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In Reply to: Re: Is anybody willing to explain Blue Velvet to me? posted by TA on November 12, 2002 at 21:30:03:
Agree w'ja TA, the travel brochures never tell you about the shallow graves or who gets beaten in the alleyways (or why)
Lynch takes a look under the rug in the "perfect small town" and finds Dennis Hopper at his most screen crazy self
Loved Laura Dern in that too, don't know how any critic could slam it, it's very well acted and original, one of Lynchs better efforts
As Margaret Thatcher once said "The veneer of civilisation is terribly thin..." I think that's what Lynchs take is with this film
Eric
Tokyo
Follow Ups:
In retrospect, BV my Lynch fave, reversing order with WAH, never
tried to make great sense of any Lynch film, however, Lost Highway
completely lost me. BV came across subliminally implausible to me
as incredible so much Big City-type sheenanigans going in such a pedestrian
small town, something I chose to ignore,although, I can see how Lynch
would use the contrast for great effect, like you say, though, good
to great performances, highly original. If you´re interested in
seeing my previous comments on Lynch´s films, go to www.imdb.com
(Walt Whizzer) or this forum´s archives. - AH
< < "The veneer of civilisation is terribly thin..."Yes, that's probably a good enough theme. Some disjointed thoughts: I couldn't figure out what the detective (Dern's "father") was about, and how I got the impression he was involved with the "crime". I couldn't figure out if the crime was gratefully participated in by all sides, and if so then it's not really a crime. I couldn't figure out the meaning of the boy having lesbian (my impression again) parents. Or the bloody robins. I'll obviously have to watch it a few more times. Hopper was great, totally creepy. Dern's character was the only one that seemed straight and "normal". Siskel liked the movie, Ebert didn't, I did watch the short excerpt of their review on the disc, kinda surprised they put it there since Ebert was so negative.
are typical of Lynchs films; it keeps the audience on their toes and keeps things interesting; don't expect logical conclusions or happy endings with this director. Mulholland Drive is even more fantastic a fantasy with even more unanswered questions and loose(r) ends
Not that I'm complaining...
Eric
Tokyo
Checked one of my (few) bird books. Robins are typically "loners" among their own type and like to hide and generally be unobservable/unintrusive. They apparently like to frequent swamps and bogs. That seems to metaphorically fit...
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