David Lynch’s bizarre drama, Mulholland Drive, illustrates a metaphor for how Hollywood revels in LGBT+ tragedies by crafting the story around a fantasy within a fantasy, then dashing it against a brick wall of reality. Taking a second look at this critically acclaimed fan favorite against the portrait of today can keep us progressing forward. Changing the narrative means acknowledging the horrifying potential of ignoring it, and David Lynch was way ahead of the times. The symbolic weirdness characteristic to his style gives a spectacular view, you just have to climb a mountain to get there.
I'm a gay male, which does complicate things a bit. It's a testament to Mulholland Drive that even I rank the sex scenes as some of the most intensely erotic in cinema. No matter how many contradictory analyses have attempted to explain what it is actually about, there is no arguing that it is a masterful depiction of LGBTQ love and desire. Naomi Watts plays dual roles which gives her the opportunity to show such dazzling range it is baffling how she was overlooked for an Oscar nomination. Betty is decisive and ambitious while Rita is reserved and dependent, or at least this is the kind of relationship Betty ideally wants them to have.
Having taken in more than $20 million in the box office world wide, and won awards from Cannes (among others) as well as having been nominated for an Oscar and several Golden Globes, Mulholland Drive is an intoxicating mystery, and one that centers around two women in a relationship. Great review. I also felt it was unecessarily confusing which detracts from the overall enjoyment of the film. It started on a high, and was coherent enough, but the last half hour of dream sequences were too exaggerated.
His projects featured a plethora of weird and wonderful LGBTQ+ characters who cemented his works as deeply, authentically queer, even if the filmmaker himself may not have been. Here are the highlights: The surrealist thriller Mulholland Drive is among David Lynch’s most popular and most perplexing films. Mulholland Drive is, as every reviewer and academic film wag in the country knows, a complex, complicated, indecipherable, post-modern or is it post post-modern filmic questioning of either the film industry or all of life. Except for one scene. In that scene Naomi Watts and Laura Harring not only take off all their clothes, but they touch each other.
Mulholland Drive: The Consequences of Gay Silence by Kristin Grady David Lynch’s bizarre drama, Mulholland Drive, illustrates a metaphor for how Hollywood revels in LGBT+ tragedies by crafting the story around a fantasy within a fantasy, then dashing it against a brick wall of reality. .
I'm a gay male, which does complicate things a bit. It's a testament to Mulholland Drive that even I rank the sex scenes as some of the most intensely erotic in cinema. .
Mulholland Drive is one of the most award-winning, critically beloved lesbian-themed films of all time, yet it’s rarely one celebrated by queer women. The darkly experimental neo-noir work of David Lynch was released as part of The Criterion Collection yesterday, solidifying its role in cinematic history. The new DVD/Blu-Ray edition includes on-set footage, a deleted . .
In honour of the late David Lynch, here are his biggest contributions to queer cinema, including iconic lesbian movie Mulholland Drive. .