Lynch (One)
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #25362 in DVD
- Brand: RYKODISC
- Released on: 2008-08-26
- Rating: Unrated
- Aspect ratio: 1.66:1
- Formats: Color, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 84 minutes
Features
- A film that gives you a rare glimpse into the fascinating mind of the man who created such visionaryics as Eraserhead, Mulholland Drive, Blue Velvet, Twin Peaks, Wild at Heart, The Elephant Man and more Compiled from over two years of footage, the film is an intimate portrait of Lynch s creative process as he completes his latest film, INLAND EMPIRE. We are with him as he discovers the beauty in i
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
A film that gives you a rare glimpse into the fascinating mind of the man who created such visionary classics as Eraserhead, Mulholland Drive, Blue Velvet, Twin Peaks, Wild at Heart, The Elephant Man and more... Compiled from over two years of footage, the film is an intimate portrait of Lynch's creative process as he completes his latest film, INLAND EMPIRE. We are with him as he discovers the beauty in ideas, leading us on a journey through the abstract which ultimately unveils his cinematic vision.
Customer Reviews
Portrait of the Absurdist
Many of the best scenes from this stylish and compelling documentary are of David Lynch telling stories. This is a man with an apparently bottomless reservoir of true-life tales that are every bit as humorous, disturbing, and all-out absurd as the stories from his films like ERASERHEAD, BLUE VELVET, MULHOLLAND DR., and others.
For instance, there's the story about the time he became obsessed with "popping" an enormously bloated dead cow with his pick-ax. Let's just say the effort backfired.
Or the time he found himself pinned against his steering wheel, in the middle of traffic, by a ponderous, house-eating floor sander.
Um...
Or there's that black and white French film ("But I swear there was color in it, although I don't know HOW!"), entitled "Blood of the Beast," in which the world's most efficient slaughterhouse made a horse disappear before his awe-stricken eyes.
And on and on and on...
But aside from chronicling many of Lynch's alternately grotesque, hilarious, and sometimes even poignant, stories, LYNCH (ONE) also gives you insight into: Lynch the mad carpenter at work in his shops; Lynch the devoted practitioner of Transcendental Meditation, explaining the benefits of TM and spreading the good word; Lynch the meteorologist, delivering idiosyncratic daily weather reports to [...] members; Lynch the charmer explaining to Laura Dern the real reason why he calls her "Tidbit"; and even Lynch the rock star recording his distorted, otherworldly vocals to the INLAND EMPIRE theme song, "Ghost of Love".
And speaking of INLAND EMPIRE, quite a bit of this film is a fly-on-the-wall look at the unusual gestation process of Lynch's latest absurdist extravaganza. For those who still don't know, IE is a three-hour mind-bender (and the bonus disc provides 74 more minutes of footage entitled MORE THINGS THAT HAPPENED) that, two years after its release, absolutely no one on earth has a solid, working interpretation for. Check that one out.
But getting back to LYNCH (ONE), the dvd is generously packed with bonus features which, although they can get a bit tiresome, contain all sorts of hidden gems throughout.
It should also be noted that LYNCH 2 (the follow-up to LYNCH [ONE]) is included on the sprawling INLAND EMPIRE bonus disc. L2 focuses on behind-the-scenes IE production footage, as opposed to LYNCH (ONE), which is more about Lynch's background, personal philosophies, and approach to craft.
All in all, this is a film that no Lynch fan, and no fan of INLAND EMPIRE, should ever pass up.
Oh, and happy Bastille Day!
A gripping experience . . .
From the first scene I was gripped and fascinated, not only by the eccentric Lynch, but by the pure artistry of the film itself. From the music and sounds to the vivid imagery and the intelligence of the storytelling I found the film a complete experience. I highly recommend this film.
Could've been longer
It's great to be able to see Lynch at work in something more concrete than a DVD extra or two, and this doc gives fairly good insight into the man doing his thing. The four stars come from that.
Had to take a star away because of how short it is compared to how much footage was shot, and also because the director did a bit of an amateurish job of imitating Lynch's trademark visual mechanisms and scattered editing style. I would've rather just had a straight-up 200 minute documentary about Lynch without any huge focus on artistic representation(outside of Lynch at work of course): if the mystery is being exposed to a certain degree, don't try to shroud it in mystery's cloak.
A must-have for Lynch fans though.




