1/16/2025 at 7:04:31 PM
"My childhood was elegant homes, tree-lined streets, the milkman, building backyard forts, droning airplanes, blue skies, picket fences, green grass, cherry trees. Middle America as it's supposed to be. But on the cherry tree there's this pitch oozing out – some black, some yellow, and millions of red ants crawling all over it. I discovered that if one looks a little closer at this beautiful world, there are always red ants underneath. Because I grew up in a perfect world, other things were a contrast."David Lynch
by handfuloflight
1/16/2025 at 7:26:20 PM
"What a heavy load Einstein must've had. Fuckin' morons, everywhere."David Lynch
by nathcd
1/16/2025 at 7:32:16 PM
I have never seen a single one of his movies but I love watching interviews with him, he had an amazing presence and so much energy.by sk11001
1/16/2025 at 8:49:51 PM
I'm also ashamed to say I've also never seen any of his movies and TV series but this still hits hard because of his influence on some my most cherished fictional properties. These are Alan Wake/Control, Silent Hill 1&2, Returnal and Disco Elysium.Actually, his influence on how surrealist fiction is presented throughout all media cannot be understated. I was surprised to read even the original Zelda has him as an influence. Majora's Mask does feel particularly Lynchian.
It would not surprise me if the Souls games and at least the later Berserks (late 90s/early 2000s forward) were either directly or 1-step indirectly influenced by Lynch.
by Vetch
1/16/2025 at 9:53:07 PM
I think it was less the original Zelda than it was Link's Awakening that had the Lynch influence, specifically influence by Twin Peakshttps://www.nintendolife.com/news/2019/12/feature_how_david_...
by wdbbdw
1/17/2025 at 5:30:41 PM
There's no possibility Lynch inspired the original Zelda.The original Zelda was released way before Lynch's Twin Peaks, which was a hit in Japan, was even in production. The look of the protagonist of Zelda was inspired by Disney's Peter Pan. The pig villain was inspired by a pig man in Journey to the West.
by staticman2
1/16/2025 at 10:05:18 PM
An (un)obvious connection between Eraserhead and Bloodborne (spoiler!):https://www.reddit.com/r/bloodborne/comments/xgu21c/eraserhe...
by _hzw
1/16/2025 at 8:19:43 PM
I'm gonna say start with Blue Velvet. It still has the backbone of a classical noir, but it is completely run through with the character of his work. Mulholland Drive reflects the apex of his vision and talents, but there's a learning curve to appreciating it.by Triphibian
1/17/2025 at 2:10:23 AM
Elephant Man is perhaps the most approachable. Anthony Hopkins and John Hurt are at the apex of their acting careers in this film.After that Mullholland Drive is absolutely brilliant and has that unforgettable masterpiece diner scene: https://youtu.be/UozhOo0Dt4o?si=GedzAdMh0KIXoHz4
by crispyambulance
1/17/2025 at 7:00:13 AM
Okay. not knowing anything about this film, not ever hearing or seeing it, I just clicked on that diner scene and holy f*ck, that was terrifying. and thank you :)by itsmemattchung
1/17/2025 at 4:48:29 PM
It's a jump scare that works incredibly well, yet it's shot in slow-motion and lit to full daylight, two things anathema to jump scares.by ascagnel_
1/16/2025 at 8:59:49 PM
On the other end, save Inland Empire for after you've seen a lot of his filmography and are in the mood for a challenge.I wouldn't call it his best work, but it is Lynch at his most singular and uncompromising.
by mortenjorck
1/16/2025 at 11:15:55 PM
I would put Twin Peaks: The Return up there too. Beneath the trademark surrealism and whimsy there’s an intense, bittersweet profoundness.It was the last thing he made for TV/cinema and for me feels like the culmination of everything he did before it.
by ljm
1/17/2025 at 12:40:05 AM
> Lynch at his most singular and uncompromisingMore so than "Eraserhead"?
by JKCalhoun
1/17/2025 at 3:09:21 AM
The Sekiro of Lynch movies. I was defeated by the first dance routine.by imbnwa
1/17/2025 at 1:07:21 AM
Other than the 1980's Dune movie he directed, I think it was either Lost Highway or Mulholland Drive that made me want to know more about David Lynch.I had to watch Mulholland Drive at least 5 times to get a sense of what it's even about, and I think I must have been the audience for which he made that film, if it wasn't indeed just art to make himself happy (which is the BEST kind).
Anyway, it kind of endears another person to you when you connect with their work. So this one hit kind of hard.
