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Eraserhead

Eraserhead is a 1977 American surrealist horror film written, directed, produced, and edited by David Lynch. Lynch also created its score and sound design, which included pieces by a variety of other musicians. Shot in black and white, it was Lynch's first feature-length effort following several short films. Starring Jack Nance, Charlotte Stewart, Jeanne Bates, Judith Anna Roberts, Laurel Near, and Jack Fisk, it tells the story of a man who is left to care for his grossly deformed child in a desolate industrial landscape.

Eraserhead
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDavid Lynch
Written byDavid Lynch
Produced byDavid Lynch
Starring
Cinematography
Edited byDavid Lynch
Music by
Production
company
Distributed byLibra Films
Release date
  • March 19, 1977 (1977-03-19)
Running time
89 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$7 million[2]

Eraserhead was produced with the assistance of the American Film Institute (AFI) during Lynch's time studying there. It nonetheless spent several years in principal photography because of funding difficulties; donations from Fisk and his wife Sissy Spacek kept production afloat. It was shot on several locations owned by the AFI in California, including Greystone Mansion and a set of disused stables in which Lynch lived. Lynch and sound designer Alan Splet spent a year working on the film's audio after their studio was soundproofed. The soundtrack features organ music by Fats Waller and includes the song "In Heaven", written and performed for the film by Peter Ivers, with lyrics by Lynch.

Initially opening to small audiences and little interest, Eraserhead gained popularity over several long runs as a midnight movie. Since its release, it has earned positive reviews and is considered a cult film. Its surrealist imagery and sexual undercurrents have been seen as key thematic elements, and its intricate sound design as its technical highlight. In 2004, the film was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Film Registry as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[3]

Plot

The Man in the Planet (Jack Fisk) is moving levers in his home in space, while the head of Henry Spencer (Jack Nance) floats in the sky. A spermatozoon-like creature emerges from Spencer's mouth, floating into the void.

In an industrial cityscape, Spencer walks home with his groceries. He is stopped outside his apartment by the Beautiful Girl Across the Hall (Judith Anna Roberts), who informs him that his girlfriend, Mary X (Charlotte Stewart), has invited him to dinner with her family. Spencer leaves his groceries in his apartment, which is filled with piles of dirt and dead vegetation. That night, Spencer visits X's home, conversing awkwardly with her mother. At the dinner table, he is asked to carve a chicken that X's father has "made"; the bird moves and writhes on the plate and gushes blood when cut. After dinner, Spencer is cornered by X's mother, who tries to kiss him. She tells him that X has had his child and that the two must marry. X, however, is not sure if what she bore is a child.

The couple move into Spencer's one-room apartment and begin caring for the child—a swaddled bundle with an inhuman, snake-like face, resembling the spermatozoon-like creature seen earlier. The infant refuses all food, crying incessantly and intolerably. The sound drives X hysterical, and she leaves Spencer and the child. Spencer attempts to care for the child, and he learns that it struggles to breathe and has developed painful sores.

Spencer begins experiencing visions, again seeing the Man in the Planet, as well as the Lady in the Radiator (Laurel Near), who sings to him as she stomps upon miniature replicas of Spencer's child. After a sexual encounter with the Beautiful Girl Across the Hall, Spencer has another vision: the Lady in the Radiator sings ("In Heaven Everything Is Fine") as Spencer watches his own head fall off, revealing a stump underneath that resembles the child's face. Spencer's head falls from the sky, landing on a street and breaking open. A boy finds it, bringing it to a pencil factory to be turned into erasers.

Awakened, Spencer seeks out the Beautiful Girl Across the Hall, but finds her with another man. Crushed, Spencer returns to his room. He takes a pair of scissors and for the first time removes the child's swaddling clothes. It is revealed that the child has no skin; the bandages held its internal organs together, and they spill apart after the rags are cut. The child gasps in pain, and Spencer stabs its organs with the scissors. The wounds gush a thick liquid, covering the child. The power in the room overloads, causing the lights to flicker; as they flick on and off the child grows to huge proportions. As the lights burn out completely, the child's head is replaced by the planet seen at the beginning. Spencer appears amidst a billowing cloud of eraser shavings. The side of the planet bursts apart, and inside, the Man in the Planet struggles with his levers, which are now emitting sparks. Spencer is embraced warmly by the Lady in the Radiator, as both white light and white noise build to a crescendo before the screen turns black and silent.

Production

Pre-production

 
 
Stories by Franz Kafka (left) and Nikolai Gogol (right) influenced Eraserhead's script.

Writer and director David Lynch had previously studied for a career as a painter, and he had created several short films to animate his paintings.[4] By 1970, however, he had switched his focus to film-making, and at the age of 24 he accepted a scholarship at the American Film Institute's Center for Advanced Film Studies. Lynch disliked the course and considered dropping out, but after being offered the chance to produce a script of his own devising, he changed his mind. He was given permission to use the school's entire campus for film sets; he converted the school's disused stables into a series of sets and lived there.[5] In addition, Greystone Mansion, also owned by the AFI, was used for many scenes.[6]

