Showing posts with label jack nance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jack nance. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Twin Peaks: Episode 15-Drive with a Dead Girl



Directed by Caleb Deschanel and written by Scott Frost, the eighth episode of the second season of Twin Peaks entitled Drive with a Dead Girl revels in the aftermath of not just Benjamin Horne’s arrest but also in the revelation into who really killed Laura Palmer. With Jerry Horne arriving to represent his brother where it is clear that the two are in trouble over their connection with One Eyed Jack’s, it is clear that Horne is in big trouble while Leland Palmer is in total disbelief over the fact that Horne is a suspect as he starts to act very odd during a following meeting with Special Agent Cooper and Sheriff Truman on the way to the country club.

It’s an episode where there are many revelations about the identity of Laura Palmer’s killers but also into the things about Benjamin Horne as he is major suspect but isn’t the man that killed her. When Pete Martell arrived at the station to talk about Truman about Josie’s recent departure, he would also meet Horne with a message that proved to be just as shocking. What happens would be a bad day for Horne as he is then examined by the possessed Philip Gerard who believes that killer is close. While Truman thinks Horne did it, Cooper doesn’t think so as he thinks there is more that is happening.

It’s an episode where the audiences know who is the killer but also into the strange events that is happening in the town following the return of one of its residents. Still, there are a few subplots that occur as it relates to a few residents such as Norma Jennings who receives a visit from her mother (Jane Greer) who reveals she is married as she introduces her husband (James Booth) to Norma as Hank knows the man from prison which Norma doesn’t know. Another subplot involves Lucy as she returns home with her sister Gwen (Kathleen Wilhoite) as it causes more baffling questions about who could’ve impregnated Lucy along with a quick-rich scheme from Bobby Briggs who discovers the content from Leo's tape recorder. It’s among some of the humorous moments of the episode yet it is largely about the mystery involving the killer.

Especially in the final minutes where a body is found as it becomes clear the killer is loose where Cooper just as he was talking to Audrey Horne who asks him about her father. It’s an episode that is more simplistic and less plot-driven where Caleb Deschanel maintains certain visuals that is hallmarks of the series as well as a quirky flashback sequence with offbeat edits as it relate to Ben and Jerry Horne’s childhood past.

Drive with a Dead Girl is a spectacular episode of Twin Peaks from Caleb Deschanel. Not only does it create a lot of intrigue into the mystery of Laura Palmer’s death but also play into the person who killed her and those who are suspected into her death. Even as it becomes clear that just as everyone thinks they’re closer to solving the mystery, there’s more bumps ahead. In the end, Drive with a Dead Girl is an exhilarating episode of Twin Peaks from Caleb Deschanel.

Twin Peaks: Season 1: Pilot - Episode 1 - Episode 2 - Episode 3 - Episode 4 - Episode 5 - Episode 6 - Episode 7

Season 2: Episode 8 - Episode 9 - Episode 10 - Episode 11 - Episode 12 - Episode 13 - Episode 14 - (Episode 16) - (Episode 17) - (Episode 18) - (Episode 19) - (Episode 20) - (Episode 21) - (Episode 22) - (Episode 23) - (Episode 24) - (Episode 25) - (Episode 26) - (Episode 27) - (Episode 28) - (Episode 29)

Fire Walk with Me - (The Missing Pieces)

Season 3: (Coming Soon)

© thevoid99 2015

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

The Short Films of David Lynch Part 1 (1966-1995)




Throughout his illustrious career in the world of film, television, art, and music, David Lynch is someone that is the true definition of an artist. While he is largely known for his work in feature films, the man has also carved a very solid career in the world of short and experimental films. His work in shorts have spanned for more than half a century as it is clear why he is so lauded by many as one of the finest filmmakers in the world.

Part 1 (1966-1995)

Six Men Getting Sick


The first short that Lynch did is a forty-second animated loop about six men getting sick as they throw up as it features images that are strange which would play into the many things Lynch would do in the coming years. While it’s a simple student film that cost about $200 back in 1966, the sense of imagination is very prominent as Lynch’s approach to editing and shooting style is just incredible for someone who was just starting out in the world of film. 

Sailing with Bushnell Keeler


One of Lynch's early short films is essentially a homage to his mentor Bushnell Keeler as it play into a sailboat trip with Keeler and Keeler's brother Dave.  While it doesn't feature many of the surreal nor offbeat aspects that Lynch is known for.  It does play into something simple though Lynch claims it's really just a home film that is a tribute to his mentor.   

Absurd Encounter with Fear


The first of two short films Lynch made in 1967 showcases Lynch playing around with an emerging sub-genre in the world of horror which involves the living dead. It revolves around a zombie walking down a hill as if he’s about to stalk a young woman as he pulls something out of the fly of his pants. What happens is probably one of the most odd short films ever created but it also shows Lynch’s very warped idea of humor.

Fictitious Anacin Commercial


The second of two short films Lynch made in 1967 would be in the form of a commercial for Anacin. Yet, it is played with a sense of kitsch where it starts out being very dark until this young makes the Anacin and feels great. It’s another example of Lynch playing around with the ideas of commercial as it is clear that the 60s were a very weird time.

The Alphabet


The four-minute short film Lynch made in 1968 is a combination of live-action and animation as it relates to a young girl having a nightmare involving the alphabets. The girl, played by Lynch’s then-wife Peggy, would be haunted by learning the alphabets as it’s this strange mixture of fear and innocence as Lynch find ways to combine these two elements in both animated and live-action. It’s a short that would be very inventive as it would give Lynch a grant from the American Film Institute as it’s another of one of his finest shorts.