I lost a fellow weirdo, and he'll be missed!
by butterisgood
1/16/2025 at 8:46:14 PM
Wild at heart. Very approachable, but gory and brutal. The angst seep troughby signalToNose
1/17/2025 at 12:54:02 AM
Mulholland Drive was my first Lynch movie and led me to watch pretty much everything else he released. I'd still start with Mulholland Drive if I started over again I think.by werdnapk
1/17/2025 at 2:55:58 AM
The lipstick scene. There should be an emoji for that.by xivusr
1/16/2025 at 9:08:29 PM
Nooooo, not Blue Velvet. That's on my "never watch again" list, because the people in it are so creepy I wanted to just go buy a million guns afterwards.by adamc
1/16/2025 at 11:26:16 PM
I feel the same. If Blue Velvet was the first Lynch movie I saw, I surely wouldn't have bothered with the rest, and I would have missed out on what I now consider one of my absolute favorites (Mulholland Drive). Same goes for Eraserhead and Wild at Heart.by noisem4ker
1/17/2025 at 3:58:54 AM
It was my first, and I didn't bother with the rest.There's just something in it that made me viscerally hate it, and I'm usually fond of surreal movies.
by dalmo3
1/17/2025 at 2:41:00 PM
It's worth giving Mulholland Drive a look. And the Elephant Man and The Straight Story are nothing like Blue Velvet.by adamc
1/17/2025 at 12:41:50 AM
Agree about "Blue Velvet" — too much Dennis Hopper, ha ha. Also agree the "Mulholland Drive" is a masterpiece.by JKCalhoun
1/17/2025 at 1:35:19 AM
Literally just watched it today and it's definitely in my 10 least favorite movies I've ever watched. Wish I had seen your comment.by zug_zug
1/16/2025 at 11:39:49 PM
But it's also so beautiful; Laura Dern's character is so touching and Kyle McLachlan playing the naif in a world of evil is so moving.And when they dance together at the end with "Mysteries of Love" playing - wow.
by emmelaich
1/16/2025 at 8:13:07 PM
I'd personally say try Mulholland Drive first.by mtalantikite
1/16/2025 at 8:29:03 PM
oh boy. I'd understand if you said to try Mullholland Drive first, second, and third and then go from there.by Keyframe
1/16/2025 at 10:40:59 PM
Yes this may be my favorite of his films, and I love pretty much everything he's doneby ddellacosta
1/17/2025 at 7:18:12 PM
I'd say twin peaks season 1 and first half of season 2 are Lynch's most accessible workby Sateeshm
1/16/2025 at 9:09:02 PM
Yes. Definitely his best.by adamc
1/16/2025 at 7:43:53 PM
Start with "Eraserhead" and then go from there. Surreal is the word I associate with his movies and tv show (Twin Peaks) and I absolutely love watching such movies!by gordon_freeman
1/16/2025 at 9:17:15 PM
Eraserhead is borderline unwatchable. I love David Lynch, sort of, but without telling people that they're about to sit down and watch an hour-and-a-half of what is effectively an unwatchable piece of avant-garde cinema, then they're not going to be able to appreciate it.There is nothing worse than getting excited to see a famous director's debut film, thinking you're going to have a good time, and then getting Eraserhead.
by scoofy
1/16/2025 at 10:54:38 PM
If someone is not into art films, to not start with Twin Peaks is absolutely insane to me.First two seasons of Twin Peaks are his masterpiece IMO and his most watchable.
Those are some of the best characters of any film/tv show ever.
From there I would go to Lost Highway next for a stronger dose of the more out there stuff.
by monophonica
1/17/2025 at 4:54:31 PM
Just start with the pilot first -- as it is, the US pilot is basically a feature-length film (it runs 1h25m), and features enough of Lynch's trademark juxtaposition of horrible and mundane, and piles on the warmth and love for his characters that set his works apart. The European cut of the pilot adds a few minutes to the end and originally aired as a TV movie, and may be worth it if you're not otherwise hooked by the show, since it features a definitive ending as well as the first appearance of the show's trademark "red room" (footage from the sequence was included in a later episode in the US).For me, the second step would either be The Elephant Man or Mulholland Dr. -- many of his works tackle very dark subject matter and include sexualized violence that can be downright disturbing to watch, but those two omit those elements. The Straight Story is much lighter, but largely lacks the surrealism Lynch is known for.
