Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 4:01 am Posts: 19477 Location: Brooklyn NY
This is coming out in December. The film festival reviews have been mixed; basically it's even more fragmented and dissonant than Mulholland Drive and some critics have questioned Lynch's use of HD as opposed to film, since digital basically lacks the vibrant aspects of celluloid that his cinematography is famous for. Anyway, the story is about an actress with MPD who becomes unable to decipher the reality of a film she's in with her actual life. For many reviews I've read, Laura Dern's performance is the saving grace of the movie. I'm a bit disappointed from what I've heard regarding the plot, the making of the film (basically every scene was improvised the day of or before shooting - which actually isn't as original of a directing technique as it sounds), and the reception but sometimes Lynch's cinema takes a while to sit in. Oh yeah it's three hours long too. I'll probably see it over xmas break.
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LittleWing sometime in July 2007 wrote:
Unfortunately, it's so elementary, and the big time investors behind the drive in the stock market aren't so stupid. This isn't the false economy of 2000.
Last edited by glorified_version on Sun Oct 22, 2006 6:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Unfortunately, it's so elementary, and the big time investors behind the drive in the stock market aren't so stupid. This isn't the false economy of 2000.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 4:01 am Posts: 19477 Location: Brooklyn NY
Quote:
Nevertheless, my favorite film of the entire festival and the year (thus far) is David Lynch's hotly anticipated Inland Empire, a three-hour magnum opus of such escalating detachment to any sort of summarizable rationality that few have publicly dared to take a stab at what it all means, or had the guts to admit they don't have any theories. I'm speaking especially of a few major voices in the biz who have evaded this by name-checking Buñuel and others as "obvious inspirations." Not every artist cares about or takes from those who came before them, and it's arrogant to allege otherwise.
Pinballing between the id and ego where the heart is only a brain function, Lynch's most challenging work since Eraserhead is a viscerally unrivaled love letter to the transformative powers of cinema that can't be controlled nor comprehended. Parsing that requires some backstory, which begins with Lynch, intrigued by a consumer-grade DV format, shooting test footage of a lengthy confessional monologue performed by one of his regulars, Laura Dern. Over the next two years, scenes were added and interwoven in a piecemeal fashion to flesh out an aloof whole that's truly as calculated as its auteur's greying cowlick.
As it stands now, Dern is commanding as Nikki Grace, a veteran actress who has signed on with womanizing costar Devin (Justin Theroux) for the adulterous weepie On High in Blue Tomorrows, a cursed remake of a project that was abandoned after its two leads were murdered. Inevitably, on-screen chemistry lusts its way off-screen, even after Nikki's towering husband warns Devon that there will be "dark, inescapable consequences" if the vows of marriage are forsaken. So far so good, but then Sue, Nikki's character from the film-within-this-film, becomes her own distinct personality, then splinters into a third role for Dern. A posse of prostitutes coexist on Hollywood Blvd. and a sepia-toned Poland, reality overlaps hallucinations making temporal shifts, and how is that crying woman in the hotel room watching the same movie we are?
Every director with longevity eventually makes their film about filmmaking, and while Inland Empire ostensibly appears to be the ugly stepsister to his Tinseltown noir-subverting Mulholland Dr., Lynch is working in a cognitively corrupt, impossible genre, so the comparison is only and deliberately self-referential. Watch for slightly modified allusions to past characters (Diane Ladd's caustic TV host echoes her clash with real-life daughter Dern in Wild at Heart; Mulholland Dr.'s Laura Harring briefly shows in a staggering end-credits sequence that feels like his oeuvre's own after-party) and moments (Harry Dean Stanton's random dog speech positions him as the surrogate Jack Nance of Wild at Heart; a bug-eyed Grace Zabriskie makes idle threats about being here and there simultaneously like Lost Highway's Robert Blake). And see the sitcom family of bunny-head people? That's recycled footage from Rabbits, a series of shorts available on the official DavidLynch.com around 2002.
Lynch assigns himself to the disembodied voice of Bucky Jay, an ineffectual gaffer on the Blue Tomorrows set that illustrates his meta-role as a small cog in the monstrous energy of movie-making. Later, when Nikki's sinister spouse goes looking for a nameless man in the woods, he's told by a mutual friend that he left, "muttering something about Inland Empire," and complaining that the husband hasn't done enough. Considering the fact that the hubby disappears until this bit, passively avoiding the menace he promised upon Devon in the first reel, is the mystery man a reference to Lynch abandoning his own film, or worse, that the film itself has taken over his directorial duties? After two screenings, this is frankly not enough word space to fully deduce its auto-cannibalizing spirit and neverending doppleganger logic, but I implore courageous art-lovers to seek out this defiantly unique hellion when Lynch self-distributes in upcoming months. Inland Empire is interchangably terrifying, maddening, shockingly hilarious and perversely exciting, and that's just to those who end up disliking it. http://www.premiere.com/feature/3194/ne ... ate-7.html
I am so excited for this
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LittleWing sometime in July 2007 wrote:
Unfortunately, it's so elementary, and the big time investors behind the drive in the stock market aren't so stupid. This isn't the false economy of 2000.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 3:02 pm Posts: 10690 Location: Lost in Twilight's Blue
mowbs wrote:
I'll definitely be seeing it
Same here. I just saw a small blurb about this in EW, so I'm happy to have a better explanation. The plot sounds very similar to Mullholland Drive, but since this is Lynch, I'm not going to worry about that too much.
_________________ Scared to say what is your passion, So slag it all, Bitter's in fashion, Fear of failure's all you've started, The jury is in, verdict: Retarded
Unfortunately, it's so elementary, and the big time investors behind the drive in the stock market aren't so stupid. This isn't the false economy of 2000.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 4:01 am Posts: 19477 Location: Brooklyn NY
Droppin Ordnance wrote:
Thanks for the trailer link GV. When in december is this released?