The Grandmother


The 34-minute short film Lynch made in 1970 at a budget of $7,200 as it is a mixture of live-action and animation in this story about an abused boy who finds seeds and hopes to grow a grandmother to protect him. It’s a short that is just very imaginative as well as relying music and sound effects to help tell the story rather than dialogue. It’s a short that has elements of mime in the performance of the actors but also a lot more as it features images of a boy growing a tree on a bed along with repeated images of him wetting the bed and getting beaten up by his father. Relying on black-and-white and color photography plus animation that is sort of reminiscent of Terry Gilliam’s work with Monty Python. It’s definitely a short that is quintessential Lynch.

The Amputee (versions 1 & 2)


Made in 1974 for the American Film Institute, the short was made during the production of Eraserhead where Lynch and cinematographer Frederick Elmes were both experimenting with black-and-white video stock. Written with Catherine Coulson (who would be known more as the Log Lady in Twin Peaks), the short revolves around an amputated woman (Coulson) writing a letter while a nurse (Lynch) is changing her bandages. The differences between the two shorts as the first one is timed at five minutes and the second is at four is that the former has a crispier look where it’s darker in its photography while the latter is a bit more polished with some blurs. Both are shot in one take in an entire static shot as it’s a very weird yet compelling short from Lynch.

The Cowboy and the Frenchman


The 26-minute short that stars Harry Dean Stanton, Jack Nance, and Frederic Golchan was made for the French TV series The French as Seen By… that would feature shorts by Werner Herzog, Andrejz Wajda, Luigi Comenichi, and Jean-Luc Godard. It’s a very humorous short film that is set in the American West where a nearly-deaf cowboy (Stanton) asks his fellow cowboys to see what is coming down as it is this Frenchman (Frederic Golchan). Thus, a strange mix of culture clash and confusion looms as this cowboy wonders what this Frenchman is about where he and his buddies look into the Frenchman’s luggage and sees things that are foreign to them. However, the two different men would find common ground in all sorts of things which goes to show that even the biggest differences can bring people together.

Industrial Symphony Vol. 1: The Dream of the Broken Hearted


On November 10, 1989 at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York City, Lynch did a stage presentation of an experimental play based on complex mosaic geometric shapes that he did during his days at the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts. Starring Nicolas Cage, Laura Dern, Michael J. Anderson, and vocalist Julee Cruise, the fifty-minute short that Lynch released a year later would have a lot of references to projects Lynch would do in 1990 such as Wild at Heart and the TV show Twin Peaks. With a stage set looking like a factory, it’s a strange avant-garde mix of musical performance with drama, exotic dancing, horror, and all sorts of things with music by Lynch collaborator Angelo Badalamenti. It’s one of Lynch’s most oddest film pieces but certainly a fascinating one thanks in part to the music and stage setting.

Premonitions Following an Evil Deed


The fifty-two second short film made in 1995 as part of the anthology film Lumiere and Company is a celebration of the works of the Lumiere Brothers where forty filmmakers would create a short no longer than fifty-two seconds with no synchronized sound and no more than three takes where they would use the original Cinematograph camera invented by the Lumiere Brothers. The short revolves around the death of a young woman where the police tells her parents about their daughter as it features some surreal imagery that is definitely in tune with what Lynch does as a filmmaker.

(End of Part 1)

David Lynch Films: Eraserhead - The Elephant Man - Dune - Blue Velvet - Wild at Heart - Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me - Lost Highway - The Straight Story - Mulholland Dr. - INLAND EMPIRE

The Short Films of David Lynch Pt. 2 - The Music Videos of David Lynch

The Auteurs #50: David Lynch: Pt. 1 - Pt. 2 - Pt. 3 - Pt. 4

© thevoid99 2015

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Twin Peaks: Episode 11-Laura's Secret Diary




Directed by Todd Holland and written by Robert Engels, Mark Frost, Harley Peyton, and Jerry Stahl, the fourth episode of the second season of Twin Peaks entitled Laura’s Secret Diary relates to the mysterious diary of Laura Palmer that Harold Smith had been holding for some time as he reveals its contents to Donna Hayward. After meeting Maddy Ferguson to talk about the diary, Donna decides to call a truce with Maddy in order to work together while things in the town of Twin Peaks are starting to get strange. Notably as Leland Palmer has been arrested for Jacques Renault’s murder which he’s confessed to as he is later met by a judge (Royal Dano) to discuss what will happen to Palmer. Meanwhile, Andy talks to Dr. Hayward to see if he’s the father of Lucy’s baby while Dick Tremaine makes an offer to Lucy in one of the episode’s funniest subplots.

Yet, it’s an episode that balances the strange mix of humor, drama, and suspense where Josie Packard finally returns from Seattle as she meets with Pete Martell and Sheriff Truman as no one knows about whether Catherine is dead or alive. Still, Packard’s return would raise a lot of eyebrows as it relates to not just the land where the saw mill used to be and something more. Benjamin Horne would learn about Audrey’s whereabouts from Jean Renault as he turns to Special Agent Cooper for help in retrieving Audrey as he deals with the upcoming arrival of a famous hotel/food critic which also has Norma and Hank Jennings ready to get the diner to be in top shape. Yet, no one knows the identity of who this critic is while a mysterious Japanese businessman makes an arrival at the hotel.

The sense of mystery becomes prominent as Agent Cooper is calling on the town’s secret society to help him retrieve Audrey while there’s a lot going on as it relates to Leland Palmer as Ray Wise’s performance is definitely his best so far. The darker elements of the series do come to ahead when the power of Jean Renault is finally shown when he does something in front of an intoxicated Audrey as it reveals that as evil as he is. He’s also a man that can be reasonable and knows what to do in the world of business as Michael Parks bring a lot of charm to the performance. One aspect of the series that is revealed is the appearance of an Asian man who is revealed to be a relative of Packard as she orders him to take care of some loose ends.

