Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Blue Velvet is a 1986 American neo-noir mystery thriller film written and directed by David Lynch. Blending psychological horror [ 4 ] [ 5 ] with film noir , the film stars Kyle MacLachlan , Isabella Rossellini , Dennis Hopper , and Laura Dern , and is named after the 1951 song of the same name .
Frank Booth is a fictional character and the main antagonist in David Lynch's 1986 psychological thriller Blue Velvet, portrayed by Dennis Hopper.A violent drug-dealer, he has kidnapped the family of lounge singer Dorothy Vallens, holding them hostage in order to force her into becoming his sex slave.
Just four years after Blue Velvet was turned down by the Venice Film Festival, his erotic 1990 road movie, Wild at Heart, walked off with the Palme d’Or at Cannes. And again, Lynch seemed to ...
Blue Velvet Revisited is a 2016 documentary film directed and edited by Peter Braatz. Using a montage technique, it documents the making of David Lynch's critically acclaimed film, Blue Velvet, using a combination of filmed footage, photographs and interviews captured on set by Braatz, with an accompanying soundtrack by Cult With No Name, Tuxedomoon and John Foxx.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Lynch worked with Badalamenti for the first time in this film and asked him to write a score that had to be “like Shostakovich, be very Russian, but make it the most beautiful thing but make it dark and a little bit scary.” [3] Badalamenti would later go on to contribute to all of Lynch's future full-length films except for Inland Empire (2006).
The book also tracks the post-Velvet work of Reed, Cale and the singer/songwriter Nico, who was featured on the band's debut album. Reed finally began getting his due in 1972 with the release of ...
Fred C. Caruso is an American film producer known for his work on such films as Network and Blue Velvet. [1]His contributions as a producer for the film version of The Bonfire of the Vanities with director Brian De Palma were detailed in Julie Salamon's 1991 non-fiction book The Devil's Candy.