David Lynch, the peerless director behind such masterpieces as Eraserhead, Blue Velvet, Wild at Heart, Twin Peaks, and Mulholland Drive, was one of cinema’s all-time greats, a unique visionary whose dark and surreal films were the stuff of both unsettling dreams and sumptuous nightmares.
Reactions to the death of David Lynch, the visionary filmmaker behind “Twin Peaks” and “Mulholland Drive,” whose death at 78 was announced Thursday.
Steven Soderbergh’s “Presence” requires some initial audience disorientation. Mistake? If so, why do we miss David Lynch so much?
"I always operate the camera, but this was next level," the director says. "I’m really in there with the actors."
Steven Spielberg, Nicolas Cage, and Kyle MacLachlan are among the prominent figures paying tribute to David Lynch, whose death was announced Thursday. “I loved David’s films. Blue Velvet, Mulholland Drive,
Soderbergh shares his memories of trying to work with the legendary director and why he was inimitable. “The people who tried to appropriate his algorithm, that just didn’t work ...
Director Steven Soderbergh, in an interview with The Associated Press. — ''I am astounded and heartbroken I can't express with any words the profound loss of the great David Lynch my friend.''
I saw a good movie the other night, guided by a tight, 85-minute narrative and a gratifying seriousness underneath its supernatural premise. The film is “Presence,” made for a couple of million dollars,
P12 - Parental guidance required for audiences under the age of 12. 13 - For audiences aged 13 years old and above. 16 - For audiences aged 16 years old and above.
Click to compare. Or clear cinema selection. "La Haine" (1995) goes hi-tech as Leito (David Belle) and Damien (Cyril Raffaelli) pair up to parkour our ass all over the place again, returning to the urban mess that is Banlieue 13 after six years away on the ...
Oscar-winning director Steven Soderbergh takes us there in “ Presence ,” a ghost story filmed entirely in a New Jersey home. Unlike most films in the genre, the movie, in theaters Friday (Jan. 24), is told solely from the point of view of the ghost.
Jim Tauber, a longtime executive and the president of Sidney Kimmel Entertainment for a decade until his retirement in 2015, died Wednesday from complications of multiple myeloma, his family confirmed.