The problem with Blue Velvet is David Lynch or ... the MacGuffin of the severed ear, the small-town milieu lifted from Shadow Of A Doubt. The curious, voyeuristic hero comes straight out of ...
David Lynch, known for his surreal and dark films, still retained a sense of hope and love in his films. His infinite ...
The famously weird filmmaker set his 1986 movie in Lumberton, with many modifications, and filmed in Wilmington during its film infancy.
Lynch uses the imagery of the severed ear and the titular song Blue Velvet to symbolize the juxtaposition of innocence and corruption. The ear represents a hole into a hidden world, and the song ...
Elmes tells IndieWire about "haunting dark corners" with the late filmmaker on "Eraserhead" and the great feedback Lynch gave him at the "Blue Velvet" DGA premiere.
David Lynch has passed. His films will live on for many years to come. From the short films of the late sixties and early ...
With the demise of the legendary filmmaker David Lynch, there has been renewed interest in his past works, especially Blue Velvet, which is often considered one of his best. Released on September ...
The prop human ear made out of silicone that Kyle MacLachlan found at the beginning of “Blue Velvet.” Juli Leonard File photo The state is still full of people who contributed a piece of ...
Films like “Blue Velvet” and “Mulholland Drive” aren ... MacLachlan plays Jeffrey Beaumont, who stumbles upon a severed ear when he comes home from college. (That ear, crawling with ...
Steven Soderbergh’s “Presence” requires some initial audience disorientation. Mistake? If so, why do we miss David Lynch so much?