by ascagnel_
1/17/2025 at 9:36:59 AM
i tried watching Twin Peaks but my GenZ attention-hungy brain got really bored during the first episode. maybe i should give it another shot...it's not like i'm not used to watching long movies and i would call myself some form of cinephile, but for some reason Twin Peaks felt unbelievably slow.
by 4ggr0
1/17/2025 at 3:00:05 PM
Twin peaks is incredible and Agent Cooper is a kind of a role model haha, never seen any other character like himby wellthisisgreat
1/17/2025 at 6:23:46 PM
maybe i should give it another shot...i'll at least finish the first episode :)by 4ggr0
1/18/2025 at 12:19:43 AM
Yeah, it’s certainly one of those shows that take a couple episodes to settle in but then it’s one big, sweeping impressionby wellthisisgreat
1/16/2025 at 11:02:02 PM
But he didn't direct all of Twin Peaks episodes and it shows.by tpm
1/16/2025 at 9:47:29 PM
Eraserhead is highly watchable, but the first time you see it, it's best to just experience it without trying to process it too much. The nuance comes through on repeat viewings.by tjakab
1/16/2025 at 10:01:35 PM
>Eraserhead is highly watchableIt is a film explicitly designed to be unpleasant. This may be artistically interesting, but it's certainly no going to appeal to most people.
by scoofy
1/16/2025 at 10:10:37 PM
I rented Eraserhead and watched with some friends in college. I loved it, and so did the other Lynch fan. The other two, well, the first words spoken over the credits were “What the actual fuck was that?” Let’s just say it’s a divisive film.by labster
1/16/2025 at 8:07:25 PM
> Surreal is the word I associate with his movies and tv showAnd his style of surrealism has been so influential that it has its own term: Lynchian!
by Trasmatta
1/17/2025 at 12:56:35 AM
The "sausages" skit [1] by kids in the hall I'm pretty sure is massively inspired by eraserhead.by werdnapk
1/16/2025 at 9:10:11 PM
When people say "surreal" they mean "real", it's just most of your life is not very real, just repetition and routine. - Norm Macdonald
by kingstoned
1/16/2025 at 8:03:03 PM
Dune or Twin Peaks are probably going to be more accessible than anything else.For Eraserhead, I understand the metaphor of how parenting can be larger-than-life and terrifying and I see how Eraserhead was trying to embody that but I very much didn't appreciate the highly pessimistic ending. It's an early movie that would have benefited immensely from an alternate ending on its DVD.
by jimbob45
1/16/2025 at 8:15:46 PM
I think there's a lot more to Eraserhead than that! I also don't really see the ending as pessimistic personally.Lynch: "Believe it or not, Eraserhead is my most spiritual film."
Lean: "Elaborate on that?"
Lynch: "No, I wont. No one sees it."
by Trasmatta
1/16/2025 at 8:42:29 PM
The Straight Story is almost certainly his most accessible film, while also very focused on themes that he cares about.It isn't the elusive puzzle that many cinephiles value in his work, but it is clearly a Lynch film, even if it's not a stereotypical one.
by msabalau
1/17/2025 at 3:22:37 AM
It also happens to be just a beautiful film.by turbojet1321
1/16/2025 at 9:24:42 PM
actually it is an elusive puzzle :D https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wa16cd5zAuc&ab_channel=KyleL...by retinaros
1/16/2025 at 10:22:21 PM
His most mainstream work is The Elephant Man, commissioned by Mel Brooks.by saijanai
1/17/2025 at 12:06:54 AM
The Elephant Man is great, but does have a surreal sequence, and is entirely in black and white. I'd vote for the The Straight Story, which is literally a Disney movie, being more mainstream.by colmmacc
1/16/2025 at 8:10:13 PM
The beauty of Lynch films is that everyone can interpret it in their own way!by gordon_freeman
1/16/2025 at 8:13:51 PM
I know what you're trying to say, but that's also true of every other movie.by DrillShopper
1/17/2025 at 12:44:25 AM
Well Lynch famously said this over and over about his films — that they mean whatever people think they mean.Watch a few interviews where he is asked what a film of his means. A smirk comes on his face and he repeats his mantra.