Laura’s Secret Diary is a brilliant episode of Twin Peaks from Todd Holland as it maintains that sense of intrigue as well as introducing a lot more characters and motivations of some of the regulars. Especially as some action is taking place in relation to some of the stories and subplots as it is written with wit and mystery by its writers. In the end, Laura’s Secret Diary is an amazing episode in the second season of Twin Peaks.

Twin Peaks: Season 1: Pilot - Episode 1 - Episode 2 - Episode 3 - Episode 4 - Episode 5 - Episode 6 - Episode 7

Season 2: Episode 8 - Episode 9 - Episode 10 - Episode 12 - Episode 13 - Episode 14 - Episode 15 - (Episode 16) - (Episode 17) - (Episode 18) - (Episode 19) - (Episode 20) - (Episode 21) - (Episode 22) - (Episode 23) - (Episode 24) - (Episode 25) - (Episode 26) - (Episode 27) - (Episode 28) - (Episode 29)

Season 3: (Coming Soon)

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me - (The Missing Pieces)

© thevoid99 2015

Saturday, June 20, 2015

Summer of Twin Peaks: Episode 2-Zen, or the Skill to Catch a Killer




Directed by David Lynch and written by Lynch and Mark Frost, the third episode of Twin Peaks entitled Zen, or the Skill to Catch a Killer is an episode which picks up from the previous episode as many cope with Laura’s death as well as the things that are happening in the town. Special Agent Cooper and Sheriff Truman continue the case where Cooper’s fellow FBI agent Albert Rosenfield (Miguel Ferrer) would come in to aid in the case much to Truman’s dismay. Meanwhile, certain events and such would play into the investigation as well as the town of Twin Peaks becoming more ominous.

It’s an episode that starts off with its mixture of cheesy soap-opera dramatics and its offbeat yet quirky humor that would play into not just the charms of the small town but also into some of its darker elements. Notably the business that Leo Johnson is running as he would confront Bobby Briggs and Mike Nelson about the money they owe him where the former would make a secret vow to Johnson’s wife Shelley to kill him just several hours after meeting Leo. Other dark elements include a world that is outside of Twin Peaks where Benjamin Horne gets a visit from his younger brother Jerry (David Patrick Kelly) as the two go to the Canadian border to a brothel/casino called One Eyed Jacks where the two flip a coin to see who can sleep with the new prostitute.

The comedic elements would include not just the Hayward family witnessing Audrey Horne dancing to a jazz tune at the diner but also in Cooper’s approach in the investigation inspired by Tibetan ideals. It’s a scene where it is quite playful but allows Cooper to have Truman and the other people in the sheriff department be part of this as equals. It’s among one of the finer moments of the episode where Cooper seems to enjoy himself in the town and is happy to work with Truman and the staff as he would smile when he saw Truman chew out Rosenfield. It is a moment where Rosenfield thinks he is in charge and accuses the people of Twin Peaks as amateurs where the receptionist Lucy would make a face at him.

Another funny moment that plays into David Lynch’s warped sense of humor is the opening scene where the Horne family are eating dinner as they’re interrupted by Jerry who brings in baguettes with brie as Benjamin goes nuts over it. It is part of Lynch’s own idea of a world where kind of makes fun of family dramas but also add an element of danger. Then there’s the surreal dream sequence towards the end of the episode that becomes part of the series’ trademark. It’s where Agent Cooper finds himself in a mysterious room with a woman that looks like Laura Palmer as he meets this strange little midget talking backwards that is known as The Man from Another Place (Michael J. Anderson). It is part of the surrealistic elements that Lynch is known for yet is very effective to its sense of intrigue and offbeat tone where this mysterious being would also dance to the jazzy score by Angelo Badalamenti.

Zen, or the Skill to Catch a Killer is one of the finest episodes of the series as it manages to balance the strange mix of humor, drama, and surrealism. Notably as the entire cast including the appearances of David Patrick Kelly and Miguel Ferrer all bring in their game and more. Even as David Lynch manages to bring in some unique visuals and compelling stories for audiences to be engaged by. In the end, Zen, or the Skill to Catch a Killer is a riveting episode of Twin Peaks.

Twin Peaks: Season 1: Pilot - Episode 1 - Episode 3 - Episode 4 - Episode 5 - Episode 6 - Episode 7

Season 2: Episode 8 - Episode 9 - Episode 10 - Episode 11 - Episode 12 - Episode 13 - Episode 14 - Episode 15 - (Episode 16) - (Episode 17) - (Episode 18) - (Episode 19) - (Episode 20) - (Episode 21) - (Episode 22) - (Episode 23) - (Episode 24) - (Episode 25) - (Episode 26) - (Episode 27) - (Episode 28) - (Episode 29)

Season 3: (Coming Soon)

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me - (The Missing Pieces)

© thevoid99 2015

Thursday, June 09, 2011

Lost Highway


Originally Written and Posted at Epinions.com on 10/11/07 w/ Additional Edits.


Following a career backlash, the cancellation of his TV show Twin Peaks, and the barrage of bad reviews from fans and critics for its prequel film Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me. David Lynch went into hiding as from 1992 through 1995, he spent his days working on experimental projects and short-lived TV projects. Finally in 1996, David Lynch decided to return to the world of feature films with a dark, film noir-inspired film that would not only return him to the twisted, surrealism of his previous film work. It also marked a new transition into his film career with the 1997 film Lost Highway.

