuggy, Wednesday, 8 October 2014 23:11 (nine years ago) link

I don't know how the compassion and openness of his Interview Project (http://interviewproject.davidlynch.com) can fit with or relate to the corruption of his film worlds, but it seems worth considering when making broad claims about his oeuvre.

Merdeyeux, Wednesday, 8 October 2014 23:22 (nine years ago) link

i think what comes out in his films and what he's like normally are not necessarily the same thing

I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 23:33 (nine years ago) link

Mulholland Drive is a movie often cited by people who live outside of Los Angeles, but never by people who live here.

oh, come on.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 23:59 (nine years ago) link

yeah that's just pedantic nonsense

I dunno. (amateurist), Thursday, 9 October 2014 00:02 (nine years ago) link

well TA takes Chinatown to task for warping history thru a '70s paranoiac prism, but i don't care.

this horrible, rotten slog to rigor mortis (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 9 October 2014 03:49 (nine years ago) link

i read that to the tune of "jimmy crack corn"

I dunno. (amateurist), Thursday, 9 October 2014 04:18 (nine years ago) link

four months pass...
eight months pass...

Dennis Lim has a book, “David Lynch: The Man from Another Place,” out November 3rd from Amazon Publishing.

Whether innate or cultivated or both, the picture of David Lynch the straight-arrow square is striking for the obvious contrast with the darkness and extremity of the work, its obsession with grotesquerie and depravity. In view of the work, in fact, Lynch’s mild-mannered calm can seem somewhat creepy. This is the contradiction — David Lynch the all-American weirdo — that defines how we think about him. Not for nothing did Mel Brooks call him “Jimmy Stewart from Mars” and David Foster Wallace describe his voice as “Jimmy Stewart on acid.”

That voice has become more caricatured over the years, even the subject of self-parody. Most of us know it from Lynch’s recurring cameo as the hard-of-hearing F.B.I. bureau chief Gordon Cole in “Twin Peaks,” whose foghorn delivery only slightly exaggerates Lynch’s speaking voice. So much about Lynch’s fraught relationship with language is summed up in that voice, in its unnervingly high volume and halting cadences. It’s clear from the 1979 footage — and from almost every interview he has done since — that words do not come easily to him. Both Lynch and his first wife, Peggy Reavey (née Lentz), have referred to his “pre-verbal” years, a phase that lasted into his early twenties, when he had a hard time stringing even more than a few words together. In his early short film, “The Alphabet,” verbal learning is a source of dread: a young girl is terrorized by the letters of the alphabet as she sleeps. The serial killer in “Twin Peaks” leaves lettered scraps of paper under the nails of his victims.

http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/david-lynchs-elusive-language

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 29 October 2015 19:05 (eight years ago) link

Can't believe DFW used the old "x on acid" line.

Alba, Thursday, 29 October 2015 21:38 (eight years ago) link

i always think of david byrne repeatedly deadpanning it (x="60 minutes") in the stop making sense self-interview.

“If you’re going into the netherworld, you don’t want to go in with Chuck Heston.”

http://41.media.tumblr.com/5ef522318a02f64b3dc302a0437d6f42/tumblr_mhyf6btTso1rxjpzqo1_500.png

(not that welles wanted to)

playlists of pensive swift (difficult listening hour), Thursday, 29 October 2015 21:46 (eight years ago) link

I looked up the 1979 interview mentioned in that New Yorker article:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l3WFOPWbG8I

A lot of interesting stuff here. Lynch is clearly himself, but didn't quite have the whole David Lynch shtick yet, so he comes off a bit more earnest. I like what he has to say about the comedy element in Eraserhead, it helps to make sense of the role comedy plays in many of his films. Also, I never knew that parts of Eraserhead were filmed in downtown LA.

too young for seapunk (Moodles), Thursday, 29 October 2015 22:52 (eight years ago) link

Thanks Moodles.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Thursday, 29 October 2015 23:44 (eight years ago) link

more from the

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 3 November 2015 19:48 (eight years ago) link

...Lim book; on Mulholland Dr.

https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/3776-lim-on-lynch-mulholland-dr

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 3 November 2015 19:49 (eight years ago) link

The jury, led by the actress and director Liv Ullmann, awarded the best director prize jointly to Lynch and Joel Coen (for The Man Who Wasn’t There).

lol um one of these things is not like the other

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 November 2015 20:02 (eight years ago) link

but didn't quite have the whole David Lynch shtick yet, so he comes off a bit more earnest

but isn't lynch's shtick precisely that he's earnest?

wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 3 November 2015 20:03 (eight years ago) link

i mean the moments when the shtick slips is when he admits to irony or to commercial imperatives.

wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 3 November 2015 20:04 (eight years ago) link

I guess what I mean is there is less of the wacky showman element in this early interview

too young for seapunk (Moodles), Tuesday, 3 November 2015 20:33 (eight years ago) link

roundup on the book

https://www.fandor.com/keyframe/daily-dennis-lim-on-david-lynch

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 4 November 2015 16:58 (eight years ago) link

dfw's symbol of the shtick moodles is talking about was

http://img.timeinc.net/time/magazine/archive/covers/1990/1101901001_400.jpg

playlists of pensive swift (difficult listening hour), Wednesday, 4 November 2015 17:02 (eight years ago) link

(good fixed-in-time headlines there)

playlists of pensive swift (difficult listening hour), Wednesday, 4 November 2015 17:04 (eight years ago) link

can't wait to read Lim's book.

Karl Malone, Wednesday, 4 November 2015 17:08 (eight years ago) link

Lim interview:

Lynch’s compound, which I was fortunate enough to visit when I was writing about Inland Empire, is set up like a place that’s really conducive to working. There’s a quote I use in the book from Isabella Rossellini about how he set everything up to optimize working conditions. He has his house, office, recording studio, and screening room. You see art on the walls. I’m sure there are meditation spaces. Right at the top of the property, he had this beautiful studio where he works. You can see that in the weather reports he used to do and the documentaries about him. He obviously hasn’t made a film in a long time, but he’s been extremely prolific. I was surprised when I went to the Philly exhibition how much he had produced in the last ten years — new paintings and all kinds of work.

http://flavorwire.com/546923/discovering-the-man-from-another-place-dennis-lim-on-his-book-about-david-lynchs-labyrinthine-works

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 10 November 2015 18:07 (eight years ago) link

i went to lim's talk at videology the other night, and bought the book. it's well-written (so far, i'm only a few chapters in) but kind of light on new information. i haven't really learned anything that i didn't know about him already from other biographies (Beautiful Dark and Lynch on Lynch). during Lim's talk someone asked him if he had interviewed him for the book, and he said that although he relied on 3 past interviews that he had done years ago, Lynch didn't want to be interviewed for this one. but i still need to finish the rest of the book, so maybe there's some new stuff. i'm especially interested in the post-Lost Highway period

Karl Malone, Tuesday, 10 November 2015 19:14 (eight years ago) link

i thought you might've gone to that!

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 10 November 2015 19:24 (eight years ago) link

i didn't think i would, but happened to be nearby anyway so i dropped in!

Karl Malone, Tuesday, 10 November 2015 19:36 (eight years ago) link

btw there's this dual series upcoming at Linc Ctr (if you're not travelin')

http://www.filmlinc.org/daily/lineup-for-lynchrivette-dual-retrospective-revealed/

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 10 November 2015 19:41 (eight years ago) link

Yep, i should be around for at least some of it! i haven't seen anything by rivette, so i'd be most interested in seeing what's regarded as one of his better films.

Karl Malone, Tuesday, 10 November 2015 19:53 (eight years ago) link

What I consider the lesser films of Lynch and Rivette... yikes. (Tho I haven't seen Wild at Heart in 25 years.)

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 10 November 2015 19:58 (eight years ago) link

Watching "The Straight Story" right now for the first time. It is really hitting the spot. Good mix of goofy small-town charm mixed w cosmic profundity.

Love the running joke about Wisconsin being a big party state.

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 21 November 2015 22:39 (eight years ago) link

Also appreciated the movie beginning w a nonsensically staged shot of someone sunbathing outside. Lynch really likes hanging on to images of corners and it always does something weird to my brain.

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 21 November 2015 22:43 (eight years ago) link

Wow, loved the ending.

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 21 November 2015 23:49 (eight years ago) link

The Straight Story is my favorite Lynch. Richard Farnsworth is so damn good.

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Saturday, 21 November 2015 23:55 (eight years ago) link

It was really TM. A lot of shots of people reflecting on something and it fading into stars.

I liked Alvin's sense of humor. He realized he was out of his mind but he was going to do it anyways.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xk8Y-XxaAog

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 22 November 2015 06:16 (eight years ago) link

four weeks pass...

First *rescreen* of Lost Highway in 18 years... The first 45 minutes are pretty good, don't like much else except the Loggia "safety manual" freakout. Similar territory he covered earlier (and later) better.

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Monday, 21 December 2015 04:14 (eight years ago) link

It'll never be a favorite but I like it a little better with each rewatch.

the naive cockney chorus (Simon H.), Monday, 21 December 2015 04:18 (eight years ago) link

didn't remember all the nude Arquette

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Monday, 21 December 2015 04:25 (eight years ago) link

The sense of dread around the images on the videotape is really something and the "call me" scene at the party is singularly terrifying.

Whoremonger (jed_), Monday, 21 December 2015 04:31 (eight years ago) link

didn't remember all the nude Arquette
--skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius)

There's a bunch of her. Plus nude Nathalie Wood daughter too

One bad call from barely losing to (Alex in SF), Monday, 21 December 2015 04:34 (eight years ago) link

Criterion Mulholland Drive has several great interviews with Lynch and crew, definitely worth checking out

Check Yr Scrobbles (Moodles), Sunday, 27 December 2015 00:40 (eight years ago) link

three weeks pass...

He's 70 years old today.

pastoral fantasy (jed_), Wednesday, 20 January 2016 16:26 (eight years ago) link

I saw a couple of his early shorts on Hulu last weekend... The Grandmother def seems like a warmup for Eraserhead.

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 20 January 2016 16:34 (eight years ago) link

Filmed entirely in his house (some of which he painted entirely black) iirc

Karl Malone, Wednesday, 20 January 2016 17:15 (eight years ago) link

or filmed mostly in his house, rather. can't remember but i think there are some outside scenes as well

Karl Malone, Wednesday, 20 January 2016 17:16 (eight years ago) link

So Dolly Parton and Davids Lynch and Bowie were all born within days of one another??? What on earth was in the water back then, and can we bottle and distribute that shit?

Meat Sheet (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 20 January 2016 17:21 (eight years ago) link

I adore The Grandmother.

Meat Sheet (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 20 January 2016 17:22 (eight years ago) link

Bowie was born in '47, a year later, OL

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 20 January 2016 17:23 (eight years ago) link

Ahhhhhh. Thanks. I mistakenly thought his last birthday was his 70th.

Meat Sheet (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 20 January 2016 17:25 (eight years ago) link

four months pass...

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CjPSzO5VAAAk37R.jpg

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 24 May 2016 17:39 (seven years ago) link

Um.

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 24 May 2016 17:45 (seven years ago) link

Now I'm picturing Lynch doing that late-period thing that other respected artists sometimes do where they get tired of toiling in relative obscurity and decide to just coast and cash in and direct Fast 9.

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 24 May 2016 17:58 (seven years ago) link

not sure how you got from point A to B there

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 24 May 2016 17:59 (seven years ago) link

That's like his Bret Ratner pic. Just before he got completely roided out but after he'd already been hooking up with supermodels and doing lots of blow for a while.

Wet Food (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 24 May 2016 18:06 (seven years ago) link

haha ok

he was just promoting these people fwiw: https://allianceofmoms.com/

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 24 May 2016 18:08 (seven years ago) link

promoting a password-protected Wordpress blog?

glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 01:03 (seven years ago) link

Yup

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 01:38 (seven years ago) link

Saw Blue Velvet in a theater for the first time last night. Absolutely floored. Don't think I'd seen it in 10+ years. Fucking bowled me over completely, especially in a gorgeous + huge art deco theater. The opening sequence is one of my favorite pieces of film ever. Been thinking about this post all morning:

Are you sure the ending of Blue Velvet is happy? It always seemed important to me that the bird was fake, and that the acting in the last scene is even more stilted than normal. Something about how happiness is defined.
― Dan I., Tuesday, December 18, 2001 8:00 PM (14 years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I was really excited about INLAND EMPIRE at the time and the path Lynch might take with digital video- seems now is that he'll never make another film, just like John Waters. In a lot of ways, Blue Velvet was the movie that would've been the next step for John Waters but he got beaten to the punch by Lynch.

flappy bird, Thursday, 2 June 2016 17:00 (seven years ago) link

those are two directors with *very* different sensibilities

Οὖτις, Thursday, 2 June 2016 17:18 (seven years ago) link

w/r/t all their other movies, sure. But Blue Velvet's early sixties Americana, perversion in a small town- that's quintessential Waters. And if he ever wanted to move beyond the campiness of Polyester, Blue Velvet is the movie he would've made. I can imagine Waters being pretty deflated when he saw it in 1986.

flappy bird, Thursday, 2 June 2016 17:29 (seven years ago) link

when has waters ever been interested in moving beyond camp? Beyond some surface similarities in their reference points (which were, tbf, all over the place at the time - the proliferation of "wow late-50s/early 60s America sure was fucking WEIRD" were all over the place at the time until finally drying up in the late 90s), Lynch and Waters have very different goals as filmmakers. Waters has never been interested in being serious, or evoking horror, or in fucking with narrative and audience expectations the way Lynch is.

Οὖτις, Thursday, 2 June 2016 17:42 (seven years ago) link

I mean you can draw a through line from Blue Velvet and True Stories and Polyester and Edward Scissorhands to any number less successful movies, this exploration of middle America's inner weirdness was a cultural thing not at all specific to any of the filmmakers, all of whom made very different movies for very different reasons. it wasn't a competition.

Οὖτις, Thursday, 2 June 2016 17:45 (seven years ago) link

I mean there were so many movies about this - Stand By Me, Parents, it's a long list

Οὖτις, Thursday, 2 June 2016 17:46 (seven years ago) link

Wow, I was just thinking about Parents as I read the above couple posts, haven't thought about it in years!

Double Nickels on the Pecunidigm (Dan Peterson), Thursday, 2 June 2016 17:49 (seven years ago) link

Bob Balaban's lone horror film!

Οὖτις, Thursday, 2 June 2016 17:51 (seven years ago) link

I was really excited about INLAND EMPIRE at the time and the path Lynch might take with digital video- seems now is that he'll never make another film, just like John Waters.

given that lynch just finished shooting an ~18hr film that if successful could raise his profile higher than it's been in a decade, I don't think it's unreasonable to hold out hope that he can get another theatrical picture made

mario vargis loosa (wins), Thursday, 2 June 2016 17:57 (seven years ago) link

You mean the new Twin Peaks? TV is one thing, I don't think it'll be much easier to get funding for a feature film or if he's even interested.

xposts Waters' wheelhouse is camp but I'm not convinced he never wanted to move beyond it and make something darker and more serious like Blue Velvet. Whether or not he had the capacity to, or even thought about it before Blue Velvet, it struck me as the film he should've made in the mid-80's. Strange to think there was such a long gap between Polyester in 81 and Hairspray in 88.

flappy bird, Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:09 (seven years ago) link

xxpost (aside) Not film but Balaban also had some involvement with Tales From the Darkside.

What's Your Definition of a Dirty Baby? (Old Lunch), Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:09 (seven years ago) link

but I'm not convinced he never wanted to move beyond it and make something darker and more serious like Blue Velvet

Waters is not exactly a reclusive or secretive person, he's made no secret of his goals as a filmmaker and has written extensively about his films, their inspirations, and his sensibility. Like, entire books. I dunno why you would think this about him, it's something he has literally never expressed an interest in.

Οὖτις, Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:13 (seven years ago) link

I'm thinking specifically of an interview in the New York Press years ago where it came up. He said he loved the film but was bummed and felt beaten to the punch by Lynch. Trying to find it online.

flappy bird, Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:21 (seven years ago) link

in a weird way, I feel like Waters' films are much more wholesome than David Lynch's

Al Moon Faced Poon (Moodles), Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:29 (seven years ago) link

I mean, Pink Flamingos is basically just a disgusting movie about a loving family

Al Moon Faced Poon (Moodles), Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:30 (seven years ago) link

this is great - Ebert gets it totally wrong, and suggests that Isabella Rossellini was used and abused by Lynch against her will. Siskel points out that she consented to the role, then Ebert says "well the film was shot in two halves, and she had no idea the other half was all campy comedy!" - as if she didn't read the entire script?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uehfL60EA4

flappy bird, Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:41 (seven years ago) link

xps yeah I mean TP, which was shot as one big film - and even if it'd been made in the conventional manner he's obv interested in directing again. idk much about the money side of things tbf

mario vargis loosa (wins), Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:44 (seven years ago) link

Ebert recanted that review

Οὖτις, Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:45 (seven years ago) link

xps yeah I mean TP, which was shot as one big film - and even if it'd been made in the conventional manner he's obv interested in directing again. idk much about the money side of things tbf

― mario vargis loosa (wins), Thursday, June 2, 2016 2:44 PM (1 minute ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

afaik money is the only obstacle - Waters was trying to make a claymation/animated christmas kids movie called Fruitcake circa 2007 but then the economy collapsed and he hasn't been able to find funding since. There was a great article about the disappearance of mid-level independent movies and directors like Soderbergh, Waters, and Lynch either sitting back or moving to TV...

flappy bird, Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:48 (seven years ago) link

yeah it's all about financing with this tier of directors

Οὖτις, Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:48 (seven years ago) link

ie that's the obstacle, not that they've run out of ideas

Οὖτις, Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:49 (seven years ago) link

well then surely at the very least off the back of a theoretically successful twin peaks lynch could get another inland empire done on the hoof

mario vargis loosa (wins), Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:51 (seven years ago) link

fingers crossed! you never know, and i found this post pretty funny and encouraging:

I love Laura Dern (and have some sort of feeling approaching something like fondness for Lynch.) It'll probably come out in 2015 though knowing him.

― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, May 12, 2005 4:27 PM (11 years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

btw heres that article: http://flavorwire.com/492985/how-the-death-of-mid-budget-cinema-left-a-generation-of-iconic-filmmakers-mia

flappy bird, Thursday, 2 June 2016 18:54 (seven years ago) link

two weeks pass...

I was really excited about INLAND EMPIRE at the time and the path Lynch might take with digital video- seems now is that he'll never make another film,

― flappy bird, Thursday, June 2, 2016 5:00 PM (2 weeks ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Iirc we didn't know anything about INLAND EMPIRE until it was finished and ready for release and that he funded it mostly off his own back acquiring additional funds from investors during the actual process rather than in advance. He could be making another film now or could be channeling his fee for TP2 into making something new. We just never know with him.

Pastoral Fantasy (jed_), Monday, 20 June 2016 00:10 (seven years ago) link

there was plenty of advance press as inland empire was being made

wizzz! (amateurist), Monday, 20 June 2016 00:27 (seven years ago) link

There was? I thought it was a surprise to everyone that he had a new film imminent but maybe I'm just remembering it wrong.

Pastoral Fantasy (jed_), Monday, 20 June 2016 00:45 (seven years ago) link

ten months pass...

Cool to see that the zig zag carpet is shared between eraser head and the twin peaks cooper dream sequence

calstars, Wednesday, 26 April 2017 23:17 (seven years ago) link

two months pass...

from Amy Taubin's Cannes report in the current Film Comment, where the first two eps of TP 2.0 were screened:

"I wish I could be interested in Lynch’s fiddling with CGI, his overworking of his actors’ glottal stops, and his evocation of Mystery Science Theater 3000, the symptomology of Alzheimer’s disease, and, more generally, castration anxiety. But I’m not."

She did like the new Top of the Lake.

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 12 July 2017 17:19 (six years ago) link

her loss, truly

Karl Malone, Wednesday, 12 July 2017 17:23 (six years ago) link

Wow, what a shitty place to stop watching.

Dippin' Sauce on my Nice New Slacks (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 12 July 2017 17:25 (six years ago) link

three weeks pass...

With the Lynch documentary The Art Life getting a home video release from Criterion next month, I was really surprised to notice today that it's streaming on Amazon. (It's good.)

I can see by the look on your face, you've got ring worm. (WilliamC), Saturday, 5 August 2017 22:13 (six years ago) link

I enjoyed it, really liked seeing so much of his art and process. Wished the narrative didn't stop at Eraserhead.

Moodles, Saturday, 5 August 2017 23:01 (six years ago) link

three weeks pass...

Lynch the normative reactionary?

"Notwithstanding his aesthetic distinction, Lynch’s depictions of queerness, disability, gender, sexuality and race suggest that any deviation from white, heterosexual, middle-class life is not normal. Consistent with his position on trespassing, the director’s films strictly demarcate a place of normalcy that must be aggressively protected from the deviance and obscenity of the outside. Against Waters, who locates the darkest elements of the American experiment in so-called polite society, for Lynch, evil comes from the place we are always told evil comes from—the periphery. In his work, it’s the killers at cheap motels, drug dealers, prostitutes and back-alley perverts that menace the shining city upon a hill. A position profoundly at odds with critics and audiences increasingly attuned to racism and inequality, Lynch’s worldview is an anachronism and worthy of more serious critique."

http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/man-behind-glass-trouble-david-lynchs-brand-weird/

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:04 (six years ago) link

evil comes from the place we are always told evil comes from—the periphery

this is bullshit

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:05 (six years ago) link

While Lynch is largely regarded as patron saint of the weird, his nearly ecclesiastical approach to the supposed aberrance of bodies, erotic desires, sexual orientations, abilities and races undermines the supposed weirdness he depicts. For these elements to appear exceptional, there must be a presumptive normal against which the weird is measured. For Lynch, such normalcy ultimately looks a lot like conservative, middle-class American life. To his credit, he often suggests that suburban America is not as innocent as it seems, but he nevertheless continually establishes a dichotomy between good, minimally kooky, salt of the earth folks—Alvin (Richard Farnsworth) in The Straight Story, Sheriff Harry Truman in Twin Peaks (1991)—and deviants. The hostility with which Lynch regards nonconformity, then, ultimately suggests a profound resentment of “the weird”.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:06 (six years ago) link

his (arguably) most famous work centers around an upstanding upper-middle class pillar of a white community raping and murdering his daughter

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:07 (six years ago) link

or the closing credit sequence in Inland Empire - where all the girls are liberated and together and finally happy - how is this "conservative, middle-class American life"?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxG5-MlEurI

hot take reductive nonsense

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:12 (six years ago) link

I do think David Lynch plays off a particular brand of "normal" - specifically the American white nuclear family of the 1950s - in just about everything I've seen of his. He has both a fascination with that period (the conservative ethos, the aesthetics/design) and a love of throwing in gruesome/comedic/surreal/mystical weirdness to see how it screws it up.

Dominique, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:13 (six years ago) link

This is a dumb essay.

Glengarry Glen Marshall (Old Lunch), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:13 (six years ago) link

(didnt read essay tho, not necessarily agreeing w it)

Dominique, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:14 (six years ago) link

an upstanding upper-middle class pillar of a white community raping and murdering his daughter

...while possessed by what appears to be a longhaired grease monkey.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:16 (six years ago) link

...OR IS HE?!?!?!?

na (NA), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:17 (six years ago) link

^^^

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:18 (six years ago) link

then there's the Elephant Man, a whole film about how "normal" people are the real monsters etc.

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:20 (six years ago) link

Dune (of course) doesn't fit into this rubric at all either.

there are so many dumb holes in this argument.

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:21 (six years ago) link

Now I know why he called it The Straight Story!

Anne of the Thousand Gays (Eric H.), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:22 (six years ago) link

lol

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:22 (six years ago) link

Article speaks of a tendency... you seldom find universals in a filmmaker with a 40-year-career.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:22 (six years ago) link

the fact that there are significant countervailing tendencies would indicate that the conclusion being drawn is wrong

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:25 (six years ago) link

yes, that essay is dumb: the standard line you usually hear trotted out about david lynch (and especially wrt blue velvet and twin peaks) is that his work pries into the evil that is lurking behind the surface image of white picket fences and all-american small town life. and while that's a bit of a whatever,cliched take it's certainly more on the money than this.

-_- (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:25 (six years ago) link

yes, that the Rotary Club types are actually crossdressers and into BDSM...

I knew this wd provoke a firefight from the worshippers.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:28 (six years ago) link

im not really a worshipper and i think if you wanted to critique lynch on how unwoke he is, how white his films are, or how often the portrayal of women in his films betrays a hairy-handed lechery then you can easily do that. i just don't think this is particularly illuminating

-_- (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:30 (six years ago) link

Like many directors his age he's subject to objections that the majority of his protagonists are straight, white men. I don't take this "sin of omission" as anything major, given the overall tenor and focus of his body of work, and the fact that his protagonists are often nuanced, flawed, etc. and not held up as paragons of racial virtue or some shit like that.

I do think it is worth noting that his lone lesbian protagonist (Naomi Watts in Mulholland Drive) is ultimately a tragic figure that is portrayed pretty sympathetically, and not as evil or as deserving of punishment for her "deviance".

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:32 (six years ago) link

xxpost No, it just provokes corrections from people who know how to read a text without imprinting bullshit on it that isn't there.

Now, if someone wanted to write an essay about Lynch's questionable handling of women in The Return, I'd be all ears.

Glengarry Glen Marshall (Old Lunch), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:33 (six years ago) link

I knew this wd provoke a firefight from the worshippers

This is key.

Anne of the Thousand Gays (Eric H.), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:33 (six years ago) link

it does raise interesting questions, that's the value i see in it, and I honestly (in mostly staying away from the Return thread) haven't heard/read much other than awestruck praise for DL of late. I am an admirer.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:36 (six years ago) link

Still, it's something worth wrestling with, the horror genre and human deviance. Signed, a gay horror fan.

Anne of the Thousand Gays (Eric H.), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:36 (six years ago) link

'zackly!

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:36 (six years ago) link

xp
One thing that struck me as I skimmed that article (sorry, work) is the notion that more people haven't called out Lynch's version of "normal". I don't agree that it's in need of calling out really, because the white picket fence families in his stuff (Earth based stuff anyway) are kind of archetypes anyway. They don't seem real or normal to me, and it's not like I "relate" to the facade of the Palmer's family life, or Janey & Dougie or whoever. They're almost like blank canvases on which Lynch can paint surreal, nightmarish shadow versions of those peoples' lives.

What's "dated" about this is that hyper-stylized version of an American family really only exists on commercials, or via nostalgia for people who grew up in the 50s and 60s. Haha, or for the kind of suburban white Americans who would probably never watch Twin Peaks.

Dominique, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:37 (six years ago) link

an upstanding upper-middle class pillar of a white community raping and murdering his daughter

...while possessed by what appears to be a longhaired grease monkey.

― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, August 31, 2017 11:16 AM (seventeen minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

It's probably significant here that Fire Walk with Me, which was Lynch's last word on the Twin Peaks universe until very recently, implies that Leland was considerably more abusive and symbiotically linked to BOB than the series lets on.

one way street, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:38 (six years ago) link

Yes, obv the TP series' vision of 'normal' directly derives from '50s/early '60s pop culture, even in the casting of actors from the period like Beymer, Tamblyn, Piper Laurie, Chamberlain, Don Murray. (ditto Blue Velvet)

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:45 (six years ago) link

from Amy Taubin's Cannes report in the current Film Comment, where the first two eps of TP 2.0 were screened:

"I wish I could be interested in Lynch’s fiddling with CGI, his overworking of his actors’ glottal stops, and his evocation of Mystery Science Theater 3000, the symptomology of Alzheimer’s disease, and, more generally, castration anxiety. But I’m not."

She did like the new Top of the Lake.

― Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 12 July 2017 17:19 (one month ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

That last sentence is a kicker and a half. New top of the lake is appalling

passé aggresif (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:46 (six years ago) link

i think the essay's thesis (that lynch is working from a notion that middle class wasp life is normal and everything outside of it is deviant/horrifying) is easily countered with numerous examples from his films and also his own life. if anything, he often seems to conjure up that perception of normality only to subvert the living hell out of it.

but i also think it's silly to pretend that he doesn't have longstanding "issues" with how he presents people with physical and mental disabilities, and issues with not portraying people of color at all. lynch is really good at offering up visions of the "normal" life and then subverting them, because he often does so in deliberate, drawn out subtle ways (yes, i know it often ends in very unsubtle ways). but he frequently doesn't offer up that same subtlety to his "weird" characters. i think the essay is correct to point out that he often uses disability as a signifier of "otherness". but again...sometimes he does show immense compassion for these characters. as morbs said, he has a long career and there are plenty of counterexamples.

Karl Malone, Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:51 (six years ago) link

lmao i essentially said what shakey said on morbs' facebook post

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:56 (six years ago) link

New rule. Only allowed to post 'c' or 'd' in these threads.

