David Lynch's Unfathomable Masterpiece (2024)

Culture

A digital reissue of Inland Empire reveals the charms of the director’s inscrutability.

David Lynch's Unfathomable Masterpiece (1)

One day, deep into production on David Lynch’s 2006 film, Inland Empire, a producer approached the actor Laura Dern in a panic, trying to parse a strange request from the director. “He took me aside and said, ‘Laura, David called me this morning, and I can’t figure out if it’s a joke,’” Dern, the movie’s lead, recalled in an interview. “‘He said, “Bring me a one-legged woman, a monkey, and a lumberjack by 3:15.”’ I said, ‘Yeah, you’re on a David Lynch movie, dude; just sit back and enjoy the ride.’”

By 4 o’clock, shooting had begun with the lumberjack, monkey, and one-legged woman all on set—they’re all prominently featured in the compellingly inscrutable final sequence of Inland Empire, which has been recently remastered and is now touring cinemas around the country. The anecdote is a testament to how classically “Lynchian” the film is, loaded with visual details that invite intense analysis but defy plot logic. But it’s also illustrative of the unique way Inland Empire was made, what sets it apart from the rest of Lynch’s oeuvre, and the unexpected strength of surreal storytelling. Unlike the rest of his movies, Inland Empire was created without a complete script. Instead, Lynch would write specific scenes as he went along, gather his actors for filming, and then repeat the process again over the course of about three years.

“I would … shoot that scene, not knowing if it would ever hook on to any other scenes,” Lynch said in that same interview, “and not knowing if it would go, you know, wherever. I didn’t think about it.” Dern told reporters at the film’s premiere that she had no idea what the movie was about, but hoped that seeing it would help. Her co-star Justin Theroux said that trying to figure out what was going on in Inland Empire had become an on-set “pastime” for him and Dern. “I couldn’t possibly tell you what the film’s about, and at this point, I don’t know that [Lynch] could,” he said.

Almost every Lynch film is a mystery to unravel, as is his television masterwork, Twin Peaks. Inland Empire, however, is on its own island of pure impenetrability. Yes, long theories have been written up to try to impose narrative consistency on the film, which follows the actor Nikki Grace (played by Dern) as she embarks on a seemingly cursed movie project and disappears into the character she’s playing. But to me, the spontaneity of Lynch’s creative process means Inland Empire should be embraced as something beyond narrative. At its best, the film’s a compelling re-creation of a dream state, in which one’s location, timeline, friends, and personality can morph without warning.

Read: David Lynch found the perfect ending for Twin Peaks

Lynch shot Inland Empire on a handheld Sony digital camcorder, a high-end piece of equipment in the early 2000s but one far less powerful than most camera phones today. When the film was released in 2006, its grainy, standard-definition imagery looked unsettling on the big screen, like security footage captured from inside a nightmare. The new 4K remastering is more legible, though not entirely lacking the eerie crispness that comes with digital video. Lynch supervised the entire process, which required using artificial-intelligence software and manually cleaning up a lot of the garbled images that resulted.

The director seems thrilled with the end product: “It is a much better Inland Empire because of this modern technology, but it’s the same in another way … true to the same ideas,” he said in an interview. I’m inclined to agree; I had expected the new version to look drastically different, but instead it just looked deeper and richer, and somehow easier to get lost in. Given that it runs three hours and the story’s stakes are obscure, Inland Empire has never been the easiest sit for me, and I’ve revisited it less often than some of my favorite Lynch films (such as Mulholland Drive, Lost Highway, and The Straight Story). But watching the remaster at Manhattan’s IFC Center on a rainy morning, I was surprised by how many of the movie’s specific sequences remained seared into my memory.

Early on, Nikki has a conversation with a mysterious visitor (Grace Zabriskie), who rambles on about surreal folktales with increasing menace; the exchange terrified me on first viewing and was similarly spine-tingling during this latest one. A basically wordless scene sees the actor Devon Berk (Theroux) chase after a mysterious figure on a film set, having just been told that the script they’re working from is supposedly haunted. In that moment, Lynch’s digital camera serves only to heighten the creeping horror, because it can pick up every visual detail in the surroundings, making Berk’s inability to find the intruder all the more perturbing.

Inland Empire shares some creative DNA with Mulholland Drive, Lynch’s previous film. They’re both dark fantasias set in Hollywood. Their protagonists move between dreamy illusions and gritty reality, changing their names (and personalities) in the process. But Mulholland Drive establishes a formal division between two worlds, whereas the viewer often can’t tell what is provoking Nikki’s transformation. At times, Nikki seems to be trapped in a cycle of victimization that dates back to the tale of a cursed Polish woman from decades prior; at other times, the entire project just feels like a film-within-a-film that’s gotten out of hand. As the final credits roll, a lumberjack saws wood, a monkey dances, and an unknown woman peers out from the background. It’s a David Lynch movie, dude, and it’s just as beguiling and unfathomable as it was 16 years ago.