Directed by Lynch with a script he co-wrote with Wild at Heart novelist Barry Gifford, Lost Highway tells the story of a jazz musician who suspects his wife is having an affair while delving into an underworld that included voyeuristic videos and a mysterious man. After being suspected for murder, the musician suddenly turns himself into a young mechanic who falls for a gangster's mistress. Inspired by noir films of the past including Edgar G. Ulmer's 1945 cult-film Detour, Lynch enters into a mysterious world as he re-shapes the film noir genre for a new generation. Starring Bull Pullman, Patricia Arquette, Balthazar Getty, Robert Loggia, Natasha Gregson Wagner, Robert Blake, and in their final film appearances, Richard Pryor and Jack Nance. Lost Highway is a haunting, surreal, and enchanting take on film noir by David Lynch.

In his posh, Los Angeles home on the Hollywood Hills, Fred Madison (Bill Pullman) hears his doorbell ringing for intercom as he hears a man's voice saying "Dick Laurent is dead". Later that night, Fred goes out to play at a club while his wife Renee (Patricia Arquette) is at home. When he calls her after his performance, she doesn't answer as he finds her sleeping when he returned home. The next morning, Renee wakes up to find a manila envelope on her front doorsteps. She and Fred learn it's a videotape of their house being filmed. Things get stranger the next day when another videotape surface that showed the couple sleeping in their bedroom. After calling a couple of detectives named Al (John Roselius) and Ed (Louis Eppolito), things don't get better when Fred tells Renee of a nightmare he has that involved a mysterious man (Robert Blake).

Going to a party of Renee's friend Andy (Michael Massee), Fred's suspicions about Renee having extramarital affairs make him uneasy. Things get stranger when the mysterious man he saw in his dream appeared at the party. The two talk briefly as the man claimed he's at his house. Fred doesn't believe him until he called at his own house to see that the man is at his home. Spooked by what happened, he and Renee return home as he asked Renee about Andy. The night gets darker as the things Fred sees haunt him and the next morning gets even stranger. Another videotape surfaces in which he sees the same images and a new one, Fred kneeling down covered in blood as he finds Renee dead. Guilty of murder and sent to be electrocuted, Fred suddenly has awful headaches. The visions Fred sees in his head starts to unravel as a blue light starts to blink as the headaches become awfully worse.

The next day, a guard finds a different man in Fred's cell that turned out to be a 24-year old mechanic named Pete Dayton (Balthazar Getty). Immediately released back to his parents (Gary Busey and Lucy Butler), Pete has no recollections of how he got into a jail cell while he decided to rest at home. After joining a couple of his friends (Giovanni Ribisi and Scott Coffey), he also rekindles his relationship with girlfriend Sheila (Natasha Gregson Wagner). Returning to work as a mechanic for Arnie (Richard Pryor), he is also greeted with delight by a gangster named Mr. Eddy (Robert Loggia). Unbeknownst to Pete, two detectives named Hank (Carl Sundstrom) and Lou (John Solari) are watching out for him as Pete rides with Mr. Eddy, who is also known as Dick Laurent. The next day, Pete meets Mr. Eddy's mistress Alice Wakefield (Patricia Arquette) who comes to his garage the day later to seduce Pete.

The two begin an affair only to cause more trouble as Mr. Eddy suspects something. Meanwhile, his relationship with Sheila falls apart as Pete seems to have no memory of what happened the night he was sent into Fred's jail cell. After another meeting with Alice, she tells him about a guy named Andy and her first meeting with Mr. Eddy as she hopes to steal money from Andy in order to escape. The robbery was a success except that Pete starts to have increasingly bad headaches as reality and fiction begin to blur even further. Hoping to meet a man who could help them, Fred makes his return to unravel the mystery of the mysterious man as well as Laurent, Alice, and Renee.

While a lot of the imagery, style, and caricatures are definitely inspired by film noir, David Lynch and co-writer Barry Gifford chose to play with the cliches of the genre adding new twists as well. The result is a mind-bending film that still brings more questions than answers when the mystery is unraveled. Yet, this is part of what is expected from Lynch who is a storyteller that never reveals a lot of details or what the film is about. Instead, he leaves it up to the viewer to make their own guess or interpretation about what the film is about. If one was to make an idea of what it's about, it's about a man trying to figure out about his wife's affairs, her murder, and then turns into a young mechanic who falls for a doppleganger as he delves into a world of pornography, crime, and voyeurism.

The stylized dialogue is very true to the tradition of noir while remaining modern that includes information that relates to the film plot. Both Renee and Alice have similar dialogue in their meeting that relates to Andy that eventually, revealed a darker story. The characters of Pete and Fred are similar though it's Pete that has to deal with the fact that he might be a different person. Fred has a more interesting development where he starts off as a paranoid, suspicious man until he returns late in the film as he becomes a darker character. Then there's the mysterious man. Who he is? His name is never revealed and his motives aren't clear either. Yet, he's there but is he real? All of this is part of Lynch's approach to surrealism.

The direction of Lynch is definitely top notch as he aims for a more intimate look that is reminiscent of film noir. Yet, he also goes for that Lynchian style of strange characters, symbolic images, and dreamy compositions. The film's low-key look works to convey the suspense as well as the paranoia inside Fred's head. The look of the film also has that sense of being from the perspective of Fred Madison and Pete Dayton. They're both having very surreal images where the look of the film almost has a horror-like feel while the use of a video camera also creates a sense of horror in conveying that dark feel of voyeurism. While audiences might feel confused by its complex plot and Lynch's eerie direction, even in the end, the film still proves that Lynch still has some tricks up his sleeve.

