Tag Archives: david-lynch

Watch David Lynch’s Deranged Music Video for “Crazy Clown Time”

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Anyone who’s been secretly wishing that David Lynch would get over this whole music thing and get back to making films has had their wish at least least partially fulfilled — Lynch has made a music video to accompany the title track of his album Crazy Clown Time. The video’s a literal depiction of the nighmarish Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Flavorwire Discovery Date : 02/04/2012 14:00 Number of articles : 2

Watch David Lynch’s Deranged Music Video for “Crazy Clown Time”

Here’s David Lynch’s NSFW, Barely Watchable Music Video for ‘Crazy Clown Time’

David Lynch has debuted the video for the title track of his album Crazy Clown Time , a thoroughly sick, depraved, tuneless, NSFW, barely watchable/listenable seven-minute romp through the filmmaker-cum-songwriter’s mental miasma. It’s the most literal-minded music video I’ve ever seen, which, with lines about pouring beer on people and lighting one’s hair aflame and running around the backyard, makes for some arresting imagery. As in, I almost can’t believe Lynch made this without getting arrested. Anyway. It’s no ” Firecracker ,” but what is? [via The Playlist ]

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Here’s David Lynch’s NSFW, Barely Watchable Music Video for ‘Crazy Clown Time’

REVIEW: Found-Footage Sci-Fi Tale Chronicle Is Uneven But Earnest, and Often Exhilarating

The allegory-rich Chronicle opens with a kind of generational statement: “I bought a camera,” senior class punching bag Andrew (Dane DeHaan) says, “and I’m filming everything from here on out.” Andrew is talking to his father (Michael Kelly), a drunkard ex-fireman who punishes his son for the stress of caring for his dying wife, though the announcement is meant for us as well. Chronicle fits into the growing genre of “found footage” films, though that becomes just one formal element of many director Josh Trank meshes together to put a new spin on the subject of teenage alienation and its more extreme social side effects. People don’t respond well to Andrew’s decision to begin filming everything he does, though that may be because nobody responds well to anything Andrew does. Throughout the first part of Chronicle everyone he meets wants to know why he’s filming or tells him to stop; his popular, aspiring intellectual cousin Matt (Alex Russell) is particularly camera shy. In a gesture of great social generosity, Matt brings Andrew and his massive camcorder to a barn party for some fun one Friday night. Together with the ridiculously congenial class president hopeful Steve (Michael B. Jordan), Andrew and Matt explore what appears to be a sinkhole in a ravine outside the barn. What they find inside is a glowing chamber of vascular crystals. They emerge with spontaneously bloodied noses and telekinetic powers. So, you know, another Friday night in Seattle. The trio take the event more or less in stride, so that what ensues is basically a montage of their various attempts to create the best YouTube video ever. The boys treat their superpowers like one more of puberty’s bodily twists, and trade tips on how to manage it. They begin by moving other objects around and creating force fields to shield their bodies from pain. The more they develop the power, like a muscle, the stronger it becomes. Soon they begin moving themselves around, and then up into the sky. What could go wrong? Trank keeps the fraternal tone so light it’s sometimes just shy of forced — the script, by Max Landis (the son of John Landis), is a little heavy on the “Dude, no way!” dialogue. But the first half of Chronicle establishes an affable and believable bond between the three characters — something one of them badly needs. They talk about girls and plan to see the world — Andrew wants to make a spiritual mission to Tibet. And yet it’s Andrew who begins pulling away from the pack. The kid’s got a lot of unfocused rage, and it starts slipping out in small acts of aggression. The group’s golden rule — basically don’t hurt anybody — doesn’t preclude letting Andrew earn a little social cred at the school talent show, so he puts on a “magic” act that makes him an instant hero. But a sexual humiliation soon follows, and it proves to be a point of no return. Only his friends are powerful enough to stop him, which means they quickly become his enemies. Andrew starts out with the desire to create a true record of the abuse he is suffering, presumably one that will be witnessed. And yet the fact that Andrew’s persecutors are presented from his vantage, literally and otherwise, reinforces the sense that if the camera doesn’t lie, perspective still tends to exaggerate. This uneven but earnest, often exhilarating film derives its greatest interest from the way it turns the found-footage format inside out: At some point Andrew learns to control the camera’s movement with his mind, so instead of seeing what he sees, we’re watching a self-directed version of his life. When that movie becomes a kind of disaster pic it would seem that the further we move from Andrew’s literal perspective, the deeper we get into his psyche and the hellmouth of teenage rage. By the time he’s putting the entire metro area on notice — having thrashed his father and all the local bullies — Andrew has no camera and the metaphor has run away with the story entirely. The crazy thing is it almost works. The finale, which goes off like an unmanned fire hose, rests on the assumption that everything is in fact being filmed from here on out — a subtext of the found-footage conceit. The question of who has found and edited this thing together is treated as understood, an apt reflection of the genre’s popularity. Doesn’t some part of every self-documenter assume a future curator will rescue him from oblivion? That someday his story will be told? The coda suggests the evidence will exonerate Tibet-loving Andrew for that time he had his revenge on Seattle; the truth is he was just misunderstood. Follow Michelle Orange on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Found-Footage Sci-Fi Tale Chronicle Is Uneven But Earnest, and Often Exhilarating