He never let on.
by JKCalhoun
1/17/2025 at 3:42:29 AM
I'd argue many creators are this way. Nobody is ever going to approach a piece of art the same way.Unless you are a narcissist (probable billionare) who feels the need to go back and explain every detail about the wizarding world you created a few decades later and reveal what kind of piece of crap you are.
by k_roy
1/17/2025 at 4:52:11 AM
sure but david lynch obviously lent into that way more than most others. his work is famously obtuse and the experience of each person watching and having that experience and interpreting it on their own was a huge part of the point of his work in a way that just isnt true for many other peopleby deadfoxygrandpa
1/17/2025 at 1:48:38 PM
> you are a narcissist (probable billionare)These days you'll have to be more specific.
by JKCalhoun
1/17/2025 at 5:50:53 AM
No, there's far more room for interpretation than in a typical movie.by HKH2
1/16/2025 at 8:41:00 PM
Season 3 Twin Peaks is peak "I don't know what am I looking at".by epolanski
1/16/2025 at 8:58:13 PM
When it first came out I was so desperate to see it I watched the first episode twice without realising.I spent the whole time trying to work out what was different between the "two".
I mean, it’s exactly the sort of thing he would do and I still loved it.
Magic!
by Lio
1/16/2025 at 10:34:49 PM
It's at least a third watching one of Kyle MacLachlan's characters walking around with brain damage.I liked the season after a rewatch but the Dougie stuff is still tedious.
by ruthmarx
1/16/2025 at 10:45:40 PM
The Dougie stuff was silly fun. Cherry pieby MisterTea
1/17/2025 at 5:06:29 PM
It wasn't particularly entertaining and was well overdone.by ruthmarx
1/17/2025 at 3:50:23 AM
Whether you've seen his movies or not, this 35 second video clip is David Lynch gold ("David Lynch on product placement"):https://youtu.be/F4wh_mc8hRE?si=SJwtz31ZEWuW9rk7
(Has swearing off that matters for your use!) Rest in peace.
by ratrocket
1/17/2025 at 12:33:32 AM
Can recommend the documentary "David Lynch, The Art Life". For now appears to be here:(Sorry — it appears to be 360p, not very hi-res. Other higher res versions can be found but with subtitles or dubbed in... maybe Farsi?)
by JKCalhoun
1/17/2025 at 6:55:59 AM
Definitely worth checking out his movies at some point, but his interviews alone leave a lasting impression indeed. He could captivate audiences just by being himself (in a way)by ErigmolCt
1/17/2025 at 6:11:48 AM
Surprised nobody has mentioned Lost Highway - to me it is the perfect film.by kamranjon
1/16/2025 at 9:24:29 PM
Gentle intro: Rabbits, on youtube.by geophile
1/16/2025 at 10:31:12 PM
Also on YouTube: "David Lynch Cooks Quinoa". It's a short film that is both nothing like his films/TV and everything like his films/TV. It's that "cooking podcast" or "recipe blog" that's a meandering journey through life and maybe has some bon mots about living, but also includes a recipe because it does. Like watching a beloved elderly relative do something normal in the kitchen, but also moody and in black and white.by WorldMaker
1/17/2025 at 6:43:13 AM
I loved that short film. I showed it to my wife and she said "That's 20 minutes of my life I'm never getting back."by aidenn0
1/17/2025 at 6:16:59 PM
How does it compare to the salad preparation scene in Eraserhead?by geophile
1/16/2025 at 8:59:45 PM
[dead]by anothertroll123
1/16/2025 at 9:47:29 PM
If you only watch one, I think Fire Walk With Me is the most representative. If you like it, there's a lot more to explore. If not, then maybe Lynch isn't your thing.by intellectronica
1/17/2025 at 3:25:29 AM
Look, I love FWWM, but that's a brutal way to start. Firstly, it works a lot better if you know TP. Secondly... it's a brutal film. I've seen it a bunch of times and still find some of it hard to watch.by turbojet1321
1/16/2025 at 10:44:48 PM
I think that "fire walk with me" poem is so clunky I've refused to watch anything he's ever made.by astrange
1/16/2025 at 10:43:29 PM
Great movie, but I'm not sure I would've enjoyed it as much if I hadn't already watched Twin Peaks.by pesus
1/16/2025 at 7:29:17 PM
"On your fucking telephone. Get real!"by becquerel
1/16/2025 at 8:16:56 PM
Mmm not a great quote..by renox
1/17/2025 at 3:19:21 PM
Ha, I kind of agree with you, and I'm a little embarrassed it's as upvoted as it is. I just love the silly little video of him saying it and then cracking up. It pops into my head a lot and gives me a laugh. I just felt like sharing it to be goofy. Didn't imagine it would end up at the top of the thread!by nathcd
1/16/2025 at 7:09:30 PM
Reminiscent of the opening scene of Blue Velvet.by ryandrake
1/16/2025 at 7:49:02 PM
I find it interesting how much Ebert hated that movie. I'm not sure how I feel about it myself, tbh, but I am certain I don't have his conviction to state it clearly and unambiguously. The film certainly made me feel things no other movie has.by PittleyDunkin
1/16/2025 at 8:26:21 PM
I think if you're giving original opinions about movies it guarantees that you're going to be on the wrong side of history eventually. His reviews aren't any less interesting even when you disagree with him.by havblue
1/17/2025 at 5:09:19 PM
I think Ebert didn't grasp what Lynch was going for with the Dorothy character, because I don't think anyone else in Hollywood was thinking like Lynch at the time.Blue Velvet challenges you as a viewer to look at the abuse Dorothy suffers and to be a witness -- and that's hard to do as a viewer because it is ugly. Ebert did what a lot of people did and attempted to defend Isabella Rossellini, who had signed on to the movie knowing full well what would be required.
