Dave/Eksvplot wrote:ergo space pig wrote:And what lazy choices are you talking about?
Well, for instance,
Mullholland Drive seemed very obviously cobbled together. Much of that film is soap-opera-grade-bad. It was no surprise to find out that a good deal of the film was culled from a failed TV pilot. Those opening shots/jumpcuts from behind the limo, for instance, are indeed cringeworthy. As is the "Silencio!" ending, and the cliched send-ups of Hollywood, and... I could rip this fucking film to shreds but it would require me to view it again and I dread the mere notion of doing that.
You could "rip the film to fucking shreds" and it would not ruin my enjoyment for the film at all, nor change my opinion that it's one of the best films to come out in the past 10 years. It would be even too easy to do that - all of the "flaws", if you want to call them that, are very much on the surface. The idea behind Lynch's stuff is to get people to respond on an emotional level, not a rational one. I'd be the first to admit that Lynch is sort of campy, but that's always been the language he's done things in and it's the one he's very good at. Like I said, it's very derived from old Hollywood films and is only appropriate given that the subject matter is Hollywood. He speaks to a much different tradition than a lot of other directors, but that doesn't mean that his is any less valid.
What do you think I might be getting out of it? I personally think the numerous "unlockings" of the film on the internet are pretty interesting, but not particularly insightful. Ultimately his films aren't there to be unlocked, I don't believe. I think
Mulholland Dr. is much more interesting when you see it as a story about a woman trying to escape from her crappy life by inventing in her head a sappy tale of a young actress. That's what movies have traditionally been in America - escapism and entertainment. I think it's very insightful. Not all of it makes complete sense, but to me it covers the scope of Lynch's image of Hollywood pretty well.
I also want to note that the very heavy emotional response that I got was all apparent on my first viewing of the film, before I read any interpretations.