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Eraserhead

United States

1977

89 Min
  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
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DIR David Lynch

PROD David Lynch

SCR David Lynch

DP Herbert Cardwell, Frederick Elmes

CAST Jack Nance, Charlotte Stewart, Allen Joseph, Jeanne Bates, Judith Anna Roberts, Laurel Near

Synopsis

Filmed intermittently over the course of a five-year period, David Lynch’s radical feature debut stars Jack Nance as Henry Spencer, a man living in an unnamed industrial wasteland. Upon learning that a past romance has resulted in an impending pregnancy, Henry agrees to wed mother-to-be Mary (Charlotte Stewart) and moves her into his tiny, squalid flat. Their baby is born hideously mutated, a strange, reptilian creature whose piercing cries never cease. Mary soon flees in horror and disgust, leaving Henry to fall prey to the seduction of the girl across the hall (Judith Anna Roberts). An intensely visceral nightmare, Eraserhead marches to the beat of its own slow, surreal rhythm: Henry’s world is a cancerous dreamscape, a place where sins manifest themselves as bizarre creatures and worlds exist within worlds. Interpreting the film along the lines of Lynch’s claims that it’s the product of his own fears of fatherhood may make Eraserhead easier to digest on a narrative level, if need be. —allmovie guide

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

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Displaying 4 of 33 wall posts.
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kelvanE

7Feb10

So true, Gretchen, so damn true.  
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Gretchen

2Feb10

If I could watch ANY film again for the first time it would be this one. Thank you, David Lynch for turning me into an even weirder human being.  

Steinar Danielsen

31Jan10

One of the first art house films I saw at a young age. It stayed with me and influenced me more that I would probably credit it.  
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Tyler Aikens

19Jan10

I am still in awe that I managed to sit the entire way through this confusing, awkward piece of garbage. Props go to Lynch for some really great visuals, but at an hour and a half at length and almost not discernible plot or even purpose, I see no reason to ever watch it again. COMBAT SHOCK (aka AMERICAN NIGHTMARES, considered to be a bad rip-off of ERASERHEAD) looks like Oscar material in comparison.  

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Reviews

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Untitled

By kelvanE on October 21, 2009

Lynch’s best indeed! It’s his most distilled film - cutting straight to the heart of his beautiful filmmaking technique. This is not a feel good movie, but the ultimate filmic experience. I never knew…  read review

Untitled

By J_Tizzl​e on October 9, 2009

It is all very bleak and though I can appreciate that aspect of the film, the narrative goes to hell in favor of it’s surrealist imagery with a disfigured man acting as the hand of fate landing Henry…  read review

Untitled

By McNulty on October 6, 2009

My journey into surrealism.

I will always be a fan of horror and gore movies. When DVD first came out in 1999 I indulged myself into all the horror movies I could find. Anything FUCKED up…  read review

Untitled

By César on September 25, 2009

I must admit I felt a little disappointed after reading 5 star reviews and then watching this movie. To me it lacks the dangerous edge and atmosphere of impending doom that Lynch’s masterpieces have…  read review

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Eraserhead

27 posts by 24 people about 1 year ago