See buying choices for this item to see if it's one of the millions that are eligible for Amazon Prime.

46 used & new from $2.62

Have one to sell? Sell yours here
 
 
Blue Velvet
 
See larger image
 

Blue Velvet (1986)

Starring: Isabella Rossellini, Kyle MacLachlan Director: David Lynch Rating: R (Restricted) Format: DVD
4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (269 customer reviews)


Available from these sellers.


23 new from $2.98 22 used from $2.62 1 collectible from $22.22
Also Available in: List Price: Our Price: Other Offers:
VHS Tape 41 used & new from $1.42

Special Offers and Product Promotions

  • Summer Blockbuster Sale: For a limited time, get big budget films for low budget prices. Save big on hit films. Hurry, offer ends soon. Shop now.

  • Save up to 57% on Pixar Classics: Exhilarated by Up? Get all your Pixar favorites now and save up to 57% off. See details.


What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?


Product Details


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential video
David Lynch peeks behind the picket fences of small-town America to reveal a corrupt shadow world of malevolence, sadism, and madness. From the opening shots Lynch turns the Technicolor picture postcard images of middle class homes and tree-lined lanes into a dreamy vision on the edge of nightmare. After his father collapses in a preternaturally eerie sequence, college boy Kyle MacLachlan returns home and stumbles across a severed human ear in a vacant lot. With the help of sweetly innocent high school girl (Laura Dern), he turns junior detective and uncovers a frightening yet darkly compelling world of voyeurism and sex. Drawn deeper into the brutal world of drug dealer and blackmailer Frank, played with raving mania by an obscenity-shouting Dennis Hopper in a career-reviving performance, he loses his innocence and his moral bearings when confronted with pure, unexplainable evil. Isabella Rossellini is terrifyingly desperate as Hopper's sexual slave who becomes MacLachlan's illicit lover, and Dean Stockwell purrs through his role as Hopper's oh-so-suave buddy. Lynch strips his surreally mundane sets to a ghostly austerity, which composer Angelo Badalamenti encourages with the smooth, spooky strains of a lush score. Blue Velvet is a disturbing film that delves into the darkest reaches of psycho-sexual brutality and simply isn't for everyone. But for a viewer who wants to see the cinematic world rocked off its foundations, David Lynch delivers a nightmarish masterpiece. --Sean Axmaker

Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

Mulholland Drive

Mulholland Drive

DVD ~ Justin Theroux
Wild At Heart

Wild At Heart

DVD ~ Nicolas Cage
Lost Highway

Lost Highway

DVD ~ Bill Pullman
3.8 out of 5 stars (318)  $14.49
Eraserhead

Eraserhead

DVD ~ Jack Nance
4.1 out of 5 stars (248)  $24.99
David Lynch's Inland Empire (Limited Edition Two-Disc Set)

David Lynch's Inland Empire (Limited Edition Two-Disc Set)

DVD ~ Laura Dern
3.8 out of 5 stars (159)  $18.49
Explore similar items

Tags Customers Associate with This Product

 (What's this?)
Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
Check the boxes next to the tags you consider relevant or enter your own tags in the field below.
(2)
(1)

Your tags: Add your first tag
 
Help others find this product — tag it for Amazon search
No one has tagged this product for Amazon search yet. Why not be the first to suggest a search for which it should appear?

 

Customer Reviews

269 Reviews
5 star:
 (163)
4 star:
 (38)
3 star:
 (23)
2 star:
 (19)
1 star:
 (26)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (269 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
36 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Film of the 1980's, March 1, 2000
By "meatbone42" (New York) - See all my reviews
I just recently saw David Lynch's "Blue Velvet" on the big screen (and in widescreen) for the first time. Having seen it now in its original aspect ratio, I can't bear to go back to my pan-and-scan videotape. Thank goodness that it's coming out on DVD. "Blue Velvet," quite simply, is the best film of the 1980's; the only film that comes close to it is Scorsese's "Raging Bull." "Blue Velvet" was so ahead of its time when it was first released back in 1986. In fact, it remains so today, judging by the bewildered faces of people who were at the revival showing I attended. The film precedes "American Beauty" in blowing the doors off of the closet that Suburbia keeps its skeletons in, telling the story of a young college kid who, after finding a severed human ear, gets caught up in murder and mayhem in his hometown of "Lumberton USA." Lynch goes to great lengths to set up his picture-book depiction of small-town American life (complete with bright red fire trucks, white picket fences, and blue skies) before taking a wrecking ball to it. Like he did in his debut, "Eraserhead," Lynch shows us what we look like (tedium and all) but purposely twists our view of it, like a mad optometrist giving us the wrong eyeglass prescription. Apart from the fine directing, "Blue Velvet" boasts an excellent cast that delivers each line with patented Lynch-quirkiness. Kyle MacLachlan plays Jeffrey Beaumont like a modern-day Dante, travelling through the Inferno he never knew his hometown was. Isabella Rosselini is spectacularly disturbing as Dorothy Vallens, a lounge singer whose husband and son have been abducted. Her character is a first: a femme fatale who is more dangerous to herself than anyone else. And in what may be one of the top ten tour-de-force performances of all time, Dennis Hopper, as oxygen-huffing crime boss/hedonist Frank Booth, makes you laugh one minute, and cringe with fear the next after realizing that such a person probably does exist. You may not agree that "Blue Velvet" is the best film of the 80's but you'll have to do some digging to find one more original. It is a contemporary film noir classic that deserves to withstand the test of time like older noir classics such as "Double Indemnity" and "The Big Sleep." So far, it appears to be holding up. It's a strange world and "Blue Velvet" (both the film itself and the fact that it was made) is solid proof of just how strange it can be.
Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
26 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars As coherent as it needs to be., January 12, 2004
By Samuel Chell (Kenosha,, WI United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
Although I was once inclined to agree with Roger Ebert's dismissal of "Blue Velvet" as a shocking albeit skillful montage of pointless images and effects, I've had to do a 360 turnaround after seeing it on DVD and reconsidering it in relation to some similar texts. The film certainly makes sense in comparison with a quest narrative such as Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown" and in light of Freud's ideas about love as well as Nietzsche's thoughts on the Dionysian self. It's also a film that pays constant homage to Hitchcock's best work, notably "Rear Window" and "Psycho," in its preoccupation with spectator psychology.

