starting July 20, 2008
Starts: 3:00pm
Young Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle MacLachlan) is on the brink of
manhood in Lumberton
1986—David Lynch's mise-en-scène is also readying to leave its Leave it to
Beaver façade behind. In a town overwhelmed by bright white picket fences,
blood red fire trucks, and carefully pruned roses, there's something especially
grotesque about a man having a heart attack on his front lawn while his cocker
spaniel laps spraying water from the hose still clinging to his hand.
Blue
Velvet is a film about the reality and streams of subconscious desire
seething beneath a preposterously idealistic vision of America.
Jeffrey discovers a severed, ant-infested human ear near a grassy trail
(Lynch's homage to Buñuel's
Un Chien Andalou), bringing it to the attention of the local police chief.
With the help of Sandy (Laura Dern), a voyeuristic girl-next-door who emerges
hauntingly from the shadows and promises her devotion to his mission, Jeffrey
breaks into the apartment owned by an emotionally frayed chanteuse, Dorothy
Vallens (Isabella Rosselini, doing her best impersonation of a living china
doll). Forget for a moment that MacLachlan is Lynch's doppelganger here. Lynch
is less concerned with self-reference than he is with charting the
uncomfortable crawlspace between boyhood and manhood. The many rooms of
Blue
Velvet are fascinatingly representative of internal moods: the white walls
of the virginal Sandy's home; the garish blues
and vaginal pinks of Dorothy's kitschy modern apartment; and the cluttered,
homely look of the Beaumont
home. Jeffrey innocently woes Sandy
with an okey-dokey "chicken walk" before the officer's daughter
speaks of a dream where darkness fell upon the face of the earth because there
were no robins. It's all set to the sounds of Angelo Badalmenti's brilliant
TV-noir score, which evokes everything from the wide-eyed glee of '50s pop (Roy
Orbison and Bobby Devlin, whose "Blue Velvet" was the inspiration for
the film) to divine religious hymnals. In a town where
Awake magazines
are readily associated with Jehovah's Witnesses, Dennis Hopper's Frank becomes
a kind of satanic assault on normalcy. He's a rapist and kidnapper and if
Dorothy's desire to be physically hit by Jeffrey is any indication, Frank's
perversion easily spreads. But, then again, Lynch seems to suggest that love is
as potent in Frank's fetishistic strange world as it is in Sandy's happy-go-lucky one. Even when the
robins do return to Lumberton,
Lynch still forces his characters to acknowledge the grotesque backside of
their idyllic worldviews.
-Slant Magazine
What: Blue Velvet
(1986, David Lynch)
Format: 35mm film
Runtime: 120 mins
When: July 18 & 19 @ 7pm &
9:30pm, July 20 @ 3pm
Where: 5th Avenue Cinema, 510 SW
Hall St @ PSU
Admission: Free for PSU students,
faculty and staff w/ ID, $2 for other students, seniors, and children, $3
general admission
For more information:PSU Film Committee
film@pdx.edu503-725-3551
http://www.fifthavenuecinema.groups.pdx.edu