Tag: David Lynch

  • David Lynch’s Dune A Strange Trip Back to Arrakis

    David Lynch’s Dune A Strange Trip Back to Arrakis

    When I saw David Lynch’s “Dune” in the theater, back in 1984, it was just another in a seemingly endless line of space fantasies that flooded cinemas, all of them hoping to suck on the dregs of “Star Wars’” boffo box office. It’s interesting to ponder that, in the wake of Lynch’s critical success as director of “The Elephant Man,” “Star Wars” creator George Lucas approached him with an offer to direct “Return of the Jedi.” Lynch turned it down, later stating that he had “next to zero interest” in the project.

    But “Dune” was different. Frank Herbert’s 1965 novel was held in high regard for its political, religious, and ecological insights, and not least, for its immersive world-building. Lynch confessed he’d never heard of it, but when producer Raffaella De Laurentiis (daughter of Dino) approached him to direct the film adaptation (after Ridley Scott left the project), he read it, and he loved it. As one cast member observed, the producers thought they were going to make “Star Wars” for grown-ups.

    Personally, I think Lynch was mostly into the sandworms (who wouldn’t be?), the hallucinatory effects of imbibing the Water of Life, and the grotesquerie of the Harkonnens (who at one point force a prisoner to milk a hairless cat – decidedly NOT in the book!). No doubt about it, if Lynch had directed “Return of the Jedi,” it would have been one very strange trip.

    The talent that was assembled for him, both before and behind the camera, is insane. The cast alone includes José Ferrer (albeit phoning it in), Max von Sydow, Jürgen “Das Boot” Prochnow, Linda Hunt, Dean Stockwell, Brad Dourif, Richard Jordan, Silvana (Mrs. Dino De Laurentiis) Mangano, Siân (formerly Mrs. Peter O’Toole) Phillips, Sean (always a cipher, but somehow in everything back then) Young, a pre-“Star Trek” Patrick Stewart, Paul “Midnight Express” Smith, Kenneth “Rhoda” McMillan, Sting, and at least three future “Twin Peaks” players, including lead Kyle MacLachlan, “Big Ed” Everett McGill, and Lynch’s good luck charm, Eraser Head himself, Jack Nance. That’s a lot of spice!

    Like Scott, Lynch wanted to make it into two films, but was told to tamp it down. His original cut ran to three hours, before the effects were added. Again, he was made to compromise. Sequels were envisioned and everyone had their hopes set on a franchise, but the film tanked at the box office. It’s been described as the “Heaven’s Gate” of science fiction.

    Returning to “Dune” 41 years later is an interesting experience, especially having reread the book and seen Denis Villeneuve’s superior adaptations. (Unlike Lynch, Villeneuve was allowed to do it in two parts.) In some respects, the film is very much of the mainstream of its era, especially as it sands off a lot of the book’s moral complexities to turn it into a straightforward fable of rebellion against the black hats and evil imperialists; in others, it’s crazily subversive, with what can only be described as hypnotic Lynchian interludes.

    It’s not as incomprehensible as I thought the first time around (even though I had already read Herbert’s novel, I was just a kid), but it is an awful lot of information to ingest. Because of the time limitation, they had to condense reams of exposition and jargon, and Lynch made it even busier by interweaving strange voice-overs. All said, he did the right thing to follow his quirky muse back away from the mainstream, as his next film, “Blue Velvet,” was clearly much more in line with “Eraser Head” and after that, he just kept beating his own woozy trail.

    I’ll leave the rest of my observations for tomorrow night, when Roy and I shake the sand out of our bathing suits while discussing “Dune,” on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. We’ll be counting on you to provide the extra spice for our mulled cider in the comments section, when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., this Friday evening at 7:00 EST!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • David Lynch R.I.P. Philadelphia Nightmare

    David Lynch R.I.P. Philadelphia Nightmare

    I remember first encountering David Lynch’s “Eraserhead” (1977) at the midnight movies as a teenager in the early ‘80s and thinking WTF? And this was before WTF was even a thing. As an acronym, I mean. Being a teenager, I was delighted by the film’s surreal, anxious vibe, of course. Wouldn’t you know it, its sensibility was shaped by the young director’s experiences living in Philadelphia while he attended the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Had I only taken it as the warning it should have been, as I myself wound up living in that hell hole for 32 years!

    [Note to self: Save that paragraph for the opening of my autobiography.]

    This corn-fed Boy Scout from Missoula, Montana, blossomed into one the most unique and influential voices in American cinema. Lynch came to Philadelphia as an aspiring visual artist; he left with a lifetime supply of nightmare imagery, uneasy energy, and offbeat humor. In fact, on at least one occasion, he described the city as a virtual portal to hell.

    “It wasn’t a normal city…,” Lynch recalled. “The fear, insanity, corruption, filth, despair, violence in the air was so beautiful to me.”

    [Well, he had me until the beautiful part.]

    For the movies, Lynch went on to direct “Blue Velvet” (1986), “Wild at Heart” (1990), “Lost Highway” (1997), and “Mulholland Drive” (2001), with a special shout-out to “The Straight Story” (1999), perhaps his most peculiar project, in that it was made for Disney and there is nothing in it to frighten the horses. In fact, it’s a rather touching film. For television, he created the cult classic “Twin Peaks” (1990-91).

    He never lost his “aw shucks” demeanor. Mel Brooks, who produced Lynch’s “The Elephant Man” (1980), described him as Jimmy Stewart from Mars. At one point, George Lucas offered him the opportunity to direct “Return of the Jedi.” If you saw Lynch’s “Dune” (1984), I think you have a pretty good idea how that would have gone.

    He was nominated for three Academy Awards for Best Director and received an honorary Oscar in 2019. He had such a distinctive style, it could only be described as… Lynchian.

    Lynch had an amusing cameo as crusty director John Ford in Steven Spielberg’s “The Fabelmans” (2022). More recently, he struggled with emphysema after years as a smoker.

    At the time of his death, he was 78 years-old.

    “I’ve said many, many, many unkind things about Philadelphia, and I meant every one.”

    Me too, David. R.I.P.

  • Angelo Badalamenti Twin Peaks Composer Dies

    Angelo Badalamenti Twin Peaks Composer Dies

    While I wouldn’t ordinarily equate them with Sergei Prokofiev and Sergei Eisenstein, the symbiotic relationship of Angelo Badalamenti and David Lynch – and their working methods – were astonishingly similar. Badalamenti could never have done what Prokofiev did on “Alexander Nevsky,” but at the same time, Prokofiev, despite his fondness for the grotesque, could never have crafted the moody scores conjured by Badalamenti for “Blue Velvet” and “Twin Peaks.”

    Lynch’s musical good luck charm also appeared as an espresso-obsessed gangster in “Mulholland Drive” and accompanied Isabella Rossellini from the piano in her onscreen performance of “Blue Velvet.”

    Julee Cruise, with whom Badalamenti collaborated several times, including on the hit single “Falling” (her vocals overlaid onto the “Twin Peaks” theme music), died earlier this year, in June. Lynch can currently be seen in an amusing cameo, as crusty director John Ford, in Steven Spielberg’s “The Fabelmans.”

    Angelo Badalamenti died yesterday at the age of 85. R.I.P.

    https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/angelo-badalamenti-dead-david-lynch-composer-blue-velvet-1235280660/

    Badalamenti’s “Twin Peaks” theme (instrumental):

    With Cruise’s vocals:


    TOP: Badalamenti has Rossellini’s back

    BOTTOM: With Lynch and Cruise

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