Posting thinkpieces = ban, the wronger the longer

passé aggresif (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 August 2017 16:57 (six years ago) link


CDCCDCCD CCDCCCCC CDDCCDCC CDDCDDDD CDDCDDDC CCDCCDDD CDDDCDCC CCDCCCCC CDDDCDCC CDDCDCCC CDDCDCCD CDDCDDDC CDDCDCDD CCDCCCCC CDDDCDCC CDDCDCCC CDDCDCCD CDDDCCDD CCDCCCCC CDDCDCCD CDDDCCDD CCDCCCCC CDDCCCCD CCDCCCCC CDDCCDDD CDDCDDDD CDDCDDDD CDDCCDCC CCDCCCCC CDDCDCCD CDDCCDCC CDDCCDCD CDDCCCCD CCDCDDCC CCDCCCCC CDDCCDCC CDDCDDCD CDDCCCCD CDDCCCDD CCDCDDDC

Karl Malone, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:03 (six years ago) link

that's a real message but it's in binary so get your punch card supercomputers out of the closet

Karl Malone, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:03 (six years ago) link

Oh I've no doubt there's already twenty posts in the TP thread about it hey

passé aggresif (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:06 (six years ago) link

It's probably significant here that Fire Walk with Me, which was Lynch's last word on the Twin Peaks universe until very recently, implies that Leland was considerably more abusive and symbiotically linked to BOB than the series lets on.
]

This is true, but on the other hand, FWWM also presents Deer Meadow, which is like a nastier version of Twin Peaks and … at the same time a whole lot lower down the socio-economic scale. Maybe it has a light underbelly we never get to see.

Alba, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:09 (six years ago) link

Carl is positively angelic in TP:TR

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:10 (six years ago) link

And I love Lynch, but I'm not sure he's done a lot for the image of hobos.

Alba, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:11 (six years ago) link

Carl is positively angelic in TP:TR

But he's moved his trailer park from Deer Meadow to Twin Peaks ha ha.

Alba, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:12 (six years ago) link

Recently saw Ellen Page accused of being an imperialist colonialist.

I think David Wants To Fly is probably the worst we'll see of Lynch.

Didn't Lynch's interview with the Palmer family suggest Leland was not guilty of abuse?

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:18 (six years ago) link

Given these elements of Lynch’s work, it is baffling that more people have not critiqued the filmmaker’s normative sensibilities.

I stopped reading the essay here, because I feel like critiques of Lynch's normative sensibilities have been a staple of the Lynch discourse for as long as I can remember. "Is David Lynch sexist/racist/exploitative" is probably the most well-worn corner of Lynch criticism. The essay's argument is a surface argument and it's fine as far as it goes, but plenty of ppl love Lynch who also find him troubling and sometimes indefensible. I mean, if you don't find him troubling I'm not sure what you even get from his work. Of course it's troubling.

Didn't Lynch's interview with the Palmer family suggest Leland was not guilty of abuse?

According to... Leland

streeps of range (wins), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:26 (six years ago) link

Who was created by lynch!

passé aggresif (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:26 (six years ago) link

wait a sec, does this refer to Gordon Cole interviewing the Palmers? xp

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:27 (six years ago) link

It was Lynch as himself interviewing the Palmer family for a special feature.

Horror troubling and bigotry troubling are very different reasons?

Watched Fire Walk With Me recently and wondered whether Sarah is somehow sleeping through Laura's screaming or if she's been ignoring the abuse.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:30 (six years ago) link

i already know about "I am the FBI" ... very funny to hear of it choking up left-wing friends who may be on watchlists. :)

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:33 (six years ago) link

Sarah is somehow sleeping through Laura's screaming

this is the case, leland is drugging her

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:33 (six years ago) link

i already know about "I am the FBI" ... very funny to hear of it choking up left-wing friends who may be on watchlists. :)

― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, August 31, 2017 10:33 AM (twenty-six seconds ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

oh no the cognitive dissonance i'm experiencing in this fictional story!!!!!!!!!!!

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:34 (six years ago) link

it's familiar, but it's still funny.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:38 (six years ago) link

Horror troubling and bigotry troubling are very different reasons?

Sure, but not unconnected. A lot of fear is about the unknown/unfamiliar.

the FBI in Twin Peaks bears virtually no relationship to the actual irl FBI

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:40 (six years ago) link

It's probably worth noting the posts in the cosmic horror thread where people cogently explain why they wouldn't conflate Lynch's worldview with e.g. Lovecraft's.

Glengarry Glen Marshall (Old Lunch), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:41 (six years ago) link

like, enjoying that line has nothing to do with the actual FBI and everything to do with the character's position in this fictional universe

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:41 (six years ago) link

xxp

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:42 (six years ago) link

Since when has the context of a line of dialogue ever mattered? Since never, that's when.

Glengarry Glen Marshall (Old Lunch), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:44 (six years ago) link

the line in the article about Mike evoking otherness through his disability just seems wrong on many levels

Week of Wonders (Ross), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:46 (six years ago) link

Didn't he cut off his own arm to rid himself of BOB?

Moodles, Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:55 (six years ago) link

enjoying that line has nothing to do with the actual FBI and everything to do with the character's position in this fictional universe

YEAH THX I'M DUMB

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:58 (six years ago) link

christ i fucking hate this place sometimes

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:58 (six years ago) link

the FBI in Twin Peaks bears virtually no relationship to the actual irl FBI

wellllll, they have the same name...

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:59 (six years ago) link

sorta like the FBI in Mississippi Burning

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 17:59 (six years ago) link

I keep forgetting that David Lynch directed a Sparks video

streeps of range (wins), Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:04 (six years ago) link

I didn't know that! nuts

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:09 (six years ago) link

YEAH THX I'M DUMB

I think there's some Christian homily that applies here let's see if you can figure it out

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:10 (six years ago) link

I caught a lunch interview - think it was Charlie rose idk- yesterday from around the time of lost highway

Now I wanna watch more good lynch interviews. Any recommendations?

passé aggresif (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:23 (six years ago) link

The documentary films the art life and lynch one and the quinoa video

streeps of range (wins), Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:27 (six years ago) link

It's not filmed, but Chris Rodley's series of interviews in Lynch on Lynch is essential reading.

one way street, Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:29 (six years ago) link

Hmm the art life is available +#**around the place*#-+ y/n

passé aggresif (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:29 (six years ago) link

Art Life is good

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:31 (six years ago) link

lynch one

Karl Malone, Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:33 (six years ago) link

you got me Shakey, i'm not a Christian anymore

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:38 (six years ago) link

Lapsed democrat

passé aggresif (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:44 (six years ago) link

I keep forgetting that David Lynch directed a Sparks video

― streeps of range (wins), Thursday, August 31, 2017 2:04 PM (fifteen minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

WHAT

flappy bird, Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:51 (six years ago) link

ikr

I haven't seen it

streeps of range (wins), Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:51 (six years ago) link

The director's identity seems to be in dispute, but you can draw yr own conclusions:

https://youtu.be/TH5USLpPa_0[

one way street, Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:58 (six years ago) link

Sorry, that should be:

https://youtu.be/TH5USLpPa_0

one way street, Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:58 (six years ago) link

@darragh - here are some sweet ones:

circa 1990, career overview, interviews Lynch & close associates, really really great
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=On02Z42mznc

circa 2005-06, behind the scenes & making of Inland Empire. lots of stuff about process
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FG0OzpEjUPU

flappy bird, Thursday, 31 August 2017 18:58 (six years ago) link

Ah lovely, thanks!

passé aggresif (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 August 2017 19:04 (six years ago) link

yeah no...

‘I Predict’ came with a striking video that fell foul of the conservatism of MTV. Directed in the style of David Lynch by group friends, identical twins and occasional actors Doug and Steve Martin, it is crammed full of strangeness. Shot in a dimly lit bar outside LA, Ron, in drag, develops the bride theme from the album’s cover with Russell still wearing the cover’s wedding suit. And Ron is stripping. And Russell is watching. Something is clearly not right. With the attendant promotion and the video’s notoriety, ‘I Predict’ reached number 60 on the Billboard Hot 100. Sparks had finally achieved a US Top 100 single after a decade of trying.

Talent Is An Asset: The Story Of Sparks
Daryl Ealesa

Doug Martin
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0552220/

Steve Martin
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0553094/

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Thursday, 31 August 2017 19:17 (six years ago) link

Just posted this in the TP thread

https://youtu.be/nu6BUQUDjII

And I know lots of people can't stand Mark Cousins, but this has some good moments

https://youtu.be/MIlmdLPUdpg

Priory, Thursday, 31 August 2017 19:17 (six years ago) link

xpost: The Martin twins from that same year:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRbeBV5UEZU

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Thursday, 31 August 2017 19:18 (six years ago) link

My bad, I was taking as my source the Sparks biography by Dave Thompson, which I've been re-skimming in anticipation of seeing them later this month. Pretty big thing for a biographer to get wrong!

streeps of range (wins), Thursday, 31 August 2017 19:39 (six years ago) link

that article posted up above is pretty lame. talk about starting from a bad premise and cherry picking evidence.

i do think there is something to be said for critics vicariously using Lynch as a scapegoat to work out/indulge some inner kinks and moral shaming but this guy seems to miss that point entirely.

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 31 August 2017 23:18 (six years ago) link

Other characters from the White Lodge are similarly tokenised—The Man from Another Place (Michael J. Anderson) has osteogenesis imperfecta and The Fireman’s (Carel Struycken) height is the result of acromegaly.

right and the correct thing to do would be not feature these actors at all so as not to be accused of tolkenism

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 31 August 2017 23:23 (six years ago) link

you dont have to cherry pick shit! the only black ppl in the new tp (out of a cast of hundreds) are literally
- a hooker
- a jazz band
- ernie hudson

kurt schwitterz, Thursday, 31 August 2017 23:30 (six years ago) link

tbf it's only tolkenism if hobbits are involved

Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 August 2017 23:32 (six years ago) link

you can admit there are issues with representation without jumping to the dumb conclusion that David Lynch wants to enforce normality and everything weird in his movies is to be looked at with condescension.

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 31 August 2017 23:37 (six years ago) link

For Lynch, such normalcy ultimately looks a lot like conservative, middle-class American life

as depicted where? Inland Empire? Mulholland Drive? Eraserhead? honestly wondering where this positive depiction of conservative middle class American life exists in Lynch's films. cos the author of this piece doesn't give any examples, he just gives counter examples of "weird stuff" and infers from there

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 31 August 2017 23:48 (six years ago) link

i do think there is something to be said for critics vicariously using Lynch as a scapegoat to work out/indulge some inner kinks and moral shaming but this guy seems to miss that point entirely.

― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 1 September 2017 00:18

Something to be said for scapegoating? That it sucks.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 1 September 2017 00:22 (six years ago) link

imo Lynch has grown more sympathetic towards the lower class in his work. Laura Dern having the transformative lighter experience with the street lady in Mulholland Drive. look at Harry Dean Stanton, trailer park manager in the new Twin Peaks, similarly witnessing death and eternal life. the family in the Straight Story is all but absent from that trashed house, only Jack Nane and Sissy Spacek living a debilitated and physically demanding life, yet they persevere. Eraserhead felt pretty working-class, it was created in that world of the factories of Philadelphia. the guy lived a life of working class trudgery living in a tiny space. was the Elephant Man a paragon of normal culture?

it is weird that he brings up Blue Velvet cos i thought the sensitive effeminate man was good as a stark contrast to the misogynist supreme Frank Booth. it made sense for this person and not Frank Booth to perform that wonderful lip sync karaoke to Roy Orbison. you couldn't have had Frank Booth doing this, he was a violent, horrible man, someone we had despised already for a good chunk of movie time. it is beyond hilarious to say that the guy miming to "In Dream" enforces normality.

this guy is technically a great writer but his ideas are shit.

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 1 September 2017 00:45 (six years ago) link

darraghmac--in addition to the above seek out the Stories documentary on the Eraserhead DVD. Intimate, great Catherine Coulson content, and a beautiful evocation of a lost world.

sciatica, Friday, 1 September 2017 01:36 (six years ago) link

imo representation only becomes an issue when the material or setting demands it - i.e. the Ghost in the Shell remake, that dumb Lone Ranger remake (?... the one with Johnny Depp), or the first season of Girls. although i will say it is strange that the original series had more black actors than The Return. as for Lynch's worldview... i'm not going to read that shit article, but... the guy grew up in Missoula. his childhood & experience that shaped his worldview was presumably mostly white. TP is set in the PNW, a very white area of the country. it makes sense that the series is populated predominantly by white people. this doesn't extend fully to The Return, which spends a lot of time in Las Vegas, but boy... really fishing for something that isn't there in that thesis, especially w/r/t to the rest of his work (adam otm xp) Everyone has already gone through how dumb the "Lynch loves conservative white America" angle is. Terrence Malick is a much more conservative director imo, to make a totally unrelated comparison...

flappy bird, Friday, 1 September 2017 02:08 (six years ago) link

the original series had more black actors than The Return

Say what?

Οὖτις, Friday, 1 September 2017 02:12 (six years ago) link

Lots of employees at the Great Northern. I mean, it can't be much longer than the list posted upthread, but there are more more.

flappy bird, Friday, 1 September 2017 02:18 (six years ago) link

more more
ugh

flappy bird, Friday, 1 September 2017 02:20 (six years ago) link

tipsy, re history of Lynch critiques:

Certainly, there have been quite a few complaints over the years regarding Lynch’s gleeful representation of violence against women. Others have analysed Lynch’s problematic depictions of disability and race, yet these critiques have been largely apologetic.

I haven't read enough DL scholarship to confirm or deny that last...

author photo in this essay looks kinda like Max Headroom

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 1 September 2017 03:15 (six years ago) link

clearly Lynch is a WASP Eagle Scout Woody Allen

(when they were both nominated for the best directing Oscar in '87 btw, Woody said Blue Velvet was the year's best film)

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Friday, 1 September 2017 03:27 (six years ago) link

There is definitely a seed of truth in that article, but yeah, so many exceptions as to render it muddy enough to not be able to make any sorta full proof case for it.

circa1916, Friday, 1 September 2017 03:36 (six years ago) link

I think it was in The Art Life he was talking about how for a while as a teenager he was running with a bad crew and things were bleak... his details were sparse... was where he gets some his concept of trouble or "evil". I picture him as Jeffrey Beaumont in the back of Frank's car.

circa1916, Friday, 1 September 2017 03:45 (six years ago) link

Oh, I mangled that a bit. I was definitely that kid in the back seat of a car a few times as a teen, so maybe I'm projecting but probably not totally.

circa1916, Friday, 1 September 2017 03:57 (six years ago) link

although i will say it is strange that the original series had more black actors than The Return.

― flappy bird, Friday, 1 September 2017 03:08

I watched it all recently and I think there was more people of colour in general. Mostly great northern employees, law people and doctors in minor speaking roles.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 1 September 2017 07:00 (six years ago) link

Has anyone seen his Duran Duran movie?

Elvis Telecom, Saturday, 2 September 2017 02:00 (six years ago) link

I have. I didn't like it, and couldn't really detect any sort of lynch influence on it. It was hard to believe he was involved. But I don't really like Duran Duran beyond the hitz and I was bored and turned it off about a quarter of the way through, so maybe bloodcurdling Duran Duran horror takes place later on and I missed it

Karl Malone, Saturday, 2 September 2017 02:09 (six years ago) link

four months pass...

the powermad speed metal --> "love me" sequence in wild at heart, with the girl screaming in ecstasy sample triggered over and over, is david lynch's sense of humor at its very best

Karl Malone, Saturday, 20 January 2018 01:33 (six years ago) link

btw here is the story of how powermad became involved with lynch and wild at heart (among many other detours): http://nightflight.com/rock-stories-wild-at-heart-director-david-lynch-meets-powermad/

Karl Malone, Saturday, 20 January 2018 01:39 (six years ago) link

That Metal/Elvis scene is one of my favorite things he’s ever done. Feel very alone in rating Wild at Heart higher than seemingly everyone.

circa1916, Saturday, 20 January 2018 03:14 (six years ago) link

It's definitely gone from overrated to underrated.

Moodles, Saturday, 20 January 2018 05:50 (six years ago) link

I rewatched it recently and liked it a lot more than I thought I would. The way the story is broken up into flashbacks and oddball detours gives the film a weird flow. Hopefully they'll put out a fancy edition with all of the deleted stuff. Since The Return, we've been plowing through everything he's done chronologically. It all fits together well and more or less equally for me. Dune is the only one that really sticks out. And Duran Duran.

The Cowboy & The Frenchman was one of the best surprises.

Cow_Art, Saturday, 20 January 2018 07:28 (six years ago) link

The Cowboy and Frenchman is still randomly quoted (probably incorrectly) amongst some dork friends of mine thanks to a random drunken late night screening of his shorts eons ago. It struck us as super funny at the moment. Almost don’t want to revisit it.

I understand the criticisms of Wild at Heart, but it’s kinda Lynch’s most blown out Audio/Visual MTV Experience and it’s totally thrilling on that level.

circa1916, Saturday, 20 January 2018 08:00 (six years ago) link

I don’t think it holds up totally as a film, but there are enough scenes... cuts, color, sound, music that are really peak Lynch to me.

circa1916, Saturday, 20 January 2018 08:10 (six years ago) link

His new book of nude photography anyone? Not sure I want it but I'm curious to see who he photographs but it's probably all little known models. Wonder if there will be anything odd.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 3 February 2018 00:21 (six years ago) link

Lecturing today on THE ELEPHANT MAN and Lynch’s simple, precise, unfathomably powerful use of point of view; i.e the sequence with the frightened nurse in Merrick’s room

— Adam Nayman (@brofromanother) February 14, 2018

Also thinking of the amazing fact of Hurt, Hopkins and Gielgud present and sharply triangulated for a single scene - directed by a 34-year-old

— Adam Nayman (@brofromanother) February 14, 2018

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 14 February 2018 18:31 (six years ago) link

The distended scene of the old man in the bank fetching water in the TP s2 finale put me in mind of the dinner scene in Cinderfella and sent me to googling. Lynch as Jerry Lewis' heir in "comedy of duration":

http://www.brightwalldarkroom.com/2017/09/04/lynch-time-and-comedy/

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 12:54 (six years ago) link

heh... you are going to love season 3

Hazy Maze Cave (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 15:24 (six years ago) link

well, as that piece says, it's been a pretty constant trope for him through his career. (i stopped reading before the Dougie content.)

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 15:38 (six years ago) link

this is a great read. i like this bit about the botched comedy hitman scene in Mulholland Drive:

Just as the act of cleaning up won’t end, neither will the scene. It should have ended when he accomplished his goal, but once the accident is introduced, an intrusion of contingency that has no plot meaning, we are moved sideways rather than forward. We are made aware of the things going on in this building that are not important to the plot, and that therefore we should never have known about, or that at least should never have become part of the action.

it really captures one of the ways in which he sort of pushes against the edges of the frame where most directors let the holy narrative dictate things

Hazy Maze Cave (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 15:44 (six years ago) link

What are some non-TP examples of this (comedy of duration)? I'm drawing a bit of a blank and the piece moves on to talk about Lynch's approach to comedy in general. The Cowboy & the Frenchman has some of this iirc but in general it seems to be something he saves for this show.

scotti pruitti (wins), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 15:46 (six years ago) link

Yeah, the elevator door in Eraserhead that takes juuust a little bit too long to close comes to mind.

i remember the corned beef of my childhood (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 15:48 (six years ago) link

xpost to morbs but an example for wins, too

i remember the corned beef of my childhood (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 15:49 (six years ago) link

The hitman scene is more in line with a typical comedy crescendo of complications than something like the bank scene imo

The fight scene in the missing pieces is a great companion piece to the Andy floorboard scene in the same way that the bank scene is to the waiter scene

scotti pruitti (wins), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 15:50 (six years ago) link

Family Guy chicken fight gag maybe the lowest common denominator version of this

Hazy Maze Cave (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 15:53 (six years ago) link

idk what that is but there are like thousands of examples (I think there's an ilx thread "the joke goes on too long & that's the joke"), sideshow bob stepping on the rakes, Stewart Lee standup, loads of monty python but I always think of the "bring out yr dead" bit

scotti pruitti (wins), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 15:58 (six years ago) link

just so you know why the waiter and the bank clerk remind me of Lewis:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tvrmgJHltGY

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 16:02 (six years ago) link

Ha good catch. I wouldn't be surprised at all if both lynch & frost (who I suspect has more input into these types of scenes than ppl assume) are Lewis fans

scotti pruitti (wins), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 16:08 (six years ago) link

well, they're the right age! Werner Herzog is.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 16:16 (six years ago) link

My personal favorite in this vein:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAaifw-cVoQ

"Minneapolis" (barf) (Eric H.), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 16:40 (six years ago) link

Family guy chicken sequence > Lewis tbf

Planck Blather (darraghmac), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 16:45 (six years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1gnZN4SEhjA

Heavy Messages (jed_), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 16:47 (six years ago) link

Family Guy [insert any skit here] < literally anything that's ever been created throughout history

"Minneapolis" (barf) (Eric H.), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 16:48 (six years ago) link

Eric eternally correct on this

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 16:53 (six years ago) link

Hmm *studies next move*

Planck Blather (darraghmac), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 16:54 (six years ago) link

Lewis so much better than wretched family guy but of course lynch is a recurring player in the Cleveland show so the inspiration could be running in all kinds of directions

scotti pruitti (wins), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 16:54 (six years ago) link

and Herzog has been on American Dad!....

Simon H., Wednesday, 21 February 2018 17:00 (six years ago) link

the relevant scene i think of first in the first hour of TP s3 is the protracted delay and frustration rhythms leading to the discovery of the head and body in South Dakota (woman and her dog, idiot in the alley, etc).

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 17:04 (six years ago) link

lynch is a recurring player in the Cleveland show

This fact is still weirder than any of Lynch's work.

Jock Totty's Monocle (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 17:05 (six years ago) link

the relevant scene i think of first in the first hour of TP s3 is the protracted delay and frustration rhythms leading to the discovery of the head and body in South Dakota (woman and her dog, idiot in the alley, etc).


Yeah definitely - as I said above this type of scene isn't anything unusual, it's a comedy commonplace going back decades, but it's the contexts in which they appear in TP that makes l&f's version stand out. Everyone's waited months to see what happens next after the Cooper-gets-shot cliffhanger: we get 20 minutes of him lying on the floor. A new season starts and you're trying to get your bearings in an entirely new location: they skew the signal-to-noise ratio so you get no purchase.

I love stuff like this cause it suits my temperament but I don't know if I agree when ppl call it "audacious" so much as it highlights the timidity of other tv whether network or prestige

scotti pruitti (wins), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 17:14 (six years ago) link

While it's true that's a type of reliable comedy scene -- eg, the guy who comes to WC Fields in the middle of the night looking for "Carl LaFong" -- when Lynch does it, he usually leaves out the jokes, I think? I mean, Hank Worden giving the thumbs-up and the ancient bank office fetching water is kinda funny, but not really. Or funny-strange, not funny-haha (which is also how some categorize Jerry Lewis).

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 18:02 (six years ago) link

*ancient bank officer

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 18:03 (six years ago) link

Banner logo
Wikivoyage is celebrating its 5th anniversary! Help us grow by sharing travel information about destinations that interest you
Hide
Open main menu
Wikipedia Search
EditWatch this pageRead in another language
Shaggy dog story
This article is about the joke. For the television program of the same name, see Shaggy Dog Story (TV). For other uses, see Shaggy dog (disambiguation).
In its original sense, a shaggy dog story or yarn is an extremely long-winded anecdote characterized by extensive narration of typically irrelevant incidents and terminated by an anticlimax or a pointless punchline.

Shaggy dog stories play upon the audience's preconceptions of joke-telling. The audience listens to the story with certain expectations, which are either simply not met or met in some entirely unexpected manner.[1] A lengthy shaggy dog story derives its humour from the fact that the joke-teller held the attention of the listeners for a long time (such jokes can take five minutes or more to tell) for no reason at all, as the end resolution is essentially meaningless.[2] The nature of their delivery is reflected in the English idiom spin a yarn, by way of analogy with the production of yarn.

Archetypal story Edit

A shaggy dog, the archetypical subject of long-winded, pointless stories
The commonly believed archetype of the shaggy dog story is a story that concerns a shaggy dog. The story builds up, repeatedly emphasizing how shaggy the dog is. At the climax of the story, someone in the story reacts with, "That dog's not so shaggy." The expectations of the audience that have been built up by the presentation of the story, that the story will end with a punchline, are thus disappointed. Ted Cohen gives the following example of this story:[1]

A boy owned a dog that was uncommonly shaggy. Many people remarked upon its considerable shagginess. When the boy learned that there are contests for shaggy dogs, he entered his dog. The dog won first prize for shagginess in both the local and the regional competitions. The boy entered the dog in ever-larger contests, until finally he entered it in the world championship for shaggy dogs. When the judges had inspected all of the competing dogs, they remarked about the boy's dog: "He's not that shaggy."

However, authorities disagree as to whether this particular story is the archetype after which the category is named. Eric Partridge, for example, provides a very different story, as do William and Mary Morris in The Morris Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins.

According to Partridge and the Morrises, the archetypical shaggy dog story involves an advertisement placed in the Times announcing a search for a shaggy dog. In the Partridge story, an aristocratic family living in Park Lane is searching for a lost dog, and an American answers the advertisement with a shaggy dog that he has found and personally brought across the Atlantic, only to be received by the butler at the end of the story who takes one look at the dog and shuts the door in his face, saying, "But not so shaggy as that, sir!" In the Morris story, the advertiser is organizing a competition to find the shaggiest dog in the world, and after a lengthy exposition of the search for such a dog, a winner is presented to the aristocratic instigator of the competition, who says, "I don't think he's so shaggy."[3][4]

Examples in literature Edit

A typical shaggy dog story occurs in Mark Twain's book about his travels west, Roughing It. Twain's friends encourage him to go find a man called Jim Blaine when he is properly drunk, and ask him to tell "the stirring story about his grandfather's old ram".[5] Twain, encouraged by his friends who have already heard the story, finally finds Blaine, an old silver miner, who sets out to tell Twain and his friends the tale. Blaine starts out with the ram ("There never was a bullier old ram than what he was"), and goes on for four more mostly dull but occasionally hilarious unparagraphed pages. Along the way, Blaine tells many stories, each of which connects back to the one before by some tenuous thread, and none of which has to do with the old ram. Among these stories are: a tale of boiled missionaries; of a lady who borrows a false eye, a peg leg, and the wig of a coffin-salesman's wife; and a final tale of a man who gets caught in machinery at a carpet factory and whose "widder bought the piece of carpet that had his remains wove in..." As Blaine tells the story of the carpet man's funeral, he begins to fall asleep, and Twain, looking around, sees his friends "suffocating with suppressed laughter." They now inform him that "at a certain stage of intoxication, no human power could keep [Blaine] from setting out, with impressive unction, to tell about a wonderful adventure which he had once had with his grandfather's old ram — and the mention of the ram in the first sentence was as far as any man had heard him get, concerning it."

Buy Jupiter and Other Stories, a collection of stories by Isaac Asimov, contains a tale whose title is "Shah Guido G."[6] In his background notes, Asimov defines the tale as a shaggy dog story, and explains that the title is a play on "shaggy dog".

Examples in music Edit

Arlo Guthrie's classic anti-war story-song "Alice's Restaurant Massacree" is a shaggy dog story about the military draft, hippies, and improper disposal of garbage.[7]
David Bromberg's version of "Bullfrog Blues" (on "How Late'll Ya Play 'Til?") is a rambling shaggy dog story performed as a talking blues song.[8][9]
"Weird Al" Yankovic's "Albuquerque," the final track on his 1999 album Running with Scissors, is an over-twelve-minute digression from one of the first topics mentioned in the song, the narrator-protagonist's longstanding dislike of sauerkraut.
See also Edit

Anti-humor
The Aristocrats
Chekhov's gun
Feghoot
Information overload
No soap radio
Red herring
Shaggy God story
References

Further reading

Last edited 6 days ago by Staszek Lem
RELATED ARTICLES
Shah Guido G.
short story by Isaac Asimov
Isaac Asimov's Treasury of Humor
Anti-humor
style of comedy that is deliberately awkward or experimental
Wikipedia

Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless otherwise noted.
Terms of UsePrivacyDesktop

scotti pruitti (wins), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 18:07 (six years ago) link

"the Aristocrats" is pretty close, but it has a punchline!

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 21 February 2018 18:10 (six years ago) link

Eric, the Buddy Lester hat thing is way too action-packed and breathlessly funny to qualify!

