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  1. Like how you might recognize a stranger in your dream as your best friend. Or how seemingly arbitrary things might make us feel deep bursts of emotion in our dreams. It’s all very inexplicable, but Lynch, and Mulholland Drive in particular, is somehow able to capture those feelings beautifully.

  2. Oct 19, 2021 · It’s one thing to say that a movie requires multiple viewings in order to pull it together, but the last thing Mulholland Drive feels like is homework. Sensations of recurrence and déjà vu are ...

    • Adam Nayman
  3. Mulholland Drive feels like what it is - a failed television pilot retro-fitted into a remake of Lost Highway's basic storyline, but with a bunch of shaggy loose ends still dangling about.

  4. Jul 5, 2018 · The most obvious explanation of the movie is that the actress Betty is actually Diane Selwyn. The first two-thirds of the film is actually a perfect fantasy that is created by Betty (Diane) played by Naomi Watts. In the real world, she is depressed, washed up and suicidal.

  5. Jan 4, 2024 · And so, calling Lynch’s Mulholland Drive dream-like is the greatest compliment there is. Lynch made his film in a way that demands to be felt, evoking raw emotion and making our conscious, rational minds take a backseat to our subconscious ones that momentarily get plugged in and proceed to pick up on symbols, repetitions and visual cues ...

  6. May 16, 2021 · All the elements that comprise Mulholland Drive make it a masterpiece. In its twists and turns its deceives and convinces us, lures into a sense of fake safety and then destroys it. It is a psychological rollercoaster that messes with our receptacles.

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  8. Aug 23, 2016 · Why has Mulholland Drive topped BBC Culture’s poll of the greatest films of the 21st Century? Luke Buckmaster explains. It puzzles viewers but delights critics.

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