That's fair, it has been a long time since I have seen it.
That's fair, it has been a long time since I have seen it.
That's sad. I always thought the women in the first Clerks were really cute and i like how they didn't take the guy's bullshit. Then Clerks 2 goes totally against that by acting like staying in arrested development for 20 plus years is a good thing. The end of Clerks was supposed to be Dante beginning the road of…
The skronk ass Sax that Bill Pullman's character plays helped get me into the more extreme types of music I listen to these days.
It is actually what got me into Lynch, I was 12 or 13 and enthralled with the NIN song (that I don't even think is in the movie) and entranced by the commercial for the movie. Hearing Patricia Arquette saying "he was videotaping us" set my imagination on fire. It wasn't until I was 16 or 17 that I finally watched the…
I think Mulholland Drive and Blue Velvet are his most popular/critically acclaimed. Lost Highway is often considered a warm up to Mulholland Drive but I love it all its own and have some friends who for them, it is their favorite Lynch.
I love Lost Highway and I love how it is 90's as fuck
FWWM taken as a standalone is one of my favorite Lynch films.
Any clue what type of flesh was in the trunk of that car?
I always liked it but I first saw Twin Peaks and FWWM in like 2004 so I missed the whole disdain for it.
Yes but what does Snidley Q Douchbag think?
Yes, but what does Snidley Q. Douchbag think?
I am in for this ride. The Evolution of the Arm looks like something out of Eraserhead or his early paintings.
Woah, I haven't heard about the Loa since reading Neuromancer. Nice catch.
They are more like his movies than Twin Peaks. If you were down with the Rabbits Scene in INLAND EMPIRE, Mulholland Drive and Eraserhead, you should be able to get on board with this.
Needs more body horror mutations and explicit gay sex to be a Burrough's dump (I say that as a lifelong Burroughs fan).
You're usually supposed to laugh. I was laughing at that scene too.
I love how Jerry Horne owns a marijuana dispensary. It's like Lynch's way of saying "Yes, this takes place in the 21st century."
Jerry Horne owning a legal dispensary was a hysterical way for Lynch to say "Yes this exists in the 21st Century"
It was the character, I don't know if it was his voice though.
The scratching in the opening scene very much reminded me of Eraserhead (The B&W helped)