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 22 February 2018 04:31 (six years ago) link

the Godot thing is straightup Laurel & Hardy as Sam himself wd admit

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 22 February 2018 04:33 (six years ago) link

four months pass...

given how manic a lot of ILX is about Lynch I'm surprised that there's been no reference (to my knowledge) about this new biography/memoir "Room to Dream". I'm actually surprised there hasn't been a wider cultural spasm about it.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Room-Dream-David-Lynch/dp/1782118381

I looked at it in the bookshop today and it seems to have a biographical chapter/ memoirial chapter alternating structure.

Britain's Sexiest Cow (jed_), Saturday, 23 June 2018 01:32 (five years ago) link

personally, I don't know if there's anything in this book that I'm not already tired of or that hasn't been hashed out in multiple video extras/ interviews tv and print/lynch on lynch's etc.

Britain's Sexiest Cow (jed_), Saturday, 23 June 2018 01:35 (five years ago) link

i am surprised at how under-the-radar it is.

Britain's Sexiest Cow (jed_), Saturday, 23 June 2018 01:38 (five years ago) link

actually, it seems to have been released/published today but i'm still surprised.

Britain's Sexiest Cow (jed_), Saturday, 23 June 2018 01:51 (five years ago) link

I may check it out, but Lynch has a certain number of stories he tells over and over again.

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Saturday, 23 June 2018 02:05 (five years ago) link

i've thumbed through books of his in stores before and i've never been that impressed with the way he writes. i do find his life interesting, and have a few other bios on my shelf, but i kind of prefer to have his stories filtered through other people's writing voices

Karl Malone, Saturday, 23 June 2018 02:06 (five years ago) link

stories he tells over and over again.

he seems to be something of an the obsessive, so this fits.

A is for (Aimless), Saturday, 23 June 2018 03:11 (five years ago) link

I read a review. He's someone I don't particularly find compelling in terms of life story/art dynamic. Maybe someone will write a good bio 20-30 years from now.

the ignatius rock of ignorance (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 23 June 2018 03:22 (five years ago) link

My wife gave me a copy Tuesday as a late Father's Day present. I'm about 240 pages in and enjoying it. I really like the structure -- alternating sections of well-researched biography by Kristine McKenna with sections by Lynch reacting to, embellishing and occasionally rebutting the previous section. Loads of anecdotes that are new to me.

a shomin-geki poster with some horror elements (WilliamC), Saturday, 23 June 2018 03:58 (five years ago) link

I wasn't aware of the bio until a friend told me he got it a couple days ago. Lack of publicity and enthusiasm is surprising. I just ordered a copy, that sorta structure sounds really enjoyable.

flappy bird, Saturday, 23 June 2018 04:19 (five years ago) link

lol it's like how many people bought The Final Dossier and don't know about this

flappy bird, Saturday, 23 June 2018 04:20 (five years ago) link

Ahh, I didn't understand that the bio part was not written by Lynch. That actually makes me more interested.

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Saturday, 23 June 2018 04:29 (five years ago) link

Same here

Karl Malone, Saturday, 23 June 2018 05:18 (five years ago) link

It’s kind of interesting - I’m not sure I’ve seen a similar bio structure?

Karl Malone, Saturday, 23 June 2018 05:18 (five years ago) link

I got the audiobook - I’d be interested to see what the print version looks like cause lynch’s sections seem pretty off-the-cuff a lot of the time, full of ad-libs, saying something & then correcting himself and so on. I’d guess they use a cleaned-up transcript of these in the physical book.

It’s entertaining, like WilliamC said there’s a decent amount of new stuff along with stuff you’ve heard a million times (he prefaces a couple of things with “I’ve told this story so many times”). The lynch sections get more scant the closer we get to present day, as you might expect, so it’s up to the McKenna sections to provide the detail.

There isn’t much in the way of “rebuttal”; the wives, girlfriends and children will say some pretty revealing stuff about his personal life in each chapter and Lynch won’t address any of it and just tells a couple of stories.

But yeah I enjoyed the audiobook as a kind of companion to the art life film (which btw anyone who’s seen that might be interested to know that we get the end of the “Mr Smith” anecdote in this book) and he also has a kind of quasi Dr Amp outburst at one point

U. K. Le Garage (wins), Saturday, 23 June 2018 05:41 (five years ago) link

i just want to know if he ever popped the cow (the one stranded on a ski trail in idaho)

sciatica, Saturday, 23 June 2018 07:14 (five years ago) link

He's someone I don't particularly find compelling in terms of life story/art dynamic.

Yeah the details of both his upbringing and his professional life seem pretty banal. Grew up squaresville but has always been a weirdo, has spent the last 50 years or so obsessed with making art. Some personal drama here and there, plus the Woody Woodpeckers, but he's definitely someone where everything interesting in the work itself.

...is in the work itself.

Lynch gave up toxic anger 20-30 years ago for meditation. Couldn’t give up smokes tho lol so yeah. Yeah

mind how you go (Ross), Saturday, 23 June 2018 13:25 (five years ago) link

Lack of publicity and enthusiasm is surprising.


I like Lynch as much as the next guy, but feel like there have been a dozen documentaries and a dozen books about him at this point. I heard about this and mustered a “ehhh”.

circa1916, Saturday, 23 June 2018 14:31 (five years ago) link

An interview piece in the Guardian today on the back of the book. I really like that main b/w portrait photograph of him. https://www.theguardian.com/film/2018/jun/23/david-lynch-gotta-be-selfish-twin-peaks

brain (krakow), Saturday, 23 June 2018 14:55 (five years ago) link

Lack of publicity and enthusiasm is surprising

i don't think it's necessary if you enjoy an artist to have to consume every single thing they do. i like Lynch for his movies. not gonna buy all his books or t-shirts.

also last year i devoted an insane amount of time and thought to 18 hours worth of new Lynch. not just the shows but the behind the scenes, the book, some podcasts, etc. his shit is so real, it's emotionally and mentally draining. can't blame anyone for wanting to take a break.

Hazy Maze Cave (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 23 June 2018 15:11 (five years ago) link

xp the back of the book presumably has more content tbh

tired culché (darraghmac), Saturday, 23 June 2018 15:15 (five years ago) link

You wait until they interview him about the copyright page!

brain (krakow), Saturday, 23 June 2018 15:29 (five years ago) link

his short movie on the chapter headings gave me nightmares so I'll pass i think

tired culché (darraghmac), Saturday, 23 June 2018 15:30 (five years ago) link

In his 40 years of film-making, the director has taken audiences from sunlit American idylls to surreal dimensions populated by demons, doppelgangers and psychotic killers. His are scenes you can’t forget: the whimpering, deformed baby in Eraserhead, the severed ear in Blue Velvet, the blood-spattered, skull-crushing violence of Wild At Heart, the nuclear explosion in Twin Peaks: The Return. Google “David Lynch creepy”, and you get 5.5m results.

sigh, pet peeve but if you google "david lynch creepy", in quotes, you get 3,030 results. if you google the same thing without quotes you get over 9.5 million results. if you google David Lynch Hot Dogs, you get more than 11 million results (if you google "David Lynch hot dogs", you get 3 results)

Karl Malone, Saturday, 23 June 2018 15:35 (five years ago) link

He does, however, squash the theory, much loved by some Peakers, that the last two parts of the 18-hour series should be watched simultaneously on two screens, with dialogue overlapping. “Yeah, I heard that. It’s bullshit. See, it’s beautiful that someone came up with this. You could double-expose scenes in lots of films and it could conjure some fantastic thing.”

sad lol

Karl Malone, Saturday, 23 June 2018 15:58 (five years ago) link

Lol I’d forgotten about that “theory”

His quote on trump from that interview is so dumb, he really should stay as tight-lipped on politics as he is on the meaning of his films

U. K. Le Garage (wins), Sunday, 24 June 2018 16:15 (five years ago) link

Its true that Donald Trump could be the greatest president ever if he was not Donald Trump

Οὖτις, Sunday, 24 June 2018 19:45 (five years ago) link

well its a function of arts graduates insisting that artists have something valid to say about politics etc isnt it they then ask great artists this as if it were going to lead anywhere but where it usually does

under a mand'rin tsar (darraghmac), Sunday, 24 June 2018 19:48 (five years ago) link

Nah I don’t think the interviewer that goes looking for a lynch quote on politics in 2018 is under any illusions, ppl know the kind of thing they’re gonna get

U. K. Le Garage (wins), Sunday, 24 June 2018 19:58 (five years ago) link

true true

twas a remarkably poor piece all told

under a mand'rin tsar (darraghmac), Sunday, 24 June 2018 20:29 (five years ago) link

He is undecided about Donald Trump. “He could go down as one of the greatest presidents in history because he has disrupted the thing so much. No one is able to counter this guy in an intelligent way.

...what

karl wallogina (Autumn Almanac), Sunday, 24 June 2018 21:05 (five years ago) link

you see em doin so?

under a mand'rin tsar (darraghmac), Sunday, 24 June 2018 21:26 (five years ago) link

It’s been funny watching people online today try and claim he’s the victim of clickbait w the Trump quote instead of dealing w the reality that great artists can have bad politics. Or it seems like he doesn’t follow politics closely at all. Like if it doesn’t effect him, he doesn’t care.

Nerdstrom Poindexter, Sunday, 24 June 2018 21:26 (five years ago) link

Who gives a shit

flappy bird, Sunday, 24 June 2018 21:29 (five years ago) link

Or it seems like he doesn’t follow politics closely at all. Like if it doesn’t effect him, he doesn’t care.

Yep

flappy bird, Sunday, 24 June 2018 21:30 (five years ago) link

Who gives a shit

otm

Britain's Sexiest Cow (jed_), Sunday, 24 June 2018 22:31 (five years ago) link

how out of character that David Lynch, so famously engaged with the world outside his own studio, would have one slight blip in his analysis of geopolitics

kelp, clam and carrion (sic), Sunday, 24 June 2018 23:24 (five years ago) link

didn’t he love reagan

flamenco blorf (BradNelson), Monday, 25 June 2018 00:05 (five years ago) link

he’s like a kid watching bugs through a magnifyimg glass, it’s just bc ppl are reacting to trump that he even notices

“they’re swarmimg maybe they will eat the leader” etc

Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Monday, 25 June 2018 00:09 (five years ago) link

I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed obsessing over the small print of celebrity interviews

Chuck_Tatum, Monday, 25 June 2018 00:11 (five years ago) link

yes next to the guy that finally wiped out the Cherokee and the other guy who nuked Japan and another guy who raped his slave and is on our $20 bill yes he could end up being the greatest among that esteemed crowd

Hazy Maze Cave (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 25 June 2018 00:33 (five years ago) link

No one is able to counter this guy in an intelligent way.

otmfmfmfm

Hazy Maze Cave (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 25 June 2018 00:34 (five years ago) link

what am i missing? the only way to respond to trump is more intelligently than trump

karl wallogina (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 25 June 2018 00:43 (five years ago) link

1964: College student David Lynch gets stoned at a Bob Dylan concert and walks out of the show. His roommate, Peter, gets angry about this, so Lynch throws him out. (Peter would later become J. Geils Band singer Peter Wolf.) pic.twitter.com/xaikQHOYSK

— Robert Loerzel (@robertloerzel) June 24, 2018

Karl Malone, Monday, 25 June 2018 00:44 (five years ago) link

No he didnt “love” Reagan. So tired if that getting passed around

Xxp

Οὖτις, Monday, 25 June 2018 01:46 (five years ago) link

oh lol sorry i should not take a magazine headline to heart

flamenco blorf (BradNelson), Monday, 25 June 2018 01:51 (five years ago) link

“No one is able to counter this guy in an intelligent way.
otmfmfmfm
― Hazy Maze Cave (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, June 24,

Lol

Nerdstrom Poindexter, Monday, 25 June 2018 02:26 (five years ago) link

I heard that Dylan anecdote somwhere else recently, in almost those exact same words, I think in the Art Life film? He really does tell the same stories over and over. I have no desire to get this, at least not now.

sciatica, Monday, 25 June 2018 02:35 (five years ago) link

The intelligent way to counter Trump is to say “Trump isn't that bad”

Nerdstrom Poindexter, Monday, 25 June 2018 03:08 (five years ago) link

the fact that people earnestly care about this is insane to me, the guy has never uttered a coherent political statement in public that I'm aware of

Simon H., Monday, 25 June 2018 03:19 (five years ago) link

also, for real, burn indiewire to the fucking ground. they suck and I hate them a lot.

Simon H., Monday, 25 June 2018 03:23 (five years ago) link

Are people legitimately trying to make a deal out of that Trump statement? Def. dumb if you have any sense of the dude.

circa1916, Monday, 25 June 2018 05:14 (five years ago) link

Dude said he voted for Reagan cause he likes 50s cowboys & doesn’t remember who he voted for in 2016, he is clearly not what you’d call a deep political thinker, he’s practically bruneau-level

Obv people shouldn’t earnestly care what he has to say about this stuff (and don’t really, that I can see, not like they do about eg Kanye who is at least as dumb & incoherent) which is why he should stop talking about it and ppl should stop asking him

U. K. Le Garage (wins), Monday, 25 June 2018 05:28 (five years ago) link

I still prefer Lynch (fuck-witted/inarticulate political comments and all) over that annoying smug cunt Alec Baldwin, times about a zillion.

calzino, Monday, 25 June 2018 09:09 (five years ago) link

Lynch has had a speech problem since he was young. Which has made for some memorable dialogue in his movies but expecting Lynch to be articulate seems odd to me. Simon otm

mind how you go (Ross), Monday, 25 June 2018 10:12 (five years ago) link

I dunno - his points seem pretty clear! And while I don't agree with him, it's kind of an interestingly fucked-up take.

Chuck_Tatum, Monday, 25 June 2018 10:27 (five years ago) link

Yeah it’s not really a question of articulation, he’s cheerfully clueless when it comes to anything like this but i think his position is exactly what he says it is. Knowing a bit about his worldview it isn’t that surprising that he genuinely believes this is a likely outcome:

*trump puts kids in cages*
World: boy this shitty president sure is disruptive
(later)
hmm but wat if TM tho 🤔
*paradise ensues*

U. K. Le Garage (wins), Monday, 25 June 2018 15:19 (five years ago) link

his folksy patter seems to be slipping since he continues to use that word and not like shambles or muddle

sciatica, Monday, 25 June 2018 18:09 (five years ago) link

what word

flappy bird, Monday, 25 June 2018 18:26 (five years ago) link

the j word

kurt schwitterz, Monday, 25 June 2018 18:34 (five years ago) link

...josie?

flappy bird, Monday, 25 June 2018 18:37 (five years ago) link

JUDY?

oops i meant the i word

kurt schwitterz, Monday, 25 June 2018 18:43 (five years ago) link

IRENE?!

I Never Promised You A Hose Harden (Eric H.), Monday, 25 June 2018 18:44 (five years ago) link

re trump, i assume ppl have seen this?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=up6zyI-cV5k

sciatica, Monday, 25 June 2018 19:04 (five years ago) link

Issac, Chris

Imbroglio?

albvivertine, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 02:26 (five years ago) link

Imbruglia?

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 02:33 (five years ago) link

I'm torn.

Simon H., Tuesday, 26 June 2018 02:35 (five years ago) link

The Angriest Trump in the World by D. Lynch
https://i.imgur.com/LPQCoxx.png

Philip Nunez, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 02:43 (five years ago) link

We may never understand the appeal to David Lynch of a presidency that, using kitsch and dream logic, has transformed ordinary American life into a phantasmagorical hellscape

— Robbie Collin (@robbiereviews) June 26, 2018

frogbs, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 13:45 (five years ago) link

lol

So many people, even some ostensibly "serious" critics, taking the "could be one of the great presidents" bit on its own and stripping it of any context is fucking depressing. Obviously Lynch is not the most politically coherent guy but even 15 seconds of reading will make clear they're not straightforward words of praise.

Simon H., Tuesday, 26 June 2018 13:54 (five years ago) link

Great meaning large or immense. We use it in the pejorative sense

YouTube_-_funy_cats.flv (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 14:07 (five years ago) link

Good piece: https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/43595b/no-david-lynch-didnt-actually-praise-trump

Need to find that soundbite of Trump shouting out David Lynch at a rally.

flappy bird, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:03 (five years ago) link

Is this really a hill people are going to die on? This is how adults fail to process that a great artist can have bad politics. There’s maybe an element where people like Peyser agree w what he said but know they can’t say that.

It’s not better to praise Trump as a “disrupter”. In context his quote is no different than Susan Sarandon’s really naive stuff about Trump during the election but worse because now we know things didn’t actually work out that way.

Nerdstrom Poindexter, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:11 (five years ago) link

https://www.facebook.com/davidlynchofficial/posts/1800909923291220

Dear Mr. President,

This is David Lynch writing. I saw that you re-tweeted the Breitbart article with the heading – Director David Lynch: Trump ‘Could Go Down as One of the Greatest Presidents in History.’ I wish you and I could sit down and have a talk. This quote which has traveled around was taken a bit out of context and would need some explaining.

Unfortunately, if you continue as you have been, you will not have a chance to go down in history as a great president. This would be very sad it seems for you – and for the country. You are causing suffering and division.

It’s not too late to turn the ship around. Point our ship toward a bright future for all. You can unite the country. Your soul will sing. Under great loving leadership, no one loses – everybody wins. It’s something I hope you think about and take to heart. All you need to do is treat all the people as you would like to be treated.

Sincerely,

David Lynch

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:12 (five years ago) link

That should settle the matter (in the sense that hopefully no one ever again turns to david fucking lynch for political analysis or clickbait)

Simon H., Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:13 (five years ago) link

Genuinely reads like it was written by a nine year old as a class project.

Wag1 Shree Rajneesh (ShariVari), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:14 (five years ago) link

lol

oh no pic.twitter.com/h6kJKs4XhZ

— John Lichman (@jlichman) June 26, 2018

Simon H., Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:18 (five years ago) link

Genuinely reads like it was written by a nine year old as a class project.

― Wag1 Shree Rajneesh (ShariVari), Tuesday, June 26, 2018 2:14 PM (seven minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

fucking seriously. maybe it's an epic troll move because Trumps reads at a third-grade level but all of this bullshit about "You can unite the country" and "It's something I hope you think about and take to heart" are so far out of the realm of actual possibility that they're utterly meaningless. It's like me saying I could win next year's slam-dunk contest.

evol j, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:25 (five years ago) link

Is this really a hill people are going to die on?

When the time comes to die, doesn't really matter what hill you're on, does it?

I Never Promised You A Hose Harden (Eric H.), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:26 (five years ago) link

lol otm

stoker (Ross), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:26 (five years ago) link

earnestly recommending ego death to donald trump is much less ridiculous and confused than tweeting like WHERE ARE THE TAX RETURNS at him

difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:31 (five years ago) link

letter reads fine to me. uses words president can comprehend, appeals to his vanity etc

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:31 (five years ago) link

agreed

under a mand'rin tsar (darraghmac), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:34 (five years ago) link

This is how adults fail to process that a great artist can have bad politics.

Caring in the first place is a mistake and a distraction. It doesn't matter. I don't know why people are so fixated on artists they like being good people or having "good politics." I have enjoyed people twisting themselves into knots defending the pull quote, when they would've totally written off most other people for saying the same thing. And Lynch is right - it's just an opinion two years out of date. Trump did show how ineffectual and cowardly his opponents were, particularly during the GOP debates. His accomplishment ends there. I don't know how anyone can deny that.

flappy bird, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:36 (five years ago) link

If communication is your main concern, that is exactly how you write a letter to the 45th president of the United States.

pomenitul, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:41 (five years ago) link

Lynch's letter is fine, it's probably a much better way of getting Trump to change (only a 1% chance vs a less than zero percent chance i guess...)

omar little, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:43 (five years ago) link

Good piece: https://newrepublic.com/article/149344/living-david-lynchs-art-life

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:48 (five years ago) link

Lynch as “art monster”

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:49 (five years ago) link

Flappy- yeah I get that caring is the mistake. Part of my amazement is that it’s like people trying to avoid the complexity of the art/artist compartmentalization whivh is a pretty basic element of following art and culture.

I don’t think Lynch is talking about the GOP debates he probably didn’t watch when he says “ nobody has intelligently opposed Trump”, What that means he probably never cared enough to listen to some square earnestly talk about why taking peopls’s health care away or tearing up the Iran Deal is bad.

Nerdstrom Poindexter, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 18:54 (five years ago) link

True

flappy bird, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 19:47 (five years ago) link

Since he is guilty of thought crime and not caring as much as NP why not just write him off and avoid him entirely? Nothing to be gained by waxing on about how much you care and how little others care it’s merely a circle of virtue masturbation

Hazy Maze Cave (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 19:55 (five years ago) link

Since he is guilty of thought crime and not caring as much as NP why not just write him off and avoid him entirely? Nothing to be gained by waxing on about how much you care and how little others care it’s merely a circle of virtue masturbation

Hazy Maze Cave (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 19:55 (five years ago) link

Why not post twice and avoid him entirely?

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 19:57 (five years ago) link

earnestly recommending ego death to donald trump is much less ridiculous and confused than tweeting like WHERE ARE THE TAX RETURNS at him


Yeah as I was saying the other day, this quote is dumb but it could be sooo much worse all things considered *cough*markfrost

U. K. Le Garage (wins), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 19:58 (five years ago) link

imagine the lindelhof rewrite tho

under a mand'rin tsar (darraghmac), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 20:00 (five years ago) link

three months pass...

pic.twitter.com/stbY5rqtA8

— floor (@fleurmao) October 2, 2018

Dan S, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 06:19 (five years ago) link

His Nudes book is kind of surprising but maybe not surprising at all. Most of the photos are dark and obscure extreme close-ups of women, some of them will have you puzzling over what you're actually looking at. There's only three photos resembling full body shots and two of them are so dark or obscured that you couldn't easily identify the models. I couldn't find credits for them but it seems like it was only a few women. Some of it looks like stills from his Inland Empire period, glaring light on faces.

Also featured is a couch with smoke trailing from it, looking like someone has just evaporated.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Sunday, 14 October 2018 14:26 (five years ago) link

poor dougie

Clay, Sunday, 14 October 2018 16:58 (five years ago) link

I was expecting to see some recognizable people and perhaps some of these women have had a minor part in a Lynch film but I was kind of keeping my fingers crossed for a really unexpected naked actor.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Sunday, 14 October 2018 17:05 (five years ago) link

three months pass...

I dressed up as Ben from Blue Velvet for a Lynch tribute night and did the "Candy Colored Clown" lipsynch. Still waiting for phone footage of the lipsync but in the meantime this:

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bs4PyrZnhQJ/?utm_source=ig_share_sheet&igshid=14wz30eqcav05&fbclid=IwAR2cmG4Hcq2r-h7Nq4428usBgEHOXspgaOfoBToK-xqwanr9RKWebPG8L94

I thought the lady who shot it this video was taking photos not a video. she calls me Kevin in the description. That's not my name.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Monday, 21 January 2019 22:53 (five years ago) link

Good costume!

Leaghaidh am brón an t-anam bochd (dowd), Monday, 21 January 2019 23:46 (five years ago) link

two months pass...

Kino Lorber putting out Lost Highway on Blu in June.

a large tuna called “Justice” (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 5 April 2019 17:40 (five years ago) link

Nice! Where are you seeing this?

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Friday, 5 April 2019 17:48 (five years ago) link

Here

a large tuna called “Justice” (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 5 April 2019 17:49 (five years ago) link

I'm ready for it. I wonder if it will have any decent special features.

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Friday, 5 April 2019 17:53 (five years ago) link

Sweet!

flappy bird, Friday, 5 April 2019 17:55 (five years ago) link

Apparently an announcement about special features is forthcoming.

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Saturday, 6 April 2019 01:14 (five years ago) link

It would be awesome if the dialog in the early scenes were a bit more audible. I always have to crank the volume to make sense of it, and then I get slammed by that fucking maniacal sax solo.

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Saturday, 6 April 2019 01:17 (five years ago) link

I’ve had LH on blu for, like, 6 years. Has it not been available some places?

an incoherent crustacean (MatthewK), Saturday, 6 April 2019 01:19 (five years ago) link

not region 1. saw some people complaining about the current blu transfer, said the movie's "never been graded correctly," though of course it's hard to get it right with such a (literally) dark movie

flappy bird, Saturday, 6 April 2019 01:53 (five years ago) link

#LostHighway upcoming US Blu-ray release is rumored to have the following special features:

Audio commentary with Film Historian Tim Lucas

One-hour interview with #DavidLynch

Booklet Essay by Film Critic Nick Pinkerton

Animated Image Gallery

Trailer

— Ivan (@underthefan113) April 17, 2019

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Thursday, 18 April 2019 02:00 (five years ago) link

Saw on a different board that at the very least the Lucas interview had been dropped according to Lynch's longstanding stance on commentary tracks and that the only extra would be the trailer :/ Can't confirm, of course, but it wouldn't be the first time.

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Friday, 19 April 2019 20:39 (five years ago) link

Booo

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Friday, 19 April 2019 21:25 (five years ago) link

Dune is free on Amazon Prime. This has been a game changer

El Tomboto, Friday, 19 April 2019 21:35 (five years ago) link

The spice must flow.

one month passes...

Now out on @Criterion pic.twitter.com/YX2WvU9KRZ

— Janus Films (@janusfilms) May 29, 2019

flappy bird, Wednesday, 29 May 2019 00:20 (four years ago) link

Got my copy in the mail today!

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Wednesday, 29 May 2019 02:12 (four years ago) link

ICYMI, Lynch is a guest artiste on the new Flying Lotus album, intoning a little story on the track "Fire is Coming".

Hans Holbein (Chinchilla Volapük), Wednesday, 29 May 2019 05:32 (four years ago) link

honorary Oscar this fall

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 7 June 2019 14:44 (four years ago) link

That makes me nervous

flappy bird, Friday, 7 June 2019 17:38 (four years ago) link

because...?

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 7 June 2019 17:48 (four years ago) link

Presumably because it's like a first draft epitaph.

Is fall a normal time for the awarding of honorary Oscars? Is there any reason they couldn't give him props on the telecast?

Try Oscar Mayer and Hellmann's new Bolognnaise! (Old Lunch), Friday, 7 June 2019 18:14 (four years ago) link

They stopped giving honorary Oscars roughly around the same time they decided they needed 10 best picture nominees.

zama roma ding dong (Eric H.), Friday, 7 June 2019 18:18 (four years ago) link

Heaven forfend we don't get a chance to hear Gerard Butler summarize the plot of The Blind Side for us.

Try Oscar Mayer and Hellmann's new Bolognnaise! (Old Lunch), Friday, 7 June 2019 18:25 (four years ago) link

(xpost obv I meant stopped giving the honorary Oscars out on the telecast)

zama roma ding dong (Eric H.), Friday, 7 June 2019 18:32 (four years ago) link

The oscars are bad not good and nobody should pay the slightest attention but these “honorary” ones can be quite funny

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Friday, 7 June 2019 18:41 (four years ago) link

Geena Davis (humanitarian), Wes Studi, and Lina Wertmuller also getting em, and i think you can connect the dots

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 7 June 2019 18:55 (four years ago) link

People aren't dots.

zama roma ding dong (Eric H.), Friday, 7 June 2019 19:03 (four years ago) link

Lynch is the old white male dot.

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 7 June 2019 19:22 (four years ago) link

Yeah, the epitaph aspect. I’m just thinking of Altman getting one months before he died.

flappy bird, Friday, 7 June 2019 20:58 (four years ago) link

otoh Spike Lee got one a couple years ago and he's fine

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 7 June 2019 21:17 (four years ago) link

Why do you even need to go on living when you’ve achieved the artistic pinnacle that is the begrudging acknowledgment award

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Friday, 7 June 2019 21:22 (four years ago) link

True. Did Hitchcock get his after Family Plot?

flappy bird, Friday, 7 June 2019 22:04 (four years ago) link

(he was about 4 years younger than Lynch is now)

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 7 June 2019 23:19 (four years ago) link

And for sure had more films in him than Lynch does now.

zama roma ding dong (Eric H.), Saturday, 8 June 2019 01:45 (four years ago) link

good thing DL is taking care of himself

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DgYiKYlU0AE3Lm4.jpg

flappy bird, Saturday, 8 June 2019 03:03 (four years ago) link

It frustrates me that a lot of Lynch fans I know IRL dont rate this movie because its not grotesque enough (though they'd never admit that's the reason)

One Eye Open, Friday, 21 June 2019 19:52 (four years ago) link

I love it but it's such an outlier even I sometimes forget about it.

Chris L, Friday, 21 June 2019 20:08 (four years ago) link

except in the ways that it's not an outlier (detailed by Nayman).

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:10 (four years ago) link

I'm not saying you're wrong, but I got a chuckle when I read the header for that article.

