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- [ COVER STORY, Page 84Czar of Bizarre
-
-
- As his haunting Twin Peaks begins a new season, David Lynch
- tests whether a brilliantly eccentric film artist can move into
- the mainstream
-
- By RICHARD CORLISS -- Reported by Elizabeth L. Bland/Los Angeles
-
-
- A peg-legged woman walks past David Lynch's table. She might
- be a victim from Blue Velvet or local color from Twin Peaks.
- But the man who dreamed up both of those nightmare
- entertainments pays her no heed. In the woodsy main dining room
- of Musso & Frank's, Hollywood's oldest eatery, the 44-year-old
- multimedia auteur concentrates on ordering his usual lunch: "A
- Swiss cheese, real Swiss cheese, on whole wheat. A side order
- of steamed broccoli. And a Coke." In his soft tenor voice, he
- discusses nutrition: "Do you like it when your sandwich is
- burned like that? That's not supposed to be good for you. But
- it sure tastes good, though." He chats with the waiter: "Does
- this bread get thrown away? It could go to the homeless. They'd
- only have a little-bit-later lunch."
-
- Some people want to know who killed Laura Palmer, the Twin
- Peaks homecoming queen with a past, the identity of whose
- murderer has been kept secret nearly as long as that of Jimmy
- Hoffa. More people, it seems, want to know about David Lynch's
- eating habits. How many damn fine cups of coffee (lots of milk,
- gobs of sugar) does he drink each day? Does he share the
- cherry-pie fixation of his TV hero, Special Agent Cooper? On
- the Tonight Show, Jay Leno quizzed Lynch about his Guinness
- Book-worthy consumption of chocolate milk shakes at the Bob's
- Big Boy chain in Los Angeles. The astounding stats: one every
- day at 2:30 p.m. for seven years, 1973-79.
-
- So let's break the big news first: David Lynch's current
- favorite liquids are red wine, bottled water and coffee. "I
- like cappuccino, actually. But even a bad cup of coffee is
- better than no coffee at all. New York has great water for
- coffee. Water varies all around. We've got to drink something.
- Do you just drink water, sometimes? It's very good for you."
- And, stop the presses, David Lynch doesn't cook at home. "No,
- ma'am! I don't allow cooking in my house. The smell. The smell
- of cooking -- when you have drawings, or even writings -- that
- smell would go all over my work. So I eat things that you don't
- have to light a fire for. Or else I order a pizza. The speed at
- which I eat it, it doesn't smell up the place too bad. The smell
- doesn't last too long."
-
- In Hollywood nothing lasts long -- except the work. Lynch
- has earned his 15 minutes of celebrity with 15 years of the
- strangest characters and most hallucinogenic images an American
- filmmaker ever committed to celluloid. His early career traced
- a paradigmatic arc of hotshot movie eminence, from a $20,000
- underground classic (Eraserhead in 1977) to a $5 million Oscar
- nominee (The Elephant Man in 1980) to a $50 million sci-fi dud
- (Dune in 1984). Each film had segments of bafflement and
- spectral beauty. But Hollywood, looking at the escalating price
- tags and plummeting ticket sales, wrote the director off. So
- Lynch made Blue Velvet (1986), a magnificent revenge drama --
- his revenge on fettered movie conventions -- about small-town
- life and lust, drugs and death. Twin Peaks, you could say, is
- only the TV domestication of that warped masterpiece.
-
- Only! Long before the series' April premiere, ecstatic
- critics were priming TV viewers to expect the unexpected.
- Lynch's two-hour pilot didn't disappoint. It was frantic and
- lugubrious in turn, a soap opera with strychnine. In one night,
- the show had hip America hooked. Twin Peaks stoked a media
- frenzy unseen since the Dallas heyday. But this time the
- director, not the star, was the prime beneficiary. David Lynch
- was J.R.
-
- Suddenly, like a high-cult Larry Hagman, Lynch was
- everywhere. The director whose pre-1990 oeuvre comprised just
- four features -- eight hours of public film -- will have more
- than matched that total this year. Two two-hour and three
- one-hour episodes of Twin Peaks. The rambunctious road movie
- Wild at Heart, winner of the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film
- Festival and now in theatrical release. Four TV commercials for
- Obsession perfume. A 50-minute video, Industrial Symphony No.
- 1, featuring a dwarf, prom teens, a floating topless lady, a
- skinned deer and ethereal warbler Julee Cruise singing from a
- car trunk; it's Lynch's most brazenly avant-garde work. If
- that's not enough, how about a weekly David Lynch comic strip
- called The Angriest Dog in the World? Or a book of his own
- photographs? Or a flurry of Twin Peaks merchandise, including
- the unexpurgated Secret Diary of Laura Palmer, written by
- Lynch's daughter Jennifer?