Lynch had initially begun work on a script titled Gardenback, based on his painting of a hunched figure with vegetation growing from its back. Gardenback was a surrealist script about adultery, which featured a continually growing insect representing one man's lust for his neighbor. The script would have resulted in a roughly 45-minute-long film, which the AFI felt was too long for such a figurative, nonlinear script.[7] In its place, Lynch presented Eraserhead, which he had developed based on a daydream of a man's head being taken to a pencil factory by a small boy. Several board members at the AFI were still opposed to producing such a surrealist work, but they acquiesced when Dean Frank Daniel threatened to resign if it were to be vetoed.[8] Lynch's script for Eraserhead was influenced by his reading as a film student; Franz Kafka's 1915 novella The Metamorphosis and Nikolai Gogol's 1836 short story "The Nose" were strong influences on the screenplay.[9] Lynch also confirmed in an interview with Metro Silicon Valley that the film "came together" when he opened up a Bible, read one verse from it, and shut it; in retrospect, Lynch could not remember if the verse was from the Old Testament or the New Testament.[10] In 2007, Lynch said "Believe it or not, Eraserhead is my most spiritual film."[11]

The script is also thought to have been inspired by Lynch's fear of fatherhood;[6] his daughter Jennifer had been born with "severely clubbed feet", requiring extensive corrective surgery as a child.[12] Jennifer has said that her own unexpected conception and birth defects were the basis for the film's themes.[12] The film's tone was also shaped by Lynch's time living in a troubled neighborhood in Philadelphia. Lynch and his family spent five years living in an atmosphere of "violence, hate and filth".[13] The area was described as a "crime-ridden poverty zone", which inspired the urban backdrop of Eraserhead. Describing this period of his life, Lynch said, "I saw so many things in Philadelphia I couldn't believe ... I saw a grown woman grab her breasts and speak like a baby, complaining her nipples hurt. This kind of thing will set you back".[6] In his book David Lynch: Beautiful Dark, film critic Greg Olson posits that this time contrasted starkly with the director's childhood in the Pacific Northwest, giving the director a "bipolar, Heaven-and-Hell vision of America" which has subsequently shaped his films.[13]

Initial casting for the film began in 1971, and Jack Nance was quickly selected for the lead role. However, the staff at the AFI had underestimated the project's scale—they had initially green-lit Eraserhead after viewing a twenty-one page screenplay, assuming that the film industry's usual ratio of one minute of film per scripted page would reduce the film to approximately twenty minutes. This misunderstanding, coupled with Lynch's own meticulous direction, caused the film to remain in production for a number of years.[5] In an extreme example of this labored schedule, one scene in the film begins with Nance's character opening a door—a full year passed before he was filmed entering the room. Nance, however, was dedicated to producing the film and retained the unorthodox hairstyle his character sported for the entirety of its gestation.[14]

Filming

Buoyed with regular donations from Lynch's childhood friend Jack Fisk and Fisk's wife Sissy Spacek, production continued for several years.[15] Additional funds were provided by Nance's wife Catherine E. Coulson, who worked as a waitress and donated her income,[16] and by Lynch himself, who delivered newspapers throughout the film's principal photography.[17] During one of the many lulls in filming, Lynch was able to produce the short film The Amputee, taking advantage of the AFI's wish to test new film stock before committing to bulk purchases.[18] The short piece starred Coulson, who continued working with Lynch as a technician on Eraserhead.[18] Eraserhead's production crew was very small, composed of Lynch; sound designer Alan Splet; cinematographer Herb Cardwell, who left the production for financial reasons and was replaced with Frederick Elmes; production manager and prop technician Doreen Small; and Coulson, who worked in a variety of roles.[19]

 
It has been speculated that Lynch used a rabbit to create Spencer's alien-like baby.

The physical effects used to create the deformed child have been kept secret. The projectionist who worked on the film's dailies was blindfolded by Lynch to avoid revealing the prop's nature, and he has refused to discuss the effects in subsequent interviews.[20] The prop—which Nance nicknamed "Spike"—featured several working parts; its neck, eyes and mouth were capable of independent operation.[21] Lynch has offered cryptic comments on the prop, at times stating that "it was born nearby" or "maybe it was found".[22] It has been speculated by The Guardian's John Patterson that the prop may have been constructed from a skinned rabbit or a lamb fetus.[23] The child has been seen as a precursor to elements of other Lynch films, such as John Merrick's make-up in 1980's The Elephant Man and the sandworms of 1984's Dune.[24]

During production, Lynch began experimenting with a technique of recording dialogue that had been spoken phonetically backwards and reversing the resulting audio. Although the technique was not used in the film, Lynch returned to it for "Episode 2", the third episode of his 1990 television series Twin Peaks.[25] Lynch also began his interest in transcendental meditation during the film's production,[6] adopting a vegetarian diet and giving up smoking and alcohol.[26]

Post-production

Lynch worked with Alan Splet to design the film's sound. The pair arranged and fabricated soundproof blanketing to insulate their studio, where they spent almost a year creating and editing the film's sound effects. The soundtrack is densely layered, including as many as fifteen different sounds played simultaneously using multiple reels.[27] Sounds were created in a variety of ways—for a scene in which a bed slowly dissolves into a pool of liquid, Lynch and Splet inserted a microphone inside a plastic bottle, floated it in a bathtub, and recorded the sound of air blown through the bottle. After being recorded, sounds were further augmented by alterations to their pitch, reverb and frequency.[28]

After a poorly received test screening, in which Lynch believes he had mixed the soundtrack at too high a volume, the director cut twenty minutes of footage from the film, bringing its length to 89 minutes.[29] Among the cut footage is a scene featuring Coulson as the infant's midwife, another of a man torturing two women—one again played by Coulson—with a car battery, and one of Spencer toying with a dead cat.[30]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack to Eraserhead was released by I.R.S. Records in 1982.[31] The two tracks included on the album feature excerpts of organ music by Fats Waller and the song "In Heaven", written for the film by Peter Ivers.[32] The soundtrack was re-released on August 7, 2012, by Sacred Bones Records in a limited pressing of 1,500 copies.[33] The album has been seen as presaging the dark ambient music genre, and its presentation of background noise and non-musical cues has been described by Pitchfork's Mark Richardson as "a sound track (two words) in the literal sense".[34]