The most important lines occur early in the film when the protagonist, Kyle MacLachlan, tells Laura Dern that he needs to investigate the mysterious circumstances surrounding Isabella Rosselli because "knowledge requires risk" but with the possible reward that "you might learn something." By the end of the narrative, MacLachlan's character should have learned a lot, but here's where Lynch flinches, much like Robert Altman in the conclusion to "The Player." MacLachlan emerges neither a sadder nor wiser man from his rite of passage and his descent into the dark corners of the psyche. Instead, Lynch cynically reprises the film's innocent opening with its hopelessly artificial, Pollyannish, pastoral idyl that is most likely the preferred reality of the American mainstream movie consumer. At the same time, he preserves the tenuousness of such a naive vision with the shot of an insect impaled on a robin's beak and with a soundtrack that subjects the theme song to a disturbing treatment out of some internal, subterranean sound studio.

The film's meanings are inexhaustible, though a few important details should not be missed. Jeff confronts, first, mortality (his father stricken by a life-threatening stroke), then a severed, decaying human ear. The ear, the organ of hearing, is also the sense that fully awakens only in the dark, granting access to the Dionysian, deep intuitive wellsprings of the self. But the ear we see on screen has become a diseased, useless instrument in a "sunny" culture whose idea of music is Bobby Vinton's version of "Blue Velvet." Rossellini's alternative version of the song, with all of its sensuous, alluring darkness, will draw MacLachlan in to the same degree that it repells girl friend Dern (contrast this relationship with that of Jimmy Stewart and Grace Kelly in "Rear Window," where Kelly becomes increasingly drawn to the voyeuristic and "ghoulish" activity initiated by Stewart). Soon MacLaclan will discover the love substitutes embodied by both Rossellini and Hopper--the sadism and masochism, fetishism and scopophilia that, like it or not, are present in every son and daughter who has inherited from birth and learned from upbringing the pleasure/pain principle that underlies even the most well-intentioned, "selfless" love (the absence of any shown feelings between MacLaclan and either parent is another tip-off to the basis of his attraction to the dominitrix/sex slave character played by Rossellini).

As for the "villain," the foul-mouthed Dennis Hopper did not seem so frightening or repelling to me on this viewing. If anything, he's less the personification of evil than another version of insecure, overcompensating macho desire, perhaps better seen as a projection of the searching MacLachlan than as anybody's nemesis.

Lynch must know the risk, and even believe in the necessity, of coming to terms with the feelings of a darker but far from inauthentic self. MacLaclan tells the naive, shielded and conventional Dern from the beginning that it's extremely dangerous business. But the alternative is a Salem where everybody is "good," a Lumberton where people get sick but never die, a Disney fantasy that can exist only in artificial movies. I still think that "Blue Velvet" (in fact, most any other film since 1980) is eclipsed by his own "Elephant Man," where the camera takes us into the eye-hole and interior world of John Merrick, whose world we discover is also ours. But "Blue Velvet" is a more personal film, revealing not simply the mind of its creator but capturing a distinctively American experience.

