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David Lynch's American Dreams
Ricardo Moraes / AP Photo
The acclaimed director’s latest work is a fascinating low-key documentary Web series celebrating hardscrabble American lives. Lee Siegel on David Lynch’s elegiac Interview Project.
If you want to see one of the most affecting instances of documentary journalism since Let Us Now Praise Famous Men—James Agee and Walker Evans’ famous book, by turns lyrical and dispassionate, about white sharecroppers living through the Depression—go to interviewproject.davidlynch.com. That’s right. David Lynch, the creative force behind bare-knuckle surrealist films like Wild at Heart, Mulholland Drive, and his masterpiece Blue Velvet, as well as the equally weird and original Twin Peaks television series.
For Lynch, the reality of the American dream is in marginal and vulnerable American places, where rough mobility and desperate sexuality collide and down-and-out people have no buffers between themselves and life’s hard knocks.
Lynch’s Interview Project is like the elementary materials of his movies before they become fictions. He describes it as “a 20,000-mile road trip over 70 days across and back the United States,” although so far most of the eventual-121 interviews on the site are with people who live in the Southwest. His subjects are never doctors or lawyers, poets or novelists, accountants or professors. They are always people with what more sophisticated types like to call “humble” lives, or sometimes with lives that are hard and anguished, too storm-tossed to be merely humble. They are mostly older white men, with a few older white women and a handful of younger (white) men appearing here and there. They are the sort of people that every four years spring into the minds of pundits and commentators as riddles to be solved, and then disappear from the commentariat’s consciousness until they return in conundrum form four years later.
Lynch’s subjects have solid American names: Palmer Black, Doc Whitman, Lynn Goodwin, Jim Carter—the kind of names that in a different setting you’d find on the Social Register. Most believe in God; a lot of them profess that loving their children is more important to them than anything else; a surprising number say they want only to be remembered as people who made other people happy. Many of them are impoverished or living just above the poverty line.
Some are sad and seem beaten by life. “I’m broken… broken I guess,” says 42-year-old Lynn Goodwin, whose blond hair ends just above blue eyes surrounded by dark circles of pain. “I just want my kids to be happy,” she continues, barely able to hold back tears. Others possess something like a Buddhist calm about their “humble” lives. “I love little kids and puppies,” says dignified, cheerful, sneakered 68-year-old Palmer Black, a retired Naval officer—his white bangs boyishly askew over his forehead with not the slightest touch of vanity—who says that he would like to be remembered “as a happy person who cooked a real good barbecue, and made people laugh and that people were happy around.”
All of Lynch’s artistic creations seem to take as their starting point Norman Mailer’s remark that the essence of America is the smell of gasoline and cheap perfume. For Lynch, the reality of the American dream is in marginal and vulnerable American places, where rough mobility and desperate sexuality collide and down-and-out people have no buffers between themselves and life’s hard knocks. Getting knocked around is dreamlike, and Lynch always seems to be saying, through his surrealist devices, that in its hidden core, the American dream is dreamlike, unreal in both its giddy highs and its heart-in-the-stomach lows. In Lynch’s work, people are more exposed to life’s naked elements in America than they are just about any place else.
I don’t know what Lynch’s motive was behind his choice of subjects for the Interview Project. By speaking mostly to white people with hardscrabble existences, was he trying to make some understated exposure of the futility of Red State existences, of lives lived blindly in quiet desperation? I hope not, but even if that were Lynch’s banal and ignominious (and Borat-like) purpose, his team’s self-effacing, even gentle camerawork and editing would belie any such plan.







msw444
I've had "The Interview Project" bookmarked for 7 weeks. Lynch's simple declaration after we hear an old radio changing stations in a colorfully plain workspace set a nice tone for the interviews that follow. There is a charming simplicity; it's like watching moss grow in a time lapse photography. What I don't understand is why the video of the interviews themselves, cough and sputter and start and stop, even on a high speed Verizon connection. The lack of a quality playback isn't charming, if that is in any way a part of the plan. With Lynch, you never can be sure. Maybe the "tapes" should be mastered somewhere before downloading ...
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n--Y--untillSalome
Thanks for the recommendation. I am a huge Lynch fan, but I hadn't yet heard of this project.
raindogtoo
Just to clarify - David Lynch's son Austin and his crew are ones who carried out this project: traveling around the country, choosing subjects, filming the interviews, etc. Lynch Sr. signed on to help develop the concept and allowed his brand to be used.
Please give credit where credit is due.
jblum8156
I watched several of the interviews and found them kind of tedious, maybe because the interviewers didn't ask the right questions.
Thank you.
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