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A Story of a Mystery...
A Mystery Inside Worlds within Worlds...
Unfolding Around a Woman...
A Woman in Love and in Trouble.
"A Polish woman looks, intently, into someone or something ... an actress (Laura Dern) is warned that her new movie is cursed ... a rabbit-headed family perform sit-com actions on a stage set as if engaged in a solemn ritual ... Such are just a few of the elements and recurrent motifs of The Inland Empire, a mesmerizing surge through countless looking glasses that lands us on the far side of the land of nightmares. Lynch’s first foray into high-definition video is just as visually stunning as his work in 35mm, but the long gestation period of his new film (he shot on and off over two years, and wrote as he went) has allowed him to give his own uniquely epic form to many of his primary concerns: the exploitation of young women, the mutability of identity, the omnivorousness of Hollywood."
http://www.criterionforum.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=4943
Screening Schedule at the Biennale in Venice
INLAND EMPIRE will be shown out of competition at the Biennale in Venice where David Lynch receives a Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement. The film's runtime is 172 min.
September 6, 2006
8:30 a.m., Sala Perla
10:45 a.m., PalaLido
6:30 p.m., SALA GRANDE (after Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement)
September 8, 2006
10:45 p.m., PalaLido
New York Film Festival
Sunday, October 8, 2006, 8:30 p.m.
Monday, October 9, 2006, 11:00 a.m.
USA: Magnolia Pictures, n/a
UK: Optimum Releasing, n/a
France: Mars Distribution, 2007
Germany: Concorde, January 11, 2007
Australia: Dendy Films, 2007
Switzerland: Frenetic, January 25, 2007
Netherlands: March 29, 2007
David Lynch (Director/Writer/Editor)
- "Every film is like going into a new world, going into the unknown. But you should be not afraid of using your intuition, and feel and think your way through."
- "Cinema is such a beautiful language. Cinema is the thing that deals with things beyond words, and it's so beautiful. So to go with cinema is like going with music, your intellect travels along with it, it's so fantastic. Go in and have an experience in a different world."
- "The cut to next can be so surprising and that's just the miracle of cinema -- how we go from one place to another and the possibilities of those places to go to are kinda infinite. How we can see ourselves and find ourselves in there is kinda what gets me going."
- "It's about a woman in trouble, and it's a mystery, and that's about all I want to say about it."
- "We did film some out there [San Bernardino County]. It's not really about that area, though. "
Laura Dern (Nikki/Sue)
- "Each day was a different direction, each day was a different idea because we didn't have a script we were following. The truth is, I didn't know who I was playing — and I still don't know. I'm looking forward to seeing the film to learn more."
- "All of us, like you, were experiencing David's vision for the first time because there wasn't a laid-out linear script or plan from the outset. The film rolled over us and our experience of it was very like yours."
Justin Theroux (Devon/Billy)
- "I always thought of a David Lynch movie as buying a new jazz record. The best way is to let the film wash over you. Sit back and go on that ride."
- "It’s loosely a mystery [but] I have no idea what kind of movie we’re going to have."
- "As far as what the movie is about, I could rattle off a couple scenes, but it’s difficult to describe. I play an actor who sort of gets cast in a large movie, and in that movie I play a Southern gentleman, and that’s about all I know. And then there are tons of scenes within that, but I don’t know how he’s going to use those scenes, you know?"
- "David never really gave us a script, he just gave us scenes, these little 10-page packets. And then we’d go home and he’d hand us another one at the end of the night, or hand us three at a time. But they sometimes seemed really linked and sometimes didn’t. So the actual process [of filming] seemed probably very similar to what it’s going to be like to watch it, which involves sort of having to link it together as you go."
- "Working with David is probably the best time you’ll ever have in your life. Contrary to what anyone might think, when you’re making a David Lynch movie you don’t feel like you’re making a David Lynch movie; you feel like you’re making a Farrelly brothers movie or something. He’s just a really, really fun guy to be around, and everyone that he works around and hires is just a blast. So you just go and have a goof and get serious for the work, but the rest is just gravy. It was really fun."
Produced by Mary Sweeney, David Lynch
Executive Producer Marek Zydowicz
Co-Producers Laura Dern, Jeremy Alter
Directed, Written, Edited by David Lynch
Cast
Laura Dern: Nikki/Sue
Jeremy Irons: Kingsley
Harry Dean Stanton: Freddie
Justin Theroux: Devon/Billy
more...
Premiere Magazine, By Mark Salisbury, September, 2006 The Observer, By Jason Solomons, September 10, 2006
The Hollywood Reporter, By Ray Bennett, September 8, 2006
The Guardian, By Geoffrey Macnab, September 7, 2006
The Times, By James Christopher, September 7, 2006
Variety, By Jay Weissberg, September 6, 2006
Screen Daily, By Lee Marshall, September 6, 2006
David Lynch puzzle premieres at Venice
Lynch handed award as movie baffles
Venice honors Lynch
'Inland Empire' -- Just Don't Expect to See the 91
Lynch's Empire Is Nearly Built
Lynch To Venice: Lionize Me!
Lynch invades an 'Empire'
Pictures
Room to Dream
David Lynch main page
Rabbits Page
© Mike Hartmann
mike@thecityofabsurdity.com
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