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:46 (four years ago) link

It frustrates me that a lot of Lynch fans I know IRL dont rate this movie because its not grotesque enough (though they'd never admit that's the reason)

― One Eye Open, Friday, June 21, 2019

Really? I'm not doubting you, but I've never met these people in real life.

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:47 (four years ago) link

The Straight Story is his most Lynchian film wtf

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:47 (four years ago) link

Dunno if I’d say that but it is way lynchian for sure

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:49 (four years ago) link

If I define his ethos, broadly, as, "unearthing the unexpected in the most banal of surfaces," then TSS is at the top of the triumphs.

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:51 (four years ago) link

I think a lot of ppl would say a certain type of dread is a necessary component (but tss isn’t even completely free of that!)

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:51 (four years ago) link

The most Lynchian is definitely a stretch, especially now that we have the all-you-can-eat Lynch buffet that is Twin Peaks season 3.

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:52 (four years ago) link

i was full after ep 8

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:53 (four years ago) link

I find the surfaces of TSS among his creepiest.

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:54 (four years ago) link

I think he called it his most experimental film - he’s also called eraserhead his most spiritual film, and there’s no reason not to take him at his word in either case but I think most would swap those two around (or have IE supercede both on both counts)

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:55 (four years ago) link

The Return is his masterpiece

Trϵϵship, Friday, 21 June 2019 20:56 (four years ago) link

Have you seen the straight story?

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Friday, 21 June 2019 20:57 (four years ago) link

I just went looking for home-video releases of TSS and that is a disgusting situation -- a DVD with package design so bad it looks like a bootleg, and no blu-ray. I demand the Criterion Collection do something about this soonest.

I am curious (george) (slight return) (WmC), Friday, 21 June 2019 21:33 (four years ago) link

are there different dvd versions? there appear to be at least 3 different cover images for it. I think it's the only feature of his I've never seen. I doubt it will surpass The Return for me, however

Dan S, Friday, 21 June 2019 21:44 (four years ago) link

Yeah it's afaik the only Lynch work I still haven't seen (aside from the Duran Duran film but come on). They really do need to make with the blu-ray already, gahdammit.

a fan of the Beetles, the Beach boys, the Monkeys (Old Lunch), Friday, 21 June 2019 22:06 (four years ago) link

It's still a great movie on DVD.

frustration and wonky passion (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 21 June 2019 23:07 (four years ago) link

I will watch it!

Dan S, Friday, 21 June 2019 23:10 (four years ago) link

Not Straight Story Bluray news but...

Dear Twitter Friends, A Blu-ray of LOST HIGHWAY will be released very soon. It was made from old elements and NOT from a restoration of the original negative. I hope that a version from the restoration of the original negative will happen as soon as possible.

— David Lynch (@DAVID_LYNCH) June 22, 2019

Ned Raggett, Saturday, 22 June 2019 17:41 (four years ago) link

Hih, that's disappointing

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Saturday, 22 June 2019 18:08 (four years ago) link

great way to kill that BR release...!

licorice oratorio (baaderonixx), Monday, 24 June 2019 08:10 (four years ago) link

Xpost way upthread to Alfred - sure I would say its def not uncommon for me to meet ppl who profess to be super into lynch but aren’t really able to discuss (or in many cases haven’t seen) his movies that don’t feature IN YR FACE horror & grotesquerie. In my experience these are usually people under 40 for whom Lynch’s oeuvre is Blue Velvet, Twin Peaks, Mulholland Drive, and [everything else].

One Eye Open, Monday, 24 June 2019 14:24 (four years ago) link

those ppl usually haven't seen The Elephant Man either

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Monday, 24 June 2019 14:34 (four years ago) link

Or any of his appearances on The Cleveland Show. Philistines.

Top Number One Most Of Smart (Old Lunch), Monday, 24 June 2019 14:42 (four years ago) link

Kino Lorber responded to David Lynch's tweet from over the weekend. It sounds like Lynch's dissatisfaction with the release is partially his fault.https://t.co/J8NrKe7jLm pic.twitter.com/o1hSEYGKcn

— Eric Dienstfrey (@SignalsToNoises) June 24, 2019

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 14:28 (four years ago) link

I know that Tim Lucas recorded the commentary track for the Kino Lorber release that Lynch nixed (on general principle - he just doesn't like 'em).

Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 14:32 (four years ago) link

kino strike me as 'budget criterion'.

akm, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 14:55 (four years ago) link

which isn't to say they haven't put out good things.

akm, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 14:55 (four years ago) link

I'd say your impression is accurate on both counts.

Sly Bradbury's The Marion Cobretti-cles (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 15:00 (four years ago) link

Lost Highway, more like Lost Opportunity

it's not his worst (that would be Wild at Heart) but Tuomas is right in that it's clearly a dry run for the shifting identities and inverted realities of Mulholland Drive, Inland Empire, Twin Peaks: The Return etc. But it contains a bunch of sequences that don't really work, and several of the stunt cameos (Marilyn Manson, but also Richard Pryor) take me out of the movie.

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 15:34 (four years ago) link

I think Lost Highway actually is his worst, but most people can probably come together and at least agree that the worst Lynch project featured the involvement of Barry Gifford (had actually literally forgotten that Hotel Room existed until this very moment).

Sly Bradbury's The Marion Cobretti-cles (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 15:41 (four years ago) link

yup, Gifford was a bad influence

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 15:47 (four years ago) link

Probably not I reckon

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 15:47 (four years ago) link

or at least a mismatch as far as collaborators go

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 15:48 (four years ago) link

one and a half of the hotel rooms are actually pretty good imo

i will never make a typo ever again (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 15:56 (four years ago) link

No judgment inasmuch as I haven't seen them recently enough to judge, just recalling that they were another Gifford joint and among the less feted Lynch works.

Sly Bradbury's The Marion Cobretti-cles (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 15:59 (four years ago) link

yeah, i agree! i liked the crispin glover episode, and i like Wild at Heart too, but they're way down on my Lynch list

i will never make a typo ever again (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:07 (four years ago) link

One of the many ways ppl read twin peaks s3 was as a kind of résumé, Lynch working in all these modes he’d worked in before, with bits that felt like eraserhead, dune, his paintings... what was maybe most surprising was that along with all his features and the two Lynch/frost series there was a decent bit of hotel room in the return’s dna

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:07 (four years ago) link

I think of the Gifford era as Lynch's 'try hard' period. He didn't seem to have as much faith in his otherwise-uncanny instincts. Which I think was best encapsulated for me when I finally saw the deleted scenes from Wild at Heart. In most other instances, material that doesn't make it into the final cut of a Lynch film feels like added texture, something of a piece with the greater whole but not particularly necessary. With respect to Wild at Heart, some of the excised scenes felt rather more integral and as if they'd been cut just to make the finished film seem WEEEEIRD. One of the rare instances where I feel like an expanded cut would make for a better film.

Sly Bradbury's The Marion Cobretti-cles (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:08 (four years ago) link

But I was mainly disagreeing that there was consensus about a Gifford project being his worst. A lot of people really don’t like dune or inland empire, and both wild at heart & lost highway are beloved

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:10 (four years ago) link

I watched Lost Highway for the first time a week or so back and liked it a lot, although as everybody mentions it has a lot of similarities to Mulholland Drive. I've only seen Blue Velvet (decades ago), Twin Peaks (original series), Fire Walk With Me, this, Straight Story, and Mulholland Drive. Although none of them near enough to one another for comparison purposes. What makes Lost Highway suck so bad, in so many people's eyes?

☮ (peace, man), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:16 (four years ago) link

The only sequences that work in LH are the opening credits using Bowie's "I'm Deranged" and the wizardry editing of Bill Pullman's late night free jazz performance. Everything else is a rehash (Robert Blake doing Frank Booth), clearly the end of a method.

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:19 (four years ago) link

I agree w that

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:21 (four years ago) link

I wouldn't say it sucks (even the worst Lynch is better than the majority of extant things), rather that it just feels like thin soup to me. Most of his work is a deep well from which I can drink full over and over, but I just don't get much out of LH.

Sly Bradbury's The Marion Cobretti-cles (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:21 (four years ago) link

there are good moments and scenes throughout tbf. I love the scene w Robert Blake with the phone at the party, for example.

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:21 (four years ago) link

the end of one method but the beginning of another (Möbius strip timelines)

i will never make a typo ever again (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:21 (four years ago) link

xp

i will never make a typo ever again (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:22 (four years ago) link

David Foster Wallace's essay for Premiere on its making is the best thing it inspired.

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:22 (four years ago) link

the end of one method but the beginning of another (Möbius strip timelines)

― i will never make a typo ever again (Karl Malone)

Oh sure. The Straight Story was an unexpected, delightful return, more successfully "Lynchian" than LH. Then along came Mulholland Drive.

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:23 (four years ago) link

Robert Blake doing Frank Booth

... no i disagree with this

american bradass (BradNelson), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:24 (four years ago) link

DFW essay is great. Also responsible for convincing me to reconsider the implications of the final shot of Blue Velvet.

Sly Bradbury's The Marion Cobretti-cles (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:24 (four years ago) link

Yeah do you mean loggia?

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:24 (four years ago) link

I was lukewarm on LH at the time but it'll be of interest longer than most movies from 1997. Seeing it projected on a huge screen took it to another level for me.

Chris L, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:24 (four years ago) link

no, Blake as Mystery Man with his damn face paint.

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:25 (four years ago) link

Is like frank booth how

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:25 (four years ago) link

it's still not really remotely frank boothish imo, blake's performance is much more an otherworldly evil intruding on our universe kind of thing

american bradass (BradNelson), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:26 (four years ago) link

No offense intended, but I don't understand arguments like "of interest longer than most moves from 1997" or "even the worst Lynch is better than the majority of extant things" when I can think of 10 superior movies released in 1997. It's an argument I hear in music discussion too tbh ("Even bad X is better than most Y.").

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:26 (four years ago) link

more of a composed faustian bob xp

american bradass (BradNelson), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:27 (four years ago) link

Is like frank booth how

― shhh / let peaceful like things (wins)

Creepy Evil, albeit in LH Lynch smooshed Hopper's character and Dean Stockwell's.

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:27 (four years ago) link

No offense intended, but I don't understand arguments like "of interest longer than most moves from 1997" or "even the worst Lynch is better than the majority of extant things" when I can think of 10 superior movies released in 1997. It's an argument I hear in music discussion too tbh ("Even bad X is better than most Y.").

Hyperbole, though I myself use it in cases like Kiarostami, whose Taste of Cherry is one of those 1997 films in question.

Pauline Male (Eric H.), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:28 (four years ago) link

Less an argument than an opinion. Like (by way of wholly arbitrary example) I'd rather rewatch Lost Highway than say the majority of films that have been nominated for Academy Awards. Others, I'm sure, feel differently.

Sly Bradbury's The Marion Cobretti-cles (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:30 (four years ago) link

Creepy Evil

If that’s all it is then a few dozen Lynch actors are “doing frank booth” (some of them are even similar to frank booth)

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:30 (four years ago) link

The seams show when it's done ineptly.

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:31 (four years ago) link

anyway even though i'm making these arguments i haven't seen lost highway in ten years lol. at one point i preferred it to mulholland dr. but i'm guessing this was a consequence of building it up so much in my head when it was out of print and all i had was the soundtrack

american bradass (BradNelson), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:32 (four years ago) link

Mystery man is an early version of the cowboy from Mulholland dr and zabriskie in inland empire

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:32 (four years ago) link

oh I have several friends who agreed with your stance a decade ago too.

xpost

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:32 (four years ago) link

More legit Booth analogues would be (as noted) Loggia in LH, Red in The Return, Bobby Peru.

Sly Bradbury's The Marion Cobretti-cles (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:32 (four years ago) link

Uncanny confrontational interlocutor

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:33 (four years ago) link

Mystery man is an early version of the cowboy from Mulholland dr and zabriskie in inland empire

― shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Wednesday, June 26, 2019 11:32 AM (thirty-two seconds ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Was about to follow up with pretty much exactly this.

Sly Bradbury's The Marion Cobretti-cles (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:33 (four years ago) link

Booth isn’t spooky, he’s just a psycho

shhh / let peaceful like things (wins), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:34 (four years ago) link

I can think of 10 superior movies released in 1997.

was curious about this and looked up American films released in '97 and there's a lot of garbage but also:

Starship Troopers
Boogie Nights
Deconstructing Harry
Jackie Brown

and while that's not 10, those are some heavy hitters that are all better than LH imo (I'm sure others here would throw in Amistad or Fifth Element or Good Will Hunting or a handful of others)

xp

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:34 (four years ago) link

Mystery man is an early version of the cowboy from Mulholland dr and zabriskie in inland empire

I agree

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:34 (four years ago) link

1997:

The Sweet Hereafter (Atom Egoyan)
Irma Vep (Olivier Assayas)
The Apostle (Robert Duvall)
Happy Together (Wong Kar-wai)
Jackie Brown (Quentin Tarantino)
Taste of Cherry (Abbas Kiarostami)
Grosse Pointe Blank (George Armitage)
The Wings of the Dove (Iain Softley)
The River (Tsai Ming-Liang)
Nil by Mouth (Gary Oldman)

HONORABLE MENTIONS: Boogie Nights (Paul Thomas Anderson), Hard Eight (Paul Thomas Anderson), L.A. Confidential (Curtis Hanson), The Daytrippers (Greg Mottola).

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:35 (four years ago) link

not a bad year by any stretch

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:38 (four years ago) link

and I'll throw in Deconstructing Harry and Starship Troopers too

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:39 (four years ago) link

don't forget Radiohead - OK Computer

i will never make a typo ever again (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:45 (four years ago) link

lol, you trumped any smartass retort I might've made (was mulling over a Leprechaun in Space ref).

Sly Bradbury's The Marion Cobretti-cles (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 16:46 (four years ago) link

My larger point was that Lost Highway and Good Burger are literally the only two 1997 movies anyone cares about nowadays.

Chris L, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 17:02 (four years ago) link

In the reverse order you listed them, but yes.

Pauline Male (Eric H.), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 17:04 (four years ago) link

brb gonna watch Tony Leung and Leslie Cheung have sex again

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 17:09 (four years ago) link

1997 was a great year for flicks. Starship Troopers should have won best picture but for some reason it wasn't even nominated, i think maybe the screeners got lost in the mail.

omar little, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 17:12 (four years ago) link

I love Lost Highway, think it's underrated, although it would benefit from shaving some of the endless scenes of him stumbling around long hallways near the end. Replaying that whole sequence along with the Rammstein tune is a bit much.

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 17:52 (four years ago) link

I didn't like it as much second time but I still prefer it to all those listed films that I've seen so far (even though Irma Vep may be better). The Bowie/road credit scenes completely knocked my socks off first time I seen it, even though not much is happening.

I love Robert Blake in this, especially the way he says "ask me". Booth is good, but I'd actually like to be Blake's character. Who wants to be Booth except guys who endlessly quote tough guy assholes in movies?
Has anyone here read Blake's autobiography Tales Of A Rascal: What I Did For Love? I've heard it's brilliant and quite dark itself.

I once read someone complain that Booth is simply a rehash of an earlier Hopper character.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 21:18 (four years ago) link

Hopper once claimed that Booth is what Billy The Kid from Easy Rider would have become in the '80s had he not been (SPOILER) killed.

frustration and wonky passion (C. Grisso/McCain), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 21:53 (four years ago) link

I know he got off on an acquittal but I can't enjoy LH anymore knowing Blake (or one of his goons) knocked off his wife.

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Wednesday, 26 June 2019 21:59 (four years ago) link

I'd actually like to be Blake's character

really

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 22:02 (four years ago) link

My favorite 1997 film is the relatively obscure Too Many Ways to Be No. 1, an early Milkyway joint. Probably the most echt-90s film I can think of too - Kieslowski/Tykwer-style alternate timelines, camerawork that wants to out-Doyle Chris Doyle, direct lifts from Takeshi Kitano (hey wasn't Fireworks also 1997?).

Second fave is Boogie Nights. Favorite from Alfred's main list is Grosse Point Blank: sneakily subversive take on the hitman genre. Probably the only Tarantino wannabe that was bearable.

I remember my friend and I were soooo psyched to see Lost Highway at the time, my friend doubly so since he absolutely adored Reznor and Manson, and after we watched it, we just sat there, deflated: "Um, that's it?".

gjoon1, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 22:03 (four years ago) link

As for Wild at Heart, I haven't seen the deleted scenes, but I read the script and there was more of the random peripheral violence/accidents that you get just a taste of in the final film. The script made it feel like Lynch and Gifford were trying to make their own version of Godard's Weekend, except with a central couple in love rather than falling apart.

Speaking of Weekend, has any other Lynch film been so heavy-handed in its references? The Wizard of Oz, Sherilyn Fenn looking for her handbag seemed to come from Weekend, the dog with the severed hand from Yojimbo. I don't remember Lynch typically being so obvious, usually it's more along the lines of the bird in Blue Velvet maybe being a Kuchar reference or something obscure like that.

gjoon1, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 22:13 (four years ago) link

Checking the festivals of 1997, it's also the year that Hana-bi won the Golden Lion. That's a good one as well.

Frederik B, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 22:17 (four years ago) link

I just checked, Paul M Sammon claimed that the character and even certain scenes in Blue Velvet are very similar to Out Of The Blue. But he was also complaining that Lynch was selling out and was becoming too crassly pornographic (this was 1992), most of arguments points weren't very convincing.

Οὖτις- in the same way I want to Count Orlok or the creep in Khanate's "Skin Coat".

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 22:35 (four years ago) link

want to be

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 22:35 (four years ago) link

oh well that all makes sense then

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 26 June 2019 22:43 (four years ago) link

I haven't seen LH in a long time, I should rewatch it. But one of the biggest problems with it is that it's so dark, meaning, the lighting in it is just dark, that it doesn't translate well to my TV which is 10 years old (and the last time I actually watched it was on VHS on a tube TV which was terrible looking). It looked good in a theater. I'd guess that a blu-ray on a better TV would look great. If Lynch was holding out for Criterion that's too bad.

akm, Thursday, 27 June 2019 03:50 (four years ago) link

haven't seen it since it was released but on the They Shoot Pictures website Lost Highway is still the highest ranking film from 1997, even above Happy Together and Taste of Cherry

Dan S, Thursday, 27 June 2019 04:49 (four years ago) link

Tim Lucas offers up his blocked Lost Highway commentary: https://videowatchdog.blogspot.com/2019/07/hear-my-lost-lost-highway-audio.html

frustration and wonky passion (C. Grisso/McCain), Tuesday, 2 July 2019 14:46 (four years ago) link

(sorry, who is Tim Lucas?)

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Tuesday, 2 July 2019 16:37 (four years ago) link

film critic, publisher of Video Watchdog, author of Throat Sprockets, Bava biographer, professional DVD commentary track guy whose commentary was blocked by Lynch from the Lost Highway blu-ray discussed extensively in this thread evive

quelle sprocket damage (sic), Tuesday, 2 July 2019 18:52 (four years ago) link

yeah i have to imagine that Criterion wants to put out all the Lynch films they can and he's just waiting out until they're able to (at least a year considering they just put out Blue Velvet). I'd prefer an Inland Empire reissue, not because it needs to be 'restored,' it's just very hard to find these days. the region 1 dvd has been out of print for years.

flappy bird, Tuesday, 2 July 2019 19:10 (four years ago) link

two months pass...

Henry Rollins talking about Lynch's working process on Lost Highway, and hanging out with him off-set, on a 2017 podcast episode

(there's five minutes of chit-chat between Rollins and his long-time office manager / co-host at the beginning)

quelle sprocket damage (sic), Monday, 2 September 2019 02:35 (four years ago) link

This is good stuff

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Monday, 2 September 2019 02:59 (four years ago) link

I’m re-watching the return now and it’s so mind-blowingly good

k3vin k., Monday, 2 September 2019 16:56 (four years ago) link

lol that megaphone story in Rollins podcast is beautiful

The Ravishing of ROFL Stein (Hadrian VIII), Friday, 13 September 2019 23:53 (four years ago) link

I never wanted The Return to end, so I put off and put off watching the last two episodes... and still haven’t. Love having them out there to watch sometime when the mood takes me

Chuck_Tatum, Saturday, 14 September 2019 13:57 (four years ago) link

Last two episodes are both equally nuts, but in very different ways

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Saturday, 14 September 2019 14:34 (four years ago) link

two weeks pass...

I've heard a couple of people say More Things That Happened is just as good or better than Inland Empire and I cant wrap my head around that. Only two scenes particularly grabbed me. One was the short scene at the end with Dern sitting among the girls in a living room with warm light. The other is the longer part for Karolina Gruszka, in which she subtly twitches with curiosity and fear while talking to the "phantom" watch seller. I might have a lookout for more Gruszka (mostly polish films).

Robert Adam Gilmour, Monday, 30 September 2019 18:44 (four years ago) link

I love More Things Happened because it further destabilizes Inland Empire, which I mostly love for how impossible it is for me to get my head around. But no, it's not better, of course not.

Frederik B, Monday, 30 September 2019 21:15 (four years ago) link

three months pass...

https://www.instagram.com/p/B2nTQV1n7CC/

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Tuesday, 14 January 2020 02:57 (four years ago) link

new short up on Netflix!

bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Monday, 20 January 2020 14:36 (four years ago) link

wait what

Οὖτις, Monday, 20 January 2020 16:12 (four years ago) link

you heard me

bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Monday, 20 January 2020 16:17 (four years ago) link

new Lynch film is always excellent news

Οὖτις, Monday, 20 January 2020 16:19 (four years ago) link

'A detective interrogates a monkey who is suspected of murder.'

Nice.

pomenitul, Monday, 20 January 2020 16:20 (four years ago) link

and it's lynch's birthday today too

"it was the ape in the rue morgue with simian frenzy and a chimneypiece"

mark s, Monday, 20 January 2020 16:24 (four years ago) link

I'd like to see this monkey team up with Babu Frick for some serious hijinks.

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Monday, 20 January 2020 17:23 (four years ago) link

this is great; i love that the monkey's mouth/voice is so clearly lynch

i'm shocked he didn't drop this in advance of the oscars so he could pick up a short subject nom (yes i know it's old but this should count as a new release)

"i would lay my life on the line for any chicken or rooster"

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Monday, 20 January 2020 20:34 (four years ago) link

oh lord the musical number

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Monday, 20 January 2020 20:40 (four years ago) link

Amazing. This kind of thing feeds my soul.

SQUIRREL MEAT!! (Capitaine Jay Vee), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 01:23 (four years ago) link

hardboiled noir answers from that little guy.

SQUIRREL MEAT!! (Capitaine Jay Vee), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 01:23 (four years ago) link

ARE YOU A STRONG ARMED MAN?

Its big ball chunky time (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 03:09 (four years ago) link

one month passes...

Please let this be true

David Lynch creating new
limited series at Netflix with Laura Dern & Naomi Watts..... https://t.co/VEmsHlnup6

— Amanda (@DuganAmanda) March 11, 2020

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Wednesday, 11 March 2020 15:20 (four years ago) link

Oh

Boy

Unparalleled Elegance (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 11 March 2020 15:22 (four years ago) link

Protect mr lynch from Coronavirus at all costs

Garu you just posted flange (wins), Wednesday, 11 March 2020 15:23 (four years ago) link

this had better fucking be true!!!

bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Wednesday, 11 March 2020 15:25 (four years ago) link

holy moley

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 11 March 2020 15:26 (four years ago) link

My sources are telling me that Dern and Watts will be wordless cameos. 99% of screentime is going to Chrysta Bell.

bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Wednesday, 11 March 2020 15:28 (four years ago) link

xxxp Lynch got very sick working so hard on The Return so yeah, be careful.

Chris L, Wednesday, 11 March 2020 15:29 (four years ago) link

That’s fine xp

Its big ball chunky time (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Wednesday, 11 March 2020 15:41 (four years ago) link

Chrysta Bell is a pretty terrible actress tbh. Those line readings! That awkward demeanor! Then again probably gonna be perfect for this.

SQUIRREL MEAT!! (Capitaine Jay Vee), Wednesday, 11 March 2020 22:28 (four years ago) link

There was a scene in The Return where she spends about 2 minutes just looking at a computer screen and clicking her mouse as she tries to match fingerprints. And watching her efforts to convey emotion was no joke one of my favorite things about the entire season.

crusty but malignant (Eric H.), Wednesday, 11 March 2020 22:54 (four years ago) link

Her terrible acting was one of my least favorite parts of the show

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Wednesday, 11 March 2020 22:56 (four years ago) link

She honestly grew on me a lot over the course of the season, not so much as an individual performer but as part of a comic trio with Ferrer and Lynch

bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Wednesday, 11 March 2020 22:57 (four years ago) link

two months pass...

So happy to have Lynch back on the Los Angeles weather beat
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DT_N-jtB24

Elvis Telecom, Thursday, 14 May 2020 00:59 (three years ago) link

What is it?

Bleeqwot (sic), Friday, 15 May 2020 02:55 (three years ago) link

Sorry - https://youtu.be/aTrTtzTQrv0 Flying Lotus album teaser

Bidh boladh a' mhairbh de 'n láimh fhalaimh (dowd), Friday, 15 May 2020 02:59 (three years ago) link

Man, I was watching that Flying Lotus video with headphones on and right when Lynch starts saying "FIRE IS COMING" and it gets all flashy, my wife came up behind me and poked my side.

I just about shit myself and yelped and she's still laughing.

Cow_Art, Friday, 15 May 2020 03:33 (three years ago) link

released today, on his new youtube channel:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXTLsQBJSVc

though it says copyright 2015 in the credits

Karl Malone, Wednesday, 20 May 2020 22:13 (three years ago) link

three weeks pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v8pVP4xeRyk

checking stick

karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Tuesday, 16 June 2020 04:18 (three years ago) link

Can't argue with science

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Tuesday, 16 June 2020 04:32 (three years ago) link

Dear Twitter Friends,
David Lynch Theater will present RABBITS STARRING JACK tomorrow, Tuesday, June 30, 2020 at 10 A.M. PDT.https://t.co/7ArIfTArZI

— David Lynch (@DAVID_LYNCH) June 29, 2020

time is running out to pitch in $5 (Karl Malone), Monday, 29 June 2020 17:02 (three years ago) link

Lynch weather report preceded by Biden cash plea = perfect

brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Monday, 29 June 2020 17:11 (three years ago) link

I checked the last week's weather reports and he doesn't ask for Biden donations in any of them - how far back are you catching up?

an, uh, razor of love (sic), Monday, 29 June 2020 20:10 (three years ago) link

We get it sic, you have an adblocker.

peace, man, Monday, 29 June 2020 20:11 (three years ago) link

new board title

lumen (esby), Monday, 29 June 2020 20:15 (three years ago) link

oh duh, I thought Morbs actually meant that Lynch was making ~clueless old white man Democrat~ appeals, and felt betrayed.

in which case: Doc, the ads you get on youtube are based on your location and the demographic info they've gathered from your own viewing choices. David Lynch is not selling ad time to Joe Biden, or to anyone. That you're getting Biden ads is the result of two different decisions by you, and none by David Lynch.

an, uh, razor of love (sic), Monday, 29 June 2020 20:34 (three years ago) link

From OP: "Looked in the Films category for a discussion about him but suprisingly there doesn't seem to be one."

Films category?! Ah, transports of sweet, sweet nostalgia.

the unappreciated charisma of cows (Aimless), Monday, 29 June 2020 20:41 (three years ago) link

i think morbs was referring to my display name (which is a joe biden email subject line from february)

time is running out to pitch in $5 (Karl Malone), Monday, 29 June 2020 21:01 (three years ago) link

could be, could be

time is running out to retweet boing.gif (sic), Monday, 29 June 2020 21:05 (three years ago) link

time has actually run out of that (as i've run out of money to match)

https://i.imgur.com/RMqs5sj.gif

time is running out to pitch in $5 (Karl Malone), Monday, 29 June 2020 21:09 (three years ago) link

[ominous boinging]

time is running out to retweet boing.gif (sic), Monday, 29 June 2020 21:14 (three years ago) link

btw sic, since i've got you on this thread (#onethread), did you see i made a sic-signal?

https://i.imgur.com/9OPiETA.jpg

i posted it on some other thread (#onethread) in tribute but you didn't see it, then i freaked out and started to worry that you didn't know it was meant out of respect

time is running out to pitch in $5 (Karl Malone), Monday, 29 June 2020 21:16 (three years ago) link

#allthreadsmatter

time is running out to retweet boing.gif (sic), Monday, 29 June 2020 21:37 (three years ago) link

i mean i wouldn't go that far

time is running out to pitch in $5 (Karl Malone), Monday, 29 June 2020 21:46 (three years ago) link

sic, i am very aware of all that shit, you tosspot

brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Monday, 29 June 2020 21:55 (three years ago) link

idk, maybe take it to an Ask Dr Morbius thread or something then

time is running out to retweet boing.gif (sic), Monday, 29 June 2020 23:38 (three years ago) link

I’d like to bring the conversation back to the checking stick

k3vin k., Tuesday, 30 June 2020 03:33 (three years ago) link

when he said we don’t really need checking sticks because we have intuition, I lost it

k3vin k., Tuesday, 30 June 2020 03:33 (three years ago) link

David Lynch's late-career avuncular presence is a welcome development.

one month passes...

