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Lost Highway (1997)
In this intriguing, extremely-enigmatic, non-linear
David Lynch psychological thriller about double lives - the entire
surreal and abstract neo-noir film possibly could be interpreted as
a subconscious, psychotic dream, deranged fantasy, or imagined memory
(or even a kind of purgatory or hell) of the main protagonist (Fred
Madison) - a dying and guilty convicted killer who was accused of murder
(and possibly about to be executed in prison (by the electric chair))
after killing his unfaithful actress wife (Renee); it was possible
that the prison was only metaphoric, and that he was imprisoned in
his own fractured delusions during interrogations.
During part of the film, Fred's life was bizarrely linked
or intertwined with many others. His hallucinations and paranoid jealousy
were to justify his murder of both porno mogul Mr. Eddy and his own
wife Renee (for cheating on him, and for her new porn lifestyle):
- in the film's opening, a mysterious voice (over his
home's intercom system) cryptically told the disheveled, wealthy,
successful LA tenor saxophonist/ jazz musician Fred Madison (Bill
Pullman) a meaningless statement at the time (about a shady gangster
boss):
"Dick Laurent is dead."
- while playing saxophone at the Luna Club one evening
with a jazz band, Fred had lingering doubts about his wife Renee
(Patricia Arquette), who was at home but not answering the phone;
the next morning, an anonymous VHS videotape was delivered; upon
playing it, it consisted of a 20-second image of their home's exterior
- Fred began to experience strange disassociations and
dreams; after trying to have sex with Renee but failing, he heard
his wife Renee calling out for him: "Fred, where are you?"; in the
dream, Renee also screamed as she was attacked; Fred also envisioned
Renee's face as that of a pale, frightening-looking elderly man
- a second videotape arrived, now showing the interior
of the Madison home and the two sleeping in bed together; two detectives
Ed (Louis Eppolito) and Al (John Roselius) were called in to investigate
but found nothing unusual
- during a party at the home of Andy (Michael Massee),
an old friend of Renee's, Fred jealously regarded Renee's drunken
behavior as troubling; he was confronted by a creepy, pasty-faced,
black-clad individual (known as The Mystery Man (Robert Blake)) -
the man who was in Fred's earlier dream (and had probably filmed
and sent the videotapes); the man asked: "We've met before, haven't
we?", and also claimed that he was in Fred's house at that very moment;
in the film's scariest and most disquieting moment, Fred phoned his
own home with the Mystery Man's cellphone and the voice of the Mystery
Man answered at the house, although he was standing directly in front
of Fred; after the man left, Fred asked Andy about the man's identity
and was told he was a friend of Dick Laurent's; Fred recalled the
earlier intercom message: "Dick Laurent is dead" and told Andy who
reacted with disbelief
- the next day, a third video tape was delivered - Fred
watched as the recording showed gory images of his murder of Renee;
Fred was next to the bloody bed where Renee's dismembered and mutilated
corpse was laid out; Fred cried out for Renee
- in the following sequence, Fred was being interrogated
and beaten up by the two detectives, accused of his wife's homicide;
dazed and confused over everything, Fred was put on trial, convicted
and found guilty, and sentenced to death row for execution; he suffered
from headaches and insomnia, and was offered tranquilizing sedatives;
he began to experience strange visions, hallucinations, and dreams
- of the Mystery Man, of a burning desert cabin, and of the stripe
down a two-lane highway (the "Lost Highway" of the film's title)
- in the film's strange turning point, Fred
inexplicably morphed or was reborn into the 'hallucinated' character
of Pete Dayton; possibly because of his identity crisis and insecurity,
Fred was imagining himself in his 'dream' as a younger individual
named Pete Dayton, who was living a completely different life; prison
guards discovered Pete Dayton in Fred's cell, and were forced to
release him from prison (under the care of his biker parents Bill
and Candace (Gary Busey and Lucy Butler) who lived in Van Nuys) -
his only crime on the record was auto theft five years earlier; Pete
met up with his girlfriend Sheila (Natasha Gregson Wagner), who
asked where he had been for a few days and kept noticing that he
was acting "different"
- after his absence, Pete Dayton
returned to his auto mechanic garage job with co-workers where he
attracted the attention of a hot-headed, violent-tempered criminal
mobster thug named "Mr. Eddy" (Robert
Loggia) who was requesting car repairs for his Mercedes (and then
the next day for his Cadillac)
- shortly later, Pete found himself immediately having
passionate feelings for the mobster's blonde femme fatale mistress
and porn actress Alice (a doppelganger resembling Fred's dead wife
Renee) - Pete/Fred was soon having illicit sex with her at the Starlight
Motel, to compensate for losing his wife earlier, but fearing that
"Mr. Eddy" suspected their affair
- Alice told Pete that "Mr. Eddy" was actually
a porno producer named Dick Laurent, and Alice was forced to perform