-
- He has proved that an eccentric artist can toil in American
- TV without compromising his vision, and in doing so he helped
- loose the bonds of the prime-time straitjacket. Who was the
- last fellow to pull off that parlay -- Ernie Kovacs? And what
- filmmaker as inimitable as Lynch has ever sponsored other
- directors to clone his style? The quirky outsider is close to
- becoming David Lynch Inc.
-
- But even Lynch must know that every fad must fade. Any
- enthusiasm with the velocity of Twin Peaks mania is bound to
- boomerang. "Fame is an unnatural thing," says Mark Frost,
- Lynch's TV partner and Twin Peaks co-producer. "There is no
- equivalent to it in the animal kingdom." A director on the edge
- gets critical indulgences when he steps into the mainstream;
- a director on top is ripe for a raspberry. The trick for Lynch
- is to keep the ebb of acclaim from affecting either his work
- or his attitude toward it.
-
- So as Twin Peaks' fall season begins next Sunday with
- another of the two-hour episodes he directed, Lynch arrives at
- a perplexing crossroads. He is too familiar to some admirers
- of his early movies, yet too weird for the Hollywood
- establishment -- or for the American couch potato.
-
- Wild at Heart, which sends a pair of loser lovers (Nicolas
- Cage and Laura Dern) on a trip into the dark night of the
- Southern Gothic soul, is a tonic for the senses and an assault
- on the sensibilities. Heads splatter, skulls explode, biker
- punks torture folks for the sheer heck of it, and a pair of
- loopy innocents find excitement in a side trip to hell. Pretty
- much like Blue Velvet. Yes, it's different, but the same kind
- of different; Lynch could no longer shock by being shocking.
- Many critics figured they had solved the mystery of his visual
- style and thematic preoccupations. Next mystery, please. By
- August, when the film opened in the U.S., the Lynch mob was more
- like a lynch mob.
-
- Barry Gifford, on whose novel the film was based, blames the
- critics for the film's lukewarm reception. "The faux
- intelligentsia can jump on or off a bandwagon," he notes.
- "Andre Gide said that writers should expect to lose 50% of
- their audience with each new work, that the rest never
- understood it in the first place. Perhaps that has happened to
- David."
-
- "I can't try to second-guess the critics," the director
- says. "The world is changing, and we are changing within it.
- As soon as you think you've got something figured out, it's
- different. That is what I try to do. I don't try to do anything
- new, or weird, or David Lynch. But I'm real happy with the
- picture. See, I love 47 different genres in one film. I hate
- one-thing films. And I love B movies. But why not have three
- or four Bs running together? Like a little hive!"
-
- Even on the Twin Peaks front, the entrails from last week's
- Emmy Awards make for cautionary reading. The show, nominated
- for 14 Emmys, was virtually shut out, winning only technical
- prizes for editing and costume design. Lynch, up for the Best
- Director citation, lost out to Thomas Carter (Equal Justice)
- and Scott Winant (thirty something). The Twin Peaks cast put
- its best face on defeat. "We kind of like the idea that we
- didn't get any Emmys," maintains Ray Wise, who plays Laura
- Palmer's spectacularly bereaved father. "We're not about winning
- awards; we are about doing what we do. If the great American
- public accepts it, fine. If they don't, we will still have our
- core audience. And even if we don't have our core audience, we
- know we have done it right."
-
- But will Twin Peaks be done in by ABC's Saturday-night
- graveyard slot, where the show will run after Sunday's
- premiere? Will the mass TV audience still care about (or keep
- track of) the town's residents, their loves and fetishes? Will
- viewers have grown weary of the show's cliff-hanging teases,
- as when Special Agent Cooper gets shot in the chest, only to
- revive in the next episode, or when he determines Laura's
- murderer in a dream and then forgets the name the next morning?
- Can they submit to the pleasures of texture, the luxury of the
- show's somnambulist pace, the comic-opera grandeur of the
- performances? Most important, will they keep watching Twin
- Peaks when it is no longer culturally compulsory to do so?
-
- For the first clues to these answers, tune in to next week's
- Nielsen ratings. And attend to the show's spiritual leader as
- he considers his delectable career crisis. "I'm real busy,"
- Lynch says. "And I'm busy not always on things that I think are
- important. Making a new film is important. Making each episode
- of Twin Peaks is important. And painting and music. But there's
- a lot of things in between that take a lot of time. Take this
- day: I haven't shot a scene, I haven't written anything, I
- haven't done anything. It's really frustrating." He pauses
- between bites of broccoli. "The good side of failure is you've
- got plenty of time to work."
-
- These days he has little time for a primo passion: painting.
