Snufkino wrote:
Incidentally, I always felt like the Legend of Zelda games had a touch of this kind of malevolent force. Majora's Mask is like the Twin Peaks of the series.
Can we be friends?
Moderator: Ghost Hip

Snufkino wrote:
Incidentally, I always felt like the Legend of Zelda games had a touch of this kind of malevolent force. Majora's Mask is like the Twin Peaks of the series.


BetterOffShred wrote:Snufkino wrote:
Incidentally, I always felt like the Legend of Zelda games had a touch of this kind of malevolent force. Majora's Mask is like the Twin Peaks of the series.![]()
![]()
![]()
Can we be friends?


Exactly my thought. I see people sometimes trying to find some kind of logic or hidden meaning in his movies when perhaps he is just leaving a lot of place for random and accidental elements that may originate from his unconscious mind (or dreams?) and get altered by the movie making process into something unexpected. Something like that. Which is why I really love his stuff.$harkToootth wrote:I've re-read 'Catching The Big Fish' more than any other book. For the mystical characters, I would make the connection it has something to do with the 'Unified Field' that Lynch talks about in his Transcendental Meditation practice. He loves leaving stuff open to interpretation and film is not like a rubix cube that you solve so I guess it depends on the person? Who knows?


I've read a lot of 'academic' books on Lynch. Him and Kubrick are the two directors I've read the most secondary literature about (which is why I am embarrassed I didn't recognize that still in the OP immediatelydrolo wrote:Exactly my thought. I see people sometimes trying to find some kind of logic or hidden meaning in his movies when perhaps he is just leaving a lot of place for random and accidental elements that may originate from his unconscious mind (or dreams?) and get altered by the movie making process into something unexpected. Something like that. Which is why I really love his stuff.

This is a very impressive collection of Roto Toms. That's 21 Roto Toms in all. That is only $33.00 a Roto Tom.

This is a very impressive collection of Roto Toms. That's 21 Roto Toms in all. That is only $33.00 a Roto Tom.

you and me bro, you and me$harkToootth wrote:
Perhaps an unpopular opinion but I strongly prefer his short films to his feature films (I'm always on the lookout for other avant-garde animation similar to his early works).
innit ?lost in music wrote:also Big Trouble in Little China is the best (xps to drolo)


drolo wrote:you and me bro, you and me$harkToootth wrote:
Perhaps an unpopular opinion but I strongly prefer his short films to his feature films (I'm always on the lookout for other avant-garde animation similar to his early works).![]()



Well my friend, if you find anything...you know who to PM. Closest stuff I found is Walerian Borowczyk's animated output, some (not a lot) of Jan Svankmajer, and aesthetically old PBS / Education films (which, I would wager, has more to do with the film stock and developing process at the time). Also, the brother Quay's earlier output.drolo wrote:you and me bro, you and me$harkToootth wrote:Perhaps an unpopular opinion but I strongly prefer his short films to his feature films (I'm always on the lookout for other avant-garde animation similar to his early works).