Shit, I don't think this is real, looking at the other headlines. Sorry. Someone else linked this and I didn't check the site out yet.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 22 August 2020 17:37 (three years ago) link

No wonder nobody else posted this "news".

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 22 August 2020 17:39 (three years ago) link

three months pass...

https://www.brooklynvegan.com/david-lynch-making-new-series-wisteria-for-netflix/

Don’t know if this has been mentioned elsewhere but !!!

circa1916, Saturday, 28 November 2020 00:03 (three years ago) link

stoked

even though it will be “50% shit like most lynch” to quote the good doctor

Politically homely (jim in vancouver), Saturday, 28 November 2020 00:13 (three years ago) link

FINALLY! I've known about this since March because of my job, but I've had to keep it my own secret for eight months. I feel liberated!

Johnny Fever, Saturday, 28 November 2020 00:16 (three years ago) link

Desperate Housewives/Twin Peaks crossover.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 28 November 2020 00:33 (three years ago) link

:))))))

Its big ball chunky time (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Saturday, 28 November 2020 01:17 (three years ago) link

YESYESYESYESYES

Cow_Art, Saturday, 28 November 2020 02:19 (three years ago) link

25 HOURS OF LYNCH I WANT TO SNORT IT SMOKE IT PUT IT UP MY *ahem* I’m excited.

Cow_Art, Saturday, 28 November 2020 02:20 (three years ago) link

You may remember that Lynch's new short film What Did Jack Do? premiered on Netflix at the start of the year, and he's been in talks with the streaming service for a couple years now. WTTP also notes that a Reddit thread back in February "referred to the Wisteria working title back in February 2020 and also mentioned a $85 million budget for 25 one-hour long episodes. The same user later added it could also be 13 ‘mini movies’ (or anything between 13 and 25) and that production planned for 200 shooting days in the Los Angeles area.

*boisterous Home Improvement man/dog grunting*

Karl Malone, Saturday, 28 November 2020 04:21 (three years ago) link

also, if the speculation about the budget ($85M) is close to correct, it confirms the hilariously transparently grumpy interviews lynch was giving a few years ago where he was complaining that he couldn't do movies because he couldn't get money. he negotiates in a lynchian way, i guess. and now he's doing movies that are 12 times the length of normal movies, with a big budget

Karl Malone, Saturday, 28 November 2020 04:28 (three years ago) link

25 hours/85 mil is unverified but if that’s actually true or close to true, that’s fucking wild.

circa1916, Saturday, 28 November 2020 06:42 (three years ago) link

Netflix has more money than God, but curious about their calculus if those details are true. Made sense for Showtime to grab TP The Return to stand out, but not sure what Netflix would gain. I also have no idea how much these shows typically cost.

That Nicholas Refn series on Prime that seemingly 50 people watched (it’s awesome btw) is kind of a similar thing. All for corporate behemoths throwing millions at auteur directors to do whatever the fuck they want, just curious about those meetings.

circa1916, Saturday, 28 November 2020 07:07 (three years ago) link

I had a feeling the Netflix thing would be the antelope don’t run no more, the feature film he was trying to get funded that was cited in the recent bio - iirc it had elements of mulholland dr people who’ve read the script say it’s the best thing he’s ever written. I’m ok with a series tho

Gab B. Nebsit (wins), Saturday, 28 November 2020 08:05 (three years ago) link

Netflix has more money than God

Netflix has close to sixteen billion dollars in debt.

huge rant (sic), Saturday, 28 November 2020 10:58 (three years ago) link

Tesla has 18 trillion dollars of debt. They will borrow more and be fine

Karl Malone, Saturday, 28 November 2020 16:53 (three years ago) link

It’s only regular people who have to pay money back

Karl Malone, Saturday, 28 November 2020 16:54 (three years ago) link

Sixteen billion dollars in debt and they can't afford to stream any good films ffs

Bandscamp Fryday (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 28 November 2020 16:57 (three years ago) link

Shooting starting in may 2021 seems ambitious tbh but this will prob still have a less protracted gestation than twin peaks the return

Gab B. Nebsit (wins), Saturday, 28 November 2020 17:15 (three years ago) link

He moves in Wisteria's maze.

Hideous Lump, Sunday, 29 November 2020 08:38 (three years ago) link

(That pun has been in my head since Achtung Baby came out. Thought I'd go to my grave without every having an excuse to use it.)

Hideous Lump, Sunday, 29 November 2020 08:42 (three years ago) link

rumours had been swirling about regarding this project for a while, it sounded like the original plan may have been to start shooting may this year until covid happened?

ufo, Sunday, 29 November 2020 10:32 (three years ago) link

XP good payoff imo

spruce springclean (darraghmac), Sunday, 29 November 2020 10:37 (three years ago) link

(to pun) I'll say you in 25 years.

huge rant (sic), Sunday, 29 November 2020 18:25 (three years ago) link

is it controversial to say the sax playing in lost highway is good not bad

it bangs for thee (Simon H.), Friday, 11 December 2020 00:56 (three years ago) link

it’s fun

brimstead, Friday, 11 December 2020 01:40 (three years ago) link

it's bold

the sax playing, i mean

i've only seen lost highway a few times, but i love the sax in it

Karl Malone, Friday, 11 December 2020 01:45 (three years ago) link

My only gripe with the sax is that I can never understand the dialog in the early scenes so I crank up the volume, and then get blown out by that sax. I assume this was by design.

Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Friday, 11 December 2020 02:45 (three years ago) link

the sax is one of the best parts

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Friday, 11 December 2020 02:54 (three years ago) link

The sax scene is second only to The Lost Boys imho

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Friday, 11 December 2020 03:10 (three years ago) link

the new series is now known as Unrecorded Night

https://welcometotwinpeaks.com/news/unrecorded-night-david-lynch-netflix/

it bangs for thee (Simon H.), Saturday, 12 December 2020 16:19 (three years ago) link

That is a great title tbh

circa1916, Saturday, 12 December 2020 16:21 (three years ago) link

yeah way cooler imho

it bangs for thee (Simon H.), Saturday, 12 December 2020 16:30 (three years ago) link

Imagining lynch’s people putting the title out there after he is dismayed at everyone making desperate housewives jokes, similar to the agent Jeffries thing where he was like “it’s just a device, why does everyone keep calling it a tea kettle”

Colour me excited for this btw, Netflix is good now

Gab B. Nebsit (wins), Saturday, 12 December 2020 18:12 (three years ago) link

My hometown (home of the world's largest wistaria plant) actually has an annual Wistaria Festival so without any evidence* I'm hoping that it will all be filmed here.

*A lot of film production is done here... Laura Palmer's funeral in the original TP was filmed in the town cemetery.

Elvis Telecom, Monday, 14 December 2020 00:43 (three years ago) link

three weeks pass...

i hate seinfeld but

starting 2021 by making the dumbest and most niche stuff imaginable. here's part two of Seinfeld: The Return, my series where i imagine a Seinfeld revival in the style of Twin Peaks pic.twitter.com/02BfAOpWHA

— dom nero (@dominicknero) January 2, 2021

the serious avant-garde universalist right now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 7 January 2021 06:07 (three years ago) link

Happy Birthday, DL!
Also, currently reading "Room To Dream" and it's great. The definitive (auto)biography?

SQUIRREL MEAT!! (Capitaine Jay Vee), Wednesday, 20 January 2021 20:07 (three years ago) link

sorry to #onethread but if the GOP was smart they'd try to tap him for the next GOP nominee

stylish but illegal (Simon H.), Wednesday, 20 January 2021 20:20 (three years ago) link

the great fillummaker

John Wesley Glasscock (Hadrian VIII), Thursday, 21 January 2021 20:11 (three years ago) link

So, something may happen tomorrow, or not, or...

David Lynch's announcement, tomorrow, February 1st. pic.twitter.com/ltPvZa3hY1

— Black Lodge Cult (@BlackLCult) January 31, 2021

Ned Raggett, Sunday, 31 January 2021 22:32 (three years ago) link

Thinking about him pic.twitter.com/otHOQFJy7y

— meg “yar” bitchell (@MeganBitchell) January 31, 2021

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 31 January 2021 22:35 (three years ago) link

What are the chances that TP S4 may be coming? Several cast members obliquely chimed in on twitter.

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Monday, 1 February 2021 05:20 (three years ago) link

whomst?

stimmy stimmy yah (Simon H.), Monday, 1 February 2021 05:28 (three years ago) link

I have to imagine chances are low if he's focusing on a whole new project.

Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Monday, 1 February 2021 05:42 (three years ago) link

it's possible the new netflix project could be twin peaks-related and lynch has said the occasional thing which has suggested that could be the case

ufo, Monday, 1 February 2021 05:49 (three years ago) link

I'm guessing it will be Peaks related to the same extent Mulholland Dr is Peaks related.

stimmy stimmy yah (Simon H.), Monday, 1 February 2021 05:57 (three years ago) link

my hopes are some new series that's funded and substantial,
my expectations are the february weather outlook

Karl Malone, Monday, 1 February 2021 06:19 (three years ago) link

im furiously refreshing david lynch's youtube channel lol

stimmy stimmy yah (Simon H.), Monday, 1 February 2021 15:37 (three years ago) link

Keep us posted.

pomenitul, Monday, 1 February 2021 15:37 (three years ago) link

I don't know if it was posted itt or in a different t but someone noted that the production company name affiliated with the new Lynch project has only previously been used for TP-related projects. So...

Vladislav Bibidonurtmi (Old Lunch), Monday, 1 February 2021 15:49 (three years ago) link

looooooool

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QapYuD5hDVw

stimmy stimmy yah (Simon H.), Monday, 1 February 2021 15:52 (three years ago) link

Hahaha

pomenitul, Monday, 1 February 2021 15:53 (three years ago) link

what a fucking gem

stimmy stimmy yah (Simon H.), Monday, 1 February 2021 15:53 (three years ago) link

I'm so stupid that a major part of my brain is like "ok but maybe he's saving something for the number picking video"

stimmy stimmy yah (Simon H.), Monday, 1 February 2021 16:01 (three years ago) link

Never dream, and you’ll never fail to achieve your dream

Karl Malone, Monday, 1 February 2021 16:57 (three years ago) link

two months pass...

Lost Highway is so great. “50,000 PEOPLE DIED ON THE HIGHWAY LAST YEAR!”

calstars, Thursday, 15 April 2021 02:15 (three years ago) link

I really recommend “Room To Dream” . Based on the anecdotes in there about how physically gruelling it was for him to make TP:TR I’d be surprised if he puts himself through something similar again.

SQUIRREL MEAT!! (Capitaine Jay Vee), Thursday, 15 April 2021 04:35 (three years ago) link

“AND YOU...what the fuck is your name?”

calstars, Saturday, 17 April 2021 01:30 (three years ago) link

I'm sort of fascinated by Lynch's late-career presence in the culture, his weather reports, this kind of affection that I feel like a lot of people feel for him even if they haven't seen all of his work. Thinking about him a lot lately, because we've been doing the entire Twin Peaks run with our kids (skipping a lot of the non-Lynch backhalf of S2). We're all the way thru Fire Walk With Me and up to about episode 6 of TP:TR. The kids (ages 13 and 16) both get him, they think he's weird and funny and disturbing, they laugh and freak out in all the right places.

He almost reminds me of Bob Dylan, the way he has both created a remarkable, enduring and influential body of work (I see so many things in so many movies, music videos, TV shows that have obviously absorbed Lynch) and has also created himself as a figure, a sort of friendly unreliable narrator that you're always happy to hear from.

He’s pretty similar to Herzog in that respect.

Alba, Saturday, 17 April 2021 19:27 (three years ago) link

The folksy vibe that he affects is personally kind of a turn-off for me, and I've given him the side-eye for a few things over the years - but I watched every minute of the TP: The Return behind-the-scenes stuff, and not only was it really cool watching him work (actually kind of amazing to see him describe to actors how a scene should look, and he's describing the exact finished scene you already have in your head), but I guess it also led me to like/respect him more as a "person," at least in that context (and keeping in mind of course you're seeing what they choose to show you).

Yawnsomely Literal Cover Band (morrisp), Saturday, 17 April 2021 20:11 (three years ago) link

I feel like the fact that many of the same people have continued working with him for decades is about as glowing a recommendation for him as a person as you'll find in Hollywood these days.

You Can't Have the Woogie Without a Little Boogie (Old Lunch), Saturday, 17 April 2021 20:33 (three years ago) link

Even the few times he gets frustrated and “loses his cool” a bit in those BTS scenes... he doesn’t fly off the handle or get abusive.

Yawnsomely Literal Cover Band (morrisp), Saturday, 17 April 2021 20:48 (three years ago) link

(He also just generally seems to treat cast & crew with real respect.)

Yawnsomely Literal Cover Band (morrisp), Saturday, 17 April 2021 20:51 (three years ago) link

I'm not sure his folksy vibe is exactly affected. He plays it up, but I also think it's him. Like, I don't think there's a totally non-folksy-eccentric David Lynch not visible to the public.

He has talked about being an angry person and how meditation helped with that. He has also said that he looked into therapy but he was afraid that it would interfere with his art.

Cow_Art, Saturday, 17 April 2021 21:34 (three years ago) link

I also remembered that an acquaintance recently told me a story about an incredible experience hanging out w/Lynch back in the 2000s (this guy’s roommate at the time was Lynch’s assistant)—it sounded like Lynch was really cool (and, yes, genuinely eccentric).

Yawnsomely Literal Cover Band (morrisp), Saturday, 17 April 2021 21:57 (three years ago) link

One side detail is that Lynch would sometimes call the apartment and ask for the roommate (I forget his name, let’s say it was Scott)—“SCOTT? IS THIS SCOTT?” Hi, David – no, this is Mike. “HI MIKE! PLEASE TELL SCOTT THAT I NEED A (whatever lens or piece of equipment) RIGHT AWAY. THANK YOU!” etc.

Yawnsomely Literal Cover Band (morrisp), Saturday, 17 April 2021 22:04 (three years ago) link

^ premium content

bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Saturday, 17 April 2021 22:30 (three years ago) link

On him being an angry person, The Angriest Dog in the World seems like a reflection of that. A meditation on anger.

Herzog and Lynch are definitely both arbiters of a certain kind of disaffected, white, crotchety cool for Cinema Kids

G.A.G.S. (Gophers Against Getting Stuffed) (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 18 April 2021 04:56 (three years ago) link

lynch is for everyone

intern at pepe le pew research (Simon H.), Sunday, 18 April 2021 07:21 (three years ago) link

I’m slightly allergic to the epic bacon fuckyeahwernerherzog type stuff but I think lynch’s public persona is both more genuine and less interesting than ppl tend to assume. Not that there is nothing calculated in how he puts himself across (duh he is a celebrity) but like his first wife has talked about how he was basically nonverbal into his 20s, he won’t have cooked food in the house - the guy is clearly mildly unusual & I think his mannerisms are a part of that but I don’t think there’s much to talk about there tbh

Having said that his statements that pass into memedom (woody woodpecker, elaborate on that, quinoa, fucking telephone &c) are p much always classic

jammy mcnullity (wins), Sunday, 18 April 2021 08:02 (three years ago) link

^ had the same lunch at the same Bob’s Big Boy diner at the same time every day for seven years, etc

bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Sunday, 18 April 2021 09:16 (three years ago) link

three weeks pass...

is this the first non-twin peaks thing lynch has done that features the backward/forward voice effect?

Pinefox reviews Reviews (wins), Thursday, 13 May 2021 17:50 (two years ago) link

it was Donovan hiding behind that dumpster the whole time

Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Thursday, 13 May 2021 20:47 (two years ago) link

Silly but diverting.

I watched that monkey film he did for Netflix and Totally Didn’t Get It… but no biggie.

Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf (CBTL) stan (morrisp), Friday, 14 May 2021 06:37 (two years ago) link

I got the 7" of that, I dig it.

Bidh boladh a' mhairbh de 'n láimh fhalaimh (dowd), Friday, 14 May 2021 15:01 (two years ago) link

The song is lovely

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 14 May 2021 17:32 (two years ago) link

Laura Dern says (re: forthcoming project), "there's a twinkle in his eye and he's up to something radical and fantastic."

Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf (CBTL) stan (morrisp), Friday, 14 May 2021 19:00 (two years ago) link

At long last, Lynch's cult classic "Weather Reports" will all be collected and combined to create a 24-hour piece which Vanity Fair says "evokes an unsettling yet strangely familiar space between reality and utopia, where the temperature is comfortable and a soft breeze blows, the sun reliably peeking through any clouds." Available June 13.

parenthetically yours, (Karl Malone), Friday, 14 May 2021 19:12 (two years ago) link

It’s a great bit but I will never actually watch any of the weather reports

Pinefox reviews Reviews (wins), Friday, 14 May 2021 19:13 (two years ago) link

i catch one every once in a while

parenthetically yours, (Karl Malone), Friday, 14 May 2021 19:13 (two years ago) link

but honestly, if they were collected and i could get them for $5 or something, i would probably do it

parenthetically yours, (Karl Malone), Friday, 14 May 2021 19:14 (two years ago) link

if only to use as an alarm clock wake-up song/video for people staying in my guest bedroom

parenthetically yours, (Karl Malone), Friday, 14 May 2021 19:14 (two years ago) link

two weeks pass...

this has probably been pointed out on ilx and elsewhere, but i just learned about the sculptor Giacometti's sculpture for the 1961 re-staging of Waiting for Godot. he and Beckett were great friends (https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/alberto-giacometti-1159/when-alberto-giacometti-met-samuel-beckett).

In the original 1953 production of Godot at the Théâtre de Babylone (a converted shop), Giacometti sat in the audience. The director Roger Blin had reportedly jerry-rigged a flimsy tree together for the production, using twisted wire coat hangers wrapped in tissue paper anchored to a piece of rubber foam. It is not hard to imagine that Giacometti might not have been impressed with Blin's shambolic attempts at scenography. When Beckett invited Giacometti to create an entirely new vision for his work in 1961, the artist readily accepted.

In an interview with art critic Reinhold Hohl, Giacometti described the process of constructing the stage set in his studio with Beckett:

"We experimented all night long with that plaster tree, making it bigger, making it smaller, making its branches finer. It never seemed right to us. And each of us said to the other, maybe."

https://i.imgur.com/f4AUAjv.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/We9EF3F.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/N1Vzh1X.jpg

....

of course, i suppose another likely inspiration was probably the sad charlie brown christmas tree, so who knows

Karl Malone, Thursday, 3 June 2021 16:06 (two years ago) link

I only watched Eraserhead in full for the first time recently. Had no idea the Evolution of the Arm was prefigured in Henry’s apartment.

Alba, Thursday, 3 June 2021 16:31 (two years ago) link

Also looks kinda like a neuron

AXx°N N.

Pfizer the pharma chip (wins), Thursday, 3 June 2021 16:43 (two years ago) link

Also how much the baby prefigured ET! Talking of which, here's a Lynch drawing from c.1970

https://i.imgur.com/5ufu2te.jpg

Alba, Thursday, 3 June 2021 16:49 (two years ago) link

The other prototype evolution of the arm is of course the cover of Julee Cruise’s voice of love album

Pfizer the pharma chip (wins), Thursday, 3 June 2021 16:52 (two years ago) link

The Julee Cruise cover features one of his ham heads. Lynch sculpted the little head out of wax, around a piece of ham. Stuck it on a wire and let the ants crawl into the head to get the meat.

One of his short films has video of the ants crawling in and around a similar head.

Cow_Art, Thursday, 3 June 2021 17:59 (two years ago) link

I had a close encounter with a “Ten lined June beetle” on the sidewalk today; it gave me serious frogmoth vibes, exceeded only by the Jerusalem cricket on our patio that made me lose my s#% one night last night last year (I seriously thought I was gonna end up like New Mexico Girl, until I found a way to fling it into a neighbor’s yard).

like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Thursday, 3 June 2021 19:42 (two years ago) link

The frog-moth that Lynch said he saw in Yugoslavia in the 60s was probably this creature, the mole cricket:

https://i.imgur.com/MvCCJu6.jpg

Looking at it now, it seems likely to have inspired the Eraserhead chickens too

Alba, Thursday, 3 June 2021 20:05 (two years ago) link

Apologies for inflicting that on this thread.

Alba, Thursday, 3 June 2021 20:06 (two years ago) link

I will not sleep tonite :|

like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Thursday, 3 June 2021 20:16 (two years ago) link

Actually that's Gryllotalpa brachyptera, which is native to Australia, so not that particular one. More likely Gryllotalpa stepposa though it doesn't look quite as good.

Alba, Thursday, 3 June 2021 20:19 (two years ago) link

I love it! What a weirdo

Chuck_Tatum, Friday, 4 June 2021 08:15 (two years ago) link

I’ve found a few of those in my time. Pretty cute guys, but if you pick them up the front digging legs can push your fingers apart with pretty amazing force.

assert (matttkkkk), Friday, 4 June 2021 08:35 (two years ago) link

I missed all this wisteria posting. Ambivalent about the new series being in the Twin Peaks world

https://moviehole.net/david-lynchs-wisteria-updates-cast-tease-involvement-twin-peaks-connection/

Alba, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 10:49 (two years ago) link

Sounding like Wisteria is just the working title for Twin Peaks season 4. Hasn't he said stuff about all his material taking place in the same world/universe/whatnot?

maf you one two (maffew12), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 11:48 (two years ago) link

That all seems like pretty weak basis for speculation to me. Kyle maclachlan is in Washington - isn’t he from there? & cast members posting pictures of wisteria “or purple flowers that resemble them” doesn’t feel like much either. omg Susan Sarandon also posted a picture of some beautiful flowers, could she be involved too? Or is that just something ppl do on Instagram in summer

idk it feels like ages since those original rumours that said they were gonna start filming in May & afiact there isn’t much to even indicate anything is happening at all, let alone that it’s twin peaks

The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 11:50 (two years ago) link

I don't want any more Twin Peaks, nothing could follow the end of S3 without feeling like a compromise.

assert (matttkkkk), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 12:08 (two years ago) link

Kyle maclachlan is in Washington - isn’t he from there?

The main Twin Peaks locations are half an hour east of Seattle, with a couple being north or west of the city. Maclachlan's childhood home town is another three hours east from the Double R, and his winery is an hour further east from there.

charlie-day-cracking-the-case.gif, except it's just a map with two dots on it.

bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 12:18 (two years ago) link

movie hole dot net with the scoop

The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 12:29 (two years ago) link

(for ppl who didn’t click through, the sole “evidence” of filming on Twin Peaks S4 was Maclachlan posting a photo of a car’s nose with some light mud splatter, meme-captioned “tell me you’re in Eastern Washington w/o etc”)

bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 12:54 (two years ago) link

I'm willing to believe this new thing is straight up Peaks S4 tbh

intern at pelican brief consulting (Simon H.), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 13:12 (two years ago) link

I mean in the absence of any evidence I’m willing to believe it could be anything - I’m kinda hoping it’s that antelope don’t run no more script that’s mentioned in the recent bio - the author writes something like “those who have read it say it’s the best thing he’s ever written” but he wasn’t able to get it made because it would be too expensive. If the rumours about Netflix money are true that is quite tantalising!

The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 13:24 (two years ago) link

also K-Mac does seem to be really into dropping cryptic little hints about stuff

intern at pelican brief consulting (Simon H.), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:20 (two years ago) link

My take here is basically the same one I had when Twin Peaks S3 was announced: there is more David Lynch directed stuff coming and that is good and it doesn't matter if it's Twin Peaks related or not.

silverfish, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:30 (two years ago) link

^^^

In my house are many Manchins (WmC), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:31 (two years ago) link

yes

intern at pelican brief consulting (Simon H.), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:41 (two years ago) link

there is more David Lynch directed stuff coming

tbf tho I don’t think even this much is confirmed (even that clickbait article that draws conclusions based on literally nothing is calling it a “rumoured project” still) - I do have faith something is in the works but it’s a p different situation to when s3 had actually been announced

The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:47 (two years ago) link

I don't see him relinquishing directing duties again if he can help it.

intern at pelican brief consulting (Simon H.), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:48 (two years ago) link

If he does end up getting other directors to chip in I hope he goes for like, PFFR people

intern at pelican brief consulting (Simon H.), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:49 (two years ago) link

No I’m not saying twin peaks is back without lynch, I’m saying there is no confirmation there is a lynch thing definitely coming tp or otherwise

The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:53 (two years ago) link

yeah I've been wrong before but I feel like it will still be a while yet before we get actual "official" word either way

intern at pelican brief consulting (Simon H.), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:56 (two years ago) link

I believe it’s happening, and I don’t need evidence

Karl Malone, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:57 (two years ago) link

Evidence of that nature is antithetical to twin peaks discussion

Karl Malone, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:58 (two years ago) link

the production of a new series certainly could go sideways, but don't we know that there was a 13 part series called Unrecorded Night scheduled to begin shooting in May, produced by A2K PRODUCTIONS, INC. and TWIN PEAKS PRODUCTIONS, INC., with Peter Deming as DP?

Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 15:12 (two years ago) link

Personally would love to see a brand new project, if it had tiny links to TP world I'd be good with that. I just think S3 ended it all so perfect.

Diggin Holes (Ste), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 15:16 (two years ago) link

On the one hand, I agree, on the other hand, I didn't think I needed/wanted a third season and boy was I wrong.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 15:16 (two years ago) link

xxp Didn’t all that just come from some Reddit person tho? I don’t think there’s been any real confirmation

ALTHOUGH I just saw upthread from our own Johnny Fever when the 1st reports came out

FINALLY! I've known about this since March because of my job, but I've had to keep it my own secret for eight months. I feel liberated

Which is good enough for me

The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 15:18 (two years ago) link

xp
yeah that's true, i'm currently rewatching initial series to ready for another rewatch of S3. It's just so good.

Diggin Holes (Ste), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 15:18 (two years ago) link

I definitely don’t need more. I don’t need anything, ray. If there’s one thing you should know about me, ray, it’s that I don’t need. I want.

The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 15:20 (two years ago) link

i re-dove into the whole "episodes 17 and 18 are meant to be played simultaneously!" thing again, the last couple nights, and man it felt good!

and regardless of intent, i still find this to be one of the most beautiful images

https://i.imgur.com/tuRub45.png

Karl Malone, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 15:26 (two years ago) link

Huh, all those TP cast members posting Wisteria does seem pretty significant/telling.

like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:08 (two years ago) link

I thought someone asked Mark Frost on Twitter, though, and he said he has nothing to do with whatever wisteria is.

like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:09 (two years ago) link

If we take her at her "it's not code!" word, I feel bad for Sherilyn Fenn if it turns out the others were posting wisteria photos because they're involved and she just happened to think the wisteria was nice.

Alba, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:14 (two years ago) link

I don't want any more Twin Peaks, nothing could follow the end of S3 without feeling like a compromise.

Fwiw, I feel the opposite (would love one more thing, even just a movie, to tie up the… loose ends); but will also be plenty satisfied if that never happens.

like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:24 (two years ago) link

lol they all look coincidental tbh

Michael Horse’s is captioned “on my walk today”, Amanda Seyfried has tagged 2 of her friends who don’t seem to have anything to do with TP. I’m not even sure these are all pictures of wisteria. Some are from April or May, one is new.

Hays strikes me as someone, like George Griffith, who is as much a fan as a participant & likes to get involved in the hype so I think her “I learned about something” bit is literally just her reading the same articles everyone else is - she has been in a total of four scenes ever so I would not be assuming Heidi the waitress has deep inside knowledge on the next lynch project

The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:25 (two years ago) link

Can't believe everyone is this hyped for Lynch's Desperate Housewives reboot

Jerome Percival Jesus (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:27 (two years ago) link

Could it be these folks are all tuned in to Lynch to some degree and are aware of the title “wisteria” and then just started to notice wisteria out in the world and either consciously or unconsciously posted wisteria in their socials either as an homage / hello to Lynch and fans

calstars, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:28 (two years ago) link

That seems more likely than a coded confirmation that this is s4 and around as likely as some of them just liking flowers

The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:31 (two years ago) link

Yeah I would think it would be kinda rude for them to do that as a fake-out without knowing the "score" (or having Lynch's blessing), but what do I know.

like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:31 (two years ago) link

(also, for all we know, Heidi the waitress could be central to the whole thing, lol)

like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:33 (two years ago) link

> tie up the… loose ends

More Twin Peaks would only make more loose ends. Looking forward to whatever the heck he's up to.

maf you one two (maffew12), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:38 (two years ago) link

S4 is mainly about billy. Heidi would def be a part of it

The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:49 (two years ago) link

Can't believe everyone is this hyped for Lynch's Desperate Housewives reboot

Desperate Houserabbits

Guayaquil (eephus!), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:50 (two years ago) link

Oh, that would be fine.

