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Author Topic: Inland Empire
Aaron Burgess
Film Handler

Posts: 24
From: norfolk, va / usa
Registered: Jul 2006


 - posted 04-12-2007 07:34 AM      Profile for Aaron Burgess   Email Aaron Burgess   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
172 min of David Lynch insanity. I fear i will no longer be able to
think straight again. This 10 reeler was shot on digi video. Laura
Dern's performance scared the crap out of me. In fact, this movie was about the creepiest thing i have ever seen. If i ever get out of therapy, I will probably watch this again, if only to relive my fractured psyche. Mommy?

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Stephen Furley
Film God

Posts: 3059
From: Coulsdon, Croydon, England
Registered: May 2002


 - posted 04-12-2007 07:51 AM      Profile for Stephen Furley   Email Stephen Furley   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
We're opening it, in digital, on the 20th; I don't know anything about it except that it's 180 minutes. What's it about. When you say it was shot on video, do you know what format? How did it look?

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Michael Coate
Phenomenal Film Handler

Posts: 1904
From: Los Angeles, California
Registered: Feb 2001


 - posted 04-12-2007 08:44 AM      Profile for Michael Coate   Email Michael Coate   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
quote: Stephen Furley
When you say it was shot on video, do you know what format?
This came up in discussion a few months ago while I was working on a production on which a crew member had previously worked on "Inland Empire," and they said it was shot on DV. I believe they used the Sony DSR-PD150.

Wired interview with David Lynch

quote:
David Lynch's Weird, Wired World

Scott Thill 01.03.07 | 8:00 AM

The mere mention of the name "David Lynch" conjures images of velvety shadows and extreme violence. Over the past three decades Lynch has honed a surrealist aesthetic -- characterized by nightmarish and dreamlike sequences, stark images and meticulously crafted audio -- that can only be described as "Lynchian."

Considered one of the foremost auteurs in the film industry -- and one of the most original -- Lynch is also an accomplished writer, television producer, cartoonist, graphic artist and photographer. Plus, he's a guy with a big passion for high tech.

In March, September and December 2006, Wired magazine's Scott Thill spoke with Lynch about his innovative website, his new film, transcendental meditation and coffee. The entire, unedited transcript of these interviews can be viewed here.

Wired: When you started DavidLynch.com, you said the internet was still "sleepy" and slow. But now with a few years under your belt, has the sleeper, to quote Dune, awakened yet?

Lynch: The sleeper hasn't awakened yet. It's weird. Obviously, the internet is huge and getting bigger, but it is divided.... And I guess MySpace is the place where people go now, but even that's divided, know what I mean?

But over here (at DavidLynch.com), we've got our thinking caps strapped on. We've got a great bunch in our membership who all really like each other and find things to talk about. And when we get new members, they really like the site and say that it's different from other sites.... It's all an experiment. I want to find things that fire me up, and see if it works for the people.

Wired: How do you feel taking your work onto the internet years ago has changed you as a filmmaker?

Lynch: Well, it's huge, because I like to conduct experiments.... And because of the internet I've learned about AfterEffects, Flash animation and discovered and fallen in love with digital video.
So I just think that going onto the web was so good for me. It's just sort of starting, but it's a beautiful world.... I always like random access, and I like the idea that one thing relates to another. And this is part of the internet: It's so huge, that it is really an unbounded world. And I think that if we keep our thinking caps strapped on, we could find something beautiful out there in the ether.

Wired: Digital video seems to have made the process of filmmaking easier for budding auteurs.

Lynch: Digital video is so beautiful. It's lightweight, modern, and it's only getting better. It's put film into the La Brea Tar Pits.

Wired: So you are serious about working exclusively in DV from here on out?

Lynch: For sure.

Wired: Because of its mobility and lower overhead?

Lynch: Everything about it. In one word, film is heavy. It's gone, just gone.

Wired: DV is an easier route for new filmmakers to get their work seen, rather than relying on film festivals and the like.

Lynch: Absolutely. Like I always say, everybody has access to a piece of paper and a pencil. You can write a story with it. Anyone in the world can do that. And more and more these days, anyone in the world can make a film. There aren't that many great stories out there -- there's a bunch, maybe -- but at least now people have access where they didn't before. Films used to cost a fortune to make.


Wired: Are you worried about the intellectual property issues? The digital world is easier to hack and steal from.

Lynch: Everybody would like it if people respected the work of others. But ... I think things need to be balanced out. For sure, there are pirates out there who just want to do it (in order) to do it, but when you download something and really appreciate it, you should send something to the person who made it.

Wired: You have to support the artists or works you really admire.

Lynch: I think that that would be good.

Wired: Can that ideal survive in the digital world?

Lynch: Yeah, I think so. Of course, it all depends; you have to go person by person.

Wired: On to Inland Empire, your new film. What was it like shooting it in DV?

Lynch: It's a new world. The quality is pretty terrible, but I like that. It reminds me of the early days of 35 mm, when there wasn't so much information in the frame or emulsion. But ... you act and react, and the medium starts talking to you. So I love working in digital video.

Wired: How did the actors respond to it? Did it make a difference to them?

Lynch: It makes a difference, because you've got a 40-minute take rather than a 10-minute take, so you can just keep on rolling. In my last couple of films, I've started talking to the actors while we're shooting, which is not the smartest thing to do in a way. (Laughs.) Because you're goofing up the soundtrack. But I like to talk, and with DV, it's not like millions of dollars are flying through the camera every second. It's a different kind of feeling. You can get into a mood and stay there without breaking it because you have to stop and reload.

