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Mulholland Drive

Mulholland Drive is a motion picture, released in 2001 and directed by David Lynch. The project initially was intended to be the two-hour pilot for American Broadcasting Company, hoping to recreate Lynch's success with Twin Peaks. When Lynch finally gave them the finished pilot, however, they wanted numerous cuts made for the sake of time and content. Lynch grudgingly made them, but then the network decided that it simply didn't work.

Lynch kept control of the footage he had already shot, and with the help of Canal Plus[?], a French distributor, managed to finish the film. It premiered at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival, to much praise. He was co-awarded the Best Director prize at the festival (sharing it with Joel Coen for The Man Who Wasn't There ).

It received critical praise in the US, being named Best Picture of the Year by the New York Film Critics Association[?], and even more notably was given a thumbs-up by critic Roger Ebert, who up until that point never liked Lynch's films. Lynch was also nominated for a Best Directing Oscar for the second time, losing to A Beautiful Mind director Ron Howard. Nevertheless, the film had little commercial success, grossing just over $7 million at the American box office.

Synopsis

While driving down Mulholland Drive in Los Angeles, California late at night, a dark-haired woman has a car accident and afterward cannot remember who she is. She wanders down the hill into L.A., and sleeps in a vacant apartment. The next day, a young woman, who has just come to L.A. to try to become a movie star, moves in and finds her. Together, the two of them try to piece together exactly who the dark-haired woman is and what happened that night.

Other strange things, at first seemingly unrelated, are happening as well. A man tells a friend about a nightmare he had, only to have it come true... a film director finds his latest project (and later, his life) being controlled by shadowy mobsters... and an incompetent hit man steals a "black book".

All these pieces eventually comes together in an abstract and bizarre way, although it may take someone well versed in Lynch's films (and several viewings) to understand exactly what's happened.

Production

Mulholland Drive is an actual road that twists its way through the Hollywood Hills outside of L.A.

Laura Elena Harring[?] ("Rita", the dark-haired woman) is a former Miss USA.

Latina singer Rebekah Del Rio[?] plays herself at a nightclub, lip-synching an a cappella version of Roy Orbison's song "Crying" in Spanish. (Much as Dean Stockwell[?] lip-synchs Orbison's "In Dreams" in Lynch's earlier film Blue Velvet).

Lynch continues his trend of including The Wizard of Oz references in his films by making part of the film take the form of an idealized dream that incorporates aspects of the real world.

Michael Anderson, the dancing dwarf from Twin Peaks, has a small but odd role as Mr. Roque, a wheelchair-bound film studio executive. In order to make the diminutive actor appear normal-sized, Lynch outfitted him with a complete prosthetic body.

Lynch's longtime composer and collaborator Angelo Badalamenti[?] appears as a mobster with very exacting tastes in espresso, as well as composing the soundtrack for the film.



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