Cinematographer Peter Deming brings a wonderfully stylish look to the film that is very intimate with a grainy-like look to add the film-noir look. The use of colored lights also adds to the film's mood to show where the characters are while some wonderful, dreamy images are made to convey the style of Lynch. Lynch's then-partner and editor Mary Sweeney adds style that emphasize the film's unique tone and duality theme as if the film is told in an almost, non-linear style. Production designer/costume designer Patricia Norris and set decorator Leslie Morales help create the film's dark look with posh-like designs on some of the film's mansion scenes to the motel that is pure noir with its intimate look. Norris' work on the costumes also have film noir with the evening dresses that Renee wears to the old-school 40s clothing that Alice wears while the men wear a range of suits to street clothing.

Sound editor Frank Gaeta along with Lynch on sound design create an array of sounds to add a horror-like tone to the film where it brings suspense that also includes ominous sound overtones courtesy of Nine Inch Nails' leader Trent Reznor and Coil's Peter Christopherson. The film's soundtrack includes music from Lynch's longtime collaborator Angelo Badalamenti brings a diverse film score that includes dark, ominous classical cuts with the Prague Philharmonic that is in the noir style. Other tracks by Badalamenti range from ambient-like electronic music to a wide array of jazz from freestyle to sultry with contributions from David Lynch. Another composer added to the mix is Barry Adamson, formerly of Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, who brings some wonderful theme music to the character of Mr. Eddy along with mixes of jazz and electronic music.

The rest of the soundtrack is helmed and supervised by NIN leader Trent Reznor. Along with his own sound work and an industrial score piece, he also contributes the hit song The Perfect Drug while former protegee` Marilyn Manson brings in a couple of cuts. The film open and closes with two variations of I'm Deranged by David Bowie from his 1995 album Outside while Bowie's art-rock cohort Lou Reed brings a cover of This Magic Moment. The Smashing Pumpkins brings an eerie electronic track called Eye while the German industrial band Rammstein brings in a couple of rocking tracks. Adding to the film's dark, dreamy soundtrack though not on the actual soundtrack album is a cover of Tim Buckley's Song To The Siren by the 4AD label outfit This Mortal Coil as it's sung hauntingly and beautifully by Elisabeth Fraser of the Cocteau Twins accompanied by its guitarist Robin Guthrie. Overall, the film's soundtrack is a real highlight of the film.

The casting is wonderfully assembled with cameos and appearances from Henry Rollins as a prison guard, Marilyn Manson and then-Manson bassist Jeordie White as porn stars, Lisa Boyle as a porn star, Giovanni Ribisi and Lynch regular Scott Coffey as Pete's buddies, and in his final film role just before his death in December of 1996 is Lynch regular Jack Nance as crazed-eye mechanic named Phil. Richard Pryor, in his final film appearance before his death in 2005, is excellent as head mechanic Arnie, where despite his illness from Parkinson's disease, Pryor lights up any scene he's in. Lucy Butler and Gary Busey make great appearances as Pete Dayton's parents with Busey showing restraint and care as a father who is haunted by the moment his son had disappeared. John Roselius, Louis Eppolito, Carl Sundstrom, and John Solari are great as the detectives who investigate the different crimes while Sundstrom and Solari get to have hilarious one-liners.

Michael Massee is excellent as the sleazy Andy, a guy who seems to love a lot of porn and women while not have a clue to the associates of Mr. Eddy. Natasha Gregson Wagner is good as Pete's girlfriend Sheila, a girl who noticed that he's changed since his disappearance while trying to keep him grounded. In what is possibly his last film role before his notorious murder trial a few years ago, Robert Blake gives a chilling performance as the Mysterious Man who is a troubling voyeur that always carry a video camera or a telephone. Blake, wearing lipstick and no eyebrows with a painted white face, is a very scary man in this film and his presence remains haunting. Robert Loggia is in great form as a gangster who has a lot of charm and wit despite his dangerous persona. Loggia has a great scene that involves a tailgate driver who did something stupid that proves that tailgating is bad.

Balthazar Getty is in solid form as Pete Dayton, a confused, troubled young mechanic who is unaware of what has happened to him. Getty's performance serves as a wonderful plot device in relation to the theme of duality. Getty has to be this young man who is torn between two different women while trying to figure out is he really himself or is he possessed all of a sudden as Getty does some fantastic work. Bill Pullman is also in amazing form as Fred Madison, a man whose suspicions lead him to a possible murder and then returning to discovery about his wife. Pullman's performance is also strangely subtle as he doesn't do anything very dramatic but rather observe what's going on around him. It's definitely one of his more underrated performances, aside from Spaceballs.

The film's best performance truly goes to Patricia Arquette in her double-duty role in playing both Renee and Alice. In the role of Renee, Arquette dons a brunette hair style that is reminiscent of noir-style female characters while being very secretive and worrisome as that character is revealed whether she's having an affair. Then as Alice, Arquette shows more of her sex appeal in this femme fatale role as she is a bit more humorous, charismatic, and engaging. Arquette has that dream-like quality that makes her perfect for both roles as this reveals to be one of her more overlooked performances in her diverse career in working with the likes of Quentin Tarantino, Richard Linklater, and Martin Scorsese.

While it's not a perfect film, especially for general audiences, Lost Highway is still an amazing, complex, provocative noir film from David Lynch and company. Fans of Lynch will no doubt enjoy the film's layered story as well as surrealistic directing style. Those new to the director will enjoy the images and style that Lynch has taken into a genre. With a great cast and an amazing film soundtrack (that is unfortunately out of print), it's a film that will test the mind as well as expectations for the genre. For a film that takes an old genre with unique twists and turns, Lost Highway is the film to go see and who better from the always provocative David Lynch.


