A passionate art collector shows off her exuberant style. The homeA three-bedroom 1930s Spanish Mission-style house in ...
Films like “Blue Velvet” and “Mulholland Drive” aren’t always easy to explain, but they live on in your mind and burrow under your skin. By Esther Zuckerman David Lynch, whose death ...
Then he topped himself, and every other filmmaker of the time, with the film-noir-gone-mad genius of “Blue Velvet” (1986). Then came the dread-drenched soap opera of “Twin Peaks” (kicking ...
David Lynch, the groundbreaking director of films and shows including "Twin Peaks" and "Blue Velvet," has died at the age of 78, his family announced Thursday. "It is with deep regret that we ...
Typically available in shades of teal, rust, emerald and blossom pink, velvet sofas make for a luxe, timeless and elegant furniture piece with their appeal showing no signs of wavering.
This article originally appeared in the January 1985 issue of Esquire. To read every Esquire story ever published, upgrade to All Access. “Cartoon number three,” Lynch says to the Reader ...
Lynch made his mark as a screenwriter and director of surrealist media, often probing the disturbing undertones of everyday life, particularly in suburban or small-town America. A man of unique ...
David Lynch, the American filmmaker, writer and artist who scored best director Oscar nominations for Blue Velvet, The Elephant Man and Mulholland Drive and co-created the groundbreaking TV ...
Director-writer David Lynch, who radicalized American film with with a dark, surrealistic artistic vision in films like “Blue Velvet” and “Mulholland Drive” and network television with ...
With such hallucinogenic masterworks as 'Eraserhead,' 'Blue Velvet,' 'Mulholland Drive,' 'Twin Peaks' and 'The Elephant Man,' he often left more questions than answers. By Stephen Galloway David ...
David Lynch, the singular American filmmaker and multi-disciplinary artist who conjured dreams and nightmares of unsettling beauty and psychic horror, has died. He was 78. Lynch’s family ...
One of the most memorable images of David Lynch is not from a film set but from the corner of Hollywood Boulevard and La Brea, sitting in a director’s chair with a magnificent black-and-white ...