Wired: It's more like guerrilla filmmaking.

Lynch: For sure. You're leaner and meaner, and you can get more good footage.


Wired: Why did you decide to start the foundation for transcendental meditation?

Lynch: Because I know what it's done for me. I meditate every day, and I have for 32 years. And it's a long topic, but there's a thing called consciousness, and though consciousness is pretty abstract, it is also the ability to understand. It's awareness, it's wakefulness and it's bliss. Consciousness is the "I am"-ness....

Of course, everybody has consciousness, but everyone doesn't know that you can achieve more consciousness. There's an unbounded, infinite ocean of it within every human being. You just need the technique to dive within and get wet with it. When you really and truly experience pure consciousness ... it starts to grow. Then you've got more happiness, creativity and ability to understand the complexities of life. It's very important for a filmmaker, it's very important for a human being....

When you expand your consciousness, you can catch ideas at a deeper level, and understand them more.

Wired: Your work has always seemed to be open to consciousness, as far as I can tell. You seem to have more trust in your ideas, no matter what shape they may take, than other artists out there. Has meditation helped you build that trust?

Lynch: Absolutely. The ocean of pure consciousness is an ocean of all-knowingess.... Modern science calls it the unified field. And now modern science like Vedic science says that every thing that is a thing emerges from this field, which is unmanifest, yet manifestation comes from it.... Think about the intelligence that's there, and the creativity that's always been there, and you can dip into that.

And so I set up this foundation to raise money to give this to mainly students at first. We're trying to raise enough money to give transcendental meditation to any student who wants it, so they can dive within ... and get on the big, fast train to enjoying life.

Wired: On that note, I want to talk about your coffee -- I thought you were considering a branded DavidLynch.com coffee.

Lynch: I haven't found a coffee better than the one I'm drinking now. The idea is to really get ... this is all subjective, but I know what good coffee tastes like to me. And if I got that, we might do a DavidLynch.com coffee.


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Sam Graham
AKA: "The Evil Sam Graham". Wackiness ensues.

Posts: 1431
From: Waukee, IA
Registered: Dec 2004


 - posted 04-15-2007 12:23 AM      Profile for Sam Graham   Author's Homepage   Email Sam Graham   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
CINEMA: Fleur Cinema & Cafe, Des Moines, IA
AUDITORIUM: 2
PRESENTATION: 35mm/Analog mono
PRESENTATION PROBLEMS: Sort of a whiney noise/hum throughout, bottom half of picture was obscured by mystery object about an hour in for about ten minutes (patron complained, problem was fixed), slightly shaky and out of focus picture
RATING: Two stars (out of four)

The couple in front of me ask for tickets to "Island Empire". Ticket Girl corrects them, and they seem concerned. Then she says "People have been walking out of it all day. It's three hours long and it's REALLY weird."

The couple rethink their decision. They move to the side and read the Fleur's binder they keep stocked with detailed info about movies playing and coming soon.

Me: "Inland Empire please. I promise not to walk out."

Ticket Girl giggles.

THE PLOT: David Lynch and Laura Dern cook spaghetti, throw it on the wall, throw a loose plot around it, and distribute it as a movie.

Dern plays an actress shooting a remake of a Polish movie that was never finished due to the actors dying. We watch the new version being filmed. The further we go, the more confusing it gets as to what's supposed to be said movie and what's not. Then the whole thing goes random. Even more so than Lost Highway. You didn't think that was possible, did you. Well, it is. Oh...and there's a sitcom starring people in bunny suits. They speak random unfunny dialog and canned laughter erupts.

The video is high contrast and looks like upconverted DV, artifacts and all. All of the moving shots are done hand-held. Some of the shots reminded me of B-movies like "Carnival of Souls", which isn't necessarily a bad thing. But Lynch always relies heavily on visuals, so the DV quality is a problem.

If you ever find yourself at the Fleur, try the popcorn. Then you can brag to people that you've had the worst popcorn on Earth.

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Caleb Johnstone-Cowan
Jedi Master Film Handler

Posts: 593
From: London, UK
Registered: Mar 2006


 - posted 04-18-2007 05:53 PM      Profile for Caleb Johnstone-Cowan   Email Caleb Johnstone-Cowan   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Saw this at Cineworld Haymarket, Screen 2. The auditorium is poorly designed and not conducive to watching a 3 hour film. The customer service and staff were perfect as usual. Was in 35mm although opened upstairs in digital the week before and moved over.

Think two people walked out. This suprised me since the cinema is usually populated by people who have come out of their way to see a film there, and company policy is you can't get the £9.20 (yup nearly $20 now!) back if you walk out because you didn't like the film.

Can't really add much to the above about the plot because I didn't have a clue what was going on half the time. The film is growing on me the more I think about it. About two and a half hours in I was thinking how much the film sucked but by the end and after reading other opinions on the film I began to get it and like it. Laura Dern was really good as were the supporting cast and the cinematography was interesting. There was a lot going on plot-wise and you really had to think to just about keep up with the narrative. Certainly a relief from the commercial Hollywood stuff you usually get in cinemas.

My main problem with Inland Empire was the choice of DV for filming. It is difficult to watch something that looks like a home movie in the cinema, especially for three hours. Not going for at least decent quality video or 35mm shows a lack of respect for the big screen which is kinda ironic since this film may not work in a home environment.

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