© thevoid99 2011

Tuesday, June 07, 2011

Blue Velvet


Originally Written and Posted at Epinions.com on 10/4/07 w/ Additional Edits.


Following 1977's feature-film debut Eraserhead, that would become a cult classic. David Lynch was hired by Mel Brooks to do a film version of The Elephant Man in 1980 that drew massive critical acclaim and Oscar nominations. When George Lucas asked Lynch to direct the third Star Wars film Return of the Jedi, Lynch turned it down to instead work with producer Dino de Laurentiis for a huge adaptation of the sci-fi novel Dune by Frank Herbert. Instead, the 1984 release was a disaster and went through bad re-cuts that forced Lynch to not want to take any credit for the film. In 1986, Lynch rebounded with a film that not only shocked audiences but also would solidify him as a seminal auteur in the years to come entitled Blue Velvet.

Written and directed by Lynch, Blue Velvet tells the story of a college student in a small town in North Carolina who discovers severed human ear that leads into an investigation. There, the young man enters into a dark world of voyeurism that included a crazed lounge singer and a psychopathic criminal. A film that mixed the innocence of 1950s film with 1980s underground cinema, the film is considered to be one of the most original films of its time as it would give Lynch the prestige that he sought for. Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Isabella Rosselini, Laura Dern, Dean Stockwell, and Dennis Hopper. Blue Velvet is a strange, dark, and provocative film from David Lynch.

Visiting his father (Jack Harvey) after an accident, Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle MacLachlan) is walking around his small town of Lumberton where he stops at a shack. While throwing rocks, he finds a human ear which he gives to a detective named Williams (George Dickerson) whom he later meets when an investigation is conducted. After meeting the detective at his home, he walks out of the house where he meets William's daughter Sandy (Laura Dern) who talks to him about information she knows. She mentions a lounge singer named Dorothy Vallens(Isabella Rossellini) as Jeffrey decides to break into her apartment as Jeffrey pretends to be a pest controller. He meets Dorothy as he quietly steals a set of keys. Jeffrey and Sandy later go to the club where she sang a jazz-like version of the 50s classic Blue Velvet.

After watching Dorothy sing, Jeffrey decides to break into her home to find any clues while waiting for Sandy to give him the signal from his car in case the singer returns. Unfortunately, Jeffrey doesn't hear the signal as Sandy is forced to leave him behind. Forced to see the woman talking to a man in a yellow suit (Fred Pickler), whom he saw earlier, in a closet. He ends up seeing her undress and then talk to a man named Frank (Dennis Hopper) on the phone about someone named Don. After the phone call, she finds Jeffrey in the closet as she forces him to strip down naked while seducing him. Then she hides him when Frank arrives, who abuses her where the two engage in a sadomasochist form of sex. Haunted by what he saw, Jeffrey reluctantly leaves as he later tells Sandy what he saw. Sandy is amazed that something dark is going on in this quiet little town as she tells a dream she had that involved robins.

Jeffrey decides to go see Dorothy again at the club where he also sees Frank and his entourage that included Raymond (Brad Dourif) and Paul (Jack Nance). Learning that Frank is leading a crime gang, Jeffrey isn't sure who to turn to as Sandy remains his only ally as the two start to fall for each other. Jeffrey is also being seduced by the strange Dorothy where another encounter leads to Jeffrey's first meeting with Frank. Frank takes Jeffrey and Dorothy to meet Ben (Dean Stockwell) as a party happened with Ben lip-syncs to Roy Orbison's In Dreams. Dorothy goes into a room to meet Don, whom Jeffrey learns is her son. After the party, things get stranger when the continues abuse on Dorothy by Frank pushes Jeffrey to the edge. After getting beaten up, Jeffrey reluctantly turns to Williams only to learn that the man in the yellow suit is his partner. Deciding to go out with Sandy on a date, things start out nice until a naked Dorothy is at his home, beaten and weary. Jeffrey is finally forced to see what goes on as he hopes to stop Frank.

While the film is a take on the 50s visuals of Douglas Sirk along with the crime, mystery genre. The film is essentially about a young, good-hearted young man. A boy scout actually, who enters into a dark underworld where he ends up finding about his own dark side as well as how strange the world is. Lynch's complex, high-octane script is wonderfully structured while filled with dialogue that is stylized yet also over-the-top in some parts. Still, it manages to work by unveiling clues to the film's crime theme while also venturing into themes of voyeurism and sadomasochism. It is indeed a strange film and couldn't have come from someone as dark and as eerie as David Lynch.

Lynch's direction is wonderfully surreal with its opening, 1950s-like look of the film helmed with amazing colors, wonderful scenery, and the original Bobby Vinton song Blue Velvet playing in the background. Then, it shifts into something much darker where Lynch is saying, nothing is as it seems. The shocking images of a man becoming paralyzed with images of bugs on the ground is indeed disturbing. Yet, it sets the entire tone for the film. The way Lynch sets up a shot or a scene as well as the tension of the film's suspense is very unique. There's moments where things seem peaceful and then, everything becomes a moment where someone would say "what the fuck?" Lynch's ability to shock and make the audience uncomfortable, though not for everyone, is proof of his genius as both a storyteller and as a director.

Cinematographer Frederick Elmes brings a wonderful, colorful look to some of the film's exterior, daytime sequences that looks like a film straight out of the 1950s. Then when the film is in the hallway or Dorothy's room, the colors are much darker, and more intimate. The eerie tone of the camera while in the nighttime sequences, things get darker and more claustrophobic as it almost feels like a horror film. Editor Duwayne Dunham creates a wonderful style to the editing with a suspenseful like approach to the film while in a few sequences, he does some amazing, shimmering-like speeds to convey the emotions of those scenes.

