I've been meaning to check out Lynch for a while, where should I start?

I've been meaning to check out Lynch for a while, where should I start?

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mullholland drive
if you want a good laugh watch his daughters movie "boxing helena"

Eraserhead and then stop

Lost Highway and Mulholland Drive are my favorites
Twin Peaks is my favorite series but watch a couple of his movies first so you know what you're getting into

Blue Velvet or Twin Peaks. Those are the first two I saw.

youtu.be/11p0y9z1XOU

Is it worth watching for Sherilyn Fenn?

blue velvet is the only good film he made, also the normiest

>I've been meaning to check out Lynch for a while, where should I start?
With his first film, like you would any other director.

if you like women without limbs then yeah why not

> like you would any other director
Literally nobody does that

david lunch lol

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Thread by thread, watching all the butthurt
Plebs distress, cutting out the story snip by snip
Making sure the big cheek girl sings nicely
It's the perfect color, black and white
Always gotta keep the sluggish pacing
Making sure his head's correctly eraasing
I'm filming Eraserhead!

Frame by frame, fussing on the details
Shaved eyebrows, don't you know that spookiness is highbrow?
Metaphors for film threads to inspire
Even though the plot's what THEY desire
Gotta mind those intimate details
Even though producers just want sales
And, I just made Lost Highway!

Filmmaking's easy!
For Wild at Heart, Nicholas Cage!
Inland Emp, something creepy
Blend color and form
Do you think this scene's RAPEY?

Something nice, perhaps quite disturbing
Bag over his eyes, couldn't HE just simply DIE?
Making sure it he breathes when he goes to sleep
Don't forget some horror in his dreams
Even though it ranks low with the die hards
It's the most loved by the Oscars!
I'm filming Elephant Man!

Cut the plot, snip by snip
Add some fog, plus some crips
Thread by thread, plebs and plebs
Film by film, always pissed
And that's The Art of the Lynch!

>Literally nobody does that
Literally all kinosseurs do that.

Eraserhead

1. Start with his gay ass interview with Moby
2. Realize that he was only ever just a really confident mentally ill guy who became senile and nobody noticed
3. Anything of his can now be watched with informed expectations.

FWIW someone once described his stuff as being the product of a guy who apparently lost his virginity after dropping acid at a carnival.

Read his book

I'd start with Blue Velvet then watch everything he did in the 90's up through Inland Empire (including Twin Peaks) in chronological order. Eraserhead is kind of it's own thing and can be watched at any time, and Dune, Elephant Man, and Straight Story aren't really Lynch films, despite being de facto Lynch films. Only watch The Return after you've watched everything and listened to all of his albums.

Based

If anything, it would be David Brunch.

He has albums? Who the fuck is this guy?

you'll see her bobs, fwiw

watching order of Lynch filmography:
Blue Velvet -> Mulholland Drive -> Lost Highway -> Wild At Heart -> Inland Empire -> Eraserhead

Watch the Twin Peaks material whenever/outside of consideration of Lynch's portfolio. It's a group effort of an intellectual property, so whenever you get around to watching it, you'll be able to notice what elements in it are distinctly his. That said, I think Fire Walk With Me is his best film.

Then, if you're still interested, venture to watch Dune, The Straight Story, or Elephant Man. He only has the final cut on the second of these three, and the screenplay/source material isn't distinctly of his own style, unlike the other films listed in the viewing order.

Why watch Eraserhead last even though it's one of his first?

Just pick one you retarded zoomer

Blue Velvet is a good starting place

>Who the fuck is this guy?
He's David Fucking Lynch.
youtube.com/watch?v=caWXt9lCVrc

twin peaks is probably the easiest to get into but that's because it was more than just David Lynch so it's not really a good representation of him I guess. the red room scenes are though and so is season 3 but do not watch season 3 without watching the other 2

it's so incredible that it sets an almost irrelevant standard for the rest of his filmography. the rationale of the ordering I listed was in terms of most accessible/reasonable -> most irrational/surreal

DUNE
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