alt.hn

3/29/2025 at 8:31:21 PM

Commercials that David Lynch directed (2018)

https://www.openculture.com/2018/07/watch-commercials-david-lynch-directed-big-30-minute-compilation.html

by bookofjoe

3/29/2025 at 11:49:35 PM

As a life long fan of Lynch, I took the trip last year to go through his entire back catalog of content, from his student films, shorts, commercials, TV shows including On The Air, behind-the-scenes clips and of course main movies. Such a great journey, everything he crafted carried something more than what you saw and heard, there's always a thread or the power to make it feel like there was a thread beyond the frame.

Outside of all the typical Lynch stuff, one thing I always suggest people watch is The Straight Story. It's such a wonderful movie, one I hoped at release would find a much bigger audience as it really deserves to be seen and shows that Lynch wasn't a guy who just made weird things, he made great things.

by roskelld

3/30/2025 at 3:45:17 AM

> The Straight Story

That indeed was a nice movie. It stands out exactly as it's not like any other Lynch movies.

I always wondered what that meeting with Walt Disney Pictures looked like. "-Ok, David, please, just can you not do your Lynch thing? -What do you mean, a Lynch thing? -Oh you know..."

by rdtsc

3/30/2025 at 7:40:17 AM

A particularly memorable short review of "the Straight Story" suggests that he did end in fact end up doing a Lynch thing, however I suggest people don't read this review unless they've seen the film first [1].

> Lynch lives in a very troubled world. His pictures are characterized by being presented through the mind of the protagonist. Here, the protagonist is a simple old man, who thinks slowly and simply. So that's what we get. He has long erotic meditations on fecundity on the path of life (14 kids!), so that is what we see.

> Lynch must be laughing into his gasmask at those who think this is a Hallmark card. Consider these Lynchisms...

[1] https://www.imdb.com/review/rw0579859/?ref_=tturv_perm_18

by pryce

3/30/2025 at 4:48:26 PM

I had no idea! Thanks for sharing. Those are definitely more subtle. I had never caught on to those when viewing the movie.

by rdtsc

3/30/2025 at 1:27:05 PM

He only directed it. He didn't write it. That's the difference.

by MrMcCall

3/31/2025 at 7:28:15 AM

I've watched Twin Peaks many times, and still the series dazzles me. The depth and originality of his mythology blows me away. And, it was such a treat to get the third season. I personally would not have gotten a third of what's happening in the earlier seasons, if I had not watched the new one. I can really say that his vision changed mine.

by dmos62

3/30/2025 at 3:43:53 AM

> he made great things.

Read https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0090756/parentalguide

Anyone who calls that great enjoys the perversion of mankind, and it is nothing less than that.

It's a sickness, and lots of people have it, and they're so sick they think they're just perfectly fine.

But everyone's choices are theirs to make, for good or ill, and we are all running up a tab, and we all must pay our bill. Some lucky few of us have a positive balance, because we embrace compassion with the art of our lives.

There are people whose going is the only time they're going to make the world a better place, for their simply no longer being a persistent negative influence.

by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 10:02:30 AM

Why is portraying perversion in art bad? I suppose you also hate Dante's Inferno for similar reasons?

This just seems a little strange to me, even the Bible portrays the dark aspects of humanity. What makes you think that in Blue Velvet they are portrayed for our enjoyment specifically?

You can't have a good philosophy, or as you say, have a "good tab", without understanding the bad. David Lynch is more ethical than you, I think, because he did not run away from the depraved but wanted to understand it

by bowsamic

3/30/2025 at 10:54:44 AM

> I suppose you also hate Dante's Inferno for similar reasons?

I don't hate anything or anyone, because hate and rage are solely negative, but, I didn't bother reading that middle ages tripe any more than I read "Wuthering Heights".

That said, reading it is just one dimension, seeing and hearing it on a giant screen being portrayed by attractive people is three or four dimensions.

> David Lynch is more ethical than you, I think, because he did not run away from the depraved but wanted to understand it

I've seen "The World at War". The "Genocide" episode is the last time I wept, seeing a dumptruck full of bodies get dumped into a trench.

I understand it better than you, my friend, because I also know how to get to "Blessed are the pure of heart, for they shall see God." I'm certainly not there yet, but I've made some bit of progress, after much trial and error.

David Lynch and TM are literally the antithesis of that attainment. He wrote and directed BV and profited off it. I think Marc Maron once described a "comic" that took a shit on stage; that ain't art, that's just disgusting.