Themes and analysis

Eraserhead's sound design has been considered one of its defining elements. Although the film features several hallmark visuals—the deformed infant and the sprawling industrial setting—these are matched by their accompanying sounds, as the "incessant mewling" and "evocative aural landscape" are paired with these respectively.[35] The film features several constant industrial sounds, providing low-level background noise in every scene. This fosters a "threatening" and "unnerving" atmosphere, which has been imitated in works such as David Fincher's 1995 thriller Seven and the Coen brothers' 1991 black comedy Barton Fink.[35] The constant low-level noise has been perceived by James Wierzbicki in his book Music, Sound and Filmmakers: Sonic Style in Cinema as perhaps a product of Henry Spencer's imagination, and the soundtrack has been described as "ruthlessly negligent of the difference between dream and reality".[36] The film also begins a trend within Lynch's work of relating diegetic music to dreams, as when the Lady in the Radiator sings "In Heaven" during Spencer's extended dream sequence. This is also present in "Episode 2" of Twin Peaks, in which diegetic music carries over from a character's dream to his waking thoughts; and in 1986's Blue Velvet, in which a similar focus is given to Roy Orbison's "In Dreams".[36]

The film has also been noted for its strong sexual themes. Opening with an image of conception, the film then portrays Henry Spencer as a character who is terrified of, but fascinated by, sex. The recurring images of sperm-like creatures, including the child, are a constant presence during the film's sex scenes; the apparent "girl next door" appeal of the Lady in the Radiator is abandoned during her musical number as she begins to violently smash Spencer's sperm creatures and aggressively meets his gaze.[37] In his book The Monster Show: A Cultural History of Horror, David J. Skal describes the film as "depict[ing] human reproduction as a desolate freak show, an occupation fit only for the damned".[38] Skal also posits a different characterization of the Lady in the Radiator, casting her as "desperately eager for an unseen audience's approval".[38] In his book David Lynch Decoded, Mark Allyn Stewart proposes that the Lady in the Radiator is in fact Spencer's subconscious, a manifestation of his own urge to kill his child, who embraces him after he does so, as if to reassure him that he has done right.[39]

As a character, Spencer has been seen as an everyman figure, his blank expression and plain dress keeping him a simple archetype.[40] Spencer displays a pacifistic and fatalistic inactivity throughout the film, simply allowing events to unfold around him without taking control. This passive behavior culminates in his sole act of instigation at the film's climax; his apparent act of infanticide is driven by the domineering and controlling influences that beset him. Spencer's passivity has also been seen by film critics Colin Odell and Michelle Le Blanc as a precursor to Lynch's 1983–92 comic strip The Angriest Dog in the World.[41]

Release

Box office

Eraserhead premiered at the Filmex film festival in Los Angeles, on March 19, 1977.[42] On its opening night, the film was attended by twenty-five people; twenty-four viewed it the following evening. However, Ben Barenholtz, head of distributor Libra Films, persuaded local theater Cinema Village to run the film as a midnight feature, where it continued for a year. After this, it ran for ninety-nine weeks at New York's Waverly Cinema, had a year-long midnight run at San Francisco's Roxie Theater from 1978 to 1979, and achieved a three-year tenure at Los Angeles' Nuart Theatre between 1978 and 1981.[43] During a run of screenings in New York and Los Angeles, Eraserhead was paired with the 1979 animated short film Asparagus, created by Suzan Pitt, for nearly two years.[44]

Eraserhead was a commercial success, grossing $7 million in the United States and $14,590 in other territories.[2] Eraserhead was also screened as part of the 1978 BFI London Film Festival,[45] and the 1986 Telluride Film Festival.[46]

Home media

Eraserhead was released on VHS on August 7, 1982, by Columbia Pictures.[47] The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray by Umbrella Entertainment in Australia; the former was released on August 1, 2009,[48] and the latter on May 9, 2012.[49] The Umbrella Entertainment releases include an 85-minute feature on the making of the film.[48][49] Other home media releases of the film include DVD releases by Universal Pictures in 2001, Subversive Entertainment in 2006, Scanbox Entertainment in 2008,[46] and a DVD and Blu-ray release by the Criterion Collection in September 2014.[50]

Reception

Upon Eraserhead's release, Variety offered a negative review, calling it "a sickening bad-taste exercise".[51] The review expressed incredulity over the film's long gestation and described its finale as unwatchable.[51] Comparing Eraserhead to Lynch's next film The Elephant Man, Tom Buckley of The New York Times wrote that while the latter was a well-made film with an accomplished cast, the former was not. Buckley called Eraserhead "murkily pretentious", and wrote that the film's horror aspects stemmed solely from the appearance of the deformed child rather than from its script or performances.[52] Writing in 1984, Lloyd Rose of The Atlantic wrote that Eraserhead demonstrated that Lynch was "one of the most unalloyed surrealists ever to work in the movies".[53] Rose described the film as being intensely personal, finding that unlike previous surrealist films, such as Luis Buñuel's 1929 work Un Chien Andalou or 1930's L'Age d'Or, Lynch's imagery "isn't reaching out to us from his films; we're sinking into them".[53] In a 1993 review for the Chicago Tribune, Michael Wilmington described Eraserhead as unique, feeling that the film's "intensity" and "nightmare clarity" were a result of Lynch's attention to detail in its creation due to his involvement in so many roles during its production.[54] In the 1995 essay Bad Ideas: The Art and Politics of Twin Peaks, critic Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote that Eraserhead represented Lynch's best work. Rosenbaum wrote that the director's artistic talent declined as his popularity grew, and contrasted the film with Wild at Heart—Lynch's most recent feature film at that time—saying "even the most cursory comparison of Eraserhead with Wild at Heart reveals an artistic decline so precipitous that it is hard to imagine the same person making both films".[55] John Simon of the National Review called Eraserhead "a grossout for cultists".[56]

