Thursday, December 9, 2010
Blue Velvet
After watching Blue Velvet I feel that it was truly a mystery thriller with elements of Film Noir splashed throughout the movie. What I am having trouble with is coming to a realization about why this movie pertains to The Cold War. The small town of Lumberton, in which Jeffrey Beaumont calls home, is the picturesque, ideal 1980’s town that we usually associate now days with the incredibly nostalgic Reagan Era. The Car that Jeffrey Drives, Sandy’s high school, and the little Diner that the couple always goes to reminds me of the 1950’s, and something that closely resembles the movie Grease. At first glance no audience would suspect that there is something horribly wrong going on in this town as there is an unknown and sinister criminal underworld that has gone undetected. Jeffrey Beaumont happens to stumble across a random human ear in a field by his house and then he decides to take the ear to the authorities. I myself would have just kept walking and disregarded it totally. David Lynch does an incredible job by taking the plot into territory that no one first watching this movie would have expected. We see Jeffrey infiltrate Dorothy Vallens apartment disguised as an exterminator and he later returns to be caught red handed in his attempts at espionage. He witnesses the psychotic and sadomasochistic character in Frank Booth and realizes that there is something horribly wrong going on in his small town. The movie does a 180 from a beautiful small town with no problems at all into a vicious, immoral underworld that at some points seems invincible through Jeffrey’s eyes. Animal life is a theme that is present throughout the entire movie and symbolizes the defeat of Lumberton’s dark criminal activity. Lynch’s use of insects symbolizes the criminal underbelly of Lumberton. In the beginning of the movie we see the severed human ear covered in ants representing who might have done the crime. Jeffrey, with the help of Sandy disguises himself as an exterminator, symbolizing that he would eventually rid the town of the criminal infestation. Sandy expresses that she had a dream about a bunch of Robins symbolizing Love and peace and that she was comforted by the dream. Sure enough at the end of the film they see a Robin on the windowsill with a bug in its mouth, symbolizing a time of peace, and the death of the antagonist Frank Booth. Everyone then lives happily ever after. The use of insects was an interesting symbol used by Lynch to characterize immoral men in the shadow of a peaceful small town like Lumberton. The plot which disguises itself at first as a modern interpretation of a typical American small town turns into a Post-Modern example of immorality, drug use, and criminal activity. In the article Po-Mo Puritan, the author talks in great length over the Ideologies and motives of David Lynch in his films and his life. The author says that Lynch was influenced by Zoroastrianism and recognizably the struggle between good and evil. His antagonist Frank Booth is a prime example of a Demon, showing not one bit of morality or compassion. The article compares Puritan writer, Cotton Mather, to Lynch’s movies now days. Mather wrote about the influence of the devil hidden among the Puritan settlers in the darkness of the woods. Lynch depicts the influence of devil like characters hidden underground in small town America. Did you like this detective thriller and expect the plot to be anything like it was. Do you believe that the 80’s Reagan Era although similar to the 1950’s could never be like that generation due to the overbearing effect of post modernity? Did you like the connections to insects that I made in this blog?
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The connections you made to insects was extremely interesting and something I didn't pick up on. Isn't there underground bugs in the beginning of he film as well? When Jeffery's father is first shown? That could go along with the underground crime and the bugs representing the evil in Lumberton. Although most people would have loved to go back to 1950's ideals, it could have never happened in the 1980's. I feel that this film and others like Repo Man are a comment on how going back to times like those would never be the same. Over all I really enjoyed the film. I thought it was quite funny. I think Sandy was my favorite character because she was the embodiment of 1950's ideals.
ReplyDeleteThis focusing in on the insects is really interesting, I hadn't put much thought to it either until I read you post and Ellen's comment. I think that you're on to something Ellen by say that all of them probably represent the evil and such that is going on behind the scenes in Lumberton and I totally agree. After doing some thinking about the insects, and a lot of thinking about how you (Matt) said that you don't really get how this is connected to the Cold War, the only thing that I could imagine to give you for an answer would be the whole idea of the rise nostalgia of the 50's, the "good old days". Except here, the movie doesn't depict 80's characters looking back at those good old days, it depicts innocent, maybe even ignorant characters who are getting a front row seat of the mess of a world that's on its way. To me, it seems like it's taking that nostalgic look back, and flipping it over to a terrifying glimpse of the future, one filled with drug trafficking, sadistic Dennis Hopper's, and cool cars. Which doesn't sound so bad is you're a wrench head.
ReplyDeleteSome good insights, and yes, interesting focus on the insects (and Robins, for that matter, which are closely associated with them). But this is a little bit too much of a summary, and a little bit short on analysis. The connection to be made is not so much to the facts of the Cold War, per se, as the Cold War mentality we've been exploring throughout the class, and the ways in which the Reagan Era, in this case through the strange lens of David Lynch, revisits the various ideologies of the 1950s which we began the class exploring.
ReplyDeleteWould you seriously ignore a severed human ear? If so, what does that say about your particular generation? Also, what do you understand about the comparison of Lynch to Zoroastrianism?