Alba, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:56 (two years ago) link

also K-Mac does seem to be really into dropping cryptic little hints about stuff

I don't follow him but whenever I see his "cryptic references" linked they always seem to be straightforward, genial fanservice like recreating the opening Diane monologue in his car, or splitscreening himself reacting to tiktoks of dessert pie by sipping coffee

he's probably doing loads of posts of himself wearing an admiral's hat, or not fucking his wife, and sending the How I Met Your Mother and Sex In The City housewives into frenzies of speculation about secret reunion series too

bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 18:27 (two years ago) link

housewives fans

(I realised I don't know anything about his Desperate Housewives character but deleted the wrong bit)

lol I checked his twitter and he's twooted this week about Dune and Sex In The City, and a few posts/weeks back offered this clear indication that Cooper is unstuck in the timestream for Peaks S4:

Happy Anniversary to #TheFlintstones and the stone-cold villain, Cliff Vandercave. He might have been sly, but boy did he make some boulder power moves! 🦕🪨🦴 pic.twitter.com/pOi3q75j3I

— Kyle MacLachlan (@Kyle_MacLachlan) May 27, 2021

bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 18:36 (two years ago) link

That fan-service stuff feels different from the Wisteria tweet though?

like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 18:40 (two years ago) link

What was the wisteria tweet again? The main thing in that article was him posting a tweet on the 30th anniversary of “how’s annie” & saying something like “I guess maybe we’ll find out one day!” which is def just fan service (if there is a 4th season it is unlikely to be about how Annie is lol)

The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 18:44 (two years ago) link

Yeah I agree with that

like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 18:51 (two years ago) link

four weeks pass...

there are so many overlaps between eraserhead and the return, it's kind of bewildering. not just well-known things like the zigzag floors in both, the sound design (heavy use of foley, which is an investment that ALWAYS pays off imo), black and white scenes, pacing.

but also the very beginning of eraserhead is very similar to the twin peaks narrative of the atomic bomb and a sort of "birth of evil", a sending of a celestial body to earth or some version of earth that's not quite right.

Z_TBD (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 14 July 2021 00:33 (two years ago) link

yep EH and episode 8 are both cosmologies, or maybe alternate views of the same cosmology

assert (matttkkkk), Wednesday, 14 July 2021 00:35 (two years ago) link

I happen to be in the middle of a (very) longform analysis of The Return; she goes into great detail around the visual and thematic parallels w/Eraserhead (and Blue Velvet).

aging goth couple™ (morrisp), Wednesday, 14 July 2021 00:44 (two years ago) link

sweeeeeeet, i want to read that.

also: eraserhead is funny. like, very, very funny. i guess people know that, but in the pop culture lynch word cloud, i feel like "funny" doesn't come up often, and especially not for stuff like eraserhead, which is also very, very terrifying. but i can see why it grabbed the attention of mel brooks - absurd recognizes absurd. (probably influenced by the fact that the first words i saw on the screen on my millionth rewatch this evening were "ABSURDA")

Z_TBD (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 14 July 2021 00:55 (two years ago) link

thanks for that link morrisp - enjoying the deep dive

was just reading the bit about the ep 1 New York box - she talks about the horror movie trope of being punished for having sex and that's absolutely in play (I appreciate too her kinder reading of sex representing a scary unknown for younger people) - and I remember there's definitely a sense that fucking somehow summons the entity in the box...

but in tandem with this there's a feeling that the dude is being derelict in his duty by _not watching the box_, like that's his One Job - and I was toying with the idea of this being a inverse of the schrodinger's cat thought experiment - like maybe that watching the box is the thing that stops some kind of terrifying quantum uncertainty from manifesting - then in the next paragraph that critic starts to talk about Heisenberg but coming at it from a completely different route - via coffee and Annie in S2 and Alphaville! - and anyway it was quite a trippy couple of paragraphs to be reading before dawn

I feel I will never grow tired of letting my mind roam over the landscape of this show

lemmy incaution (emsworth), Wednesday, 14 July 2021 21:47 (two years ago) link

Glad you're enjoying it! Yeah, her attention to detail is incredible - I mean just incredible, she pores over every detail of the frame - and she goes on some fascinating tangents (and even if a certain % of the connections she draws may seem dubious, in a "no way could all this actually have been intended" kind of way, her free associations are fascinating all the same).

I discovered that site around four years ago, in the context of her Kubrick writing, and read her shot-by-shot analysis of Eyes Wide Shut (it took me days!). I revisited it a week or so ago, and found she had tackled The Return in the interim... I was like, oohhhh snap, gotta read this.

(Also, certain aspects of The Return have always felt sort of Kubrick-ian to me; so it was satisfying to see that this particular Kubrick nut is also a TP/Lynch nut.)

aging goth couple™ (morrisp), Wednesday, 14 July 2021 21:59 (two years ago) link

It's also a nice complement to other online Twin Peaks writing (my personal favorite is by this guy), because she doesn't get so much into analyzing the "big picture" questions or coming up with big theories, and instead tackles the show on more a nuts & bolts level of what a viewer's impressions may be as they watch in real time (though obviously she's writing it after having absorbed it all).

aging goth couple™ (morrisp), Wednesday, 14 July 2021 22:09 (two years ago) link

three weeks pass...

so relatable

Read between the lines Zach (Karl Malone), Tuesday, 10 August 2021 05:34 (two years ago) link

one month passes...

Sounds bad, folks

ICYMI, the original, seemingly reliable Reddit insider tipster now says David Lynch’s long-gestating project with Netflix, Wisteria / Unrecorded Night, is no longer in development there.“It's possible that it maybe goes to someone else or maybe they start prod again @ later date” https://t.co/73bOrUDhXa

— --------- (@fatecolossal) September 23, 2021

Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Saturday, 25 September 2021 16:47 (two years ago) link

Was kinda waiting for this news tbh given no official announcement 4 months after they were meant to have started filming - I assume the pandemic spiked it

siffleur’s mom (wins), Saturday, 25 September 2021 17:12 (two years ago) link

Ah well. We'll always have the weather reports.

Cow_Art, Saturday, 25 September 2021 17:17 (two years ago) link

Unrecorded Wisteria

Alba, Saturday, 25 September 2021 17:20 (two years ago) link

six months pass...

I watched The Straight Story, on Disney+ (based on a recommendation in the Inland Empire thread). What a remarkable movie. Really glad I saw it (I really had a misconception of what it would be like).

ass time permits (morrisp), Thursday, 7 April 2022 06:39 (two years ago) link

hey morrisp, what age kids do you think would appreciate the Straight Story?

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Monday, 11 April 2022 20:10 (two years ago) link

It's sounding like a new film may be debuting at Cannes

So the answer is Blue Velvet / Wild at Heart and Twin Peaks (I'm glad to see so many people are as excited as I am about a new David Lynch film) - Variety have just run an article about Lightyear https://t.co/31du84ygoc

— Kaleem Aftab (@aftabamon) April 11, 2022

In related news, I'm planning to catch Inland Empire at Austin Film Society the 2nd week of May

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Monday, 11 April 2022 20:21 (two years ago) link

xp I'd say older preteen or teenager; it's not very "kid"-oriented, despite the much-discussed G rating.

begrudgingly bound by duty of candor (morrisp), Monday, 11 April 2022 20:34 (two years ago) link

xp (to myself)

Don't know who this guy is, but –

David Lynch just told me in no uncertain terms he does not have a new film at Cannes this year. Take that for what it’s worth.

Also, um I just had David Lynch on the podcast.

Coming soon. pic.twitter.com/1GnPftrqBA

— Josh Horowitz (@joshuahorowitz) April 12, 2022

begrudgingly bound by duty of candor (morrisp), Tuesday, 12 April 2022 23:53 (two years ago) link

david lynch is the kinda guy who says "film" and "television" and ne'er the twain shall meet so

Its big ball chunky time (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Wednesday, 13 April 2022 00:03 (two years ago) link

doesn't seem like he is dissembling. was really looking forward to something new

Dan S, Wednesday, 13 April 2022 02:39 (two years ago) link

hopped back into rewatch of TP The Return last night, episode 5, so so so good

Ste, Thursday, 14 April 2022 11:48 (two years ago) link

I've been watching arguments about this tweet for a while now, so you should see it.

instructive comparison on "dark suburbia" might be david lynch vs thomas pynchon: for lynch the dark stuff is all incursions from some supernatural and/or criminal outside, for pynchon suburbs are basically little nazi factories

— joolsd (@joolsd) April 15, 2022

xyzzzz__, Monday, 18 April 2022 06:40 (two years ago) link

everyone is replying “this is a misreading of lynch” and they’re all right

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Monday, 18 April 2022 07:19 (two years ago) link

I was indifferent at first but it's been going for a while now so I'm gonna back it.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 18 April 2022 07:32 (two years ago) link

I know a ceiling fan that begs to differ

gop on ya gingrich (wins), Monday, 18 April 2022 09:43 (two years ago) link

suburbs in the return a blasted wasteland full of isolated people in addicted trances an inch from gun violence iirc

difficult listening hour, Monday, 18 April 2022 11:33 (two years ago) link

what he's sentimental about is "small towns", but still the rot is inside. (the only transmission project blue book ever receives is from the woods.) and the traditional reverse of the reactionary coin-- the corrupt city-- doesn't really appear either, not even in eraserhead (tho maybe on giedi prime): his vision of j. edgars from philadelphia is of knight-errants. (but still the rot is inside.)

difficult listening hour, Monday, 18 April 2022 11:39 (two years ago) link

(well of course there's hollywood lol. he likes it tho.)

difficult listening hour, Monday, 18 April 2022 11:43 (two years ago) link

Lol

yeah yeah suburban concupiscence allows the extra dimensional demons to enter your brain and force you to commit atrocities https://t.co/mYSV0eN2Ih

— joolsd (@joolsd) April 17, 2022

we only steal from the greatest books (PBKR), Monday, 18 April 2022 11:50 (two years ago) link

I'd say he also gets moist-eyed thinking of the rot.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 18 April 2022 11:50 (two years ago) link

I mean if he wants shots fired, why not just say Lynch is Mike Love with better aesthetics?

we only steal from the greatest books (PBKR), Monday, 18 April 2022 11:52 (two years ago) link

better hair

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 18 April 2022 11:53 (two years ago) link

Reads more Freud.

we only steal from the greatest books (PBKR), Monday, 18 April 2022 11:55 (two years ago) link

Wild that anyone could watch fwwm and take away that Leland is “forced to commit atrocities” lol

gop on ya gingrich (wins), Monday, 18 April 2022 12:25 (two years ago) link

It’s funny cause the idea that “dark suburbia” is lynch’s thing really only comes from blue velvet & twin peaks, & in the latter more developed work it couldn’t be clearer that the suburban middle class home is THE site of evil in this story even if you insist on being thuddingly literal about “supernatural entities” or w/e

gop on ya gingrich (wins), Monday, 18 April 2022 12:38 (two years ago) link

I watched The Straight Story, on Disney+ (based on a recommendation in the Inland Empire thread). What a remarkable movie. Really glad I saw it (I really had a misconception of what it would be like)

After bringing up The Straight Story on that thread we watched it a couple of days ago. It had been a long time since I last saw it - I always liked it, but now I think it's a major work of his. I can't think of a better depiction of regret and forgiveness. It's not underrated; I've been underrating it.

Elvis Telecom, Friday, 22 April 2022 20:30 (two years ago) link

My dad is a vietnam vet in his 70s and I finally made him watch the Straight Story. He watched all of it which means he must have liked it.

It holds up amazingly well.

Cow_Art, Saturday, 23 April 2022 02:28 (two years ago) link

The scene in the bar where Straight reflects on his war experiences is arresting (especially b/c it kind of comes out of nowhere).

Farnsworth and Spacek’s performances are terrific… I see the film won and/or was nominated for various awards (including an Oscar nom for Farnsworth), which were clearly well deserved. All I remember from the “discourse” at the time was — “David Lynch made a G-rated Disney film about a guy on a tractor! hurr hurr hurr”

begrudgingly bound by duty of candor (morrisp), Saturday, 23 April 2022 23:21 (two years ago) link

Looks like Mary Sweeney had a lot to do with the film as well

begrudgingly bound by duty of candor (morrisp), Saturday, 23 April 2022 23:24 (two years ago) link

In re Lynch and suburbia, his work doesn’t really have a lot of suburbia in it. As noted above, mostly small towns and cities, tho The Return does have that great Vegas subdivision. But if I’m parsing the original tweet right, it’s more saying that Lynch’s portrayal of evil doesn’t have a political agenda (or even political awareness), which I think is pretty much true. His villains and dark forces are rooted in more primal, individual desires and appetites. In that sense, settings aren’t that important, because those things are everywhere.

i guess but also that tweet is trying to say that the supernatural incursions come from *outside* whatever environment or person he's depicting, which is basically the opposite of the truth, it's always from the inside

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 24 April 2022 13:35 (two years ago) link

inland empire made me reflect on this further bc as with most lynch work it has nothing to do with suburbia but does i think contend with the environment of flagrant abuse and trauma that hollywood is just an inch below the surface, and depicts these cycles of abuse as a story that's being told and retold with different people in different positions

starting to think of fire walk with me, mulholland dr., and inland empire as a loose trilogy of films all about the same thing (with lost highway like an uneven sketch of the space between fwwm and md), only one of them taking place in suburbia

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 24 April 2022 13:51 (two years ago) link

you can still argue that this is apolitical but idk i can easily shape it into something political through reading, like even identifying and observing the nature of "evil" through this prism can feel like an implicit critique of systems and all the jungian shadows that form when people try to align themselves with systems

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 24 April 2022 13:55 (two years ago) link

lol I was totally conflating suburbia with “small towns” upthread wasn’t I (I think the point stands, neither are hugely a focus)

Isn’t the actual inland empire part of the suburban sprawl around la (along with Pomona which also comes up)? I am v bad with this stuff (need to reread city of quartz but I will only forget it all again) but that seems potentially interesting ito placing the site of dread on the margins - but again not not political

There’s definitely some sort of class dimension in how many of the terrible uncanny figures in lynch code as poor & itinerant: drifter Bob, the hobo-like woodsmen, world of truck drivers, man behind the dumpster, the travelling circus in IE; but there are different ways to read this & the reductive takes don’t quite fit (many of the dreadful underworld figures are rich, many of the benevolent figures are poor (Shelly & the homeless ppl in IE spring to mind))

gop on ya gingrich (wins), Sunday, 24 April 2022 14:28 (two years ago) link

I have to quibble a bit with the idea that it has nothing to do with suburbia. Once she has her mental break about an hour into the film, doesn't she find herself trapped in suburban limbo? Isn't that what On High In Blue Tommorrows is about, suburban trysts? And isn't the title of the film a reference to suburban Los Angeles?

Lol, in other words, wins otm

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Sunday, 24 April 2022 14:31 (two years ago) link

hm yes i guess you’re right that is part of it

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 24 April 2022 14:40 (two years ago) link

but this suburbia is also connected to like hollywood blvd and poland

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 24 April 2022 14:41 (two years ago) link

one of many chords he’s playing

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 24 April 2022 14:45 (two years ago) link

The actual IE is not suburban L.A.

Hops: Mosaic, Citra, Simcoe (morrisp), Sunday, 24 April 2022 14:59 (two years ago) link

like even identifying and observing the nature of "evil" through this prism can feel like an implicit critique of systems and all the jungian shadows that form when people try to align themselves with systems

otm

the bad, or dangerous, or violent, or haunted, or maybe only transitional place in IE-- "the marketplace", the place where the "chemical factory" makes it so you can't "think straight"-- is a place in the mind, some kind of trauma castle (with its one-way doors and scenery flats and narrow alleys and opaque windows and dark stairwells and extreme closeups of porous material signaling shifts from one layer of perception to another while sitting on suburban carpet setting a small fire in the late afternoon, this is the lynch movie that most seems to take place in the brain, like a whole movie in the black lodge) but that's exactly why it also works as broader social critique, w palimpsestic resonance beyond-but-including hollywood/america/capitalism, instead of only being a movie about how glad lynch is that his career after dune found+followed a back alley.

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 24 April 2022 18:27 (two years ago) link

Can you connect the dots? It’s also a broader social critique because…?

Hops: Mosaic, Citra, Simcoe (morrisp), Sunday, 24 April 2022 18:42 (two years ago) link

...because people see many revealing things in Rorschach tests?

...because vague omens and portents have a way of portending whatever significant event the future eventually delivers?

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Sunday, 24 April 2022 18:49 (two years ago) link

Interesting thoughts. His view of systems of power is always conflicted, because on the one hand he has a lot of kind of classic "good guy" archetypes who are representatives of those systems — the FBI most obviously, but also Sandy's cop dad in Blue Velvet, e.g. — but then also those systems are often shown to be corrupt or corruptible. There are crooks in the police forces in Blue Velvet and The Return, and Dale Cooper himself obviously is corrupted by the Black Lodge. These don't feel like political critiques per se so much as acknowledgements of the corruptible nature of people. It's true that his grotesques are often poor people, but he's also fascinated by the decadence of the rich and powerful. (Lost Highway has a lot of that.)

It’s also a broader social critique because…?

because its anchor inside laura dern's skull is what allows it to drift around in space/time/class without getting lost, overlaying various kinds of trafficking atop one another as episodes in "the longest-running radio play in history"-- as brad notes:

the environment of flagrant abuse and trauma that hollywood is just an inch below the surface, and depicts these cycles of abuse as a story that's being told and retold with different people in different positions

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 24 April 2022 19:00 (two years ago) link

people see many revealing things in Rorschach tests

tailored dresses are code for drugs. but did you notice what was pinned to it?

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 24 April 2022 19:23 (two years ago) link

xp I’ve only seen Inland Empire once, and my thoughts on it were… fragmentary (they’re in the thread), but I guess I didn’t see H’wood as as a source of abuse or trauma in the movie… sort of the opposite, in fact.

Hops: Mosaic, Citra, Simcoe (morrisp), Sunday, 24 April 2022 19:42 (two years ago) link

maybe i'm off course

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 24 April 2022 19:46 (two years ago) link

I mean, what do I know… there’s obv a ton there

(fwiw, I saw it as Dern’s actress character identifying so radically with abused/exploited characters, that her own identity was disrupted… to me it felt in the end like a highly “affirmative” movie about the power of art, or something less cheesy than that sounds, lol)

Hops: Mosaic, Citra, Simcoe (morrisp), Sunday, 24 April 2022 19:47 (two years ago) link

(although not TOO much less cheesy; as it does end with that almost proudly corny dance party in the hotel lobby scene)

Hops: Mosaic, Citra, Simcoe (morrisp), Sunday, 24 April 2022 20:02 (two years ago) link

that's def what it's about imo! hollywood is a place where art happens but it is also a violent and haunted place where the artistic impulse is threatened with exploitation/control/imprisonment. so are other cities; so is the mind. that the terrain of grace zabriskie's fable-- the marketplace; the alley; going out to play, pursued by your shadow-- is interior mental/spiritual terrain (faintly buddhist even) is exactly what makes it as mappable onto "old europe" as onto hollywood boulevard and suburban backyards.

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 24 April 2022 20:03 (two years ago) link

"that's def what it's about" = "it's def a highly 'affirmative' movie about the power of art"

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 24 April 2022 20:12 (two years ago) link

i'll admit btw that while hollywood boulevard and the suburban bungalow are both v vividly felt in this movie, "old europe" is p much just a gesture or symbol-- lynch is way out of his material universe in these scenes and you can tell. but they cast this (gendered!) creativity-and-domination struggle as something old and metamorphic, a struggle in the mind that's taken material form after material form.

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 24 April 2022 20:41 (two years ago) link

For my current Twin Peaks rewatch, I’m starting with just the episodes of the original series directed by Lynch (which feels like an interesting way to get the heart of things). The first episode of S2 is so damn good… I think it rivals the pilot in terms of quality.

Hops: Mosaic, Citra, Simcoe (morrisp), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 05:58 (two years ago) link

The Straight Story was his best-reviewed film since Blue Velvet fwiw.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 09:30 (two years ago) link

I would sure hope so!

Hops: Mosaic, Citra, Simcoe (morrisp), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 14:57 (two years ago) link

(I mean, I've done a 180 on FWWM, but it took years and some commitment... I'd like to revisit the other two at some point)

Hops: Mosaic, Citra, Simcoe (morrisp), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 14:59 (two years ago) link

I just started watching all of Northern Exposure, and there was a pleasant little Twin Peaks nod in Season 2 which I wasn't aware of. Made me smile anyway

Ste, Wednesday, 27 April 2022 15:25 (two years ago) link

erm season 1

Ste, Wednesday, 27 April 2022 15:26 (two years ago) link

Back to the ruminations on evil: watching Blue Velvet with students two months ago, I noted how Sandy's dad seems implicated in the corruption. We only know thanks to stricken reaction shots and his insistence on Jeffrey's not telling Sandy about what he learned, but I appreciated Lynch wasn't heavyhanded about it.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 15:27 (two years ago) link

And the 90s coincides with his most determined efforts to work within the system as it was at the time. Making TV shows, or trying to, being an A-list name even if everyone thought he was a super weirdo. The ultimate failure of all of that was when ABC killed Mulholland Drive as a TV series, which from this perspective feels like a great liberation for him.

xp

I don't think he's implicated in it, I think it's more like he knows his partner is crooked, which on the one hand fucks him up, but on the other hand he has to tread very carefully if he wants to see justice served

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 15:46 (two years ago) link

where are you watching Northern Exposure? I heard it wasn't streaming due to music rights like lots of other shows. Yes it started as kind of a ripoff on the innocuous and quirky side of Twin Peaks; I enjoyed it up to a point.

akm, Wednesday, 27 April 2022 17:09 (two years ago) link

Yeah I thought Sandy's dad was investigating his partner, not that he was in cahoots with him.

xp akm, I bought the dvd box set

Ste, Thursday, 28 April 2022 11:46 (two years ago) link

he had a beard last year!? scroll down to 6/1/2021 here while being impressed by the list: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videos

StanM, Wednesday, 4 May 2022 16:27 (two years ago) link

ok then youtube . com/c/DAVIDLYNCHTHEATER/videos

StanM, Wednesday, 4 May 2022 16:27 (two years ago) link

I'm on to the final two eps in the Return, which I've saved for some Friday night viewing. So far the re-watch has been totally worth it, had dreads that it wouldn't be as good second time round thankfully proved wrong. I'm still trying to figure out what the fuck that vomiting girl in the car with screaming mad woman was all about. i love you david.

Ste, Friday, 6 May 2022 15:29 (two years ago) link

They were very late iirc

lol

Ste, Friday, 6 May 2022 15:34 (two years ago) link

They had miles to go.

Max Hamburgers (Eric H.), Friday, 6 May 2022 16:54 (two years ago) link

two weeks pass...

watched Eraserhead again, can see it was the genesis of his obsession with zigzag-patterned floors and curtains

Dan S, Monday, 23 May 2022 00:49 (one year ago) link

it was an interesting experimental film, I still don't love it though

Dan S, Monday, 23 May 2022 00:59 (one year ago) link

I think the films he made after that brought the viewer in more, bit by bit.

I want to rewatch The Elephant Man

Dan S, Monday, 23 May 2022 01:19 (one year ago) link

I’ve actually never seen The Elephant Man, need to rectify that.

Bob Dylan's iconic Ray Ban sunglasses (morrisp), Monday, 23 May 2022 01:36 (one year ago) link

It’s very good. Sorta like The Straight story in that it is remembered as one of his more mainstream movies but it’s chock full of Lynch nuggets.

Cow_Art, Monday, 23 May 2022 02:16 (one year ago) link

also his saddest film by a mile

assert (matttkkkk), Monday, 23 May 2022 02:44 (one year ago) link

It has an amazing ending.

circa1916, Monday, 23 May 2022 02:49 (one year ago) link

Remember watching it with my roommate years ago and we were both trying not to blubber.

circa1916, Monday, 23 May 2022 02:52 (one year ago) link

two months pass...

My brain has wanted to think about Twin Peaks lately, but I don’t have the time/patience for podcasts (so not sure how to really scratch the itch). I’ve been doing a sort-of TP rewatch by watching just the episodes that Lynch directed himself, followed by FWWM/Missing Pieces (and I guess eventually The Return again, it’s been a year or so since I first rewatched it).

Disarm u with a SMiLE (morrisp), Sunday, 7 August 2022 03:08 (one year ago) link

The Diary of Laura Palmer is probably the best off-the-screen TP work and it works as a Twin Peaks object. The audiobook is supposedly excellent but I don’t know if I can do it.

Cow_Art, Sunday, 7 August 2022 04:47 (one year ago) link

I just finished a rewatch of OG Twin Peaks - trying to work up the courage to do Fire Walk With Me. Have never seen The Missing Pieces and I guess I may as well?

Don’t know when I’ll redo The Return - the first time through was one of the absolute greatest screen experiences of my life and I’m kind of afeared that it might lose some of its power the second time round.

Would definitely want to do it on Blu-ray with a decent sound system tho. Watching it on streaming I did get a bit annoyed by compression artefacts in the dark parts of the screen. Want my TP blackest ever black pls.

the life of a rebo band is always intense (emsworth), Sunday, 7 August 2022 05:01 (one year ago) link

The Missing Pieces are really interesting and feel (to me) like integral, if less essential, parts of the story. I understand why none of them were in the final cut; though there are a few that I could make an argument for including.

Disarm u with a SMiLE (morrisp), Sunday, 7 August 2022 06:10 (one year ago) link

Re FWWM, Missing Pieces, and courage: there's a fan edit out there that combines the two pretty well, making the movie a bit easier to take.

I'm slowly rewatching for the first time, and for some reason started with my first watch of the actual movie. I'm into the Return now and decided to leave the famous episode 8 until I'm done the rest. See what I can see in it after Cooper biffs it.

My favourite fan content is our own Simon's The Lodgers podcast and this guy's videos which I'll probably watch again later.

Haven't checked out the diary yet. Is the "Diane.." Cooper tapes book or audiobook worthwhile too?

I have listened to the two Mark Frost books which are pretty fun, and further the lore a bit and wrap up some minor storylines. But I feel like they'd be out the window if Lynch decided to make anything else.

maf you one two (maffew12), Sunday, 7 August 2022 10:58 (one year ago) link

emsworth: I'm enjoying The Return the second time through. Not looking at everything as a potential "clue" and just letting it wash over, it's different and good.

maf you one two (maffew12), Sunday, 7 August 2022 11:02 (one year ago) link

The diary is an essential companion piece to the series and especially the film, & if the latter had never been made would take its place as the most sustained/focused look at the real horror behind the murder mystery & kind of a justification of the whole enterprise for me? It’s not that the incest & abuse would be absent from the series otherwise — it’s kind of everywhere, but diffused in the town & its secrets, the world & its spinning, all the cycles and splits and breakages — but without these two extended bits from Laura’s perspective I think so much essence is lost from the story

(The story goes that Jennifer Lynch wrote it in like 3 weeks, then lost the manuscript and *rewrote* it in like 3 days, there’s def a rawness)

fwwm is such a punctum/eye of the duck for me, I should prob watch that fan edit one day but I just hate the idea of putting the missing pieces back in and diluting the film (tho of course I understand why you might need to make it “easier to take” considering the subject); also just on a formal level the editing style of tmp is so different, much closer to the return (it was the last thing in my mini-rewatch just before tptr dropped and it really primed me for the feel of those first parts). A big part of fwwm’s power is that it feels sort of apart from the series, the idea of the edit feels a bit like a fan tried to “improve” part 8 by cutting away to Lucy & Andy during the nuclear explosion

Wiggum Dorma (wins), Sunday, 7 August 2022 14:02 (one year ago) link

haha I don't think there is anything like that. Just full scenes arranged in whatever best order they could work out. Though I've only seen each once (the edit, then eventually the movie and the Missing Pieces), I noticed that the Philip Jeffries section was really diminished by going on longer. That really unexpectedly hit me in the movie as something terrifying.

maf you one two (maffew12), Sunday, 7 August 2022 14:11 (one year ago) link

I wonder if its seeing the film first but i just think that once youre past the prologue *anything* else just feels like pulling focus in an unfortunate way (and i love all those scenese, ed & nadine in the car is all time)

I think the compressed Jeffries scene is ideal for the film but I love the extended convenience store sequence with all the animal chattering - the worst bit of lynch/engels humour is around here tho & makes me feel weird about being the guy who's like "twin peaks fire walk with me is a masterpiece, one of the most radically empathetic works of fiction, and its supplementary film the missing pieces is an essential primer for the sequel series that manages to define the current era better than almost anything produced since. Nowhere is this more apparent than when the Buenos Aires bellhop says 'mr jeffries de shit it come out of my ass!' I'm smart"

Wiggum Dorma (wins), Sunday, 7 August 2022 14:52 (one year ago) link

The autobiography of Dale Cooper is pretty good and had a few genuine lol bits. It feels very true to the character. Not essential like the diary, but much more enjoyable than the Frost books. The Diane tapes are a different thing, and to make knowledge are only available on out of print cassette. It’s good but it has some continuity problems and isn’t worth spending $$$ for a tape.

