Film Review
David Lynch's best, darkest and most controversial film to date,
Blue Velvet divided critics when it
was first released and yet it became in instant cult classic,
redefining and reinvigorating the film noir thriller genre and
influencing a whole generation of filmmakers. Arguably the
most subversive American film of the 1980s, it challenged expectations
over what was acceptable in mainstream cinema - some critics praised it
for its daring and originality, others dismissed it as cheap and vulgar.
In plot terms,
Blue Velvet is
little more than a traditional film noir thriller, with all the
familiar noir motifs - an uncorruptible hero, a femme fatale, a noxious
villain and a sinister web of intrigue binding these three
together. However, Lynch's highly individualistic approach, which
combines bizarre surrealism and brutally explicit (to the point of
visceral) realism, makes it uniquely different. The result is a
film that is both compelling and deeply unsettling. The director
is clearly influenced by Hitchcock in the way he uses the camera to
involve the spectator, making him or her a willing voyeur in the
unfolding drama.
Lynch gets the best out of his cast, particularly his fairly
inexperienced leads Isabella Rossellini and Kyle MacLachlan (the latter
had starred in Lynch's earlier sci-fi mishap,
Dune),
although it is Dennis Hopper who steals the show as the unremittingly
bad, mad and dangerous to know villain, Frank Booth. The slight
lack of confidence that Rossellini and MacLachlan betray in their
performances works to the film's advantage, adding an edge of
vulnerability to their characters and heightening the threat posed by
Hopper and his henchmen.
Perhaps the most disturbing thing about
Blue Velvet is the way in which it portrays
small-town America. With its immaculate lawns and faultless
picket-fences (not to mention the robot robins), this setting appears
artificial, and ludicrously so, when compared with the vicious
underworld which exists right along side it. When Jeff enters the
latter, via the device of the severed ear, he resembles a latter day
Alice in Wonderland, but in reverse - he is going from a world of
fantasy and illusion (or rather delusion) into a world of vice and
suffering. The film is obviously intended as an attack on the
complacency and naivety of the American bourgeoisie, offering a potent
reminder that just beneath the surface there lies something very nasty
and very dangerous, and we ignore it at our peril.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Outwardly, Lumberton appears to be the model American small town - law
abiding, tidy, peaceful. But surface impressions can be
deceptive, as college student Jeffrey Beaumont discovers one fateful
summer. Not long after his return home to help out in the family
business when his father has a stroke, Jeff comes across a severed
human ear on a patch of waste ground. He takes the ear to police
detective John Williams and is surprised when the latter insists that
he keeps quiet about the whole business. Jeff's curiosity
is aroused when Williams' daughter, Sandy, reveals that the severed ear
may be connected to a mysterious cabaret singer Dorothy Vallens.
One evening, Jeff breaks into Dorothy's apartment, but is caught when
the singer makes an unexpected return. Threatening him with
a knife, Dorothy forces Jeff to strip naked. Before she can
seduce her captive, another man enters the apartment. Jeff hides
in a closet and watches in horror as Dorothy is physically and sexually
assaulted by her visitor, a man named Frank Booth. The next day,
Jeffrey relates what he has discovered to Sandy. Booth is a
vicious, drugs trafficking gangster who is holding Dorothy's husband
and child hostage so that he can go on abusing her.
Determined to help Dorothy, Jeff returns to her apartment. Just
as he is leaving, Frank and his bully boys turn up and decide to have
some fun, with pretty boy Jeff providing the entertainment...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.