Contemporary reception of the film has been highly favorable. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 90% based on 62 reviews. The critical consensus reads, "David Lynch's surreal Eraserhead uses detailed visuals and a creepy score to create a bizarre and disturbing look into a man's fear of parenthood".[57] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 87 out of 100 based on 15 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[58]

Writing for Empire magazine, Steve Beard rated the film five stars out of five. He wrote that it was "a lot more radical and enjoyable than [Lynch's] later Hollywood efforts" and highlighted its mix of surrealist body horror and black comedy.[59] The BBC's Almar Haflidason awarded Eraserhead three stars out of five, describing it as "an unremarkable feat by [Lynch's] later standards".[60] Haflidason wrote that the film was a gathering of loosely related ideas, adding that it is "so consumed with surreal imagery that there are almost limitless possibilities to read personal theories into it"; the reviewer's own take on these themes were that they represented a fear of personal commitment and featured "a strong sexual undercurrent".[60] A reviewer writing for Film4 rated Eraserhead five stars out of five, describing it as "by turns beautiful, annoying, funny, exasperating and repellent, but always bristling with a nervous energy".[61] The Film4 reviewer wrote that Eraserhead was unlike most films released to that point, save for the collaborations between Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí; however, Lynch denies having seen any of these before Eraserhead.[61] Writing for The Village Voice, Nathan Lee praised the film's use of sound, writing "to see the film means nothing—one must also hear it".[62] He described the film's sound design as "an intergalactic seashell cocked to the ears of an acid-tripping gargantua".[62]

The Guardian's Peter Bradshaw similarly lauded the film, also awarding it five stars out of five. Bradshaw considered it to be a beautiful film, describing its sound design as "industrial groaning, as if filmed inside some collapsing factory or gigantic dying organism".[63] He compared it to Ridley Scott's 1979 film Alien.[63] Jason Ankeny, writing for AllMovie, gave the film a rating of five stars out of five; he highlighted the disturbing sound design of the film and described it as "an open metaphor".[46] He wrote that Eraserhead "sets up the obsessions that would follow [Lynch] through his career", adding his belief that the film's surrealism enhanced the understanding of the director's later films.[46] In an article for The Daily Telegraph, film-maker Marc Evans praised both the sound design and Lynch's ability "to make the ordinary seem so odd", considering the film an inspiration for his own work.[64] A review of the film in the same newspaper compared Eraserhead to the works of Irish playwright Samuel Beckett, describing it as a chaotic parody of family life.[65] Manohla Dargis, writing for The New York Times, called the film "less a straight story than a surrealistic assemblage".[24] Dargis wrote that the film's imagery evoked the paintings of Francis Bacon and the Georges Franju 1949 documentary Blood of the Beasts.[24] Film Threat's Phil Hall called Eraserhead Lynch's best film, believing that the director's subsequent output failed to live up to it.[66] Hall highlighted the film's soundtrack and Nance's "Chaplinesque" physical comedy as the film's stand-out elements.[66]

Legacy

In 2004, Eraserhead was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry by the United States Library of Congress. Selection for the Registry is based on a film being deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[3] Eraserhead was one of the subjects featured in the 2005 documentary Midnight Movies: From the Margin to the Mainstream, which charted the rise of the midnight movie phenomenon in the late 1960s and 1970s; Lynch took part in the documentary through a series of interviews. The production covers six films which are credited as creating and popularizing the genre; also included are Night of the Living Dead, El Topo, Pink Flamingos, The Harder They Come, and The Rocky Horror Picture Show.[67] In 2010, the Online Film Critics Society compiled a list of the 100 best directorial débuts, listing what they felt were the best first-time feature films by noted directors. Eraserhead placed second in the poll, behind Orson Welles's 1941 Citizen Kane.[68]

Lynch collaborated with most of the cast and crew of Eraserhead again on later films. Frederick Elmes served as cinematographer on Blue Velvet,[69] 1988's The Cowboy and the Frenchman, and 1990's Wild at Heart.[70] Alan Splet provided sound design for The Elephant Man, Dune, and Blue Velvet.[71] Jack Fisk directed episodes of Lynch's 1992 television series On the Air[72] and worked as a production designer on 1999's The Straight Story and 2001's Mulholland Drive.[73] Coulson and Nance appeared in Twin Peaks,[74] and made further appearances in Dune,[75] Blue Velvet,[69] Wild at Heart,[76] and 1997's Lost Highway.[77]

Following the release of Eraserhead, Lynch attempted to find funding for his next project, Ronnie Rocket, a film "about electricity and a three-foot guy with red hair".[78] Lynch met film producer Stuart Cornfeld during this time. Cornfeld had enjoyed Eraserhead and was interested in producing Ronnie Rocket; he worked for Mel Brooks and Brooksfilms at the time, and when the two realized that Ronnie Rocket was unlikely to find sufficient financing, Lynch asked to see some already-written scripts to consider for his next project. Cornfeld found four scripts that he felt would interest Lynch; on hearing the title of The Elephant Man, the director decided to make it his second film.[79]