The access guide to the town is very good and pretty funny.

Cow_Art, Sunday, 7 August 2022 15:00 (one year ago) link

xps the diane tapes are fluff along the lines of maclachlan hosting SNL, worth hearing once. The autobiography (which is a completely separate thing, confusingly) is entertaining enough & really funny in places, it's a piece of the version of twin peaks where windom earle matters

In terms of semi canonical twin peaks tie in media I'd say diary > tmp > palmer family interview > log lady intros > secret history > autobiography >>>>>>>>>>>>> diane >>>> final dossier

xp!

Wiggum Dorma (wins), Sunday, 7 August 2022 15:07 (one year ago) link

Never came across a copy of the access guide

Wiggum Dorma (wins), Sunday, 7 August 2022 15:08 (one year ago) link

The Diane tapes are a different thing, and to make knowledge are only available on out of print cassette. It’s good but it has some continuity problems and isn’t worth spending $$$ for a tape.


Also available now as an audiobook download, in the UK at least.

Alba, Sunday, 7 August 2022 15:08 (one year ago) link

should be piratable too, def don't buy it

I'm thinking I should bump up the palmer interview in that ranking

Wiggum Dorma (wins), Sunday, 7 August 2022 15:14 (one year ago) link

lol I did not realize "My Life, My Tapes" was a different thing from "Diane ..", the book of supposed tapes. Thanks, will enjoy.

maf you one two (maffew12), Sunday, 7 August 2022 15:48 (one year ago) link

"Re FWWM, Missing Pieces, and courage: there's a fan edit out there that combines the two pretty well, making the movie a bit easier to take."

yeah i would rarely make a case for something like this, but I recommend watching both FWWM and this fan edit; it makes the best use of those removed scenes and includes everything you'd care about from them. It's very well done.

akm, Sunday, 7 August 2022 16:07 (one year ago) link

Just full scenes arranged in whatever best order they could work out.

aiui the order is almost entirely taken from the shooting script?

Vance Vance Devolution (sic), Sunday, 7 August 2022 16:16 (one year ago) link

Think so yeah

Wiggum Dorma (wins), Sunday, 7 August 2022 16:23 (one year ago) link

I only read My Life, My Tapes once but it made an impression on me. There was cool stuff in there, the amputated hands holding chess pieces or black and white squares? something like that.

akm, Sunday, 7 August 2022 16:38 (one year ago) link

Compressed Jeffries vs. complete Jeffries is interesting... I agree the way it's all edited in the film is much more creepy and unsettling, though it's probably pretty confusing for someone who doesn't know the lore; the complete scenes spell everything out more (same with the extended "meeting" above the convenience store, and the other bits with those characters).

That said, I guess the extra Jeffries scenes are the Missing Pieces whose canonicity is debatable, as his references to "Miss Judy" and "Judy's place in Seattle" conflict w/the later retcon (though maybe you could get a No-Prize by suggesting that he's speaking in code or something).

Disarm u with a SMiLE (morrisp), Sunday, 7 August 2022 16:58 (one year ago) link

FWIW, the two extra scenes that I could see inserting into the film are Laura & Donna driving from the Roadhouse to the Canadian bar with the two guys (I think the transition btw. those two settings is confusing in the movie); and the "I'm the muffin / You're the muffin" scene in Donna's living room (not just b/c it's a really nice scene, but also because bits of the dialogue become important later - especially something Donna's dad says).

Disarm u with a SMiLE (morrisp), Sunday, 7 August 2022 17:02 (one year ago) link

If I made a fan edit, I might also drop the scene where Cooper predicts the specifics of the next murder to Albert, describes what the next victim is doing right now, etc. That exchange feels a little too "extra" to me (Cooper's intuitive and has interesting dreams, but he's not a psychic!).

Disarm u with a SMiLE (morrisp), Sunday, 7 August 2022 17:04 (one year ago) link

I think he pretty much is a psychic as far as it goes tbh - “the log lady will be here in one minute”

The missing piece I might put in is the other Palmer dinner, as a contrast to the “wash your hands” scene, they’re genuinely happy but there’s something unnerving and desperate about it

Wiggum Dorma (wins), Sunday, 7 August 2022 18:21 (one year ago) link

pic.twitter.com/MbJfV7QdoY

— [ominous whoosh] (@ominouswhoosh) August 7, 2022

mark s, Sunday, 7 August 2022 18:54 (one year ago) link

In terms of semi canonical twin peaks tie in media I'd say diary > tmp > palmer family interview > log lady intros > secret history > autobiography >>>>>>>>>>>>> diane >>>> final dossier

i don't think anyone agrees, but personally, Invitation to Love is the most enjoyable Twin Peaks-adjacent thing. i enjoy it more the 12th time around then on the very first

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFMen60b6UQ

Bruce Stingbean (Karl Malone), Sunday, 7 August 2022 19:23 (one year ago) link

Something that’s never explained in the movie is what it is about the Teresa Banks murder that leads Gordon Cole to classify it as a Blue Rose case in the first place… like what were the details of a seemingly unremarkable murder that raised his antennae. I suppose it’s one of those things that doesn’t have a clear answer (unless it’s addressed in one of the books)?

Disarm u with a SMiLE (morrisp), Sunday, 7 August 2022 19:40 (one year ago) link

three weeks pass...

A question I have on Blue Velvet (after a rewatch) concerns Jeffrey, and his general "motivation" (the "detective or pervert" angle)... like, why does he sleep with Dorothy Vallens in the first place, especially given his (apparently genuine) interest in Sandy? I suppose he's supposed to remind of a Fred MacMurray character in a b&w movie – a "normal" guy with a weakness, tempted into a web of darkness – but this angle is not really developed, and he comes off as more just a cad. Then the conflict w/Sandy (after the great/uncomfortable scene in her living room) is resolved so easily, with a single phone call...

Wikipedia sez there's an hour plus worth of deleted scenes from this movie – maybe some of those flesh out Jeffrey's character? – though I feel like the film's "tightness" is one of is virtues, hard to imagine it really benefiting from add'l footage.

Porcine-lina of the Pig Oceans (morrisp), Monday, 29 August 2022 23:43 (one year ago) link

🍆

Vance Vance Devolution (sic), Monday, 29 August 2022 23:49 (one year ago) link

lol

Porcine-lina of the Pig Oceans (morrisp), Monday, 29 August 2022 23:50 (one year ago) link

Jeffrey's a kid, he's not very experienced, and Sandy's even more of a kid. Dorothy is 100 percent grown up, she's alluring for her casual sexuality and also for all of the mysteries and secrets she's tied to. (Plus she's Isabella Rossellini, that doesn't hurt.)

Exactly.

He wants both things. Look at the color of their dresses.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 30 August 2022 01:21 (one year ago) link

I forgot how substantial Laura Dern's role is... she's so good

Porcine-lina of the Pig Oceans (morrisp), Tuesday, 30 August 2022 01:34 (one year ago) link

I think that every time I watch her in anything.

I borrowed a DVD of Wild at Heart from the library. I think I only saw the movie once, when it first came out (I was pretty young), or mayyybe once more on VHS... I remembered very little about it beforehand, but recognized many of the moments as I watched.

In the first scene or two, I thought, "Oh, this is gonna be a disaster"... but as you get into its rhythm, the film sort of draws you in and becomes very watchable. Some of the critiques that came into my head early on – these don't feel like "real characters"; Lynch is going for a sort of campy theatricality but it's not "landing," etc. – ended up falling away / seeming irrelevant. I sort of didn't want to leave the characters behind at the end.

Part of that may come from watching the movie with an "on its own terms" generosity that wasn't easy in 1990. I remember there being such a strong vibe around "Lynch's first film since Blue Velvet," and esp coming on the heels of Twin Peaks S1; the hype level was so high. A lot of stuff in the movie that seemed like "random weirdness" at the time (oh, there's Jack Nance, doing a new variation on his Blue Velvet character... etc.) is easier to digest now (some of the violence/gore maybe still feels like a bit much, but now it just "is what it is").

It helps that the acting is so good... Laura Dern of course, but also Willem Dafoe in particular (whom I can normally take or leave, but man did he nail this role).

Porcine-lina of the Pig Oceans (morrisp), Friday, 2 September 2022 18:01 (one year ago) link

It was never among my top-tier Lynch, but having watched the deleted scenes (which unpack/expand a lot), I realize now how willfully obtuse and inexplicable a lot of the movie is. Which I guess is a valid artistic choice but kinda bugs me. It feels more like a hack trying to make something more Lynchian rather than just Lynch being Lynch.

Beautiful Bean Footage Fetishist (Old Lunch), Friday, 2 September 2022 18:14 (one year ago) link

On the whole, I'm just glad David Lynch made a movie with Nicolas Cage. Keeps all of us from always having to wonder.

pplains, Friday, 2 September 2022 18:34 (one year ago) link

I really should see it again (or maybe not) but my one time watching Wild at Heart I thought it was amazing and maybe his best movie (I saw this sometime in the early 2000s maybe a year or two after having seen Mulholland Drive). The characters are over the top in the best way, so many random weird and amazing scenes (I like this one in particular: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZ8ar_wuHfI).

Was very surprised afterward learning that it was considered to be his worst movie by a lot of people.

silverfish, Friday, 2 September 2022 18:44 (one year ago) link

Wild at Heart is a blast and I think one of his most stylistically thrilling movies. Great editing, sound design, and in general just kinda pops off the screen.

I’ve always maintained it’s unfairly maligned. And tbh, considering what a sacred cow FWWM had become, I think it’s silly to accuse it of being “willfully obtuse” and “Lynch doing Lynch” when that film is frequently way more egregious in those respects.

circa1916, Saturday, 3 September 2022 07:30 (one year ago) link

To clarify, it seems like Lynch often works according to his own narrative logic, which is extremely subjective and might come off as willfully obtuse, but once you see the untrimmed Wild at Heart laid out, it's clear that there was at one point a much more straightforward narrative at play (hell, even the completely bizarre Crispin Glover sequence makes more sense). As such, the edits that were subsequently made seem to be very self-consciously about making things weeeeird rather than this just being a natural outgrowth of Lynch's inherent weirdness.

Also for the sake of clarity, this might be my second or third least favorite Lynch but it's Lynch so it's still way better than a whole lot of other stuff. And there's a lot to love in this movie.

Beautiful Bean Footage Fetishist (Old Lunch), Saturday, 3 September 2022 10:50 (one year ago) link

Is the untrimmed Wild at Heart commercially available?
I don't find it particularly obtuse, by Lynch's standards - not by comparison to e.g. Lost Highway.

Vast Halo, Saturday, 3 September 2022 12:10 (one year ago) link

Also for the sake of clarity, this might be my second or third least favorite Lynch but it's Lynch so it's still way better than a whole lot of other stuff. And there's a lot to love in this movie.

very much the same for me. i will always watch Wild At Heart.

Karl Malone, Saturday, 3 September 2022 14:07 (one year ago) link

There's a Wild at Heart Collector's Edition which has the deleted scenes. They are presented in the same manner as the deleted scenes on Blue Velvet or the Missing Pieces. They are not integrated within the existing movie but presented as a separate work.

Cow_Art, Saturday, 3 September 2022 14:31 (one year ago) link

xp afaik there isn’t an untrimmed version available at all, there was a box set that had all of the deleted scenes (taken from a workprint so not great quality) - it was called “the lime green box” or something like that, should be torrentable still

Watching them did make me like the film better but I agree with vast halo that the film was p straightforward without them? But more HDS is always good

xp my info is outdated I guess!

Wiggum Dorma (wins), Saturday, 3 September 2022 14:34 (one year ago) link

I like Wild at Heart, even though it's not one of my Lynch faves. I've always thought of it as his comedy — almost all of his stuff has humor in it, obviously, but Wild at Heart has a kind of consistent zaniness that's different than any of the other movies. The jokes are steadily punctuated by violence and unsettling events, so in a way I feel like it's an interrogation of comedy — what's actually funny, where's the line, how far can you push it. I don't know, I'm not saying it's a super coherent statement as a film, but that's my sense of it.

(Also obviously it's his Wizard of Oz tribute, in somewhat the same way Inland Empire is a Lewis Carroll homage.)

That’s interesting about the deleted scenes…

I just read a long analysis of Blue Velvet, that ends with this remark:

Having just seen the deleted scenes, I can say that there's not a single thing in them that would do anything other than detract from the film and subvert what became Blue Velvet. Some ruthless, brilliant editing was done that pulled together a tight picture that in significant ways was radically different from what was initially imagined.


(and then goes on to elaborate a little bit)

The only Lynch deleted scenes I’ve seen are FWWM’s Missing Pieces, and I guess I’ve already given my thoughts on those above…

Porcine-lina of the Pig Oceans (morrisp), Saturday, 3 September 2022 17:59 (one year ago) link

there are a bunch of scenes about Jeffrey's college life and girlfriend that are uniformly bad and needed to be cut to make Blue Velvet at all watchable

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Saturday, 3 September 2022 18:09 (one year ago) link

I remember when I saw Pulp Fiction, it felt like a less weird Wild at Heart with all of the sexual undertones - overtones? - with all of the naughty bits either removed or turned into cartoonish naughty bits, as if Quentin Tarantino was uncomfortable with sex. I had a similar feeling with Natural Born Killers. They both felt like less interesting variations of Lynch's film made by overgrown children without any of the underlying weirdness. Or with imitations of the underlying weirdness. I'm reasonably confident that this isn't an original take, but it was my first thought.

When I was young I remember that David Lynch was all over the media. He was hot stuff. But it's surprising how few films he has actually directed. How little he has to show. I assume he must have found it really hard to get funding, which might explain all the media appearances; he was selling himself. His IMDB entry is dominated, totally dominated with shorts. Short films, not shorts. I don't mean that his IMDB entry is dominated with shorts. He wears formal wear. Not shorts.

And yet he was all over the media because he was good in interviews and he looked the part; along with Tim Burton he was the model, the very archetype of the early-1990s arty-but-famous mainstream-underground creative talent. I'm surprised to find out his most recent feature film was Inland Empire back in 2006. His most recent credit is the video for "I Am the Shaman", a song by Donovan(!) released in 2021(!). I remember he did an album. With a woman. Sort of floaty singing noises. With a woman. I imagine him sitting at the mixing desk looking at the faders, thinking about Monica Bellucci.

He's obviously busy, but when I think of him I am filled with a wistful sense of melancholy because he reminds me of glossy magazines.

Ashley Pomeroy, Saturday, 3 September 2022 18:12 (one year ago) link

There was def some stuff toward the beginning of WAH that had me thinking it felt like a possible source for some of Tarantino's schtick (line readings like: "Did I ever tell you this snakeskin jacket represents my individuality and belief in personal freedom?"). Or maybe it was just kind of synchronicity... WAH feels plugged into the era's "indie film scene" in a certain way – Crispin Glover showing up; John Lurie sitting around in one scene – that I don't otherwise associate w/Lynch so much.

It's also true there was a mini-trend of violent, "young lovers on the run" flicks in the early '90s – I know QT wrote True Romance and (sort of wrote) Natural Born Killers – not sure if WAH "inspired" either of those screenplays or if he already had them going.

Porcine-lina of the Pig Oceans (morrisp), Saturday, 3 September 2022 18:24 (one year ago) link

His cameo in Spielberg’s autobiographical The Fablemans has gone down well. Apparently it’s a spoiler to say who he plays so I won’t dig.

"The audience broke into cheers and claps three times during david lynch’s cameo... and it was well deserved." "Judd Hirsch & David Lynch should go for Best Supporting Oscar as a team."https://t.co/NSzBZE2UuO pic.twitter.com/xV8HLvTIei

— --------- (@fatecolossal) September 11, 2022

Alba, Sunday, 11 September 2022 06:49 (one year ago) link

Fabelmans, sorry.

Alba, Sunday, 11 September 2022 06:51 (one year ago) link

four months pass...

No weather report for weeks now. I hope he's OK.

Alba, Thursday, 12 January 2023 11:15 (one year ago) link

I finally revisited Lost Highway… this is the one that put me off Lynch for decades, when I saw it in the theater. I was surprised by how little of it I remembered; basically just the beginning section and a little at the end. I had no memory of the entire Balthazar Getty story in the middle, which is the most entertaining/engaging part!

It’s wild how much that section has the “look & feel” of Mulholland Drive… not just the way it’s filmed (although very much that), but also the unhurried but deliberate pacing, and the (genuinely funny) offbeat humor involving bizarre violence. The “road rage” scene is great.

The movie is different from most Lynch films in a few ways; his main characters are usually extremely vivid, which is not the case here… they’re quite “blank,” I guess on purpose. Also, the soundtrack has not much Badalamenti, and instead these songs with vocals that sort of pop in and distract from the action rather than complementing it (…Lou Reed doing “This Magic Moment”?!).

The brief appearance of Marilyn Manson is (obviously) unfortunate, in retrospect; and along with some of the music, grounds the film a little too strongly in that specific mid-‘90s L.A., Ray Gun magazine milieu.

I enjoyed watching it, and thought a lot of it was pretty compelling (not sure why I had such a negative reaction in college!)… but it’s hard to avoid feeling like it didn’t quite “work” the way it should. Or maybe seeing it as a rough draft of the (far superior) Mulholland Drive

Vexatious litigant (morrisp), Saturday, 21 January 2023 18:04 (one year ago) link

how oj simpson-y was it, iyo? i just recently heard that the case inspired the story.

Cat? Cat??! CAT!! (cat), Saturday, 21 January 2023 18:15 (one year ago) link

It doesn't quite work except as a draft. The actors are unpleasant and not well cast (Getty? Loggia? Pryor?). The opening credit sequence is tops, though.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 21 January 2023 18:22 (one year ago) link

I thought Loggia was great!

Vexatious litigant (morrisp), Saturday, 21 January 2023 18:23 (one year ago) link

He wanders in from a funnier film.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 21 January 2023 18:30 (one year ago) link

great capsule review morrisp (and good calls Alfred)

assert (matttkkkk), Saturday, 21 January 2023 19:39 (one year ago) link

Thx! I’m actually glad I ended up seeing his later movies this way – getting newly interested with Twin Peaks: The Return; then watching Mulholland Drive; and then the others – as I doubt I would’ve appreciated them as much otherwise.

Vexatious litigant (morrisp), Sunday, 22 January 2023 02:57 (one year ago) link

one month passes...

I keep getting ads for a David Lynch MFA program and it seems like it’s just… transcendental meditation classes?

papal hotwife (milo z), Wednesday, 8 March 2023 20:01 (one year ago) link

I’d rather have a John Carpenter MFA, he’ll get high and challenge you to some NBA 2K.

papal hotwife (milo z), Wednesday, 8 March 2023 20:02 (one year ago) link

it seems like it’s just… transcendental meditation classes?

Adds up. Should have some meteorology as well though.

change display name (Jordan), Wednesday, 8 March 2023 20:05 (one year ago) link

we should have a thread like 'what's on your favorite artist's mfa curriculum'

ꙮ (map), Wednesday, 8 March 2023 20:12 (one year ago) link

i want to attend whoever's is like, we walk along a highway and look at leaves

ꙮ (map), Wednesday, 8 March 2023 20:13 (one year ago) link

Feel like that could be Kelly Reichardt

papal hotwife (milo z), Wednesday, 8 March 2023 20:16 (one year ago) link

Very funny that the Eraserhead baby has an entry on the "Villains" wiki

— machine gun kelly reichardt (@LingoUnbound) March 8, 2023

two weeks pass...

I just got the ad for that “screenwriting” MFA program where it seems you actually learn TM… pretty funny.

chemtrails over the turkey club (morrisp), Wednesday, 22 March 2023 23:55 (one year ago) link

one month passes...

David Lynch SCOOP! He says "bloody" in the British sense:

Now that's all in the bloody history books!

Also he has possibly been brainwashed by his TM gurus, going by the final lines in the interview.

https://www.reddit.com/r/FindLaura/comments/12unmgu/april_2023_cahiers_du_cinema_interview_with_david/

glumdalclitch, Monday, 24 April 2023 14:47 (one year ago) link

Interesting interview, thx

Wonder why he doesn’t want to hear about the new Dune movie(?)

morrisp.fandom.com (morrisp), Monday, 24 April 2023 14:52 (one year ago) link

The bloody is prob just an artefact of his answers being translated into French & then back again

michel goindry (wins), Monday, 24 April 2023 14:58 (one year ago) link

Wonder why he doesn’t want to hear about the new Dune movie(?)

why would he?

least said, sergio mendes (sic), Monday, 24 April 2023 15:00 (one year ago) link

None of that is new info. This paragraph hints more about what wont' be happening in the future.

"If I had the strength, I would prefer to embark on a series. If I had the strength..."

Chris L, Monday, 24 April 2023 15:03 (one year ago) link

xp you tell me… I don’t know a lot about Dune, but I thought he was really displeased with what the studio did to his version etc. So it’s not immediately obvious to me why he would have bitter or complicated feelings about a new version

morrisp.fandom.com (morrisp), Monday, 24 April 2023 15:24 (one year ago) link

Everything direct interview I've ever read about him regarding his Dune is that it was an incredibly painful experience and I doubt he likes thinking about it, much less talking about it or seeing how someone else would approach the problem of Dune. David Lynch is very much about the WORK, and taking it seriously and making something that feels RIGHT. Dune was his movie that took the most amount of work in terms of dollars and sets and the sheer magnitude of it all was overwhelming and it turned out the most wrong. I've been wondering lately if the Criterion Collection will do Dune since they've done his other works, but if he has anything to do with it they won't. Not that he has any control over it, but he would not participate in it and it might would even damage their relationship. I think he appreciates that Dune had to happen for him to get where he is today, but it was a colossal public humiliation in his eyes.

What does he mean he didn't go to film school? He studied film at the American Film Institute, right? I gather that experience was very different than what we think of now as a film school; I think Eraserhead was more or less his film school. I don't know that he took a Fundamentals of How To Work A Camera class?

He goes on about fish so much, I have to wonder if he eats seafood.

None of the TM stuff is alarming, he's been going on about that stuff forever. It did him a lot of good, apparently, and so he thinks it would help everybody else.

Cow_Art, Monday, 24 April 2023 15:28 (one year ago) link

Thx, Cow Art. It’s interesting that he still has such negative/complicated feelings about that movie, after 40 years of success (to put it mildly)

morrisp.fandom.com (morrisp), Monday, 24 April 2023 15:34 (one year ago) link

According to Edelstein, we couldn't do A Straight Story today because it's just a simple story, without a concept.

Oh, we can do whatever we want.

<3

difficult listening hour, Monday, 24 April 2023 17:14 (one year ago) link

It's an odd comment anyway, that movie totally has a "concept"... I suppose he meant a studio wouldn't know how to market it today, but I'm not sure why

morrisp.fandom.com (morrisp), Monday, 24 April 2023 17:20 (one year ago) link

That's also probably a translation issue.

Chris L, Monday, 24 April 2023 19:06 (one year ago) link

Not that he has any control over it, but he would not participate in it and it might would even damage their relationship. I think he appreciates that Dune had to happen for him to get where he is today, but it was a colossal public humiliation in his eyes.

He actually showed some surprising interest in it in an interview last year:

AVC: Some notable filmmakers have returned to their works years later with re-edits, because just as a viewer’s relationship to a piece of art can change over time, so too can a creator’s. Was a new narrative cut something you ever considered with Inland Empire?

DL: No. But Dune—people have said, “Don’t you want to go back and fiddle with Dune?” And I was so depressed and sickened by it, you know? I want to say, I loved everybody that I worked with; they were so fantastic. I loved all the actors; I loved the crew; I loved working in Mexico; I loved everything except that I didn’t have final cut. And I even loved Dino [De Laurentiis], who wouldn’t give me what I wanted [laughs]. And Raffaella, the producer, who was his daughter—I loved her. But the thing was a horrible sadness and failure to me, and if I could go back in I’ve thought, well, maybe I would on that one go back in.

AVC: Really?

DL: Yeah, but I mean, nobody’s…it’s not going to happen.

AVC: Well that’s interesting, because in the past you were always much less open to it.

David Lynch: Yeah, I wanted to walk away. I always say, and it’s true, that with Dune, I sold out before I finished. It’s not like there’s a bunch of gold in the vaults waiting to be cut and put back together. It’s like, early on I knew what Dino wanted and what I could get away with and what I couldn’t. And so I started selling out, and it’s a sad, sad, pathetic, ridiculous story. But I would like to see what is there. I can’t remember, that’s the weird thing [laughs]. I can’t remember. And so it might be interesting—there could be something there. But I don’t think it’s a silk purse. I know it’s a sow’s ear.

Piven After Midnight (The Yellow Kid), Monday, 24 April 2023 20:08 (one year ago) link

That would be interesting. Turn Lynch loose in the Dune vaults and have him recut everything however he wants. Three hours of sandworms and static with a Harry Dean Stanton voiceover.

Cow_Art, Monday, 24 April 2023 22:03 (one year ago) link

That thing about "selling out" as he made the film is painful, I get why it must still burn in his stomach.

morrisp.fandom.com (morrisp), Monday, 24 April 2023 22:12 (one year ago) link

I'm sure it was painful, but also Dune (and Dino) let him make Blue Velvet, which is what let him make Twin Peaks and pretty much everything he's done since. Fair trade.

thru the alley, behind the marketplace

difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 25 April 2023 01:50 (one year ago) link

I was watching Elephant Man again today, and thinking about his career. It's really pretty nuts.

1. He's in art school and makes a sculpture that incorporates film (Six Men Getting Sick)because he wants a painting that moves.

2. Somebody sees it and likes it and commissions him to make another similar piece, or an installation in their house or something. With the downpayment he buys a decent camera but he doesn't know how to work it and the commissioned film is all overexposed and messed up. *FAILURE* The buyer is cool and says hey, whatever, just make something and give me a print. So he makes The Alphabet.

3. The Alphabet gets him a grant from the AFI to make The Grandmother.

4. Based on the strength of the Grandmother, the AFI lets him in to their new program and he packs up the family and moves to California. He's frustrated because he can't get his Gardenback project off the ground, and he's going to quit and they say "hey, don't leave, what do you want to do." "Eraserhead."

5. Him and his buddies work on Eraserhead for five years. I think he gets divorced while this is going on, he's living in the Eraserhead set and delivering newspapers for money. But it gets made! It gets some sort of distribution and becomes a midnight movie hit!

6. Lynch is working with a producer who is buddies with Mel Brooks. He randomly decides he wants to make The Elephant Man, but Mel Brooks controls the rights. Mel loves Eraserhead, so it's in the bag. Lynch is going to make a real studio film.

7. This is where it gets really interesting to me. Lynch has no idea what he's doing. With Eraserhead he had no money but a whole lot of time. Him and his friends figured things out as they went along and rehearsed things meticulously down to how particular syllables are said. With Elephant Man, there's lots of money but a strict schedule. Lynch blows weeks of time because he thinks he is responsible for the special effects. He's dicking around with plaster and trying to make the Elephant Man prosthetics and it's all fucking up and he's not prepared to go to England and work with Real Actors. The real actors don't know what to make of him and he can tell. Some of them are extremely skeptical. It must feel awful, like being a substitute teacher for the first time and the kids all know that you have no clue what is going on. And yet, it works! It's nominated for an a bunch of Oscars!

8. And still things ramp up. At this point he can do whatever he wants. He's offered Return of the Jedi but turns it down and winds up making a pseudo Star Wars movie, Dune. The scale is immense. He's farther away from things, there are multiple crews so he's not always supervising all of the shots. A lot of those amazing sets were actually finely crafted out of wood, the amount of labor involved was bonkers. And I don't think it was ever going to work. If he had total creative control, final cut and everything, I don't think his Dune was going to be a great movie. Elephant Man worked because it was small; there's not really a lot of plot. Plot isn't really what Lynch is about at all and Dune (the book) is all plot. And I doubt he was ever that interested in making a proper Dune. Either he was using it as a vehicle to get his own wack ideas onto the screen (a la Jodorowsky) or he was swept up in his accidental film career and lost sight of his strengths. But it was a shit show. The studio made Dune coloring books for kids, action figures, this was going to be the next big thing except it definitely was not. A lot of people bet a lot of money on Lynch and lost. He must have felt that the industry finally figured out that he did not know what he was doing.