in his skin flicks; during a short flashback, Alice explained how Mr. Eddy
had brutalized her, by forcing her to strip at gunpoint in his mansion
- Pete was drawn into Alice's suggested scheme - to
rob her porn producer friend Andy (the same Andy from earlier in
the story), Mr. Eddy's associate and porn-actress recruiter, and
then run away with her; during the theft inside Andy's home, Pete
ambushed Andy and knocked him unconscious, and then noticed a framed
B/W group photo (including Pete and Mr. Eddy) with identical-looking
Alice and Renee together; Pete asked which one was Alice and she
only identified herself as the blonde
- Andy revived and attacked Pete, but was accidentally
killed by a blow to his forehead when he was pushed onto the edge
of a glas coffee table; Alice was unphased by the killing, and went
ahead to steal Andy's jewelry and valuables; meanwhile, Pete began
to hallucinate that Alice was in a motel and taunting him while having
sex with a faceless man
- Alice and Pete drove in Andy's red
sports car into the desert and were seen lying naked together in
the sand near the vacant cabin (from the earlier vision); Alice was
unable to connect with anyone to "fence" Andy's stolen possessions
for cash; the two were lit by the car's headlights while making love,
he told her: "I want you," and she whispered tautingly in his ear: "You'll
never have me"
- the plot became even more complex when after making
love to Alice, Pete transformed back into his original identity as
Fred, and Alice returned to being Renee, and the plot circled back
upon itself. Fred's delusion broke down and he found himself back
in reality and under interrogation for his wife's murder; Alice disappeared
while the Mystery Man reappeared to remind Fred that Alice's name
was Renee, and to begin filming him with a video camera
- Fred drove off to the nearby Lost Highway Hotel where
Mr. Eddy (Dick Laurent) and Renee were having sex; afterwards, Fred
angrily confronted Mr. Eddy, kidnapped him and forced him into the
trunk of his Mercedes vehicle and drove off back into the desert;
once the car's trunk was opened and porn/snuff film mogul Mr. Eddy
leaped out, the Mystery Man reappeared and offered Fred a knife to
kill Mr. Eddy; the Mystery Man also provided video evidence or proof
that Renee and Mr. Eddy were having a sexual affair and that he had
corrupted her life
- Fred watched as
the Mystery Man (standing next to Fred) shot and killed
Mr. Eddy, and then whispered something unintelligible in Fred's ear;
at dawn, Fred drove away from the desert crime scene with the gun
In the Desert in Front of Car Headlights, Alice
Had Sex with Pete - She told him: "You'll never have me"
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Mr. Eddy and Renee Had Sex in the Lost Highway Hotel, Just After Pete
Reverted Back to Fred
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Mr. Eddy Shot Dead by the Mystery Man (with Fred
standing next to him)
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- the final few lines of dialogue were
between the two detectives who were looking
over the crime scene in Andy's luxurious home where there was clear
evidence that Pete Dayton had burglarized and killed Andy, Renee's
porn co-star and producer buddy (with the help of a scheming
Alice, who no longer seemed to exist). The officers noticed a photograph
of Mr. Eddy, Renee, and Andy (earlier in the film, Alice was also
in the same photo):
Al: "Ed. Take a look at this!"
Ed: "Yeah. That's her all right. That's Fred Madison's wife
with Dick Laurent."
Another detective: "And Mr. Dent-Head [Andy] over there."
A second detective: "We got Pete Dayton's prints all over this
place."
Al: "You know what I think, Ed?"
Ed: "What is it, AI? Whaddya think?"
Al: "I think there's no such thing as a bad coincidence."
- after returning from the desert in Mr. Eddy's Mercedes,
Fred arrived at the front of his home and told himself at his
house's intercom callbox that Dick Laurent was, in fact, dead - the
quote from the film's opening
- when the two detectives arrived at the
house and saw Fred, they pursued after him to arrest him - leading
to a chase into the desert, where he screamed as he proceeded
down the vortex of a 'lost highway' (the same image underlying the
title credits sequence) and then seemed to vanish
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Fred Madison (Bill Pullman)
Start of Film:
Fred Listening to Intercom Recording of His Own Voice: "Dick
Laurent is dead."
Renee Madison (Patricia Arquette)
Fred Had Sex With Wife Renee, Before She was Dismembered and Murdered
(l to r): Ed and Al, Two Detectives Investigating the Case
The Mystery Man (Robert Blake) at Party (at Andy's
House)
To Fred: "We've Met Before, Haven't We?"
Renee Murdered and Dismembered by Fred
In Prison, Fred Morphed into Pete Dayton (Balthazar
Getty)
Mr. Eddy (aka Dick Laurent) (Robert Loggia), Porn
Mogul
Alice Wakefield (Patricia Arquette), Mr. Eddy's Blonde
Mistress and Porn Actress
Flashback: Alice Forced to Strip at Gunpoint for The Corrupt and
Brutal Mr. Eddy
The Framed Photograph (With Renee and Alice Together)
The Framed Photograph (now without Alice, Who
Seemed to Never Exist)
End of Film:
Fred at His Intercom Callbox Recording: "Dick
Laurent is dead" - the quote from the film's opening
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