By the end of the month...the 15th or the 29th. That's what IMDB is saying. I am so fucking pumped
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LittleWing sometime in July 2007 wrote:
Unfortunately, it's so elementary, and the big time investors behind the drive in the stock market aren't so stupid. This isn't the false economy of 2000.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 4:01 am Posts: 19477 Location: Brooklyn NY
Droppin Ordnance wrote:
I'm hoping there is an early screening in LA.
It might open up there in the next week
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LittleWing sometime in July 2007 wrote:
Unfortunately, it's so elementary, and the big time investors behind the drive in the stock market aren't so stupid. This isn't the false economy of 2000.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 3:02 pm Posts: 10690 Location: Lost in Twilight's Blue
Awesome trailer. The plot sounds very similar to Mulholland Drive but still, I can't wait for this.
_________________ Scared to say what is your passion, So slag it all, Bitter's in fashion, Fear of failure's all you've started, The jury is in, verdict: Retarded
Mixed reviews, not surprising. I'm curious to see Ebert's take. Will hopefully be seeing this when I go home in a few weeks.
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LittleWing sometime in July 2007 wrote:
Unfortunately, it's so elementary, and the big time investors behind the drive in the stock market aren't so stupid. This isn't the false economy of 2000.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 3:02 pm Posts: 10690 Location: Lost in Twilight's Blue
What's the release date on this?
_________________ Scared to say what is your passion, So slag it all, Bitter's in fashion, Fear of failure's all you've started, The jury is in, verdict: Retarded
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 3:02 pm Posts: 10690 Location: Lost in Twilight's Blue
Sooooo...any word on a dvd release date? Anything?
_________________ Scared to say what is your passion, So slag it all, Bitter's in fashion, Fear of failure's all you've started, The jury is in, verdict: Retarded
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 3:02 pm Posts: 10690 Location: Lost in Twilight's Blue
So I find out at lunch that the local independent film festival here in town is going to be showing this Friday night. The bad news is that this is the one freakin weekend this month that I'm not going to be out of town and there's no getting out of it. I also need to get tickets this Saturday, but that's another story, I can always use the net and accomplish that where I'll be staying.
_________________ Scared to say what is your passion, So slag it all, Bitter's in fashion, Fear of failure's all you've started, The jury is in, verdict: Retarded
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 4:01 am Posts: 19477 Location: Brooklyn NY
Going to go check out Best Buy for the DVD...I'm pretty pumped for this. The website says they have it, but I don't know if the store in my area is actually carrying it. Been anticipating this one for a while.
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LittleWing sometime in July 2007 wrote:
Unfortunately, it's so elementary, and the big time investors behind the drive in the stock market aren't so stupid. This isn't the false economy of 2000.
Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2004 1:52 am Posts: 418 Location: Oklaoma
I can't say i have been a Lynch fan , but i have always watched his movies because they are so bizzarre and intriguing. But definetaly one time watchers. I respected him for that. His movies always stick with you and of course there is hardly any meaning but the images and characters invoke things which you have thought in your own mind and Lynch is strange enough to go all out to get into your subconsious. Ad there is alwasy an elemnet of darkness and fear that he definately can get across. He makes his actors act quite dangerous and sick willed. So props for his 'what the fuck scenes and eerie detailed dialogues.
*Spoiler*
Now that being said I had to sit down and watch Inland Empire last night all three hours of it. I have seen everyone of his films and he went all out with this one. It was the hardest time I ever had watching a movie, although i had to watch to see what every the fuck else was going on in that movie. Believe me it is his most bizarre, crazed, jumbled up thing ever. Of course no explanations in sight. It was artsy artsy to the greates dephths. Some scenes were frightening beyond belief more frighting than his other movies. Every few minutes of this movie catches you off gaurd like a severe kick in the nuts. But lemme tell you it also had very very beuatiful things going on complete with large groups of gorgeous young dancing girls and many other very pretty women. Although one had a stick leg. Laura Dern was just incredible in this insane acid trip gone horribly wrong movie. She went through so many personalities it was scary, and there is a very disturbing scene with her using very very vile laguage endlessy. Total freak show. but definately will brand your mind like most lynch films. But this one is the epitome. 3 hours of madness But Lynch went the total wrong way with this, he went way way too far. I was a jumbled mess of scene after scene that he apprently threw all of his ideas into a film and he apperantly though "my movies arent meant to understood anyway so i am just going to smash all this bizarre scenes and characters together and just be totaalt weirder that ever just for the sake of being weird and extremely artsy. Think he just really didn't give a shit. He wanted to take it as far as he could and no matter what hardcore lych fans try to tell you there is no point this insane fucking thing. I mean most of his movies will fuck you up mentally but this might cause a checkin to a ward. David's lost it. ANd 60 percent of this movie you will be fucking board if not thani will be very fucking surprised.Not to mention he rehashed so may things he's done in his other movies. Three hours of sickness this movie. 2.5 stars outta 5...................... only because of the intensity of characters and scenes, and especaially some of the dialogue. Lynch has got to make a full on horror movie, it would be amazingy frightening
_________________ I couldn't take it anymore so I went back to the sea. cause thats where fishes go when fishes get the chance to breath.
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2004 12:03 am Posts: 18376 Location: outta space Gender: Male
i though mullholland drive was kind of a piece of shit... i respect what he's going for, i just don't think its that good. i hear blue velvet is good, but its hard to get motivated for it when people said mullholland drive was good
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thodoks wrote:
Man, they really will give anyone an internet connection these days.
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