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Mulholland Drive

Mulholland Dr.

United States, France

2001

147 Min
Color
Spanish, English
  • Currently 4.1/5 Stars.
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DIR David Lynch

PROD Neal Edelstein, Tony Krantz, Michael Polaire, Alain Sarde, Mary Sweeney

SCR David Lynch

DP Peter Deming

CAST Naomi Watts, Laura Harring, Ann Miller, Dan Hedaya, Justin Theroux, Robert Forster

ED Mary Sweeney

PROD DES Jack Fisk

MUSIC Angelo Badalamenti

SOUND David Lynch

Cannes: Best Director

Synopsis

David Lynch wrote and directed this look at two women who find themselves walking a fine line between truth and deception in the beautiful but dangerous netherworld of Hollywood. A beautiful woman (Laura Elena Harring) riding in a limousine along Los Angeles’ Mulholland Drive is targeted by a would-be shooter, but before he can pull the trigger, she is injured when her limo is hit by another car. The woman stumbles from the wreck with a head wound, and in time makes her way into an apartment with no idea of where or who she is. As it turns out, the apartment is home to an elderly woman who is out of town, and is allowing her niece Betty (Naomi Watts) to stay there; Betty is a small-town girl from Canada who wants to be an actress, and her aunt was able to arrange an audition with a film director for her. Betty befriends the injured woman, who begins calling herself “Rita” after seeing a poster of Rita Hayworth. While Betty’s audition impresses a casting agent, and she catches the eye of hotshot director Adam Kesher (Justin Theroux), Kesher’s producers and moneymen insist with no small vehemence that he instead cast a woman named Camilla Rhodes. As Rita attempts to put the pieces of her life back together, she pulls the name Diane Selwyn from her memory; Rita thinks it could be her real name, but when she and Betty find a listing for Diane Selwyn and visit her apartment, they discover the latest victim of a mysterious killer who is eluding police detective Harry McKnight (Robert Forster). Rita’s emotional identity soon takes a left turn, and it turns out that neither woman is quite who she once appeared to be. David Lynch originally conceived Mulholland Drive as the pilot film for a television series; after the ABC television network rejected the pilot and declined to air it, the French production film StudioCanal took over the project, and Lynch reshot and re-edited the material into a theatrical feature. The resulting version of Mulholland Drive premiered at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival, where David Lynch shared Best Director honors with Joel Coen.

( From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll )

Director

David_lynnc2

David Lynch

David Lynch is the Renaissance man of modern American filmmaking, an acclaimed and widely recognized writer/director as well as television producer, photographer, cartoonist, composer, and graphic artist. Walking the tightrope between the mainstream and the avant-garde with remarkable balance and skill, Lynch brings to the screen a singularly dark and disturbing view of reality, a nightmare world punctuated by defining moments of extreme violence, bizarre comedy, and strange beauty. More than any other arthouse filmmaker of his era, he has enjoyed considerable mass acceptance and has helped to redefine commercial tastes, honing a surrealistic aesthetic so visionary and deeply personal that the phrase “Lynchian” was coined simply to describe it.

Born January 20, 1946, in Missoula, MO, David Keith Lynch grew up the archetypal all-American boy. The son of a U.S. Department of Agriculture research scientist, he was raised throughout the Pacific Northwest, eventually becoming an Eagle… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 48 wall posts.
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Jack Lehtonen

7Feb10

Upon rewatch, may just be my favorite film.  

Gonn

2Feb10

I loved it. A well done thriller. I think it has some similarities with Donnie Darko in the means of time and how things, specially causes and consequences, are related to it.  
Picture of definedivine

definedivine

23Jan10

What the fuck just happened?   
Picture of Michelle Vijeh

Michelle Vijeh

21Jan10

I loved Mulholland Drive. It is so mysterious like Momento.  

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Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.
111609lists184

Let the Wild Listings Start!

By David Hudson on November 16, 2009
Updated through 11/22. "This perhaps is the first theme for the 2000s," proposes Michael J Anderson: "major filmmakers continuing their mastery, though perhaps not quite at the peak of their achievement
read article

Lists

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Reviews

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Untitled

By kelvanE on October 21, 2009

My second favorite of his - third being INLAND EMPIRE, first being Eraserhead. This one does what INLAND EMPIRE achieves only sporadically in its sprawling mess (alternately spot-on and boring) in…  read review

A Dream of Life

The mind is a terrifying place, one captured in dizzying detail by David Lynch in this film. What a shocker. The plot moves in, takes its toll on its characters, flips itself around, and tries to…  read review

Untitled

By Sam Cooper on June 1, 2009

A delicious, dangerously sensual film from David Lynch, one that I just might consider to be his best film of all time (yeah I said it. I like this better than Blue Velvet). Naomi Watts is fantastic…  read review

Untitled

By ganselm​i on May 29, 2009

The best film of the 2000s so far!

Mulholland Drive is, first of all, pure cinema — it’s neither a filmed play nor a didactic meditation on this or that social problem as so many of our award…  read review

Forum

Displaying 2 discussion topics.

Another take on best of the decade

78 posts by 15 people 2 months ago

WTF

10 posts by 8 people 4 months ago