David Lynch—the visionary director of Twin Peaks and films such as Mulholland Drive, Blue Velvet, and Inland Empire —has died. His family announced the filmmaker’s death in
The filmmaker was celebrated for his uniquely dark vision in such movies as "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive" and the TV series "Twin Peaks."
David Lynch, the American filmmaker, writer and artist who scored best director Oscar nominations for "Blue Velvet", "The Elephant Man" and "Mulholland Drive" and co-created the groundbreaking TV series "Twin Peaks" has died at age 76,
His projects made appearances on the Billboard charts throughout the years, and he directed several music videos for artists including Nine Inch Nails and Moby.
David Lynch, the surrealist American director behind Mulholland Drive and Twin Peaks, has died aged 78. “There’s a big hole in the world now that he’s no longer with us,” an announcement from his family wrote in a Facebook post.
Calling something Lynchian means recognizing what we’re seeing is off-kilter and that it doesn’t entirely compute.
The decades-long valorization and near-deification of the late filmmaker David Lynch is a sign of declining cultural standards and decaying societal values. Long ago, the public flocked to films by directors whose artistic visions,
David Lynch, whose death was announced Thursday, was my motion picture lodestar. When his 1977 movie Eraserhead played at an obscure film festival, now long gone, in Woolwich, London, it was like nirvana for a kid raised on The Sound of Music,
Timothée Chalamet will return to "Saturday Night Live" for his third stint as a host — but this time, he'll be pulling double duty. NBC announced Friday that comedian Dave Chappelle will host the sketch show Jan.
We truly enter fantasy land when Dylan plays at Gerde’s Folk City – an open-mic night with Joan Baez, where Seeger is MC. It’s supposed to be September 1961, but at this time Baez is already a national sensation with chart-topping albums,
The world needs a new Bob Dylan for an age that has become too "cynical," Timothée Chalamet said while presenting the new biographical film. | TAG24
Lynch’s weather reports attracted a dedicated following in themselves, becoming such a part of the fabric of Los Angeles — his adopted home for many years, and a lifelong fascination of his he often transmuted on film — that his forecasts were later broadcast on NPR affiliate KCRW.