Production designer Patricia Norris and set decorator Edward LeViseur creates a wonderful look to the film with the 1950s like poster for Lumberton to the 80s, slick look of Dorothy's apartment. The hallway next to apartment is also noticeable for its green carpet that looks very dark. Costume supervisor Gloria Glynn creates a great look to the film with the black suits that Kyle McLachlan and Dennis Hoppers wear, the 50s-like dresses of Laura Dern, to the sexy, blue velvet robe that Isabella Rossellini wears. There's life to what the costumes have. Sound designer Alan Splet brings wonderful mix to the film's sound to convey the suspense and dark tone of the film while adding chills to the town as if not everything is wonderful.

The film's music and soundtrack is dominated by the diverse film score of Angelo Badalamenti that is a mix of jazz, orchestral music, and electronic-ambient music that plays up to the film's suspense or a jazz theme that accompanies Frank, or a wonderfully haunting, evocative electronic piece to convey the innocence. The rest of the soundtrack features wonderful cuts like the title track Blue Velvet by Bobby Vinton and Isabella Rosselini doing a wonderful jazz-like version accompanied by Badalamenti. Also appearing is Roy Orbison's In Dreams that is wonderfully dreamy to Julee Cruise's haunting song Mysteries Of Love composed by Badalamenti and Lynch. Overall, the film soundtrack and score are one of the most memorable piece of music of the 80s.

The film's cast is wonderfully assembled with notable small appearances from Hope Lange as Mrs. Williams, Jack Harvey, Priscilla Pointer as Jeffrey's mom, Frances Bay as Aunt Barbara, Ken Stovitz as Sandy's boyfriend Mike, J. Michael Hunter, Brad Dourif, and Lynch regular Jack Nance as members of Frank's gang, and Fred Pickler as Yellow Man. George Dickerson is good as Detective John Williams, a man who warns Jeffrey of what he might enter to while Dean Stockwell is great in his role as Ben. Notably for his lip-sync of the Roy Orbison song while wearing make-up and lipstick. Dennis Hopper is brilliant in his role as the very psychotic Frank. Almost every sentence Hopper says mentions the word "fuck" as if it's part of his vocabulary. Every line, every thing Hopper does is brilliant. Even though his character is a very evil, twisted man, he's a villain that's fun to watch while breathing into an oxygen mask.

Isabella Rossellini is equally as great in her role as the desperate, destructive, submissive Dorothy. Rossellini's performance might be described as over-the-top yet her own craziness mixed in with sadness is truly one of the most haunting performances ever captured on film. Laura Dern is wonderful as the innocent, sweet Sandy who keeps Jeffrey grounded while being the kind of girl that you want to take home to mother. Dern really gives the character life by just being real and not being over-dramatic. Even when role was originally offered to Molly Ringwald. That would've been really strange. Kyle MacLachlan is excellent in his role as Jeffrey Beaumont, a college kid who enters a dark world that he never should've entered. MacLachlan starts out as an innocent young man who later is forced to see the dark side and even himself. McLachlan's performance hits all the right notes as he carries the whole movie with ease and comfort.

Released in the fall of 1986, Blue Velvet shocked audiences and critics as the film became an unlikely hit. Despite accolades from both film critics and audiences, not everyone was enthused by David Lynch's surreal vision. One of those people was Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert who named Blue Velvet the worst film of 1986. Despite Roger Ebert's notorious review, David Lynch received an Oscar nomination for Best Director as his career began to take off that were followed by high-profile projects like Twin Peaks and Wild at Heart. Twenty years since the release of Blue Velvet, the film remains a cult classic as in 2005, director Noah Baumbach showed a clip of the film in a hilarious scene for his film The Squid & the Whale. The scene emphasized on what kind of audience shouldn't see the film when Jeff Daniels' character tells his son to go see Blue Velvet with his girlfriend rather than see Short Circuit.

While it's a film that isn't for everyone. Even for those who can't stand crass language, shocking nudity, graphic sex, violence, or excessive use of the word "fuck". Blue Velvet is a film that still shocks to this day. Those new to the work of David Lynch no doubt should see this as an introduction to the director. With great performances from Kyle MacLachlan, Laura Dern, Isabella Rossellini, and Dennis Hopper, it's a movie that won't leave anyone's head. Even through the surrealistic visions of Lynch and all of his concepts. In the end, Blue Velvet is a must-see for anyone who loves shocking, surreal images, and evocative storylines.


© thevoid99 2011

Eraserhead


Originally Written and Posted at Epinions.com on 6/17/09 w/ Additional Edits.


One of cinema's most original and certainly weirdest directors in the world, David Lynch is a filmmaker who makes films that are often filled with surrealism and an eerie view into the world he is surrounded by. Yet, before he would make such classics as The Elephant Man, Blue Velvet, and Mulholland Dr. Lynch was just a young art student interested in film where at a Boston arts college, he roomed with future J. Geils band vocalist Peter Wolf. After relocating to Pennsylvania in 1966, he made his first short film Six Men Getting Sick while finally getting some attention from the American Film Institute in 1970. At the AFI, Lynch would create a film that would take him five years to make from 1971-1976 with a $10,000 budget that finalized into $20,000 with funding by his childhood friend in production designer Jack Fisk and Fisk's wife Sissy Spacek for the 1977 cult film Eraserhead.

Written, produced, edited, and directed by David Lynch, Eraserhead tells the story of a young printer who goes on vacation where he learns that his estranged girlfriend has given birth to a deformed, reptilian baby. In his hopes to take care of the baby, the young man becomes insane as his girlfriend leaves him while he starts to have bizarre visions. A film that revels in Lynch's world of surrealism while also being a horror film of sorts. It's a film that would be the start of many things to come from the great director. Starring Jack Nance, Charlotte Stewart, Jeanne Bates, Allen Joseph, Judith Anna Roberts, Laurel Near, and Jack Fisk. Eraserhead is an eerie, intriguing, and truly original film from David Lynch.

