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~ Blue Velvet, ITV1, 10:30PM ~
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Just a heads up for anyone who hasn't seen this Cult classic yet, I am still debating whether I watch it again or not TBH, I always said that once was more than enough, very disturbing film...but amazingly well acted and very dark.
*That* scene with Dean Stockwell & Dennis Hopper is as legendary as anything so the film is worth watching just for Dean's surreal miming of Roy Orbison's "In dreams" Yay Dean Stockwell, yay! Amazing actor.
*That* scene with Dean Stockwell & Dennis Hopper is as legendary as anything so the film is worth watching just for Dean's surreal miming of Roy Orbison's "In dreams" Yay Dean Stockwell, yay! Amazing actor.
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I think it's usually on the Indie channel if you want to catch it without ad breaks
Isn't that the point of it tho?
It's a fantastic film - a very important contribution to surrealist cinema, but enjoyable on a normal level as well.
Love that film - Thanks for the heads up :cool:
Perhaps it's not really my kind of film.
IF you didn't get Blue Velvet I wouldn't bother with Mulholland Drive or Lost Highway let alone Eraserhead
Did someone mention my name haha.
Yup, and if you shouldn't bother with those, you definitely shouldn't go anywhere near Inland Empire.
As for Blue Velvet, it's one of my favourite Lynch films, not just for Dennis Hopper's wonderfully over-the-top and quite disturbing performance (easily out-doing Jack Nicholson in The Shining) but for the unsettling notion of there being something rotten beneath the surface of a seemingly idyllic suburban setting.
We need more guy's like this in a movie industry obsessed with making over produced CGI movies,dumb sequels and pointless remakes,usually directed by bland,yes men.
What's not to like about a movie which features Dennis Hopper playing an off of his head,crazy psychopath that says f**k in ever sentence (Possibly a semi-autobiographical account of himself in the late 60's )
You're not too far off the truth. Hopper was drawing from personal experience when he was acting high after inhaling the gas, remembering how he used to feel when off his head back in the druggy days
In an interview I saw David Lynch said that Dennis Hopper always put in more f*cks than were scripted, but Hopper reckoned he only said the number of f*cks that were in the script. He was also joking that David Lynch didn't like using the word - he said "he can't say it, but he sure can write it!"