"What a fool believes." --Michael McDonald

by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 2:49:19 PM

I’m not sold. I think I’ll stick with my Godly ethics and I’ll leave you to your sin

by bowsamic

3/30/2025 at 8:09:59 PM

[flagged]

by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 6:34:22 AM

I found the aforementioned elements of Blue Velvet to be very uncomfortable to watch, but I also don’t think it was necessarily a work of obscenity on Lynch’s part. It always struck me that the film’s violence was intentionally framed in suburban noir. Or, that way the audience might wonder about the darker parts of 20th century Americana around them, much like Lynch did as a child.

That said, I’m on the fence if whether or not the violence in the movie felt earned to me or not.

by danbolt

3/30/2025 at 11:17:21 AM

It's not obscene, IMO, it's DEPRAVED. It is disgusting, it is unnecessary, and it was made to make money.

That it was written, directed, and produced by a huge industry and then made available to be watched in a movie theater is all one needs to know about the machine that is Hollywood, the same machine that produced (no pun intended) Harvey Weinstein.

That is no coincidence, my friend.

> Or, that way the audience might wonder about the darker parts of 20th century Americana around them, much like Lynch did as a child.

I can't stand anything about 1950s America, but 2020s America makes it pale in comparison, and Lynch's America was on that horrible descent from "does good for the world" to "embraces totalitarians for profit".

How we make our money is a bellweather of the soul, as is the art we produce and/or appreciate. The question is, "Does it elevate humanity? Or not?"

Learning about evil is necessary on the path to wisdom, but profiting off titillating the impressionable is foolish and detrimental to society.

There are many ways to tell the story of Jeffry Dahlmer, and the choices a writer and director makes in that regard show those folks' character, or lack thereof.

by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 12:01:56 PM

Which movies by David Lynch have you seen?

Lynch, by the way, was an outsider in Hollywood and in the wider movie industry. He didn't make large budget movies nor did his movies bring in a lot of money. When he was promoting his last movie, he didn't even have money for proper advertising and had to rely on publicity stunts like sitting in a director's chair next to a live cow in the middle of Los Angeles to draw attention: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9gVoSiXup0

His struggles were largely due to his refusal to trivialize violence or turn it into something easily digestible. Many of his characters (such as Dale Cooper in Twin Peaks) are highly moral and good-natured people who encounter incredible evil. This evil is depicted in an exceptionally disturbing way to amplify Lynch's message about genuine love, compassion and human connection. Lynch did not exploit or glorify violence. He presented it as something deeply unsettling to highlight its emotional and psychological impact instead of using it for shock value or cheap entertainment.

It seems like you are very angry about something you don't know much about.

by mopsi

3/30/2025 at 1:18:08 PM

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by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 1:46:05 PM

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by mopsi

3/30/2025 at 4:35:37 PM

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by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 4:29:32 AM

> Some lucky few of us have a positive balance, because we embrace compassion with the art of our lives.

I assume you mean hypothetical "we" here because given your comment you are unlikely to be in that group :)

Welcome to the rest of us! It's more fun here, anyway.

by nothrabannosir

3/30/2025 at 5:18:08 AM

[flagged]

by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 2:02:21 PM

Nothing is more obnoxious that trying to win an argument by claiming you "love" the other person. Especially when you know nothing about them.

by Trasmatta

3/30/2025 at 3:38:18 PM

[flagged]

by zen928

3/30/2025 at 4:15:10 PM

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by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 4:05:25 PM

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by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 3:53:09 AM

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by welcome_dragon

3/30/2025 at 4:00:38 AM

[flagged]

by MrMcCall

3/29/2025 at 10:13:43 PM

What about the 1999 PlayStation 2 advertisement disguised as a futuristic 2078 commercial for the PlayStation 9 [1]? I always thought it was directed by David Lynch, but I don't see it in this video.

[1] https://www.reddit.com/r/RetroFuturism/comments/u1siyw/plays...

by rossant

3/29/2025 at 11:14:10 PM

Perhaps your memory had incorrectly conflated that with his infamous "The Third Place" commercial for the PS2? I remember a fuss being made about Lynch making that at the time, but I've never heard any claim he directed the PS9 one.

by KwanEsq

3/29/2025 at 10:33:11 PM

This doesn't look like anything Lynch would have made. Quick cuts, tons of effects shots, straightforward narrative...

by mpalmer

3/29/2025 at 11:01:01 PM

i recommend you see Lynch’s The Straight Story

by fredland

3/30/2025 at 1:31:58 AM

I have! A more conventional story, but it too bears basically no resemblance to this ad whatsoever.

by mpalmer

3/29/2025 at 9:51:12 PM

That commercial for Dior is wild. It's like an outtake from Inland Empire... but still very obviously a commercial for a handbag.

by scyclow

3/29/2025 at 11:22:53 PM

Anyone want to hazard a guess about the likelihood of us ever getting high quality versions of these commercials? Are many of these likely lost to time, or is it possible that high quality copies exist somewhere?

by maxmcd

3/30/2025 at 12:00:51 AM

In short, it depends on how it was shot. If using analog film, then it's likely a higher quality scan can be made (assuming you can find the footage), but if it's digital sensors that were used, then the quality is what it is.

