Showing posts with label Laura Elena Harring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laura Elena Harring. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Mulholland Drive (2001)

(I blogged about this film originally in 2015)



 
At a glance:
  • Director: David Lynch
  • Starring: Justin Theroux, Naomi Watts, Laura Elena Harring, Ann Miller, Dan Hedaya
  • Genre: mystery, neo-noir, surreal
  • Release: 2001, USA
  • Length: 2.5 hours
  • IMDB: 8.0
  • Review: -

Plot: The drivers of a limo on Hollywood's Mullholland Drive suddenly point a gun at their female passenger (Laura Elena Harring). Lucky for her, another car accidently runs into them. When she regains consciousness, she hides in a nearby house. On the same day a countryside girl and wannabe actress Betty (Naomi Watts) moves into the same house. Betty tries to help her find out who she really is. In the meantime, a director (Justin Theroux) is struggling with the studio to have his actress play the leading role in his movie rather than theirs...

Theme: I don't want to spoil and I don't even want to solve the mystery, there are many attempts for that here. The point is that timelines, dreams, imagination and consciousnesses mix. We get several clues to understand events and symbols, but none of them are really exclusive; it's like a modern stream of consciousness by Tarkovsky, but they are most obvious, but also have multiple meanings. Another important plot is Hollywood, which according to the director is a nasty place with terrible producers, who are willing to do everything against a poor director.

Content: -

Form: The style of Lynch is described as dreamlike, and the film in its atmosphere, characters, grotesqueness seems nightmarish indeed. This nightmare has fitting expressive camera settings and lightnings, but not as many as I'd like. My impression is that Lynch wanted to create rather an atmosphere than employing a visual motif running through the whole film. The music is also fitting, even if it's just a slowly appearing bass, which gives a disharmonious feeling such as in case the theater scene. In spite of the nightmare, there are also some dark jokes, but this doesn't ruin the atmosphere. Finally, acting. Both main characters need to act out several personalities, which was spectacular especially in the case of Betty.

Impression: I think the story doesn't really go anywhere, its "only" about some people's fate. Not like that's necessary, the atmosphere and the emotions can by themselves awake ideas in us. In my case, this happened during the theater performance, in which the world Lynch built up up to that point turned suddenly upside down. The performed love song is distorted by the before mentioned dark ambient background music; the girls cry - all this felt like the display of a cruel, cold world in which the only warmth is a single positive emotion, a song. And then silencio. All in all, I didn't feel the film to be perfect, but it's definitely memorable and unsettling.

Trivia: