BLUE VELVET (1986) C widescreen 120m dir: David Lynch
w/Kyle MacLachlan, Isabella Rossellini, Dennis Hopper, Laura Dern, Hope Lange, Dean Stockwell, George Dickerson, Priscilla Pointer, Frances Bay, Jack Harvey
BLUE VELVET is a curious film which mixes a potent satire of American mediocrity with the malevolence of film noir. The contrived plotline follows a wimpish young man who discovers a nightmare world of decadence and sex hidden right in the heart of his small town.
From the Turner Classic Movies website, www.tcm.com, this article about the film by Richard Harland Smith: "Early into Walt Disney’s Mary Poppins (1964), an animatronic robin alights on the forefinger of Julie Andrews’ mystery governess as she sings to her pint-sized charges the sprightly clean-up song 'A Spoonful of Sugar.' The song and the moment serve a dual purpose– to establish Mary’s twin citizenship in both natural and supernatural realms and to mark the narrative as a rite of passage, of learning. Mary Poppins is not about Mary Poppins but rather Jane and Michael Banks, the spirited progeny of a staid London bank executive, as they learn about the world of make-believe that exists behind the curtain of dull reality. Another mechanical bird, also a robin (but probably not the same one) turns up in the final frames of David Lynch’s Blue Velvet (1986). After two hours of murder, mutilation, sexual intimidation, rape, scopophilia, drug use and sadomasochism, this juxtaposition of harsh reality with a Disney-like simulacrum defies cozy categorization. While the film’s protagonists consider the vision miraculous, a harbinger of love eternal and a testament to the inexplicable wonder and strange beauty of the world, its patent fakeness leavens the optimism. Therein lies the charm of Blue Velvet. On paper, the highly fetishized and deeply weird film couldn’t be more removed from the family friendly fare of Mary Poppins, yet their narratives are alarmingly similar as they push their heroes towards an appreciation that 'there are opportunities in life for gaining knowledge and experience.'
"If Blue Velvet’s answer to Michael and Jane Banks is its young adult protagonists Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle MacLachlan, the boy hero of Dune, Lynch’s 1984 adaptation of the classic Frank Herbert novel) and Sandy Williams (Laura Dern), then its Mary Poppins is the villain of the piece, Frank Booth. As played by Dennis Hopper, Frank is, for all his profanity, brutality, nitrous oxide abuse and predilection for cheap beer, a mentor to Jeffrey. It is Frank who takes Jeffrey and Sandy through the figurative sidewalk chalk to the other side of dreamland. It is Frank who (like Mary) propels the story both by commission (his various crimes, among them homicide, rape and dope peddling) and omission (the dropping of clues for Jeffrey to follow like bread crumbs). It is Frank who gets Jeffrey dirty (as Mary Poppins and her confederate Bert the chimney sweep did for Michael and Jane) and in so doing makes a man of him. One of many iconic moments from Blue Velvet finds Jeffrey concealed inside a walk-in closet, peeking through the slats of the louvered door, to witness Frank brutalizing Dorothy Vallens (Isabella Rossellini), a nightclub singer whose husband and child he holds hostage. Apart from its folkloric resonance, the image of Jeffrey spying on this primal scene recalls the voyeurism of Norman Bates in Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960). Kyle MacLachlan even bears a passing resemblance to Anthony Perkins, while Blue Velvet suggests, with its marriage of the saccharine and the sick, that madness is more than just a sometimes thing.
"Just as Psycho had polarized audiences and critics at the time of its release so did Blue Velvet, which also has become a cult classic, if not an outright American classic. Like so many other classics, the whole thing might just as easily never have come together. Smarting from the box office failure of Dune, producer Dino De Laurentiis pulled the plug on Blue Velvet’s original January 1985 start date. Lynch had already begun casting when he was given the ultimatum to cut the budget or see the project die on the stalk. Slashing his own salary and getting his actors to work at just above union scale, Lynch cut thirty percent out of the budget and got cameras rolling on Blue Velvet that summer. Recently rehabilitated from decades of alcohol and substance abuse, Dennis Hopper was risky casting as Frank Booth. Lynch had in fact wanted to use British actor Steven Berkoff, at the time a familiar villainous face from such films as Beverly Hills Cop (1984) and Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985). Lynch had also wanted Helen Mirren for Dorothy Vallens and only met with Isabella Rossellini because she had just worked with Mirren in White Nights (1985) and Lynch hoped the ex-model would put in a good word for him. Val Kilmer also reportedly turned down the chance to play Jeffrey in Blue Velvet. It’s difficult to imagine Blue Velvet being as memorable as it remains a quarter century after the fact if even one of these casting decisions had come to fruition.
"Blue Velvet was shot on location in and around Wilmington, North Carolina, where the De Laurentiis Entertainment Group had been headquartered since the 1970s. To keep costs down, standing locations were used as settings in the film. Arlene’s Restaurant, the small town diner where Jeffrey and Sandy discuss the abiding mystery, was in reality the storefront office of New Hanover Human Resources. Both the Wilmington Police Department and New Hanover High School contributed cameos, more or less playing themselves, while Market Street’s Carolina Apartments stood in for Dorothy Vallens’ creepy walk-up. Scenes involving Sandy’s home were filmed at a two-story Tudor dwelling located at 128 Northern Boulevard in nearby Sunset Park, North Carolina. Shooting there displaced the Spencer family for forty-six days and concluded with the scene in which a nude and gibbering Dorothy Vallens stumbles out of the shadows into Jeffrey’s arms to the mutual horror of several witnesses. Interviewed after the completion of principal photography, the Spencer family matriarch stated that she didn’t regret their decision to allow filming in their home but that they wouldn’t do it again 'unless the filmmaker were Disney.'"
Lynch was nominated for an Oscar for Best Director for BLUE VELVET.