So for 35mm film which a lot of movies and high-end commercials use, then you can most likely get a good 4K version from that. So if you know how it was shot, you could try to figure out how likely it is :)

by diggan

3/29/2025 at 10:37:51 PM

Awesome

by TechDebtDevin

3/29/2025 at 10:39:16 PM

"Why is poor taste ubiquitous?" --Eric Spieakermann in "Helvetica"

Because we live in a world who live to be titilated with the inane, lewd, and lascivious.

Like a brain-damanged Bower Bird's trashy monument to itself, he created monuments to the vapid and wasteful.

"Buh-bye." --David Spade's flight attendent character on SNL

by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 2:06:47 AM

>Obsessed with compassion and how to create happiness for others...

"One of these things is not like the other..."

It's almost like you haven't even stopped to understand his work. There's far more compassion in the films and television he left behind than there is in your comment. It's a shame you don't seem to want to find it. I hope you have a pleasant weekend.

by jjulius

3/30/2025 at 3:17:22 AM

[flagged]

by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 5:18:55 AM

Check out The Elephant Man

by adamiscool8

3/30/2025 at 11:59:18 AM

My intuition says that that is truly a film that portrays mankind's potential for humanity, not the depravity of BV.

Ironically, from IMDB's storyline for TEM, it says,

> Brutish Bytes, his "owner", only wants whatever he can get economically by presenting Merrick as a freak.

which is precisely what DL did in BV, but for drug-induced violent rape.

Side note: I loved Freddie Jones in Jeremy Brett's Sherlock Holmes' "Wisteria Lodge", though, ironically, that is the one episode with rape. Of course, it was in no way gratuitous, as it was TV, but obvious nonetheless. As well, she had deliberately risked herself on purpose in order to catch her husband's murderer.

It is truly amazing the depth and breadth of human evil encompassed by that Sherlock Holmes' TV series. I'd dare say they've got it all, by their mostly accurately following 130ish year old books. Doyle really understood human nature. I heartily recommend all 41 episodes, if only for Jeremy Brett's Holmes, but, really, it is outstanding in every aspect.

by MrMcCall

3/30/2025 at 9:57:44 PM

There's a lot to be said for how abuse was portrayed in Twin Peaks. Many survivors of abuse have praised the show and it's film counterpart for their honest portrayal. Sheryl Lee, the actress who portrayed Laura Palmer, has highlighted her positive interactions with survivors in numerous interviews. It's a hard watch, but it's an honest watch, and empathetic at its core.

You're focusing on the fact that such abuse is shown, without digging any deeper into why it's shown, and in what context - context that you are inherently ignorant to by your own admission of never having seen Blue Velvet. I have, so I know of what I speak.

And to your flip response about, "Enjoy your Insta", I don't. I stay far away. Once again you seem to be making assumptions about people (and casting aspersions towards them based on said assumptions) and things based on surface level interactions, the opposite of trying to be compassionate.

by jjulius

3/31/2025 at 4:36:31 AM

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by jjulius

3/31/2025 at 2:05:00 PM

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by MrMcCall

3/31/2025 at 7:32:51 AM

The way your comment reads weird is really remniscent, for me, of the weird characters David Lynch created. Those that were half here and half somewhere else. I bet weirdness follows him to this day.

by dmos62

3/29/2025 at 9:22:00 PM

360p quality. I understand some of these videos were uploaded from VHS and the quality has degraded over time with different compression algorithms being applied but a lot of the later commercials are out there in 1080p on YouTube. It is great to have all his commercials in one place but it would be far better to have the best quality video ripped and if it isn’t up to snuff, use AI video upscaling.

by danielktdoranie

3/30/2025 at 1:24:58 AM

> use AI video upscaling

I want to see what he made, not what something trained on stolen work thinks it might look like.

by mattl

3/29/2025 at 11:01:24 PM

AI upscaling is a poor choice for a director who deliberately made unexpected visual choices.

by pimlottc