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John David Ebert Movie Review of Mulholland Drive

Here is John David Ebert on David Lynch's Mulholland Drive. If you enjoy this video you might want to check out Ebert's website at http://www.cinemadiscourse.com See also his book "Celluloid Heroes...  
 
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kungiiii (20 hours ago) Show Hide
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Just to point out that there is no purgetory, heaven or any other superstition stuff in lynch movies. First dreaming while in sleep -> remembering past after waking up-> going insane and kill herself. It's just simple story in psychological point of view.
Vexed34 (1 week ago) Show Hide
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Thank you for a fine review and for NOT showing the thing behind Winkies. :)
LoveLuckCouture (3 weeks ago) Show Hide
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exactly, this theory coherently connects the seemingly random repeats from the 'dream' and 'reality' because if the reality happened before the dream, then the dream was constructed by all these things she saw at the party, reality etc. Some examples would be all the names, seeing the guy at winkies, characters, how Coco said 'Call me Coco' and Betty/Diane said 'this is the girl' to the hitman, and in the dream the director kept saying that.

brilliant work, i wish i'd made it!
dainewora (1 month ago) Show Hide
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mushroomleg (1 month ago) Show Hide
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@aicfan85

agreed. this movie is just a morbid version of the wizard of oz... a motif in lynch's work. i just watched mulholland drive last night for the first time in years and goddamn... what a powerful film, man.
Zynche (1 month ago) Show Hide
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Everyone has the right for it's own interpretation, but i strongly disagree that the blonde and the brunette are the same person.
jairaugustosoares (2 months ago) Show Hide
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Fantastic. Fanastic really.

And the fact that the key to the movie is who is watching, the interpretation of who is watching, only makes the movie even more absurdly perfect.
BadboybillyC (2 months ago) Show Hide
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You are great. Bravo.
gelbot (4 months ago) Show Hide
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Brilliant. Great interpretation.
tepporocks (5 months ago) Show Hide
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This was a really wonderful, theoretical analysis of a true modern masterpiece.
I must confess that I hadn't thought of the Marilyn Monroe connection until now, but it makes perfect sense.

If I ever direct a film of my own, John David Ebert is the man I want to do the DVD commentary!

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