David Lynch, American filmmaker, 1946-2025 - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT商学院

David Lynch, American filmmaker, 1946-2025

The visionary director peered into the darkness and light of the American soul

David Lynch, the American filmmaker who created an unnerving vision of the world and plumbed the fears and desires in his country’s unconscious, has died at 78. His death was announced by his family on social media, with no cause given; Lynch had been diagnosed with emphysema in 2020 and last year spoke publicly of being effectively housebound.

Lynch belongs to the pantheon of artists whose name defines not just a style but a worldview. The enveloping images and sounds of his work — especially Eraserhead (1977), Blue Velvet (1986), Mulholland Drive (2001) and the TV series Twin Peaks (1990) — breathe with the odd, the unseemly, the freakish and the savage, all lurking on the flipside of daily life. Here was a beaming devotee of both Bob’s Big Boy milkshakes and Francis Bacon.

He was born on January 20 1946 in Missoula, Montana, to a research scientist for the US Department of Agriculture and an English teacher. His upbringing has the glow of cosy Americana: a high-ranking member of the Boy Scouts of America, he watched his father troop out to work wearing a grey-green 10-gallon hat. After some years in Spokane, Washington, the family resettled in the east, where Lynch embraced painting after meeting a friend’s father, a full-time artist.

Lynch on the set of ‘Dune’ (1984) with Dean Stockwell and Francesca Annis

Lynch’s beginnings in the visual arts nurtured his later tendencies towards textured, vivid cinema that gets under your skin. He studied painting at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and — as he would with other places he lived — later channelled the urban decay of Philadelphia into the shadowy postindustrial demimonde of Eraserhead. Moving images drew him in next; his early short film Six Men Getting Sick (1967) was an animated painting. 

He developed Eraserhead at the American Film Institute, where he was part of the directing class of 1970. Shooting the story of a stricken-looking loner who fathers a birdlike baby took four years, with Lynch sometimes sleeping on set. An outlier alongside modish 1970s New Hollywood, his fully formed vision was surreal and grotesque, an extreme close-up of the surfaces and moods in an angst-ridden postwar home. Opening in downtown Manhattan in 1977, it became a midnight-movie hit.

A Hollywood producer caught a screening and, improbably, connected Lynch with a project and a backer: The Elephant Man, its unlikely executive producer comedy legend Mel Brooks, who compared Lynch’s work to Beckett and Ionesco. Starring John Hurt as John Merrick, the 1980 film earned Lynch an Academy Award nomination for Best Director. Dune, starring little-known Kyle MacLachlan, followed in 1984, thoroughly disappointing the director creatively. As Lynch said of its producer, Dino De Laurentiis: “When Dino and I first talked, he had not seen Eraserhead, so there were a lot of things in my head that he didn’t know about. When he finally saw the film, in fact, he hated it.”

In short order Lynch poured his mind into what became his defining work for many years. Blue Velvet depicted picket-fence Reagan-era suburbia as home to kitschy songbirds and a nitrous-huffing sadist (Dennis Hopper) who torments a nightclub chanteuse (Isabella Rossellini). MacLachlan stars as a young man who plays detective, opposite Laura Dern. Four years later, in Twin Peaks, Lynch cast him as an FBI agent investigating the murder of Laura Palmer. The show became a phenomenon, challenging the homogeneity of TV with new depths of the weird and inexplicable.

“It’s all about seeing that underside,” Frederick Elmes, Lynch’s cinematographer on Eraserhead and Blue Velvet, said about Lynch’s interests, in an interview last year. That view continued with the split-personality fugue of Lost Highway (1997), a warm-up for the Los Angeles phantasmagoria of Mulholland Drive (2001). Originally developed for TV, the latter is widely regarded as Lynch’s masterpiece, launching another little-known actor, Naomi Watts, as an ingénue falling down a Hollywood rabbit hole. In a social media post yesterday, Watts wrote: “Every moment together felt charged with a presence I’ve rarely seen or known. Probably because, yes, he seemed to live in an altered world.”

Naomi Watts, left, and Laura Elena Harring in ‘Mulholland Drive’ (2001)

Lynch also directed a sweet sunset idyll, The Straight Story (1999), and a torturous trip through the digital looking-glass, Inland Empire (2006), along with one-off TV and music projects. Meanwhile he adhered to and stumped for a regular transcendental meditation practice and returned to his roots in painting. But the director achieved one more moving-image pinnacle with Twin Peaks: The Return (2017), a darkly gorgeous, cracked meditation on an American atomic-era legacy of dread and death.

He continued to attract new generations of fans though his gee-whiz persona, oddball integrity and deadpan humour. But his genuineness was the real thing, as was his incongruously twisted art, peering into the darkness and light in the American soul. He was married four times and is survived by four children.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

全球毕业生面临就业的艰苦斗争

大学毕业生本应从劳动力市场的紧缩中受益。为什么仍有这么多人在找工作?

汽车制造商转向新的混合动力和汽油车型以提高利润

在电动汽车成为主流的漫长等待中,对内燃机和混合动力汽车的投资仍在继续。

反觉醒运动是否已经用力过猛?

保守派误将公众对文化左派的厌恶视为对相反教条的热情。

特朗普对援助的打击在东非救援中心引发混乱

肯尼亚的经济和医疗系统因美国总统关闭美国国际开发署而陷入困境。

美国和沙特合作的黄金时代到来了吗?

特朗普在与其他传统盟友关系紧张的同时,正在加强与这个石油资源丰富的王国的联系。

当我们将一切政治化时,社会就变得更愚蠢

当我们失去就事论事的能力时,我们也在失去对现实的掌控。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×