While working on The Elephant Man, Lynch met American director Stanley Kubrick, who revealed to Lynch that Eraserhead was his favorite film.[80] Eraserhead also served as an influence on Kubrick's 1980 film The Shining; Kubrick reportedly screened the film for the cast and crew to "put them in the mood" that he wanted the film to achieve.[81] Eraserhead is also credited with influencing the 1989 Japanese cyberpunk film Tetsuo: The Iron Man, the experimental 1990 horror film Begotten, and Darren Aronofsky's 1998 directorial debut Pi.[82][83][84] Swiss artist H. R. Giger cited Eraserhead as "one of the greatest films [he had] ever seen",[85] and said that it came closer to realizing his vision than even his own films.[86] According to Giger, Lynch declined to collaborate with him on Dune because he felt Giger had "stolen his ideas".[87]

See also

References

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  2. ^ a b "Eraserhead – Box Office Data, DVD Sales, Movie News, Cast Information". The Numbers. Nash Information Services. Retrieved August 22, 2012.
  3. ^ a b "Films Added to National Film Registry for 2004" (Press release). Library of Congress. December 28, 2004. Retrieved August 22, 2012.
  4. ^ Odell & Le Blanc 2007, pp. 192–6.
  5. ^ a b Odell & Le Blanc 2007, p. 27.
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  7. ^ Olson 2008, pp. 56–59.
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  9. ^ Olson 2008, p. 54.
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  15. ^ Odell & Le Blanc 2007, p. 28.
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  20. ^ Hoberman & Rosenbaum 1991, pp. 242–243.
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  40. ^ Olson 2008, p. 62.
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  42. ^ Hoberman & Rosenbaum 1991, p. 215.
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  47. ^ "New Video Releases". Billboard. Vol. 94, no. 31. August 7, 1982. p. 34. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved August 22, 2012.
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  55. ^ Rosenbaum 1995, p. 23.
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  65. ^ Cheal, David (October 22, 2008). "DVD reviews: Charley Varrick, Iron Man, Eraserhead, The Short Films of David Lynch, Festen 10th Anniversary Edition". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on January 12, 2022. Retrieved August 31, 2012.
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Sources

