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NePerfectionist
IMDb member since June 2016
Hi, I'm just trying to figure out why you're watching this creepy art form.
Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/NePerfectionist/
Kinopoisk: https://www.kinopoisk.ru/user/13531019/
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Ratings
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Lists
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Gotham Independent Film Awards: Breakthrough Nonfiction Series
13 titles |
Public
IDA: Best Curated/Episodic/Multi-Part/Mini-Series/Short-Form Series
158 titles |
Public
99: True Stories From Your Fellow Humans
The F Word
Why Slavery?
MEL Films
Life Underground
ON SERIES (Current TV)
TCA Award: News and Information, Reality Programming, Movies, Miniseries, and Specials
93 titles |
Public
Independent Spirit Awards: New Non-Scripted or Documentary Series
20 titles |
Public
HBO Original (Documentary)
34 titles |
Public
Online Film & Television Association: Best Non-Fiction and Informal Series
28 titles |
Public
Critics' Choice Documentary Awards:
85 titles |
Public
Cinema Eye Honors: Outstanding Nonfiction and Anthology Series
54 titles |
Public
Metacritic TV 2024
19 titles |
Public
Primetime Emmy Award: Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series
71 titles |
Public
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Reviews
Six Men Getting Sick (1967)
"Oh,the moving painting!"
11 July 2017 - 8 out of 8 users found this review helpful.
David Lynch once said about how he came to start making films.
- "One night I was drawing a garden in my studio, immersed in a thick black night, where green grass seemed to dilute this bottomless darkness, and I sat down beside my picture, began to peer at it, and I heard the wind blowing and My picture was rustled with grass, and then I thought, "Oh,the moving painting!" "
And so he realized that he wants to shoot / draw "moving pictures" called films. And this work, his first work, is so simple, so genius. In its essence, this is the true image of the philosophy with which Lynch still pictures his paintings. This is nothing more than a painting that constantly changes its state, and all this translates into a moving picture.
It is with this thought you need to look at this picture. It is she who will give you a complete idea of the primary thought Lynch shot his greatest works ("Mallholland Dr.", "Eraserhead", "Blue Velvet").
Looking at this disturbing picture, you can experience the same sensations as when looking at pictures of surrealists, such as Salvador Dali. And if you are suddenly not familiar with the works of Lynch at all, then I advise you to understand and feel his view of the cinema precisely from this work, and what undisclosed potential the cinematography possesses, not playing with your intellect, and not even with your eyes, but with your subconscious mind ...
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