The world has lost a true visionary.

  • Donjuanme@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I didn’t see a single work of his that I didn’t walk away regretting that time spent. I know a lot of people fawn over his creations, but they weren’t for me.

    Would’ve been interesting to see Mulholland drive as a television series, as a movie there was too much concept into too little space, but I honestly think he preferred it that way.

    • BestBouclettes@jlai.lu
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      1 day ago

      I watched Lost Highway which I found to be a confusing mess. To this day, I still have no idea what the hell it was about…

    • OutlierBlue@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      I’d never heard of him until today. I looked him up on IMDB and the only thing I recognized was Twin Peaks. I tried watching that years ago but got a few episodes in and decided it wasn’t for me.

      Still sad to lose someone that a lot of people respected and enjoyed.

    • ZMonster@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      Completely agree. Everyone loves to credit lynch for twin peaks success but it was frost who would let lynch off the leash in season 1. But halfway through season 2, lynch gives you both barrels and it sucks.

      He’s done some good things, but in my opinion, at the end of the day lynch is just another artist who doesn’t always tell a complete story and pretends like this inability is some sort of gift to the viewer.

      He’s like the Papa Murphy’s of storytellers. Here’s the ingredients, now you figure it out. And you’re welcome.

      • ylph@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        Everyone loves to credit lynch for twin peaks success but it was frost who would let lynch off the leash in season 1. But halfway through season 2, lynch gives you both barrels and it sucks.

        Many people contributed to make Twin Peaks a success, but it was definitely David who is most responsible for it becoming the cult masterpiece that it has. He actually left the show in the middle of season 2, so arguably the weakest episodes of that season had little direct involvement from him - and you could definitely feel it.

        He directed episodes 1 and 3 of Season 1 (and co-wrote 1, 2 and 3) and then left to do Wild at Heart. He came back to direct the first 2 episodes of Season 2, and episode 7, and basically planned the show with Frost up to the big reveal in episode 9. After that, both Lynch and Frost left to focus on other projects, and after the main plot mystery was resolved in episode 9, and without Lynch and Frost, the show lost direction at this point and kind of meandered trying to explore some of the characters. As the ratings declined the studio cancelled the show after episode 16, and these episodes (10-16) are the weakest and still the lowest rated ones of the show.

        Lynch did lobby the studio to resume the show, and managed to convince them to order 6 more episodes, bringing back Lynch and Frost to try to revive the magic - and they delivered a strong finish to the season, especially the final episodes directed again by Lynch (the iconic finale is the 3rd highest rated episode of the show now) - unfortunately the ratings at the time did not recover, and the show was cancelled for good after episode 22.

        If there was ever any doubt, when Lynch came back to do the Return (Season 3) he directed and co-wrote every episode, and this season is in my opinion the pinnacle of television as an art form - best TV show ever made (and I say this as someone who had extremely low expectations for the Return initially - I couldn’t imagine how rebooting Twin Peaks 25 years later can be a good idea - but somehow David not only made it work, he took it to levels I didn’t know were possible)

        but in my opinion, at the end of the day lynch is just another artist who doesn’t always tell a complete story and pretends like this inability is some sort of gift to the viewer.

        I understand why many people have this read on David Lynch, although I now think it’s fundamentally a misunderstanding and mischaracterization of his work. I remember when Lost Highway came out in theaters (I have seen a few of his works before that - Elephant Man, Blue Velvet, which I enjoyed, but didn’t really know much more about him at that time) my first reaction was that it was a load of pretentious nonsense. Later when the movie got to pay per view on cable, I ended up catching it late at night, initially just due to boredom, but slowly getting more and more inexplicably drawn into the movie - ended up re-watching it multiple times over the next few weeks (my roommates had a cable descrambler back then, so we could watch free cable, and pay-per-view channels would play the same movie over and over for weeks.)

        After repeated viewings I’ve come to form a completely different opinion, about both the movie and David Lynch as a director - appreciating it required learning David’s unique artistic language, letting go of linear narrative conventions and expectations, and connecting with it on a different, much more emotional level.

        I’ve since become a huge Lynch fan of course. His movies do often tell a “complete story”, but it’s not necessarily done the way you might expect, and it’s not because of some “inability” to tell a conventional story, it’s a deliberate choice. He is a true original and managed to put feelings and abstract concepts in his works that nobody else has.

      • Donjuanme@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        Love the papa Murphy analogy.

        It bothers me there are people coming through and kicking down comments like this, there’s a lot of support for the guy and his fans without anything derogatory being said, why would anyone take the time to discourage discourse like this?