- "A guy told me that in order to get one hour of good painting
- done, you need four hours of uninterrupted time." He describes
- a recent favorite, Oww, God, Mom, the Dog He Bited Me: "There's
- a clump of Band-Aids in the bottom corner. A dark background.
- A stick figure whose head is a blur of blood. Then a very small
- dog, made out of glue. There is a house, a little black bump.
- It is pretty crude, pretty primitive and minimal. I like it a
- lot."
-
- Lynch doesn't analyze his dreams much; his consciousness
- percolates plenty provocatively, thank you. But he remembers
- being depressed once because "in my dream, I see these
- fantastic paintings that were done by somebody else. And I wish
- that I had painted them. And I wake up, and after a while the
- impression wears off. I say, wait a minute, those are my
- paintings. I dreamed them; they're mine." Another pause. "Then
- I can't remember what they were."
-
- This courtly man doesn't stay depressed for long, though.
- He has seen too much. Life, to him, is an endless search, one
- long lesson. He is proof of the notion that every artist is a
- scientist, obsessed with discovering how things and people
- work. His eyes go electric as he skims the subjects of his
- forthcoming photography book. "I've got a real lot of beautiful
- industrial landscapes. And I'm real interested in dental
- hygiene, so I'm going to have a chapter on that. Maybe
- something on fictitious archaeology: I'd like to bury some
- things, then wait a little while and dig them up. I like to
- photograph plastic people in little scenes. Then I might have
- a chapter on spark plugs. Kind of amazing things, spark plugs;
- our lives revolve around them.
-
- "This is good food today."
-
- Lynch brings this canny naivete, this promiscuous curiosity,
- to every aspect of his life and work. It could be a trait bred
- from childhood -- a sylvan youth of eagle-scout badges and
- family camping trips, spent amid the Pacific Northwest trees
- that today loom over Twin Peaks. "My father was a scientist for
- the Forest Service," Lynch says. "He would drive me through the
- woods in his green Forest Service truck, over dirt roads,
- through the most beautiful forests where the trees are very
- tall and shafts of sunlight come down and in the mountain
- streams the rainbow trout leap out and their little trout sides
- catch glimpses of light. Then my father would drop me in the
- woods and go off. It was a weird, comforting feeling being in
- the woods. There were odd, mysterious things. That's the kind
- of world I grew up in."
-
- A different world greeted Lynch when, in his early 20s, he
- and his young wife were in Philadelphia to study art. (Lynch
- has been married twice, each union producing a child, and had
- a four-year bicoastal relationship with actress Isabella
- Rossellini.) The neighborhood was hairy, hostile, especially
- for a lad trying to fit his bucolic vision into the urban
- nightmare around him. Lynch says Eraserhead sprang fully formed
- from nights in that "crime-ridden" city. "My original image was
- of a man's head bouncing on the ground, being picked up by a
- boy and taken to a pencil factory. I don't know where it came
- from." Some movie folk didn't know where Eraserhead was going
- either; it was twice rejected by the New York Film Festival.
- Could it have been the picture's grim gray palette that put the
- festival off? Or the man with seared skin? Or the snakelike
- creatures in the radiator? Or the hideous mutant baby in the
- bureau drawer?
-
- Lynch made Eraserhead at the American Film Institute in
- Beverly Hills, with financial help from his boyhood pal Jack
- Fisk (a talented production designer) and Fisk's wife, actress
- Sissy Spacek. Around him the first-time director gathered
- technicians and players he has used ever since: cinematographer
- Frederick Elmes, sound-effects ace Alan Splet and, as
- Eraserhead's high-haired Henry Spencer, actor Jack Nance. "It
- seemed like we were never going to finish the film," recalls
- Nance, who plays henpecked Pete Martell in Twin Peaks. "We had
- to scrap an awful lot, and we failed an awful lot. But we were
- kids then. Now we're old." Fortunately, the film found an
- audience. With its loping internal logic and its unapologetic
- otherness, Eraserhead soon became a hit on the midnight movie
- circuit.
-
- Then everything started coming up robins in springtime. Mel
- Brooks, looking to produce films other than his own, saw
- Eraserhead and determined that Lynch should direct The Elephant
- Man. The film, cued by the parable of physical deformity as a
- kind of saint's sackcloth, embellished by Lynch's
- phantasmagoric direction and anchored by John Hurt's delicate
- performance as John Merrick, won the director big-studio
- notice. He could do anything now -- anything but turn Frank
- Herbert's daunting science fantasy into a movie Dino De
- Laurentiis would like. "I sold out on Dune," Lynch says today.
- "I was making it for the producers, not for myself. That's why
- the right of final cut is crucial. One person has to be the
- filter for everything. I believe this is a lesson world; we're
- supposed to learn stuff. But 3 1/2 years to learn that lesson
- is too long."
