Lynch/Oz (2022) Poster

(2022)

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8/10
Essential
BandSAboutMovies7 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Alexandre O. Phillippe also made 78/52: Hitchcock's Shower Scene, Memory: The Origins of Alien and The People vs. George Lucas, so he gets how to make a movie obsessed movie. Featuring filmmakers Karyn Kusama, Rodney Ascher, Justin Benson, Aaron Moorhead, John Waters and critic Amy Nicholson, his latest documentary Lynch/Oz attempts to figure out David Lynch by way of looking at Victor Fleming's 1939 film The Wizard of Oz.

Winds, narrated by Nicholson, explains the motifs that Lynch has taken from The Wizard of Oz and where they appear within his films, such as the curtains, mysterious wind and red shoes. Membranes follows, as Room 237 and The El Duce Tapes director Rodney Ascher explains that the literal walls -- membranes -- within Lynch's films are thinner than the ones in our reality.

John Waters' segment, Kindred, explains how alike the two directors are and how they came up within the same independent system, as well as their famous Big Boy meeting. Like Lynch, Waters can show moments in all of his movies that come directly from Oz. Waters once described the movie to Today as "Girl leaves drab farm, becomes a fag hag, meets gay lions and men that don't try to molest her, and meets a witch, kills her. And unfortunately - by a surreal act of shoe fetishism - clicks her shoes together and is back to where she belongs. It has an unhappy ending." Yet his love for the film runs deep -- he has an autographed Margaret Hamilton photo on his wall -- and he also added that his favorite moment is "When they throw the water on the witch, she says, "Who would have thought a good little girl like you could destroy my beautiful wickedness?" That line inspired my life. I sometimes say it to myself before I go to sleep, like a prayer."

Multitudes belongs to Karyn Kusama, who directed Girlfight and Jennifer's Body, and it truly added to my appreciation of Lynch's Mulholland Drive as its connections to Dorothy were explored. Similarly, Judy Garland is the subject of Justin Benson and Aaron Moorehead's (Spring, The Endless, Something In the Dirt) segment Judy, explaining how Lynch uses names like Judy (Jowday) to be perhaps the final nemeis of Twin Peaks and Dorothy Vallens in Blue Velvet.

The last segment, Dig, has David Lowry -- whose Pete's Dragon is perhaps the best remake of a child's movie I've seen -- discuss his feelings on Lynch.

Some may see this as too scholarly. Others as something like extras on a DVD. As for me, it was perfect, a way of reframing cinema by larning of influence and seeing art in a totally new way.
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3/10
Tedious film school lectures
davidallenxyz10 April 2023
Basically 6 video essays where critics/academics/industry figures talk about the influence of the Wizard of Oz on David Lynch's work. With an exceedingly pretentious introduction.

And that's it.

Nobody is interviewed on screen, it's all narrated off screen. Like an arthouse version of one of those TV clips shows about "the glory days of the movies".

The point came across in the first essay. The rest added hardly anything. Clips are repeated endlessly because all the the essayists talk about the deceitful wizard, and curtains, and slow fades.

Honourable mention to John Waters for getting involved. Him talking about his own meetings with Lynch is the most interesting thing on offer. Shame it's buried in this bore of a documentary.
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3/10
Practically a scam
mrscarecrow11 October 2022
There were several walkouts in the screening I attended, but I did sit through all of this documentary, so I can state that I've seen far better, more watchable analysis of David Lynch films in homemade videos on Youtube.

So, we have five filmmakers and one film critic who each get their own segment where they explain how David Lynch was inspired by the Wizard of Oz. To me, there was maybe about twenty minutes worth of material in there and then the rest of the 108 minutes was filler; or maybe there were even just about five or six interesting observations, plus one fun, goofy promo for Twin Peaks from back in the days, near the end, which I had never seen and did enjoy.

The tangents that the commentators were allowed to go on, without it being edited out, made a mockery of the effort behind this documentary. If I had done my homework before going to see this at the cinema, the involvement of the director of Room 237 should have been a huge red flag.
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3/10
tells me nothing about either thing
vailsy30 October 2023
Warning: Spoilers
I like the Wizard of Oz and don't need it dissected .. eg. Did you know that dorothy kills someone at the start of wizard of oz... oh really? You mean the feet sticking out from under the house and the explicit references to this in the movie. Well, yes I did, but thanks for letting us know. Did you know the wizard of oz has dark undertones? Er, yes you mean the super scary wicked witch and flying man monkeys? Yes, I did notice. Thanks

I also like David Lynch and don't need his work dissected either.. generally I just like his work to float over me and I don't need to know more, in fact I don't even like to fathom the linear meaning of his work, or any rationale at all since the obscurity and dream-like qualities seems to be the artistic point. So.. did you know lynch was influenced by wizard of oz and has wizard of oz themes and references in his movies? Yep i did, it's quite obvious actually and also sometimes very explicit and impossible to miss

Ok, so thanks. Now begone, before somebody drops a house on YOU.
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