David Sims is a staff writer at The Atlantic, where he covers culture.

David Lynch's Unfathomable Masterpiece (2024)

FAQs

Why is Eraserhead considered a masterpiece? ›

David Lynch's masterful direction, impeccable cinematography, and experimental music and sound design all work together to create a surreal and unforgettable cinematic experience. While not for the faint of heart, Eraserhead is a film that rewards those willing to take the plunge into its dark and dreamlike world.

What is the most normal David Lynch movie? ›

It has a slightly more foreboding atmosphere than The Straight Story, given its setting, emotional scenes, and the fact it's in black-and-white. Otherwise, The Elephant Man is one of Lynch's most straightforward and normal movies, lacking his future flair and love for the surreal.

What is the best David Lynch film to start with? ›

Most people argee that Blue Velvet is the best place to start with Lynch. While he has made films that don't have the distrubing subject matter (Elephant Man and Straight Story) This one has all of lynch's weirdness but on a much more accesible level.

What is the number 1 highest-grossing movie of all time? ›

Even after almost 14 years, Avatar's reign atop the highest-grossing films of all time list has rarely been contested. Read our review of Avatar.

Is Eraserhead hard to understand? ›

', you probably won't get much out of Eraserhead. But for those who like their concepts challenged once in a while, this film will probably be one to watch again and again until you understand. This is also not a film to be forgotten easily.

Why is Eraserhead so important? ›

In 2007, Lynch said "Believe it or not, Eraserhead is my most spiritual film." The script is also thought to have been inspired by Lynch's fear of fatherhood; his daughter Jennifer had been born with "severely clubbed feet", requiring extensive corrective surgery as a child.

What is the message of Eraserhead? ›

How Eraserhead Portrays The Fear Of Fatherhood. Despite constant ambiguity within it, a key part of Eraserhead's meaning relates to the fear of fatherhood. It depicts the anxiety of becoming a parent and taking on the responsibilities involved.

What does Tarantino think of David Lynch? ›

He deemed it nothing more than a confirmation that David Lynch had become far too pretentious as a filmmaker, lacking any self-awareness he once had. Tarantino commented: “David Lynch had disappeared so far up his own ass that I have no desire to see another David Lynch movie until I hear something different.”

Why is David Lynch so good? ›

Lynch's talents extend to various mediums, allowing him to explore his artistic-vision in multiple dimensions. His interest in art, design, and literature have greatly influenced his filmmaking style, making his works visually stunning and narratively complex.

What are the four perfect movies? ›

She said David Mamet named Dodsworth as one of four perfect films. (The other three are The Godfather, A Place in the Sun, and Galaxy Quest.

What are David Lynch movies known for? ›

Lynch has received critical acclaim for his films, which are often distinguished by their surrealist, dreamlike qualities.

What is the point of the Mulholland Drive movie? ›

Mulholland Drive is about the Hollywood dream and the discovery that there is a reality behind that dream that is ugly and violent, namely the casting couch. The cowboy represents Hollywood itself, and the pure luck of becoming a successful Hollywood director or actor.

What does David Lynch watch? ›

David Lynch's Favorite Films: 10 Movies the Director Wants You to See. The "Twin Peaks" co-creator and "Mulholland Drive" director's favorite flicks include "The Wizard of Oz" and "Sunset Boulevard."

Which director has the most billion dollar movies? ›

Steven Spielberg is the highest-grossing film director of all time and one of the medium's all-time greats. While 1993's Jurassic Park is the only film within Spielberg's filmography that has grossed over $1 billion, he has made so many all-time classics that they've produced a very high total box office sum.

What is David Lynch famous for? ›

David Lynch (born January 20, 1946, Missoula, Montana, U.S.) American filmmaker and screenwriter who was known for his uniquely disturbing and mind-bending visual work. His films juxtapose the cheerfully mundane with the shockingly macabre and often defy explanation.

How many films did David Lynch make? ›

David Lynch: David Lynch's 9 Feature Films.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Lidia Grady

Last Updated:

Views: 6360

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (45 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Lidia Grady

Birthday: 1992-01-22

Address: Suite 493 356 Dale Fall, New Wanda, RI 52485

Phone: +29914464387516

Job: Customer Engineer

Hobby: Cryptography, Writing, Dowsing, Stand-up comedy, Calligraphy, Web surfing, Ghost hunting

Introduction: My name is Lidia Grady, I am a thankful, fine, glamorous, lucky, lively, pleasant, shiny person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.