Pro Tools
•Register a festival or a film
Submit film to festivals Promote for free or with Promo Packages

FILMFESTIVALS | 24/7 world wide coverage

Welcome !

Enjoy the best of both worlds: Film & Festival News, exploring the best of the film festivals community.  

Launched in 1995, relentlessly connecting films to festivals, documenting and promoting festivals worldwide.

Working on an upgrade soon.

For collaboration, editorial contributions, or publicity, please send us an email here

User login

|FRENCH VERSION|

RSS Feeds 

Martin Scorsese Masterclass in Cannes

 

 

 

CAREER RETROSPECTIVE: THE DAVID LYNCH FILMOGRAPHY (SECTION 3)

While "Blue Velvet" could be the most structurally complete Lynchian vision, "Wild at Heart" could be considered his most accesible. For me, this is the perfect culmination of everything I love about Lynch. The previous themes exist here, too, but they are more deeply felt than they've ever been before. Like "Blue Velvet", the film is about extremes -- love and violence, darkness and light, sanity and madness. But this film takes those extremes even further - the colors and the characters are more eye-poppingly vivid and alive. The world Lynch creates here knows no bounds. "Wild at Heart" is a road picture (a perfect genre for Lynch to ground his style of storytelling), a horror movie, a love story, a musical and a domestic drama. Everything Lynch throws into the mix (whether it's Elvis Presley or "The Wizard of Oz" homages) feels like it organically belongs. The movie can never veer out of control because that lack of control is exactly what it's about. It is his most audacious, fun and free creation.

"Twin Peaks:Fire Walk With Me", the feature film "prequel" to Lynch's highly successful television series, deals with an abused child who creates their own means of emotional detachment and escape, much like "The Grandmother" before it. Only this time, the child's choices place them further on the road to self-destruction. This is, in many ways, Lynch's first all-out horror film, albeit a domestic horror film dealing with child abuse and incest. Lynch's use of macabre sound and imagery hit a new high here; the experience is at once tender, shrill, horrifying and drenched in regret.

"Lost Highway" and "Mulholland Drive" examine the nature of duality; how someone can assume a different identity to either escape or welcome a darker past. There are curious moments in each film that seem to betray the world Lynch attempts to create. For the first time, his work seems too self-conscious. While many critics claim that "Wild at Heart" was an overt attempt at Lynch trying to be Lynch, I feel this description is much more warranted with these films. With these two films, it seems as if he's trying to out-Lynch himself to an extent that cannot be adequately supported by their wobbly structures.

Always surprising, Lynch also directed "The Straight Story" during this time. A family drama about an elderly man who travels by tractor across country to visit his ailing and estranged brother, the picture is as wholesome and warm as his previous films are dark and violent. It also earned Lynch a first (and probably last) milestone in his career: a G rating. It is, like "Wild at Heart", a road picture of sorts, only here the characters suffer no extreme affectations - they are all good, moral midwesterners. "The Straight Story" is, ironically, Lynch's riskiest experiment (can he tell a straight story?) and, despite its exhaustively lengthy running time, it is largely successful.

His next film, "Inland Empire", is a 165-minute DV film that promises more of Lynch's trademark atmosphere and mystery. Video produces a more flattened and voyeuristic image than film by its very nature. There's no telling what kind of perverse world Lynch can create with it. Whatever the new film turns out to be, it will definitely be another vision that we've never seen before.

The Short Films:
Six Figures Getting Sick: B-
The Alphabet: B
The Grandmother: B
The Amputee: C
The Cowboy and the Frenchman: C-
Lumiere: A

The Features:
Erasurehead: B
The Elephant Man: B
Dune: C-
Blue Velvet: A
Wild at Heart: A+
Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me: A-
Lost Highway: B-
The Straight Story: B
Mulholland Drive: B

Links

The Bulletin Board

> The Bulletin Board Blog
> Partner festivals calling now
> Call for Entry Channel
> Film Showcase
>
 The Best for Fests

Meet our Fest Partners 

Following News

Interview with EFM (Berlin) Director

 

 

Interview with IFTA Chairman (AFM)

 

 

Interview with Cannes Marche du Film Director

 

 

 

Filmfestivals.com dailies live coverage from

> Live from India 
> Live from LA
Beyond Borders
> Locarno
> Toronto
> Venice
> San Sebastian

> AFM
> Tallinn Black Nights 
> Red Sea International Film Festival

> Palm Springs Film Festival
> Kustendorf
> Rotterdam
> Sundance
Santa Barbara Film Festival SBIFF
> Berlin / EFM 
> Fantasporto
Amdocs
Houston WorldFest 
> Julien Dubuque International Film Festival
Cannes / Marche du Film 

 

 

Useful links for the indies:

Big files transfer
> Celebrities / Headlines / News / Gossip
> Clients References
> Crowd Funding
> Deals

> Festivals Trailers Park
> Film Commissions 
> Film Schools
> Financing
> Independent Filmmaking
> Motion Picture Companies and Studios
> Movie Sites
> Movie Theatre Programs
> Music/Soundtracks 
> Posters and Collectibles
> Professional Resources
> Screenwriting
> Search Engines
> Self Distribution
> Search sites – Entertainment
> Short film
> Streaming Solutions
> Submit to festivals
> Videos, DVDs
> Web Magazines and TV

 

> Other resources

+ SUBSCRIBE to the weekly Newsletter
+ Connecting film to fest: Marketing & Promotion
Special offers and discounts
Festival Waiver service
 

gersbach.net