-
- A character in Dune says, "Let me teach you the weirding
- way." In 1986 Lynch took moviegoers the whole way with Blue
- Velvet (also, ironically, made for De Laurentiis). "I started
- with the idea of front yards at night," Lynch says, "and Bobby
- Vinton's song playing from a distance. Then I always had this
- fantasy of sneaking into a girl's room and hiding through the
- night. It was a strange angle to come at a murder mystery." The
- murders were the least mysterious element in this feral,
- fertile inversion of It's a Wonderful Life. Each shot was
- crafted with the off-center elegance and pristine passion of
- a modernist painter. But with its mix of battered beauties and
- severed ears, Blue Velvet might have been his drop-dead letter
- to Hollywood. Instead, it made the maverick bankable. His next
- big project would find takers on network TV.
-
- "We were in exactly the right place," says Mark Frost, "at
- the right network, at the right time. The end of the Reagan
- era, a new decade -- there were a lot of pointers." So who
- deserves credit for Twin Peaks? Movie people, knowing Lynch,
- may think it is his miraculously conceived love child. TV
- people, knowing Frost as a gifted graduate of the Hill Street
- Blues team, may see him as the Tom Cruise character in Rain
- Man, artfully manipulating an idiot savant. Neither legend fits
- the facts. Frost is Mr. Inside, Lynch Mr. Outside, and together
- they make an ideal odd couple. The show's pilot and atmosphere
- are clearly vintage Lynch. Frost runs the show day to day. Both
- fabricate the major story lines. "Mark is very straightforward
- and supportive," says Tina Rathborne, who directed the finest
- non-Lynch episode last season (Laura's funeral). "He is
- brilliant in his own right."
-
- "David is the keeper of the flame," says Kyle MacLachlan,
- who plays Dale Cooper. "This is his world." Ever since Dune,
- when Lynch plucked him out of anonymity in Seattle, MacLachlan
- has been the director's onscreen face. It is a startling
- visage, as pure of line as an art deco vase, with soft,
- all-American features and a comic-book hero's jutting chin --
- you could park a Packard on it. Blue Velvet needed his reckless
- innocence; Twin Peaks profits from his daft righteousness. "The
- show is unique because of the combination, the balance, of Mark
- and David," MacLachlan notes. "That uniqueness is not
- necessarily transferable. It may madden the staff when David
- directs a segment, because he throws the rules out. But to us
- actors that freedom is an elixir, a magic potion. It's hard to
- have it watered down once you've tasted it."
-
- Lynch directs, his actors suggest, through osmosis. "He
- might say, `A little more,' then `Peachy-keen,' but that's it,"
- says Dennis Hopper, the actor-director who was the memorable
- sicko Frank Booth in Blue Velvet. "However grotesque or violent
- or weird one of David's scenes may be, the whole is coming from
- a place in his brain that I trust," says Grace Zabriskie, the
- spikily hysterical mother of Laura Palmer. "It's that razor's
- edge of knowing and not knowing what he's doing."
-
- Right now Lynch and Frost are walking that edge even as they
- hone it. They want Twin Peaks to keep surprising its audience
- while they defer surprises. They want the show that couldn't
- be made to be the hit that keeps on coming. And when they get
- bored or exhausted, they want to get out. "We own the show,"
- Frost notes. "There is no studio around that can milk this
- thing until it drops dead." Lynch, with his tunnel-vision
- focus, is the last Hollywood figure one could imagine extending
- a project just to pick up a paycheck. He doesn't want to stay
- around; he wants to stay young.
-
- Lynch's films shout that sentiment in every frame, of
- course. But listen to him on the subject of aging -- which, as
- so many things do, attracts and repels him. "Scientists are
- working right now, while we are having lunch, to give us a
- better life. I hope they make some big breakthroughs soon. If
- you could only reconcile the mental with the physical, then
- throw in the emotional! These growth hormones, where can I get
- a bunch of them? Is there some way that, with electricity, you
- could stimulate your own growth hormones? Plug yourself in for
- five minutes, there'd be a little jolt, but you'd get used to
- it. It wouldn't be bad at all; in fact, you'd get to enjoy it,
- probably. Then away you'd go, and youth wouldn't be wasted on
- the young anymore. You'd be 25, with a 95-year-old mind.
- Granddad would start breaking into liquor stores and staying
- out late. Hope we have it soon!"
-
- David Lynch has finished his meal. A $20 tab, cheap at twice
- the price for lunch with a gee-whiz genius. "Do you mind to
- take me home?" he asks. "It's only a five-minute drive. But you
- can't come in!" And up he goes into the Hollywood Hills, where
- the entertainment industry's most beguiling outsider can find
- refuge in the daydreams and nightmares -- the forests and
- Philadelphias -- of his pinwheeling mind.
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