Mulholland Drive

Presented by Barrio Brewing!
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Showings

Screen 1 Fri, Sep 6 8:30 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 - THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12
Screen 1 Sat, Sep 7 5:00 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 - THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12
Screen 1 Sat, Sep 7 8:30 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 - THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12
Screen 3 Sun, Sep 8 7:15 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 - THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12
Screen 1 Tue, Sep 10 8:30 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 - THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12
Screen 3 Thu, Sep 12 6:15 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 - THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12
Admission Prices
Pricing:General Admission: $8 | Loft Members: $6
Pass Info
Pass Info:Passes Accepted
Film Info
Runtime:147
Release Year:2001
Rating:R
Genre:Thriller
Drama
Mystery
Production Country:France
USA
Original Langauge:Spanish
English
Cast/Crew Info
Director:David Lynch
Cast:Naomi Watts
Laura Harring
Justin Theroux
Ann Miller
Mark Pellegrino
Screenwriter:David Lynch

Description

David Lynch's woozy, diabolical and exhilaratingly strange thriller is a nightmarish film noir that lays bare the twisted heart of the Hollywood dream machine. Amnesia-suffering Rita (Laura Harring), who barely escapes murder in a suspicious car crash on winding, hilly Mulholland Drive, makes her way down to Hollywood, where she sneaks into the apartment of aspiring actress Betty (Naomi Watts), a wholesome Midwestern blonde who has come to the City of Angels seeking fame and fortune. When the two women encounter each other and join forces to try and piece together the elusive story of what really happened to Rita up there on Mulholland Drive, their delirious descent down the Lynchian rabbit hole ensues. A lethal blue box, an unlucky young director named Adam Kesher (Justin Theroux) and a neon-glowing nightclub called Silencio are only the tip of the iceberg in this off-kilter horror/mystery/thriller that constantly eludes easy interpretation. Originally conceived by Lynch as a TV pilot and then expanded into a feature film after network executives resoundingly rejected it, Mulholland Drive launched the film career of future Oscar-nominee Naomi Watts and simultaneously electrified and mystified audiences with its puzzle-like story of identity and madness.  In typical Lynch fashion, the director declined to offer any explanation of his narrative intentions in Mulholland Drive, instead simply referring to the film as “A love story in the city of dreams.” (Dir. by David Lynch, 2001, USA, 147 mins., Rated R)