External links

eraserhead, this, article, about, film, band, hero, academia, character, shōta, aizawa, laptop, input, device, pointing, stick, 1977, american, surrealist, horror, film, written, directed, produced, edited, david, lynch, lynch, also, created, score, sound, des. This article is about the film For the band see Eraserheads For the My Hero Academia character see Shōta Aizawa For the laptop input device see pointing stick Eraserhead is a 1977 American surrealist horror film written directed produced and edited by David Lynch Lynch also created its score and sound design which included pieces by a variety of other musicians Shot in black and white it was Lynch s first feature length effort following several short films Starring Jack Nance Charlotte Stewart Jeanne Bates Judith Anna Roberts Laurel Near and Jack Fisk it tells the story of a man who is left to care for his grossly deformed child in a desolate industrial landscape EraserheadTheatrical release posterDirected byDavid LynchWritten byDavid LynchProduced byDavid LynchStarringJack Nance Charlotte Stewart Allen Joseph Jeanne Bates Judith RobertsCinematographyFrederick Elmes Herbert CardwellEdited byDavid LynchMusic byDavid Lynch Fats Waller Peter IversProductioncompanyAFI Center for Advanced StudiesDistributed byLibra FilmsRelease dateMarch 19 1977 1977 03 19 Running time89 minutes 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBox office 7 million 2 Eraserhead was produced with the assistance of the American Film Institute AFI during Lynch s time studying there It nonetheless spent several years in principal photography because of funding difficulties donations from Fisk and his wife Sissy Spacek kept production afloat It was shot on several locations owned by the AFI in California including Greystone Mansion and a set of disused stables in which Lynch lived Lynch and sound designer Alan Splet spent a year working on the film s audio after their studio was soundproofed The soundtrack features organ music by Fats Waller and includes the song In Heaven written and performed for the film by Peter Ivers with lyrics by Lynch Initially opening to small audiences and little interest Eraserhead gained popularity over several long runs as a midnight movie Since its release it has earned positive reviews and is considered a cult film Its surrealist imagery and sexual undercurrents have been seen as key thematic elements and its intricate sound design as its technical highlight In 2004 the film was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Film Registry as being culturally historically or aesthetically significant 3 Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 2 1 Pre production 2 2 Filming 2 3 Post production 3 Soundtrack 4 Themes and analysis 5 Release 5 1 Box office 5 2 Home media 6 Reception 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Sources 10 External linksPlot EditThe Man in the Planet Jack Fisk is moving levers in his home in space while the head of Henry Spencer Jack Nance floats in the sky A spermatozoon like creature emerges from Spencer s mouth floating into the void In an industrial cityscape Spencer walks home with his groceries He is stopped outside his apartment by the Beautiful Girl Across the Hall Judith Anna Roberts who informs him that his girlfriend Mary X Charlotte Stewart has invited him to dinner with her family Spencer leaves his groceries in his apartment which is filled with piles of dirt and dead vegetation That night Spencer visits X s home conversing awkwardly with her mother At the dinner table he is asked to carve a chicken that X s father has made the bird moves and writhes on the plate and gushes blood when cut After dinner Spencer is cornered by X s mother who tries to kiss him She tells him that X has had his child and that the two must marry X however is not sure if what she bore is a child The couple move into Spencer s one room apartment and begin caring for the child a swaddled bundle with an inhuman snake like face resembling the spermatozoon like creature seen earlier The infant refuses all food crying incessantly and intolerably The sound drives X hysterical and she leaves Spencer and the child Spencer attempts to care for the child and he learns that it struggles to breathe and has developed painful sores Spencer begins experiencing visions again seeing the Man in the Planet as well as the Lady in the Radiator Laurel Near who sings to him as she stomps upon miniature replicas of Spencer s child After a sexual encounter with the Beautiful Girl Across the Hall Spencer has another vision the Lady in the Radiator sings In Heaven Everything Is Fine as Spencer watches his own head fall off revealing a stump underneath that resembles the child s face Spencer s head falls from the sky landing on a street and breaking open A boy finds it bringing it to a pencil factory to be turned into erasers Awakened Spencer seeks out the Beautiful Girl Across the Hall but finds her with another man Crushed Spencer returns to his room He takes a pair of scissors and for the first time removes the child s swaddling clothes It is revealed that the child has no skin the bandages held its internal organs together and they spill apart after the rags are cut The child gasps in pain and Spencer stabs its organs with the scissors The wounds gush a thick liquid covering the child The power in the room overloads causing the lights to flicker as they flick on and off the child grows to huge proportions As the lights burn out completely the child s head is replaced by the planet seen at the beginning Spencer appears amidst a billowing cloud of eraser shavings The side of the planet bursts apart and inside the Man in the Planet struggles with his levers which are now emitting sparks Spencer is embraced warmly by the Lady in the Radiator as both white light and white noise build to a crescendo before the screen turns black and silent Production EditPre production Edit Stories by Franz Kafka left and Nikolai Gogol right influenced Eraserhead s script Writer and director David Lynch had previously studied for a career as a painter and he had created several short films to animate his paintings 4 By 1970 however he had switched his focus to film making and at the age of 24 he accepted a scholarship at the American Film Institute s Center for Advanced Film Studies Lynch disliked the course and considered dropping out but after being offered the chance to produce a script of his own devising he changed his mind He was given permission to use the school s entire campus for film sets he converted the school s disused stables into a series of sets and lived there 5 In addition Greystone Mansion also owned by the AFI was used for many scenes 6 Lynch had initially begun work on a script titled Gardenback based on his painting of a hunched figure with vegetation growing from its back Gardenback was a surrealist script about adultery which featured a continually growing insect representing one man s lust for his neighbor The script would have resulted in a roughly 45 minute long film which the AFI felt was too long for such a figurative nonlinear script 7 In its place Lynch presented Eraserhead which he had developed based on a daydream of a man s head being taken to a pencil factory by a small boy Several board members at the AFI were still opposed to producing such a surrealist work but they acquiesced when Dean Frank Daniel threatened to resign if it were to be vetoed 8 Lynch s script for Eraserhead was influenced by his reading as a film student Franz Kafka s 1915 novella The Metamorphosis and Nikolai Gogol s 1836 short story The Nose were strong influences on the screenplay 9 Lynch also confirmed in an interview with Metro Silicon Valley that the film came together when he opened up a Bible read one verse from it and shut it in retrospect Lynch could not remember if the verse was from the Old Testament or the New Testament 10 In 2007 Lynch said Believe it or not Eraserhead is my most spiritual film 11 The script is also thought to have been inspired by Lynch s fear of fatherhood 