Can someone who liked Mulholland Drive sell it to me?
Have you liked other Lynch movies?
Because it's very Lynchian, but I thought successfully so.
Of course, you have to sort out the plot which I didn't get on first watch, but once that falls into place it's an interesting, even haunting movie.
Oh, I'm never watching it again. And I disliked the second bit more than the first (wanted to slap them all silly), so I think it's not for me.
I was a
Twin Peaks
fan, though.
Oh, I'm never watching it again.
I didn't mean that. There was a long piece on Salon when it came out laying out the storyline which made it more coherent for me.
Twin Peaks
pissed me off and I thought I hated David Lynch until I saw he directed
The Straight Story.
I guess I love everything with Richard Farnsworth in it.
I read the imdb synopses to work what had happened, but then was left with the why. The Salon piece would probably be better info.
Imdb had a list of Lynch's ten clues, and even they didn't help. On my phone so I can't link, but if someone could explain
those
to me, I'd be grateful.
Also watched the remake of
The Manchurian Candidate
(love both versions) and
Serendipity
which I enjoy in sparse doses.
Next up is to make a dent in my netflix queue by watching online. I'll die before that list gets shorter than 100.
I really don't care for clever twists and stories I have to figure out by reading clues and explanations online somewhere. I don't want everything just handed to me, but Mulholland Dr wallows in a ridiculous level of obfuscation (or laziness?) in its storytelling. If I don't care whether a single character in your movie lives or dies, all the lovely cinematography and Hidden Layers Of Stuff won't save you.
I guess that means I'm not Lynch's advocate here...
I really don't care for clever twists and stories I have to figure out by reading clues and explanations online somewhere.
In fairness to Lynch, the twists aren't there just to give you a gotcha moment, but are completely justified by the narrative.
The story achieves a fair amount of emotional heft when you realize what's happening and it's not a place you can get to narratively if it was told in a straightforward fashion.
Salon's Mullholland Drive analysis
Can someone who liked Mulholland Drive sell it to me?
I liked it. I thought it was the closest movie equivalent I've seen to watching a dream. Other than that, I am at a loss to explain it further.
Thanks for the link, Hec. It doesn't help me like it, because I don't think that movies should be that much work (and the article seems to imply that it's even more work than I found it--is it really supposed to be hard to tell it's Naomi throughout?). It mentions
Memento
as being similarly arduous, but instead I found
Memento
rewarding once you click with it, which is eminently possible while you're still in the theatre.
Now to poke through the letters in response to the analysis.