It’s only been a couple of weeks since cinema lost one of its greats – the American auteur David Lynch, a pioneering and uncompromising true original, who made some of the most extraordinary, visually unique and powerful films ever to grace the screen. 

Fellow director Steven Spielberg described Lynch as a “singular, visionary dreamer who directed films that felt handmade”, while Martin Scorsese said Lynch made “everything strange, uncanny, revelatory and new… he put images on the screen unlike anything that I or anybody else had ever seen”.

Lynch might be gone, but his wondrous, dreamlike films live on, and STUDIOCANAL Presents is the home of three of the director’s key works – The Elephant Man, Mulholland Drive, and Inland Empire.



The Elephant Man (1980) 

Lynch’s exceptional biopic features an astounding performance from John Hurt as the disfigured John Merrick, with Anthony Hopkins as the surgeon who shows him kindness. Mel Brooks, who produced the Bafta-winning (and Oscar-nominated) film, said Lynch was “a remarkably unique and very talented filmmaker. It was such a truly great pleasure to work with him. If his name was in the credits, you knew the film was really worth seeing.”



Mulholland Drive (2001) 

This dazzling, daring and unforgettable psychological thriller stars Naomi Watts in a breakout role as an actress plunged into the nightmare side of Los Angeles. Watts said about working with Lynch: “He put me on the map. The world I’d been trying to break into for ten plus years, flunking auditions left and right…”. Ironically, one of the standout scenes in the film features her character at a particularly intense and awkward audition – done in a way only Lynch could do. 



Inland Empire (2006) 

An epic companion piece to Mulholland Drive, and Lynch’s final film, this fragmentary and disorientating three-hour masterwork features a truly astonishing lead performance from Laura Dern (who appeared in Lynch’s films Blue Velvet and Wild at Heart). Named after the area of Los Angeles where Dern’s husband is from, the film took shape after Lynch called Dern and said, “let’s experiment”, and they began to improvise scenes shot on a camcorder. Famously, Lynch campaigned for Dern to win an Oscar, by sitting on the side of Hollywood Boulevard with a live cow.

All three films are available to stream now on STUDIOCANAL Presents via Apple TV and Prime Video

Post your thoughts

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Trending

Proudly powered by WordPress