Amazon.com Review
You know David Lynch as the director of terminally weird movies such as
Eraserhead,
Blue Velvet, and
Wild at Heart, as well as the bizarre and highly influential television series
Twin Peaks. But did you know that it was Mel Brooks who gave him his first big break? That the idea for
Blue Velvet grew out of a fantasy Lynch had about sneaking into a private room and learning the secret to a murder mystery? That
Twin Peaks came about because co-creator Mark Frost was obsessed with Marilyn Monroe?
In Lynch on Lynch, a 250-page interview book, editor Chris Rodley does a superb job of getting Lynch to talk at length about the high and low points of his life and career. Their conversation covers his early work as a painter through the making of his major films of the 1980s, the fiasco of Dune ("It is what it is."), and the recent and very obscure Lost Highway ("I just *loved* this title.").
Lynch is particularly interesting when he talks about the creative process: "I don't want to give the impression that I sit around thinking up horrible things. I get all kinds of different ideas and feelings. If I'm lucky, they start organizing themselves into a story--then maybe some ideas come along that are too eerie, too violent, or too funny, and they don't fit that story. So you write them down and save them for two or three projects down the road. There's nowhere you can't go in a film--if you think of it, you can go there." Lynch on Lynch is a treat for Lynch fans of all shapes, sizes, and fetishes.
Product Description
Trained as a painter, David Lynch applies his artistic talents to filmmaking. Disturbing and mysterious, his films such as "Blue Velvet, " "Wild at Heart, " and the TV series "Twin Peaks" keep surrealism and hallucination in perfect balance. Renowned for his reticence about speaking about his work, Lynch now talks openly, not only about his movies but about the full range of his many activities. 40 photos.
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