But then he makes Blue Velvet and everything is cool. I can't imagine what all of the above must have felt like.

Cow_Art, Tuesday, 25 April 2023 02:32 (one year ago) link

But imagine if Dune had been a success and he went on to create many bizarre big budget sci-fi films. That would have been cool too!

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 02:36 (one year ago) link

I have about a week to watch his version of Dune before it leaves Criterion. I remember liking it when I finally saw it years ago despite its rep as a failure. Who knows what I will think now.

The Lubitsch Touchscreen (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 02:42 (one year ago) link

I saw ‘Dune’ when I was 11 or 12 and thought it was perfect. I hadn’t read the book beforehand and it made sense to me. Even watching it today, I don’t really agree with much of the criticism back then or Lynch’s attitude towards it. I appreciate it even more now thinking about how unique a production it was. I really like the new version, but I love Lynch’s.

Spencer Chow, Tuesday, 25 April 2023 02:42 (one year ago) link

I like it for what it is. It’s like a dream and I’m happy it’s out there. But it feels like a very compromised movie. It’s not Lynchy enough because it’s tied to Herbert and Lynch can’t make the Herbert stuff work. But there are so many amazing visuals that i’m happy to watch it anytime.

Cow_Art, Tuesday, 25 April 2023 02:48 (one year ago) link

Cow_Art, thanks for the rundown; I had no idea Eraserhead took five years!
Also, didn't know about the Mel Brooks connection... I like him even more now...

m0stly clean (Slowsquatch), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 02:55 (one year ago) link

It’s really something to contemplate if he had directed Return of the Jedi.

morrisp.fandom.com (morrisp), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 03:32 (one year ago) link

Michael J. Anderson as The Yoda from Another Place

Hideous Lump, Tuesday, 25 April 2023 06:08 (one year ago) link

Yeah, Jack Nance kept that haircut for five years! Although I doubt he kept it that vertical all the time. There’s one shot where it shows Henry opening a door, there’s a cut and then he’s coming out the door on the other side, or something like that. Over a year passed between the two shots.

Towards the end they ran out of money and Lynch was very dispirited, he was thinking about finishing it with stop motion animation.

There are a couple of deleted scenes that have never shown up. I can’t remember if they are lost or if Lynch doesn’t want to share.

Jedi certainly would have been interesting. On one hand, it would have been even more pressure than Dune. But Lucas would have been there to hold his hand. It may have turned out like Spielberg/Hooper on Poltergeist. I think they also offered it to Cronenberg who was not interested.

Cow_Art, Tuesday, 25 April 2023 11:35 (one year ago) link

When I finally watched Dune in two sittings, after the first hour I thought it was actually pretty entertaining and didn't see why it was so hated. Then I watched the second hour and thought, "ah."

Chris L, Tuesday, 25 April 2023 12:07 (one year ago) link

So

many

voice-overs

Lynch has a funny thing with dialog. His people often do not talk like real people and this normally works. I don't think it works as well when they're talking about space gobbledygook. Lynchisms work best when they are grounded in the real world in some way. Which is one reason why I have little patience for his later, experimental short films, like Ant Head. I do like Rabbits though.

I've fallen down a Dune Ebay rabbit hole. I kinda want a Sandworm but that is some expensive plastic.

Cow_Art, Tuesday, 25 April 2023 13:29 (one year ago) link

It's fine. Hitchcock's characters don't talk like real people, much less other movie characters.

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 13:34 (one year ago) link

Last night, after the above discussion, I signed up for a Criterion Channel trial and watched the first 20-25 minutes or so of Dune… don’t think I can do anymore, y’all, but a scene with Kyle M., Sir Patrick Stewart, and Dean Stockwell was something I did not expect!

morrisp.fandom.com (morrisp), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 14:14 (one year ago) link

Watched Dune for the first time last year. Best part of it for me was watching Kyle McLachlan and Everett McGill together in a completely different universe years before Twin Peaks.

peace, man, Tuesday, 25 April 2023 14:33 (one year ago) link

Yeah, I watched it a couple of weeks ago, first time in 39+ years, and was like "Big Ed is Stilgar?!"

The Terroir of Tiny Town (WmC), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 15:07 (one year ago) link

Is Jack Nance in there somewhere? I think he's one of the spice miners or something.

For further watching, there's a good documentary about Nance called You Don't Know Jack.

Cow_Art, Tuesday, 25 April 2023 18:10 (one year ago) link

he's the Baron's assistant

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 19:23 (one year ago) link

iakin nefud call him by his name

mark s, Tuesday, 25 April 2023 19:35 (one year ago) link

I thought he was Paul

michel goindry (wins), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 19:38 (one year ago) link

plus Jürgen Prochnow is in Fire Walk With Me (admittedly for like 30 seconds and with no dialogue...)

Piven After Midnight (The Yellow Kid), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 20:47 (one year ago) link

5. Him and his buddies work on Eraserhead for five years. I think he gets divorced while this is going on, he's living in the Eraserhead set and delivering newspapers for money. But it gets made! It gets some sort of distribution and becomes a midnight movie hit!

Another point of serendipity left out of Cow_Art's (awesome!) narrative is that that Lynch had somehow hooked up with this producer Jack Fisk, whose wife is Sissy Spacek (I'm sure someone here knows more of the story), and their money helped keep the project afloat. Spacek is thanked in the end credits; I remember that from all the times I watched it in high school.

Anyway, I just made the connection that Spacek ended up delivering a (remarkable) performance in The Straight Story, decades later...

morrisp.fandom.com (morrisp), Tuesday, 25 April 2023 20:52 (one year ago) link

My question that i’m never going to research and answer is if altman and lynch ever crossed paths while lynch was either making eraserhead or at AFI. The timeline of eraserhead and 3 women intersect and 3 women is just so, so lynchian ime, - kind of unlike anything else altman did. The sissy spacek connection makes it even more curious to me

Its big ball chunky time (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Wednesday, 26 April 2023 00:48 (one year ago) link

I think he's one of the spice miners or something.

ha i think you're thinking of... lynch

difficult listening hour, Wednesday, 26 April 2023 01:07 (one year ago) link

xps also Alicia Witt is a TP/Dune crossover (Gersten Hayward / Alia)

assert (matttkkkk), Wednesday, 26 April 2023 01:15 (one year ago) link

Lynch was in the first classes of their kind at the AFI, and I think it was more like a residency program than formal classes. There were some abandoned stables that they allowed him to take over and the majority of his time at AFI was spent there. They had to shoot late at night so outside sounds wouldn’t interrupt; when birds started making noise in the morning it was quitting time and he would go to sleep in Henry’s bed and padlock the door so nobody would wander in and find him living there. I can’t remember an Altman/Lynch connection

Jack Fisk and Lynch were high school friends, Jack probably knows Lynch better than anybody. They went to art school together and after graduating they planned a long European trip. They got there, hated it, and immediately returned. Lynch married Jack’s sister. Jack was the man in the planet in Eraserhead and I think after that their careers separated until the Straight Story. Fisk started in set design and then moved onto directing and producing.

The making of Eraserhead is fascinating. They lived in that world for a long time. Catherine Coulson, the Log Lady, was there constantly, feeding them and being a den mother. Lynch insisted on paying them regularly, although it wasn’t much and they would have done it for free because it was the center of their lives at a certain point. When the money ran out he wrote out a contract and gave them a percentage of the profits. Nobody thought there would be profits.

Cow_Art, Wednesday, 26 April 2023 01:33 (one year ago) link

...I would love to hear david lynch and mel brooks talking movies...

m0stly clean (Slowsquatch), Wednesday, 26 April 2023 01:36 (one year ago) link

The origin of 3 Women is also Lynchian. Altman says he dreamed the title, choice of lead actresses, and opening image exactly as they appear and wrote the movie around them.

Chris L, Wednesday, 26 April 2023 01:37 (one year ago) link

brooks really threw his weight around for lynch back when lynch had none of his own:

When Paramount Pictures studio executives were shown a cut of this movie, they wanted the opening and closing surrealist sequences to be cut. Executive producer Mel Brooks, according to producer Stuart Cornfeld, said to them: "We are involved in a business venture. We screened the film for you, to bring you up to date as to the status of that venture. Do not misconstrue this as our soliciting the input of raging primitives."

difficult listening hour, Wednesday, 26 April 2023 01:39 (one year ago) link

Brooks was really as saintly a producer as you could have; he even kept his name off the credits and publicity so no one would get the wrong idea about the tone of the movie.

Chris L, Wednesday, 26 April 2023 01:44 (one year ago) link

I just found a sweet video of Lynch talking about Altman. They got to know each other after they were both nominated for Best Director in 2002 (Straight Story/Gosford Park). It doesn't seem like there was any direct connection early in on in their careers.

Cow_Art, Wednesday, 26 April 2023 01:53 (one year ago) link

Post it!

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 April 2023 01:57 (one year ago) link

I found this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjqEKfJvaJo

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 April 2023 01:58 (one year ago) link

That's it! I don't know how to post pictures or video.

It took me a couple of years to figure out there was something beyond I Love Music.

Cow_Art, Wednesday, 26 April 2023 02:17 (one year ago) link

I’ll have to revisit 3 Women… I saw it a long time ago, I remember being fairly ambivalent about it (despite the esteem in which I hold both actresses). The movie comes up a lot.

morrisp.fandom.com (morrisp), Wednesday, 26 April 2023 02:21 (one year ago) link

Trying to make good use of my Criterion trial, I watched a little of this movie today... it was so bad: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dream_Lover_(1993_film)

(This is very tangentially Lynch-related – as it starred Mädchen Amick, and the casting director was Johanna Ray. Also, it was sort of like a Lynch movie as made by someone who has heard Lynch movies described once or twice, but had never actually seen one, or any movie at all.)

morrisp.fandom.com (morrisp), Wednesday, 26 April 2023 02:35 (one year ago) link

That Coulson was AC on eraserhead AND killing of a chinese bookie is one of my favorite bits of film trivia

Its big ball chunky time (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Wednesday, 26 April 2023 02:53 (one year ago) link

"it's better that way, david" - what a sweet story

z_tbd, Wednesday, 26 April 2023 14:25 (one year ago) link

pic.twitter.com/MIajUppbpA

— [ominous whoosh] (@ominouswhoosh) April 26, 2023

z_tbd, Wednesday, 26 April 2023 15:53 (one year ago) link

one month passes...

David Lynch is filming something in West Hollywood

Alba, Tuesday, 20 June 2023 21:17 (ten months ago) link

Seems based on a random tweet by someone having lunch – pretty thin stuff – but I guess these are the scraps we have to grasp onto...

Bittern Storm Over My Hammy (morrisp), Tuesday, 20 June 2023 21:22 (ten months ago) link

yeah i'll take this right now, just pop it on the 'reasons to live' pile.

Ste, Wednesday, 21 June 2023 09:11 (ten months ago) link

two months pass...

I watched Lost Highway again, and kind of loved it this time. There’s something about it that’s just highly… enjoyable to watch. Maybe especially if you’ve seen it once or twice already, and aren’t hung up on trying to “figure it out.”

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 05:41 (seven months ago) link

My local Landmark theater is doing a David Lynch month. I missed Blue Velvet, but caught Mulholland Drive last night. Next week is Wild At Heart, which I've never seen, then Lost Highway the following week. I've never seen Wild At Heart before, so looking forward to that.

peace, man, Wednesday, 13 September 2023 11:51 (seven months ago) link

Wild at Heart has a middling rep but it’s pretty good. The tangents and side stories are what really make it work for me.

Cow_Art, Wednesday, 13 September 2023 12:18 (seven months ago) link

Lynch has this stylistic shift in the late '90s that almost makes him seem like a different artist... Lost Highway and Mulholland Dr just have this "look & feel" that's so distinctive (and of course there's The Straight Story in between those, which is remarkable in its own way). It feels weird to say that this is where he really "takes off," obv the earlier stuff is great too, but there's something about his new sensibility that's even better (IMO), and the re-watchability is particularly high on the films in that period.

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 14:28 (seven months ago) link

i rewatched Lost Highway again recently too after not seeing it for a good 20 years and quite liked it still. I don't try to 'solve' lynch movies. The only one I haven't had the urge to revisit is Inland Empire, which I didn't watch in one sitting the first time and have never seen in a theater. Probably would if someone would show it around here.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 14:45 (seven months ago) link

Inland Empire is the one that benefits the most from seeing in a theater

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:03 (seven months ago) link

I still stop the film when Balthazar Getty appears.

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:14 (seven months ago) link

lost highway and mulholland drive both give the general impression of coming full circle and tying up loose ends at the end via the timely repetition of certain images and lines, even if there's no traditional narrative logic to it. i never really felt like there was anything to 'solve' because of that, they solve themselves for you.

ciderpress, Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:18 (seven months ago) link

Crossposting but having put this in the Dune specific thread, new oral history of the film (with new interviews with him) now out:

https://www.1984publishing.com/bookstore/a-masterpiece-in-disarray-david-lynchs-dune-an-oral-history

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:22 (seven months ago) link

xp I dunno, I feel like Mulholland Dr is pretty straightforward & comprehensible (although I recall some disagreement on this thread about what seemed to me like basic aspects of the "reveal"). By contrast, I have no "explanation" for the final act of Lost Highway, or how it all fits together.

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:29 (seven months ago) link

So much of it plays like a boring reprise of Blue Velvet, with Robert Loggia playing Frank and Robert Blake playing Ben.

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:34 (seven months ago) link

...I'm reading thru the booklet now, and here's Gifford quoted as saying:

I think it's a very realistic, very straightforward case study of one person who is at a loss to deal with the way things have turned out.

OK man! (Ha ha)

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:35 (seven months ago) link

i think the tape of the murder is one of the most disturbing things that Lynch ever shot.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:39 (seven months ago) link

So much of it plays like a boring reprise of Blue Velvet, with Robert Loggia playing Frank and Robert Blake playing Ben.

― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, September 13, 2023 1:34 PM (five minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

i do not agree with this at all!!!

ivy., Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:40 (seven months ago) link

Yeah I don't either (sorry Alfred!)

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:43 (seven months ago) link

xp

Yes, seeing Mulholland Drive on release, the final act* was immediately "oh, this is what he was going for in Lost Highway, but it works properly this time."

*(not knowing that it was a kludge to salvage a TV pilot)


Never rewatched LH until a local theatre did an all-his-features-and-some-of-the-shorts series recently, and the climax's vibes are great, but the biggest difference between how the two play is that it's impossible to give a fuck about the Pullman/Getty characters, whereas both halves of Watts are sympathetic, and clearly lock together as a whole person.

vashti funyuns (sic), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:44 (seven months ago) link

Here's Lynch in the booklet (quoted from that Lynch on Lynch book, which must be quite a tome, as so many quotes you see are drawn from it):

Mystery is good, confusion is bad, and there's a big difference between the two. I don't like talking about this too much because, unless you're a poet, when you talk about it, a big thing becomes smaller. But the clues are all there for a correct interpretation, and I keep saying that, in a lot of ways, it's a straight-ahead story. There are only a few things that are a hair off.

So I guess they both really think that! I think it's more "off" than they may realize, but I'll try to follow the "clues" more closely next time (again, the "mystery" no longer detracts from my enjoyment).

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:48 (seven months ago) link

that's sorta how i've always felt, though there's something about how highway is so freewheeling and less composed than mulholland... it was the lynch film i most imagined in my head before i finally saw it, it retains a dark pull, and even though i do not give a fuck about this obtuse saxophone guy being in extreme psyche-splitting denial about killing his wife, i sure love the journey

xp to sic

ivy., Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:49 (seven months ago) link

It struck me that (I think?) you never see The Mystery Man and Alice together in the same frame; and after Alice walks naked into the cabin and Fred follows her, she's gone and MM is there instead... and then MM somehow shifts alliances and becomes Fred's ally against Dick Laurent (after Alice has turned on him). I feel like Alice and MM may be two sides of a coin somehow, but can't articulate how or why.

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:52 (seven months ago) link

The first half of LH is as compelling as any Lynch, especially whenever Bill Pullman's playing free jazz in that club (the editing, the lighting!).

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:53 (seven months ago) link

I've still only seen Lost Highway once, when it came out, and need to rewatch it. I didn't like it at the time, and in the years since it has remained in the least-favorite-Lynch slot for me (I don't really count Dune, I guess). My reaction at the time was more or less as Alfred says, it felt sort of forced and sour, in a self-conscious Lynch-being-Lynchy way. I do remember a few particular scenes and shots, it has its moments, but overall I found it off-putting.

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:54 (seven months ago) link

LH is a lot better than I initially thought, but still probably my least favorite proper Lynch movie (not counting Dune). It is SO 1990's, mainly because of the soundtrack I guess, but it seems of its time in a way that his other movies aren't. It seems like he's putting in more effort but getting less out of it. I agree that the biggest problem is Pullman/Getty, especially Getty. There is zero charisma there, nobody that I am inclined to follow through their troubles. I keep watching because I want to see what happens, but I could give two shits if something bad happens to Getty's character. Patricia Arquette is so much more interesting but she's not in it enough, or not given enough to do.

Cow_Art, Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:57 (seven months ago) link

I had the same reaction when watching in the theatre in 1997 and again in 2010-11 when I got the DVD. Our local repertory theater's playing it in early October, though, so I'm giving it another shot.

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:57 (seven months ago) link

It seems like he's putting in more effort but getting less out of it. I agree that the biggest problem is Pullman/Getty, especially Getty. There is zero charisma there, nobody that I am inclined to follow through their troubles.

Reading the Premiere story by David Foster Wallace and about what a shit Getty was didn't help lol.

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:58 (seven months ago) link

it's also a film that for a long time looked like crap on DVD; super dark, not a great transfer. I think it's been redone (I have an, ahem, 'digital file' of the film that appears to look better, don't know the source).

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 17:59 (seven months ago) link

The Criterion Blu-ray looks pretty great to me.

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 18:05 (seven months ago) link

yeah that's the upgrade that came later. that may be the source of what I have.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 18:17 (seven months ago) link

My favorite aspect about the Getty scenes are all the languorous images of back yards and sunsets fading in and out to bossa nova and trip hop cues. Getty isn't particularly sympathetic, but I like him as this dumb, hapless fuck up who never quite grasps what's going on around him. Kind of like how Pullman is perfect as this angry, snide jazz guy who never quite trusts his wife. These aren't relatable characters, but I'm not sure they're supposed to be. The tedium sets in when Pullman returns and a bunch of scenes and music cues get replayed.

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 18:30 (seven months ago) link

Yeah I like how Getty's character (Pete) is dumb and easily manipulated; it's a nice treatment of the film noir / femme fatale trope.

If the film is really meant to be "a psychogenic fugue" (as it was encapsulated in the publicity materials) – a guy on death row imagines a whole other persona and set of events, as he dissociates from reality – there's so much "excess" in the film that it's hard to see how it reduces to that. And the details provided of Fred & Renee's life (and their "characters") are so sparse, and seemingly infected by these strange events from the beginning, that reducing the movie to "Fred murdered Renee and now he's hallucinating" feels like trying to stuff a huge inflatable bounce-house into a little box or something.

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 18:31 (seven months ago) link

(Compare this to Mulholland Dr, where the final act is long, richly detailed, and carefully connects all, or most, of the dots an ingenious way.)

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 18:33 (seven months ago) link

another thing I always notice about this film is how the composition of the Fred scenes tends to be extremely geometric in lots of interesting ways, but that goes away as it shifts over to Pete where things appear more naturalistic and less boxed in.

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 18:54 (seven months ago) link

Robert Loggia is SO f'n good in this movie... just an absolute pleasure to watch.

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 19:00 (seven months ago) link

One of my favorite Lynch sequences, and one that embodies the "feel" that I love in his work, is when Pullman describes his murder dream, with the ominous smoke drifting into the hallway. Some might accuse Lynch of recycling the same images over and over, but I'll never tire of how he shoots curtains, smoke, hallways and highways in headlights.

blatherskite, Wednesday, 13 September 2023 19:02 (seven months ago) link

I like how confusing the geography of the house is, simultaneously small yet labyrinthine

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 19:05 (seven months ago) link

Reading the Premiere story by David Foster Wallace and about what a shit Getty was didn't help lol.

Roffle. I remember reading that at the time and thinking "Well this guy's a tool."

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 13 September 2023 19:47 (seven months ago) link

I've always found following the clues in a Lynch film as missing-the-pointish as it would be in Antonioni or other pure vibes types. Guess according to the man himself I'm the one missing the point, lol.

Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 13 September 2023 20:38 (seven months ago) link

Like let's say that Fred did kill Renee, and dissociates/imagines the rest in prison. Who was leaving the videotapes at their house (assuming that "really happened")? Was Fred doing that himself, even though there's no indication of such a thing? Did he really meet the Mystery Man at the party (whose face he had previously seen in a dream), or was that a hallucination? The host, Andy, also sees him, and says he's a friend of Dick Laurent's. Who said "Dick Laurent is dead" into the intercom?

If all of that is also somehow part of a retroactive "dream," you're left with the absolute barest-bones sketch of a marriage to hang the rest on. And if those things are real (as I think they're meant to be), what clues are we supposed to follow to understand it all?

Taylor Swift Reporter (morrisp), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 20:49 (seven months ago) link

I am almost sure I’ve bought more copies of LH than times I have watched it

Oh I guess I saw it at the cinema too

assert (matttkkkk), Wednesday, 13 September 2023 21:47 (seven months ago) link

Watching a making-of doc… Pullman actually learned to play saxophone for his role, and memorized his two “pieces.” (I assumed it was dubbed!)

my brain goes aahhhh (morrisp), Saturday, 16 September 2023 05:06 (seven months ago) link

The Mystery Man is Fred's conscience. "Call me," I'm in your head right now.

He's the one making the tapes, leading Fred a few steps at a time back into the bedroom to face the truth.

Hideous Lump, Sunday, 17 September 2023 05:56 (seven months ago) link

Huh, thx, I’ll think that through…

Interestingly (to me), I recall having a similar reading of the role of the elderly couple in Mulholland Dr. (one of those few “extra pieces of the puzzle” in that film).

my brain goes aahhhh (morrisp), Sunday, 17 September 2023 06:23 (seven months ago) link

I did end up seeing Wild At Heart earlier this week. I thought it was a very enjoyable comedy. I've seen over-the-top Nic Cage a million times, but Laura Dern was absolutely boiling over as well and they clicked so well together. The rest of the cast were amazing too - Grace Zabriskie, Willem Dafoe. Jesus, what a memorable film!

One thing that I noticed throughout the movie that brought me down though, was I really feel like it used black actors as props. Of course, you have the absolutely ultra-brutal scene in the beginning where Sailor bashes his assailant's brain in. Later, in New Orleans, there is a scene where the camera just trucks across the face of an unusual-looking, older black woman who you don't see before or after. The feeling I got was "here's this weird-looking black woman - see how strange New Orleans is?" There's also a scene where they're getting gas and Lula is preening for this old black man sitting in a chair outside of the service station, and he's kinda just there to smile and show increasing excitement about how hot Lula is.

It's not the only time I've felt this about a quirky indie comedy (thinking about a lot of Coen Brothers films here), so I'm kinda halfheartedly writing it off as "those were the times..." But overall, the works of David Lynch that I'm familiar with are very white and don't engage much with race. The one exception off the top of my head is in Twin Peaks, in which you have Josie and a few other Chinese characters in her storyline, as well as Catherine Martell's undercover guise of Mr. Tojamura, both of which are pretty cringey.

Not trying to cancel Lynch here or anything. Just a few hang-ups that stood out to me in an otherwise compelling and entertaining movie. Interested to see if anybody has more charitable readings than I have.

peace, man, Friday, 22 September 2023 14:14 (seven months ago) link

Of course, you have the absolutely ultra-brutal scene in the beginning where Sailor bashes his assailant's brain in

I’m admittedly squeamish, but when I first watched the film (VHS rental from Hollywood Video!) I turned it off at this scene because I found it too gratuitous, in an "edgy ’90s" sort of way. Didn’t end up finishing it until I did a Lynch retrospective a few years ago in the lead up to the new Twin Peaks season.

blatherskite, Friday, 22 September 2023 14:33 (seven months ago) link

in which you have Josie and a few other Chinese characters in her storyline, as well as Catherine Martell's undercover guise of Mr. Tojamura, both of which are pretty cringey.

Fortunately, the character of “Naido” in S3 solved this problem… NOT!!

stylized in all lowercase (morrisp), Friday, 22 September 2023 14:54 (seven months ago) link

One thing that I noticed throughout the movie that brought me down though, was I really feel like it used black actors as props.

What say you about Richard Pryor's casting in Lost Highway?

hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 22 September 2023 15:04 (seven months ago) link

I've only seen Lost Highway once and had completely forgotten about Pryor. Can't remember what his role was. There's a good chance I'll go out to see it this Tuesday. Will keep that in mind.

peace, man, Friday, 22 September 2023 15:16 (seven months ago) link

can't say i've read much good writing on lynch in regard to race but i enjoyed this:

https://www.vulture.com/2017/09/david-lynch-racial-politics.html

karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Friday, 22 September 2023 15:20 (seven months ago) link

yeah lynch is a white guy who does best just dealing with white people, frankly. Hawk is a problematic character all over the place, just native trope after native trope (made worse by the fact that Michael Horse isn't native). I mean I still love TP obviously but these elements are all cringetastic.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Friday, 22 September 2023 15:50 (seven months ago) link

Horse isn't native?

Cow_Art, Friday, 22 September 2023 16:10 (seven months ago) link

it's disputed. his mother is swedish, his adoptive father is german. he has claimed to be Yaqi (from Mexico), but he's not enrolled in any tribes nor do any tribes claim him. So if he is Yaqi, that comes from his father, but he hasn't elucidated that relationship.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Friday, 22 September 2023 16:14 (seven months ago) link

yikes bro.

citation needed (Steve Shasta), Friday, 22 September 2023 16:18 (seven months ago) link

Meantime, next week's episode on You Must Remember This in the "Erotic 90s" season will, in fact, be about Lost Highway (plus at least some discussion of Jennifer Lynch's Boxing Helena I gather.)

Ned Raggett, Saturday, 23 September 2023 18:18 (seven months ago) link

one month passes...

Finally rewatched Lost Highway, long classified in my head as my least favorite Lynch. I liked it better the second time, was reminded how many great shots and scenes it includes. It really is gorgeous. But yeah, still pretty much my least favorite Lynch — cold and uninvolving, imo, except for a legitimately great performance(s) by Patricia Arquette. Bill Pullman and Balthazar Getty remain more or less inert. Such a mid-'90s film, in that gritty '90s bummer way — very little of the warmth and humor that balances the horror in most of his other work.

BUT also, in retrospect it seems to me like the first in an L.A./Cali noir trilogy, followed by Mulholland Drive and Inland Empire. There are ideas and motifs in Lost Highway that show up more fully realized in both of those films, almost like he had ideas he was wrestling with and Lost Highway was a sort of first draft. So, totally worth seeing but not one of his greats. (imo, ymmv)

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Saturday, 4 November 2023 15:58 (six months ago) link

four months pass...

New interview with Isabella Rossellini on Blue Velvet: https://www.indiewire.com/news/general-news/isabella-rossellini-responds-roger-ebert-blue-velvet-review-1234968621/

(I don’t think I was aware of the Ebert review…)

let’s get intertwined (morrisp), Thursday, 28 March 2024 03:59 (one month ago) link

https://deadline.com/2024/04/david-lynch-animated-movie-snootworld-netflix-addams-family-edward-scissorhands-writer-caroline-thompson-1235877710/

“I don’t know when I started thinking about Snoots but I’d do these drawings of Snoots and then a story started to emerge,” Lynch told us in a rare interview. “I got together with Caroline and we worked on a script. Just recently I thought someone might be interested in getting behind this so I presented it to Netflix in the last few months but they rejected it.”

Lynch was philosophical about the reasons for that decision: “Snootworld is kind of an old fashioned story and animation today is more about surface jokes. Old fashioned fairytales are considered groaners: apparently people don’t want to see them. It’s a different world now and it’s easier to say no than to say yes.”


:_(

Alba, Monday, 8 April 2024 21:19 (one month ago) link

Lynch was coy about which project may be his next or which is taking up most of his time, cryptically noting: “I can’t talk about those things right now.”

Well at least this keeps hope alive...

rendered nugatory (morrisp), Monday, 8 April 2024 21:26 (one month ago) link

three weeks pass...

An interesting Q&A with Sabrina Sutherland, touching on a variety of topics – including "Unrecorded Night," and whether there may be more Twin Peaks (she says "David has more ideas for another season"):

https://tulpaforum.com/threads/members-q-a-with-the-one-and-only-sabrina-sutherland.491/

rendered nugatory (morrisp), Friday, 3 May 2024 23:36 (one week ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.