«The world that David Lynch portrays in his films is both utterly fantastic and strangely familiar.. David Lynch's first successful ...» Document abstract
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film studies
presentation
date published
19/11/2007
review : not yet assessed
level : Advanced
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During the first half of the twentieth-century, a movement known as classical Hollywood cinema thrived; this was the dawn of truly mainstream films. The movies created during this time operated largely within metanarratives; all-embracing laws which governed human behavior. These films utilized well-known plot structures and familiar characters to tell their stories. There was almost always a hero and a villain, and, in the end, the hero would inevitably get the girl. This was a decidedly modernist period in the realm of film. In the latter half of the century, the metanarratives of mainstream, modernist cinema began to face subversion at the hands of a new generation of filmmakers. One filmmaker who has lead the way in this fundamental shift in cinema is David Lynch. Lynch has, for nearly thirty years, stood out as a remarkably postmodern, independent filmmaker. He is largely responsible for ushering in a new breed of independent film, in which the simultaneous subversion and celebration of mainstream metanarratives creates endless cinematic possibilities. His films, most notably Blue Velvet (1986), Wild at Heart (1990), and Mulholland Drive (2001) have generated extreme controversy, dozens of awards, and a reputation as one of Americas most brilliant, offbeat directors. The stories these films tell are elaborately interesting, but what sets Lynch apart as a writer/director is the way he tells his stories. Lynchs work is categorically postmodern, extremely controversial, and undeniably independent.
Table of Contents
- The world that David Lynch portrays in his films is both utterly fantastic and strangely familiar.
- David Lynch's first successful film to showcase his uncompromising, unrivaled talent for storytelling was 1986's Blue Velvet.
- The innovative storytelling behind Blue Velvet works largely do to its acceptance of modernist genre themes.
- Many film critics took issue with the brutal violence and perversion in Blue Velvet; largely seen in the sadistic, psychotic character of Frank Booth (Dennis Hopper).
- Lynch's world is simultaneously beautiful and disgusting, intoxicating and repelling.
- What most critics of Wild at Heart failed to recognize was measure of parody that Lynch utilizes in the film.
- Wild at Heart could be described as a shock-laden, intangible road movie with an under-the-surface love story, but nothing substantial on the surface.
- While there is little violence in the Mulholland Drive, and the sex scenes are almost jarringly romantic, Lynch still relentlessly subverts the metanarratives of mainstream cinema.
- Kenneth C. Kaleta surmises that, 'quite simply, the cinematic vision of Lynch is the landscape of the twenty-fist-century film?
« David Lynch's first successful film to showcase his uncompromising, unrivaled talent for storytelling was 1986's Blue Velvet. . ...» Document abstract
$3.95
film studies
school essay
date published
19/11/2007
review : not yet assessed
level : Advanced
requested 5 times
Storytelling, since the dawn of time, has served as an invaluable means in which human beings are able to create, sustain, and relay emotion, identity, and ideology. The stories people tell allow them to simultaneously connect to, and differentiate themselves from one another. Arguably more important than the stories themselves are the manners in which they are told. In this century, films have become one of the dominant forms of storytelling. Movies are seen on every continent on Earth, and reach hundreds of millions of people each year. Storytellers who work within the medium of film have a chance to exhibit their work on an unparalleled stage. During the first half of the twentieth-century, a movement known as classical Hollywood cinema thrived. The films created in the time of classical Hollywood cinema operated largely within metanarratives; all-embracing laws which governed human behavior. These films utilized well-known plot structures and familiar characters to tell their stories. There was almost always a hero and a villain, and, in the end, the hero would always get the girl. Specifically, each film genre would operate amidst its own metanarrative structure. Detective movies, thrillers, romance movies, horror films, and comedies all followed their own metanarratives. This was, in the world of film, modernism.
Table of Contents
- During the latter half of the twentieth-century, classical Hollywood cinema died out, and with it, metanarrative structures began to lose their power
- Postmodernism has brought forth a way of viewing the world in which contradiction reigns supreme.
- David Lynch's first successful film to showcase his uncompromising, unrivaled talent for storytelling was 1986's Blue Velvet.
- The innovative storytelling behind Blue Velvet works largely do to its acceptance of modernist genre themes.
- Surrounding the identifiable genre details of Blue Velvet, however, is a universe unlike anything audiences have seen before.
- More so than any other of his films, David Lynch's Wild at Heart (1990) was equally loved and despised by critics and audiences alike.
- Wild at Heart can best be described as a shock-laden, intangible road movie with an under-the-surface love story, but nothing substantial on the surface.
- In the film, Lynch incorporates a postmodern narrative element known as heterotopias.
- Whether or not one finds the work of David Lynch embraceable is a mute point; he has become one of the most widely respected filmmakers of the latter half of the century.
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