Lynch's surreal mystery-noir was conceived and shot as a TV pilot for ABC, who promptly cancelled the proposed series after watching said pilot. However, Lynch decided to rework the failed pilot into ...
Mulholland Drive runs a curvy twenty-one miles from end ... a hobo behind a dumpster, Roy Orbison, Rita Hayworth, “Persona,” “Vertigo,” and more besides. For weeks, Lynch’s film had ...
When a bright-eyed young actress (Naomi Watts) travels to Los Angeles, she's quickly ensnared in a dark conspiracy involving a mysterious woman named Rita (Laura Harring) who was nearly murdered ...
In our hyper-rational, technology-mediated 21st century, Lynch’s cinema perforates this tyranny of a totalitarian vision and spurs bewilderment.
In "Mulholland Drive," an injured Rita (Laura Harring) stumbles onto Sunset Boulevard, and the sound of traffic is used like a sonic weapon to disorient the viewer. "Blue Velvet" still haunts ...
to which Rita replies, "I don't know. Have you?" "Oh I've never done it, let's make it cinematic. Like the one sex scene that's in Mulholland Drive, I wanna know baby, what is it like?" ...
Tuesday’s free rides on public transit saw columnist David Allen use trains and subways for a day in DTLA. Here’s what he saw, did and ate.
That’s the setup of Mulholland Drive. And if blonde Betty is the film’s governing consciousness (or, as we come to understand, its governing unconscious) then dark-haired Rita (Laura Elena Harring) is ...
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