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About this product
Product Information
David Lynch (TWIN PEAKS) wrote and directed this look at two women who find themselves walking a fine line between truth and deception in the beautiful but dangerous netherworld of Hollywood.
Product Identifiers
ProducerMary Sweeney, Alain Sarde
EAN5055201832290
eBay Product ID (ePID)19048560214
Product Key Features
Film/TV TitleMulholland Drive
ActorDan Hedaya, Justin Theroux, Robert Forster, Brian Beacock, Mark Pellegrino, Billy Ray Cyrus, Laura Harring, Naomi Watts
DirectorDavid Lynch
FormatBlu-ray
LanguageEnglish
Release Year2017
Run Time143 Mins
GenreThriller, General
Additional Product Features
Certificate15
Number of Discs1
Country/Region of ManufactureUnited States of America
Director of PhotographyPeter Deming
Consumer AdviceContains strong sex, violence
Additional InformationDavid Lynch strikes again with this literal nightmare of a motion picture--a brilliant, scathing, hysterical, and haunting ode to Hollywood. In the film, a mysterious dark-haired woman (Laura Elena Harring) emerges from an accident with a purse full of cash and a head full of amnesia. Meanwhile, Betty Elms (Naomi Watts), a wide-eyed gal from Deep River, Ontario, has just landed in Los Angeles with dreams of movie stardom. When Betty finds the nameless beauty in her aunt's apartment, she is deeply intrigued by the situation and offers to help her. This sends the two women on a bizarre search for the truth through the macabre, sun-soaked streets of the City of Angels, where the mob, a young film director (Justin Theroux), a studio executive with a tiny head, and an enigmatic figure named the Cowboy all float into the picture, then out again, until there is no longer any distinction between what is dream and what is reality.<BR>Originally filmed as a pilot for ABC, Lynch's daring, open-ended vision was coldly rejected by the network. As he was about to abandon the project, French producer Pierre Edelman convinced Lynch to rethink it as a feature. The result is this stunning expression of the subconscious, a testament to the power of personal artistic vision.