On vacation from his job as a printer in a factory, Henry Spencer (Jack Nance) receives a phone call from his estranged girlfriend Mary X (Charlotte Stewart) to attend dinner with her family. At the dinner with her parents, Henry learns that Mary had given birth to a premature, reptilian baby where her mother (Jeanne Bates) kept asking if he impregnated Mary as Henry is confused. Henry reluctantly helps Mary take care of the baby where they live in his one-bedroom apartment. Yet, the baby's whining forces Mary to not sleep as she leaves the apartment to get some sleep at her parent's house. Henry takes care of the baby as he learns that it's sick where he tries to help it. Then comes a series of bizarre visions including a man in a planet (Jack Fisk), a lady in a radiator (Laurel Near) who sings and dance while sporting huge, grotesque cheeks, and a strange visit from his beautiful neighbor (Judith Anna Roberts) where he had a sexual liaison with.

Things get even stranger in his dreams where a boy brings a head to a pencil factory as Henry finally wakes up. With visions between fiction and reality blurred, the baby starts to laugh at him mockingly where Henry decides to take action but at the expense of his own mind.

The film's plot description about a man who tries to take care of a little reptilian, deformed baby with its head sticking out of a tiny body only to endure surreal visions is essential what the film is. There's no traditional plot while the dialogue in the film is very minimal for an 89-minute film since there's really about nearly 20 minutes of it in total. While conventional audiences might be dismayed by its unconventional style, it works because it's all about sound and the visions that Lynch presents. Even as it delves into Lynch's world of surrealism with strange visions including moving creatures in stop-motion animation, a reptilian baby's head, and all of these things that are bizarre and unreal.

The direction that Lynch creates is truly mesmerizing as the film starts with no dialogue for nine minutes straight until Henry briefly talks to his beautiful neighbor about a phone call. Something like this could've been done in a slow, tedious pacing but Lynch using lots of weird images as it is shot in black-and-white maintains a nice, pacing feel. Lynch as the editor definitely creates a nice pacing that is more straightforward but also uses style to move from one weird transition to another. Being the visual effects artist and art director, the look of Henry's apartment is shabby yet weird as it is filled with plants and a radiator. All of which play up to Henry's troubled state of mind as its surreal images which involves a grotesque young woman singing and dancing while stepping on some dead creatures. A man inside a planet doing things and all other weird things.

What is more amazing is that this film came out in March of 1977, a few months before Star Wars was released that would usher the big blockbuster era of American cinema. Imagine this particular film coming out around the time Star Wars, Saturday Night Fever, Annie Hall, and other American films that year were coming out. This would be the film that would surely be something totally out of place as it's something mainstream audiences would be baffled by while art house audiences would be unsure what they're seeing. What David Lynch did with this film is truly original and fascinating as he creates a hell of a debut film that would be unmatched in the years to come.

Cinematographers Herbert Cardwell and future Lynch collaborator Frederick Elmes do amazing work with the film's black-and-white photography in its striking visuals including some blinding lights and some special effects shots by Elmes filled with dazzling effects including dust and the iconic shot that would be the film's theatrical poster. Another of Lynch's key collaborator who would be prominent in later films is sound editor Alan Splet. Along with Lynch on sound effects, the sound work is truly amazing from the sounds of clanging, hollow winds, and other noises as the sound work is just amazing. Even in adding a level of suspense and horror to the film while the little music that is used is range from tingling, carnival sounds to a dreamy ballad that would serve as a precursor to Lynch's other films in the years to come.

The casting is phenomenal with some memorable small roles from the likes of Gill Dennis as a date of Henry's neighbor, David Lynch's daughter Jennifer as a little girl playing around, Hal Landon Jr. as a pencil machine operator, T. Max Graham as the pencil factory boss, Thomas Coulson as the boy who finds a detached head, Darwin Joston as a pencil factory clerk, Jean Lange as Mary's catatonic grandmother, and legendary production designer Jack Fisk as the man in the planet. Allen Joseph and Jeanne Bates are good as Mary's crazy parents while Laurel Near is really good as the grotesque lady in the radiator. Judith Anna Roberts is excellent as the sexy woman who lives across from Henry who seduces him in a dream while Charlotte Stewart is great as Mary, Henry's troubled ex-girlfriend who can't deal with the noises in his apartment.

Finally, there's the late Jack Nance in what is truly a mesmerizing, haunting performance as Henry Spencer. Nance, who would be one of Lynch's regular actors until his final appearance in Lost Highway in 1997, is great in his physical acting in the way he stands and be still while not saying a lot of words. There's a creepiness to him while his memorable hairdo is definitely something that will never be replicated in cinema. Though his career, aside from his work with Lynch, may be relegated to character actor roles, Jack Nance will always be remembered for this entrancing yet brilliant performance as Henry Spencer.

Eraserhead is truly a film of its kind from director David Lynch. Fans of cult cinema and horror will no doubt see this as one of the most original films ever made while for David Lynch fans. This film serves as a great starting point for those interested in the director as it truly rank with such classics as The Elephant Man, Blue Velvet, and Mulholland Dr. While it's not an easy film to watch as it's filled with suspense, surreal images, and lots of horrifying special effects. It's a film that is guaranteed to shock and literally fuck with the mind. So in the end, anyone that wants to watch something late at night that will bring nightmares and surreal images. David Lynch's Eraserhead is the film to go see.


© thevoid99 2011