Lynch made two other movies in that same "the audience needs to bear witness and empathize" theme (Fire Walk With Me, Lost Highway) before Ebert caught on with Mulholland Dr.
by ascagnel_
1/16/2025 at 10:42:21 PM
Agreed. I disagree pretty vehemently with him wrt Blue Velvet but he's one of the few reviewers I trust(ed)by ddellacosta
1/16/2025 at 8:49:30 PM
I'm not really convinced he's on "the wrong side"—we're entitled to strong opinions about the role of film in society and this is either value-oriented or subjective. But I emphatically do admire his willingness to stake his claim without ambiguity.> His reviews aren't any less interesting even when you disagree with him.
100%
by PittleyDunkin
1/16/2025 at 9:09:59 PM
I'm with Ebert, I hated it. Not because it wasn't effective. It was convincing, but such a bad experience I'll never watch it again.by adamc
1/17/2025 at 12:46:32 AM
But for the sound track. The scene where Kyle and Laura are in the car and she's talking about — what — birds? The scene, with that sound track, is so haunting.EDIT: yeah, this scene: https://youtu.be/ncnq2pu4PlE
by JKCalhoun
1/16/2025 at 10:06:48 PM
It certainly changes how you feel about listening to Mr sandmanby ekianjo
1/17/2025 at 4:27:26 AM
The opposite of love isn't hate, it's indifferenceby darkerside
1/16/2025 at 7:13:52 PM
Man I wonder if he knew what the neighbors got up to when their spouses were out of town.by hinkley
1/16/2025 at 7:49:08 PM
"I discovered that if one looks a little closer at this beautiful world, there are always red ants underneath." -- Well, he ain't just talking about literal ants...by psb217
1/16/2025 at 9:03:35 PM
I think he was talking about literal ants.David Lynch’s work was never symbolic. You only ever got what was right in front of you.
The moment you start seeing symbols in his work, you know you’re viewing it wrong.
Edit: Lynch’s YT channel is filled with weather reports and random numbers. How much more anti-symbolic can you get?
by pyuser583
1/16/2025 at 9:25:24 PM
"Did I ever tell you that this here jacket represents a symbol of my individuality and my belief in personal freedom?"by freejazz
1/16/2025 at 11:30:29 PM
The snakeskin jacket was in the film on Nic Cage's request. Possibly that line too!by emmelaich
1/17/2025 at 2:57:00 AM
Lynch wrote that line because Nic wanted the jacket in the film. Gives it a little bit of an extra kick when you think about it.by freejazz
1/17/2025 at 6:24:56 AM
He's elaborated on this and is not talking about antsby wahnfrieden
1/16/2025 at 7:26:35 PM
he made Twin Peaks, he definitely knewby femiagbabiaka
1/16/2025 at 8:17:49 PM
Wish he had a bill burr rant or asmr to sleep channel. There is not enough public recordings of lynch talking.by maxglute
1/16/2025 at 9:03:20 PM
You could merge his daily weather updates into a long rambling video.by officeplant
1/16/2025 at 11:26:14 PM
Like this? https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bL6fLdOK_FMby ljm
1/17/2025 at 5:42:42 AM
What interview did he say this in? Would love to watch it! ant colonies popped up a while back on HN as being an exemplary life formby gunian
1/17/2025 at 2:17:38 AM
What people to have. Those who think outside, see different, appreciate else.by bilekas
1/16/2025 at 7:33:07 PM
the brighter the light, the deeper the shadowsby gatkinso
1/17/2025 at 6:49:19 AM
Yeah.. The surface of anything rarely tells the whole storyby ErigmolCt