VIDEO: David Lynch Coffee Gets David Lynch Commercial

On the one hand, the guy who made The Elephant Man , Blue Velvet and Mulholland Drive is entitled to some kind of lifetime exemption to direct whatever he wants whenever he wants — Duran Duran concert videos , Dior commercials , debt-ceiling riffs , pop albums , whatever . On the other hand, David Lynch may as well be the art-house Donald Trump at this point, pursuer of nominal glories bordering on the fetishistic at best and the gratuitously stupid at worst. Take this new coffee ad, for example — probably better than anything you’ll see on Super Bowl Sunday , but still an ad for a beverage branded by a master filmmaker turned hobbyist mythmaker. There’s nothing here you didn’t see 22 years ago in an episode of Twin Peaks ; there is no other new Lynch cinema in any legitimate stage of development. Or maybe that’s just how it feels! Your mileage may vary. Related: Here’s Lynch writing about his love for coffee , also old news . I am running out of things to give up on! [ AdWeek via THR ]

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VIDEO: David Lynch Coffee Gets David Lynch Commercial

How to Get Into Silencio

After two failed tries, Movieline alum Brian Clark finally visited the David Lynch-designed Paris nightclub Silencio . And? “It’s nice — assuming you get in. So, how do you do that? Search me. The P.R. person I talked to said that they do indeed let people in based on physical and fashion considerations, which she rightfully points out is pretty much the norm at high class nightclubs in Paris. According to her, the Physionomiste says he favors people who he can tell are at least trying. That is, in the clothes-related sense of the phrase. The other, probably simpler option is to make friends with a member (or become one).” [ Twitch ]

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How to Get Into Silencio

Talkback: Who Should Replace Eddie Murphy as Host of the Academy Awards?

In case you haven’t heard, the Oscars have entered a state of crisis — or a state of freedom, if you prefer. Now that Eddie Murphy is out as host of this year’s Academy Awards, let’s vent as quickly as we can and think of the single best option for a replacement emcee.

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Talkback: Who Should Replace Eddie Murphy as Host of the Academy Awards?

Blue Velvet: 25th Anniversary Edition Blu-ray Giveaway: We Have Our Winners!

Thank you, thank you, thank you to all of the gifted guest critics who turned out yesterday and today to review Blue Velvet . It is difficult to sum up David Lynch’s psycho-thriller masterpiece in just ten words but, as always, our clever readers rose to the occasion. Unfortunately, Movieline could only choose three critics to gift with Blue Velvet: 25th Anniversary Edition Blu-rays. Click ahead for the victors.

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Blue Velvet: 25th Anniversary Edition Blu-ray Giveaway: We Have Our Winners!

Mimi Rogers Brings Two and a Half Mams to Two and a Half Men [PICS]

Ashton Kutcher already has one brunette MILF in his life- the delicious Demi Moore – and the lucky, lucky guy is about to acquire another one. Mimi Rogers is gearing up to guest star on Two and A Half Men , where she’ll be playing Ashton (who replaced Charlie Sheen this season)’s mother, a famous primatologist. Mimi has been confirmed for at least two episodes of the popular sitcom. While it won’t break her non-nude streak (the last time she unleashed her jumbo jugs was in 2004’s The Door in the Floor ), any appearance by Mimi is a MAM-orable one as far as Mr. Skin’s concerned. See more of Mimi Rogers and her legendary pair after the jump!

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Mimi Rogers Brings Two and a Half Mams to Two and a Half Men [PICS]

Blue Velvet Blu-ray Comes Complete with Skinfamous "Flaming Nipple" Scene [PIC]

It’s not unusual for a Blu-ray to include footage left on the cutting room floor. But when it’s arthouse auteur David Lynch we’re talking about, well, everything is a little bit strange. Long thought lost, the work print of Blue Velvet (1986) was recently unearthed in Seattle, bringing to light over 50 minutes of deleted scenes, (sk)incuding one Lynch says is one of his favorites. In the book Lynch on Lynch , he describes being shown a “party trick” by a stripper extra on set: “They take these paper matches and split ‘em apart and then lick them and put them on their nipples, so the match-head is sitting right there and you really can’t see the little bit of cardboard. It’s sitting right there, very close. It may come out a quarter inch, but it burns for a while and then you put them out. It just burns long enough for the cut. And so it moved pretty nicely, you know.” “The flaming nipple scene” (above; you can see the stripper lighting her boobs on the right, as well as another topless extra on the left) has since become something of a Holy Grail for Lynch fans, and its skinclusion on the Blu-ray is a major find. The director told The Guardian UK he’s pleased about the revival, saying: “It’s like the song Amazing Grace. The footage was lost but now it’s found.” See the deleted scene over at Slash Film , and check out more from Blue Velvet , including full nudity from star Isabella Rossellini , right here at MrSkin.com!

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Blue Velvet Blu-ray Comes Complete with Skinfamous "Flaming Nipple" Scene [PIC]

Watch Joseph Gordon-Levitt Sing R. Kelly’s ‘Ignition (Remix)’

When Joseph Gordon-Levitt isn’t busy playing cops and pimping his HitRECordJoe empire, he clearly spends a lot of time studying the arts. Because, my friends, you don’t just learn the lyrics to R. Kelly’s “Ignition (Remix)” overnight. I speak from experience. Hit the jump to watch JGL make sweet, dirty aural love to an audience at OSU with his guitar and the R&B stylings of Mr. Robert Sylvester Kelly.

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Watch Joseph Gordon-Levitt Sing R. Kelly’s ‘Ignition (Remix)’