In Memoriam: David Lynch The Iconic Film-Maker Dies At 78
David Lynch, the film-maker who specialised in surreal, noir style mysteries who made a
string of influential, critically acclaimed works such as Blue Velvet, Eraserhead, Wild At Heart and the iconic TV series Twin Peaks has died aged 78.
David Lynch, was the living proof that the bizarre,
the radical and the experimental, can be succesful too. His family announce the passing of the maestro with the following statement in Facebook: “It is with deep regret that we, his family, announce the passing of the man and the artist, David Lynch,”. “We would appreciate some privacy at this time. There’s a big
hole in the world now that he’s no longer with us. But, as he would say,
“Keep your eye on the donut and not on the hole.” It’s a beautiful day
with golden sunshine and blue skies all the way.”
Last August, Lynch said he had been diagnosed with emphysema and in November, spoke further
about his breathing difficulties. "I can hardly walk across a room," he
said. "It’s like you're walking around with a plastic bag around your
head." Deadline reported
that sources had said Lynch's health took a turn for the worse after he
had to evacuate from his home due to the Los Angeles wildfires.
From his beginnings as an art student making
experimental short films, to the cult success of his surreal first
feature Eraserhead, and on to a string of award-winning films including Blue Velvet, Wild at Heart and Mulholland Drive,
as well as the landmark TV show Twin Peaks. He received three best
director Oscar nominations (for Blue Velvet, The Elephant Man and
Mulholland Drive), and was given an honorary lifetime achievement Oscar
in 2019; he won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes film festival for Wild at
Heart in 1990. Lynch
also avidly practiced transcendental meditation, setting up the David
Lynch Foundation for Consciousness-Based Education and World Peace in
2005; he also produced paintings, released albums (including collaborations with Julee Cruise, Lykke Li and Karen O), created a long-running YouTube weather report and opened a nightclub in Paris in 2011. In 2018 he explained his reclusive lifestyle to the Guardian: "I like to make movies. I like to work. I don’t really like to go out." In 2024 he revealed his lifetime cigarette habit had resulted in debilitating emphysema
Born in Missoula, Montana in 1946, Lynch went to art college in the 1960s and made his first experimental short, Six Men Getting Sick,
while a student at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Lynch moved
to Los Angeles in 1971 and studied film-making at the AFI Conservatory,
where he began filming his first feature Eraserhead. Finally finishing
it in 1976, the surreal black-and-white fable was received largely with
bafflement, and rejected from most film festivals, but in the late 70s
became something of a success on the late-night "midnight movie"
circuit.
The film impact led to an offer from Mel Brooks' production company to direct
The Elephant Man; starring John Hurt in a biopic of Joseph Merrick, the
film about the disfigured 19th-century man was nominated for eight
Oscars and secured Lynch's Hollywood status. After turning down an offer
to direct Return of the Jedi, Lynch agreed to make an adaptation of
Frank Herbert's epic sci-fi novel Dune, but the film was substantially
recut in postproduction and proved a commercial and critical disaster.
Instead of a planned Dune sequel, Lynch decided to make a more personal
film: his dark noir thriller Blue Velvet was a cult hit and a hugely
influential critical success on its release in 1986, and it resulted in
Lynch's second best director Oscar nomination.
Lynch then embarked on another noirish project,
the iconic, opaque and surreal murder-mystery Twin Peaks that – unusually for
notable film directors of the period – was envisioned as a TV series;
Lynch developed it with former Hill Street Blues writer Mark Frost. A
mix of small town comedy, police procedural and surreal dreamworld, and
described as "the most hauntingly original work ever done for American
TV".
Twin Peaks defied early predictions of failure on its broadcast in
1990; as a pioneer of high end TV, it is arguably Lynch’s most
influential work. A second series was broadcast later in 1990, a feature
film prequel Fire Walk With Me was released in 1992, and just like it was told on the final episode of the second season, the third season arrived more tan a quarter of a century, in 2017, being more intense and surrealistic than the first two seasons.
As Twin Peaks
went into production, Lynch began working on a feature film adaptation
of Barry Gifford’s novel Wild at Heart, and cast Nicolas Cage and Laura
Dern in the lead roles in a violent, haunting road movie with echoes of
The Wizard of Oz. Wild at Heart premiered at Cannes in 1990 and won the
Palme d’Or. In 1997 Lynch began to edge back to
his avant garde roots with Lost Highway, a surreal thriller starring
Bill Pullman and Patricia Arquette, which flopped at the box office. In
complete contrast Lynch released The Straight Story in 1999, a bluntly
straightforward story about an elderly man (played by Richard
Farnsworth) who drives 240 miles across the country on a motorised
lawnmower.
Lynch
then embarked on another highly successful project: Mulholland Drive.
Initially it appeared to go disastrously wrong, as Lynch had pitched it
as a Twin Peaks-style TV series. A pilot was shot and then cancelled by
TV network ABC. But the material was picked up by French company
StudioCanal, who gave him the money to refashion it as a feature film. A
noir-style mystery drama, it was another big critical success, secured
Lynch a third best director Oscar nomination and in 2016 was voted the best film of the 21st century. Lynch followed it in 2006 with the three-hour surreal thriller Inland Empire,
shot on video and starring Dern as an American movie star who appears
to mysteriously transport into the Polish original of a film she is
working on.
Thereafter Lynch appeared to step
back from feature films, with only the third series of Twin Peaks in
2017 representing a big film-making project, although reports suggest he
had been working on a series for Netflix. Lynch took acting roles in
other people's work, the most notably as Gus the Bartender in Seth
MacFarlane's The Cleveland Show, and as legendary director John Ford in
Steven Spielberg's loosely autobiographical 2022 movie The Fabelmans.
Lynch was married four times and had a long-term relationship with his Blue Velvet star Isabella Rossellini. Rest In Peace/In Power Maestro.
No hay comentarios.:
Publicar un comentario