6 his daughter Jennifer had been born with severely clubbed feet requiring extensive corrective surgery as a child 12 Jennifer has said that her own unexpected conception and birth defects were the basis for the film s themes 12 The film s tone was also shaped by Lynch s time living in a troubled neighborhood in Philadelphia Lynch and his family spent five years living in an atmosphere of violence hate and filth 13 The area was described as a crime ridden poverty zone which inspired the urban backdrop of Eraserhead Describing this period of his life Lynch said I saw so many things in Philadelphia I couldn t believe I saw a grown woman grab her breasts and speak like a baby complaining her nipples hurt This kind of thing will set you back 6 In his book David Lynch Beautiful Dark film critic Greg Olson posits that this time contrasted starkly with the director s childhood in the Pacific Northwest giving the director a bipolar Heaven and Hell vision of America which has subsequently shaped his films 13 Initial casting for the film began in 1971 and Jack Nance was quickly selected for the lead role However the staff at the AFI had underestimated the project s scale they had initially green lit Eraserhead after viewing a twenty one page screenplay assuming that the film industry s usual ratio of one minute of film per scripted page would reduce the film to approximately twenty minutes This misunderstanding coupled with Lynch s own meticulous direction caused the film to remain in production for a number of years 5 In an extreme example of this labored schedule one scene in the film begins with Nance s character opening a door a full year passed before he was filmed entering the room Nance however was dedicated to producing the film and retained the unorthodox hairstyle his character sported for the entirety of its gestation 14 Filming Edit Buoyed with regular donations from Lynch s childhood friend Jack Fisk and Fisk s wife Sissy Spacek production continued for several years 15 Additional funds were provided by Nance s wife Catherine E Coulson who worked as a waitress and donated her income 16 and by Lynch himself who delivered newspapers throughout the film s principal photography 17 During one of the many lulls in filming Lynch was able to produce the short film The Amputee taking advantage of the AFI s wish to test new film stock before committing to bulk purchases 18 The short piece starred Coulson who continued working with Lynch as a technician on Eraserhead 18 Eraserhead s production crew was very small composed of Lynch sound designer Alan Splet cinematographer Herb Cardwell who left the production for financial reasons and was replaced with Frederick Elmes production manager and prop technician Doreen Small and Coulson who worked in a variety of roles 19 It has been speculated that Lynch used a rabbit to create Spencer s alien like baby The physical effects used to create the deformed child have been kept secret The projectionist who worked on the film s dailies was blindfolded by Lynch to avoid revealing the prop s nature and he has refused to discuss the effects in subsequent interviews 20 The prop which Nance nicknamed Spike featured several working parts its neck eyes and mouth were capable of independent operation 21 Lynch has offered cryptic comments on the prop at times stating that it was born nearby or maybe it was found 22 It has been speculated by The Guardian s John Patterson that the prop may have been constructed from a skinned rabbit or a lamb fetus 23 The child has been seen as a precursor to elements of other Lynch films such as John Merrick s make up in 1980 s The Elephant Man and the sandworms of 1984 s Dune 24 During production Lynch began experimenting with a technique of recording dialogue that had been spoken phonetically backwards and reversing the resulting audio Although the technique was not used in the film Lynch returned to it for Episode 2 the third episode of his 1990 television series Twin Peaks 25 Lynch also began his interest in transcendental meditation during the film s production 6 adopting a vegetarian diet and giving up smoking and alcohol 26 Post production Edit Lynch worked with Alan Splet to design the film s sound The pair arranged and fabricated soundproof blanketing to insulate their studio where they spent almost a year creating and editing the film s sound effects The soundtrack is densely layered including as many as fifteen different sounds played simultaneously using multiple reels 27 Sounds were created in a variety of ways for a scene in which a bed slowly dissolves into a pool of liquid Lynch and Splet inserted a microphone inside a plastic bottle floated it in a bathtub and recorded the sound of air blown through the bottle After being recorded sounds were further augmented by alterations to their pitch reverb and frequency 28 After a poorly received test screening in which Lynch believes he had mixed the soundtrack at too high a volume the director cut twenty minutes of footage from the film bringing its length to 89 minutes 29 Among the cut footage is a scene featuring Coulson as the infant s midwife another of a man torturing two women one again played by Coulson with a car battery and one of Spencer toying with a dead cat 30 Soundtrack EditMain article Eraserhead soundtrack The soundtrack to Eraserhead was released by I R S Records in 1982 31 The two tracks included on the album feature excerpts of organ music by Fats Waller and the song In Heaven written for the film by Peter Ivers 32 The soundtrack was re released on August 7 2012 by Sacred Bones Records in a limited pressing of 1 500 copies 33 The album has been seen as presaging the dark ambient music genre and its presentation of background noise and non musical cues has been described by Pitchfork s Mark Richardson as a sound track two words in the literal sense 34 Themes and analysis EditEraserhead s sound design has been considered one of its defining elements Although the film features several hallmark visuals the deformed infant and the sprawling industrial setting these are matched by their accompanying sounds as the incessant mewling and evocative aural landscape are paired with these respectively 35 The film features several constant industrial sounds providing low level background noise in every scene This fosters a threatening and unnerving atmosphere which has been imitated in works such as David Fincher s 1995 thriller Seven and the Coen brothers 1991 black comedy Barton Fink 35 The constant low level noise has been perceived by James Wierzbicki in his book Music Sound and Filmmakers Sonic Style in Cinema as perhaps a product of Henry Spencer s imagination and the soundtrack has been described as ruthlessly negligent of the difference between dream and reality 36 The film also begins a trend within Lynch s work of relating diegetic music to dreams as when the Lady in the Radiator sings In Heaven during Spencer s extended dream sequence This is also present in Episode 2 of Twin Peaks in which diegetic music carries over from a character s dream to his waking thoughts and in 1986 s Blue Velvet in which a similar focus is given to Roy Orbison s In Dreams 36 The film has also been noted for its strong sexual themes Opening with an image of conception the film then portrays Henry Spencer as a character who is terrified of but fascinated by sex The recurring images of sperm like creatures including the child are a constant presence during the film s sex scenes the apparent girl next door appeal of the Lady in the Radiator is abandoned during her musical number as she begins to violently smash Spencer s sperm creatures and aggressively meets his gaze 37 In his book The Monster Show A Cultural History of Horror David J Skal describes the film as depict ing human reproduction as a desolate freak show an occupation fit only for the damned 38 Skal also posits a different characterization of the Lady in the Radiator casting her as desperately eager for an unseen audience s approval 38 In his book David Lynch Decoded Mark Allyn Stewart proposes that