Comment Comments (3) | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
25 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A CLASSIC MASTERPIECE, December 30, 1999
This review is from: Blue Velvet [VHS] (VHS Tape)
David Lynch is without a doubt the most brilliant talent in the movie business. His movies are always crafted with intelligence and bizarre creativity. "Blue Velvet" is one of the most original and fascinating movies I've ever seen. It is dark, funny, and very disturbing. The seemingly perfect town has an eerie sense of similarity to small towns everywhere. Nothing out of the ordinary on the surface of this littlle place, but underneath lies something far more sinister. A lounge singer's husband and son have been kidnapped by a lunatic and he wants this poor woman to perform sexual tasks for him. And in the middle of this is an innocent and curious college student who's life is altered forever when he discovers the secrets. He falls for this abused woman who is coming apart from the terrible tragedy that she has endured. Can he help? Will the madman have mercy and let her family go? This film is a fantastic look at the suffers ordinary people have to survive when unordianry circumstances are thrown their way. David Lynch is a master of modern art. He shatters molds and boundries and has become the most creative and talented director in film.
Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
 
 
Ad
 
Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Pabst Blue Ribbon!
Heineken! [....] Pabst Blue Ribbon! Even psychos can make sense. Best movie of the 1980s? Don't know, there were some good ones. David Lynch's best film? Read more
Published 3 days ago by Bob

5.0 out of 5 stars Necessary Lynch
This is quintessential Lynch. The characters are spellbinding. The story is captivating. It lacks the circular motif that appears so strongly in later works. Read more
Published 3 days ago by Jacob Kempner

5.0 out of 5 stars A Masterpiece of American Film Making
Now that my initial stupor upon seeing this film is gone (along with that impulse review I made of this), it's high time for me to write a review on one of my favorite movies of... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Untitled

5.0 out of 5 stars Black And Blue...
Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle Maclachlan from The Hidden and "Twin Peaks") lives an idyllic life in the pristine town of Lumberton. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Bindy Sue Frønkünschtein

1.0 out of 5 stars This 'Masterpiece' is the Perfect Example of Bandwagon Overrating
I make it a point to see hundreds of films from virtually every genre, and I judge them good or bad primarily on the basis of how convincing the acting is, how believable the plot... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Kevin M.

4.0 out of 5 stars I liked it a lot.
Another cool one from David Lynch.

For me, sometimes it's difficult to get into a movie directed by David Lynch. Read more
Published 5 months ago by TLewisMichigan

5.0 out of 5 stars Lynch's Most Famous Movie? I Think So!
This has always been a unique crime movie, like no story I have seen before or since. In numerous ways, yes, it's a sick film... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Craig Connell

5.0 out of 5 stars Very good
*Blue Velvet* is an American underground classic, which was made in 1986 by a surrealist director David Lynch. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Igor Biryukov

5.0 out of 5 stars great lynch primer
Blue Velvet is not David Lynch's signature film; his signature film is Mulholland Drive. In descending order, my favorite Lynch films are Mulholland Drive, Lost Highway, The... Read more
Published 6 months ago by J. O. Booker

5.0 out of 5 stars A SADISTICALLY EROTIC DREAMSCAPE
This is, in my opinion, Lynch's best film. There are few director's that could play with psycho-dramas on a level with Hitchcock. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Geary A., Jones

Only search this product's reviews



Customer Discussions

 Beta (What's this?)
New! See all customer communities, and bookmark your communities to keep track of them.
This product's forum (1 discussion)
  Discussion Replies Latest Post
first time you saw this movie? 0 May 2008
See all discussions...  
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
  [Cancel]


Active discussions in related forums
  Discussion Replies Latest Post
PLEASE HELP WITH SHOCKING/DISTURBING MOVIES 370 6 hours ago
The Ultimate Erotic/Sexual Movie List 129 3 days ago
   
Explore more


Product Information from the Amapedia Community

Beta (What's this?)



Look for Similar Items by Category


An Explosion of Popcorn Flavor!

Fireworks Popcorn & Seasoning Set
Munchies have never been better. The Fireworks Popcorn & Seasoning Set gives you four popcorn types and four seasonings, including white cheddar, butter burst, caramel pecan, and popcorn salt--all for $15.49.
 

Accessorize Your Tools

Shop for Tool Accessories
From drill bits to fasteners, find all the tool accessories you need in Home Improvement.

Shop for tool accessories

 
Shop for outdoor power and woodworking equipment
Better Than a Sharp StickBrowse outdoor power and woodworking equipment in the Home Improvement Store.
 

What Can Air Tools Do for You?

Shop for air tools at Amazon.com
Put the power of air to work for you with new pneumatics from Amazon.com. A variety of air tools and compressors for any number of projects are available at great prices.

Explore air tools

 
Ad

 

Feedback

If you need help or have a question for Customer Service, contact us.
 Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
Is there any other feedback you would like to provide?

Your comments can help make our site better for everyone.



Where's My Stuff?

Shipping & Returns

Need Help?

Your Recent History

  (What's this?)
You have no recently viewed items or searches.

After viewing product detail pages or search results, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.

Look to the right column to find helpful suggestions for your shopping session.

Continue shopping: Top Sellers
Free
Free by Chris Anderson
Paranoia
Paranoia by Joseph Finder
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan, Sir, 1859-1930 Doyle
My Soul to Lose
My Soul to Lose by Rachel Vincent

Conditions of Use | Privacy Notice © 1996-2009, Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates