Aaron Jones
over 3 years
ago
Fantastic neo-noir mystery, with great performances from the stars. Maybe Lynch's best.
Noah Rymer
5 years
ago
good into to david lynch's work, not my favorite though.
Damian Campo
5 years
ago
Nice film, a must see if you like psychopath movies with a non common story.
HIllary
almost 6 years
ago
I miss you Dennis Hopper!
Griffin Maurer
over 6 years
ago
Passable acting and solid filmmaking. Though characters seem flat and forcefully quirky.
Thomas Jennings
almost 7 years
ago
Long and uncomfortable noir that pulls you down into its brilliant, surreal underbelly.
John Matos
almost 7 years
ago
Few movies are good BECAUSE they are disturbing, but this one managed to pull it off.
Kate Du-Rose
over 7 years
ago
Surreal film noir. Disturbs the hell out of me, but I can't stop watching.
Lizzie
over 7 years
ago
Wrote my Intro to Film Analysis final paper on this. Now I want to see Twin Peaks.
Matthew Berard
over 7 years
ago
Disturbing, shocking, and visually stunning for its time - you'll never forget the villain
Austin
over 7 years
ago
One of Lynch's best, and Hopper is great in this film too.
Facu Leiva-Freytes
almost 8 years
ago
Very interesting plot. Good performances, solid characters. Great movie.
Taylor Reginald Wright
8 years
ago
A shocking, romantic and surreal neo-noir mystery of good and evil in small town America.
Daniel Jones
over 8 years
ago
The greatest film that Lynch has made.
Mark Stanley-Adams
over 8 years
ago
David Lynch either gets it horribly wrong or completely right. This one's the latter.
John Barton
over 8 years
ago
Just watched this unusual movie.
Interesting but strange.
Blue Velvet is a 1986 American mystery film written and directed by David Lynch. The movie exhibits elements of both film noir and surrealism. The film features Kyle MacLachlan, Isabella Rossellini, Dennis Hopper, and Laura Dern. The title is taken from the 1963 Bobby Vinton song of the same name. Although initially detested by some mainstream critics, the film is now widely acclaimed, and earned Lynch his second Academy Award nomination for Best Director. As an example of a director casting against the norm, Blue Velvet is also noted for re-launching Hopper's career and for providing Rossellini with a dramatic outlet beyond the work as a fashion model and a cosmetics spokeswoman for which she had until then been known.
After the commercial and critical failure of Lynch's Dune (1984), he made attempts at developing a more "personal story", somewhat characteristic of his surreal style he displayed in his debut Eraserhead (1977). The screenplay of Blue Velvet had been passed around...