the Lady in the Radiator is in fact Spencer s subconscious a manifestation of his own urge to kill his child who embraces him after he does so as if to reassure him that he has done right 39 As a character Spencer has been seen as an everyman figure his blank expression and plain dress keeping him a simple archetype 40 Spencer displays a pacifistic and fatalistic inactivity throughout the film simply allowing events to unfold around him without taking control This passive behavior culminates in his sole act of instigation at the film s climax his apparent act of infanticide is driven by the domineering and controlling influences that beset him Spencer s passivity has also been seen by film critics Colin Odell and Michelle Le Blanc as a precursor to Lynch s 1983 92 comic strip The Angriest Dog in the World 41 Release EditBox office Edit Eraserhead premiered at the Filmex film festival in Los Angeles on March 19 1977 42 On its opening night the film was attended by twenty five people twenty four viewed it the following evening However Ben Barenholtz head of distributor Libra Films persuaded local theater Cinema Village to run the film as a midnight feature where it continued for a year After this it ran for ninety nine weeks at New York s Waverly Cinema had a year long midnight run at San Francisco s Roxie Theater from 1978 to 1979 and achieved a three year tenure at Los Angeles Nuart Theatre between 1978 and 1981 43 During a run of screenings in New York and Los Angeles Eraserhead was paired with the 1979 animated short film Asparagus created by Suzan Pitt for nearly two years 44 Eraserhead was a commercial success grossing 7 million in the United States and 14 590 in other territories 2 Eraserhead was also screened as part of the 1978 BFI London Film Festival 45 and the 1986 Telluride Film Festival 46 Home media Edit Eraserhead was released on VHS on August 7 1982 by Columbia Pictures 47 The film was released on DVD and Blu ray by Umbrella Entertainment in Australia the former was released on August 1 2009 48 and the latter on May 9 2012 49 The Umbrella Entertainment releases include an 85 minute feature on the making of the film 48 49 Other home media releases of the film include DVD releases by Universal Pictures in 2001 Subversive Entertainment in 2006 Scanbox Entertainment in 2008 46 and a DVD and Blu ray release by the Criterion Collection in September 2014 50 Reception EditUpon Eraserhead s release Variety offered a negative review calling it a sickening bad taste exercise 51 The review expressed incredulity over the film s long gestation and described its finale as unwatchable 51 Comparing Eraserhead to Lynch s next film The Elephant Man Tom Buckley of The New York Times wrote that while the latter was a well made film with an accomplished cast the former was not Buckley called Eraserhead murkily pretentious and wrote that the film s horror aspects stemmed solely from the appearance of the deformed child rather than from its script or performances 52 Writing in 1984 Lloyd Rose of The Atlantic wrote that Eraserhead demonstrated that Lynch was one of the most unalloyed surrealists ever to work in the movies 53 Rose described the film as being intensely personal finding that unlike previous surrealist films such as Luis Bunuel s 1929 work Un Chien Andalou or 1930 s L Age d Or Lynch s imagery isn t reaching out to us from his films we re sinking into them 53 In a 1993 review for the Chicago Tribune Michael Wilmington described Eraserhead as unique feeling that the film s intensity and nightmare clarity were a result of Lynch s attention to detail in its creation due to his involvement in so many roles during its production 54 In the 1995 essay Bad Ideas The Art and Politics of Twin Peaks critic Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote that Eraserhead represented Lynch s best work Rosenbaum wrote that the director s artistic talent declined as his popularity grew and contrasted the film with Wild at Heart Lynch s most recent feature film at that time saying even the most cursory comparison of Eraserhead with Wild at Heart reveals an artistic decline so precipitous that it is hard to imagine the same person making both films 55 John Simon of the National Review called Eraserhead a grossout for cultists 56 Contemporary reception of the film has been highly favorable On Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 90 based on 62 reviews The critical consensus reads David Lynch s surreal Eraserhead uses detailed visuals and a creepy score to create a bizarre and disturbing look into a man s fear of parenthood 57 On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 87 out of 100 based on 15 reviews indicating universal acclaim 58 Writing for Empire magazine Steve Beard rated the film five stars out of five He wrote that it was a lot more radical and enjoyable than Lynch s later Hollywood efforts and highlighted its mix of surrealist body horror and black comedy 59 The BBC s Almar Haflidason awarded Eraserhead three stars out of five describing it as an unremarkable feat by Lynch s later standards 60 Haflidason wrote that the film was a gathering of loosely related ideas adding that it is so consumed with surreal imagery that there are almost limitless possibilities to read personal theories into it the reviewer s own take on these themes were that they represented a fear of personal commitment and featured a strong sexual undercurrent 60 A reviewer writing for Film4 rated Eraserhead five stars out of five describing it as by turns beautiful annoying funny exasperating and repellent but always bristling with a nervous energy 61 The Film4 reviewer wrote that Eraserhead was unlike most films released to that point save for the collaborations between Luis Bunuel and Salvador Dali however Lynch denies having seen any of these before Eraserhead 61 Writing for The Village Voice Nathan Lee praised the film s use of sound writing to see the film means nothing one must also hear it 62 He described the film s sound design as an intergalactic seashell cocked to the ears of an acid tripping gargantua 62 The Guardian s Peter Bradshaw similarly lauded the film also awarding it five stars out of five Bradshaw considered it to be a beautiful film describing its sound design as industrial groaning as if filmed inside some collapsing factory or gigantic dying organism 63 He compared it to Ridley Scott s 1979 film Alien 63 Jason Ankeny writing for AllMovie gave the film a rating of five stars out of five he highlighted the disturbing sound design of the film and described it as an open metaphor 46 He wrote that Eraserhead sets up the obsessions that would follow Lynch through his career adding his belief that the film s surrealism enhanced the understanding of the director s later films 46 In an article for The Daily Telegraph film maker Marc Evans praised both the sound design and Lynch s ability to make the ordinary seem so odd considering the film an inspiration for his own work 64 A review of the film in the same newspaper compared Eraserhead to the works of Irish playwright Samuel Beckett describing it as a chaotic parody of family life 65 Manohla Dargis writing for The New York Times called the film less a straight story than a surrealistic assemblage 24 Dargis wrote that the film s imagery evoked the paintings of Francis Bacon and the Georges Franju 1949 documentary Blood of the Beasts 24 Film Threat s Phil Hall called Eraserhead Lynch s best film believing that the director s subsequent output failed to live up to it 66 Hall highlighted the film s soundtrack and Nance s Chaplinesque physical comedy as the film s stand out elements 66 Legacy EditIn 2004 Eraserhead was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry by the United States Library of Congress Selection for the Registry is based on a film being deemed culturally historically or aesthetically significant 3 Eraserhead was one of the subjects featured in the 2005 documentary Midnight Movies From the Margin to the Mainstream which charted the rise of the midnight movie phenomenon in the late 1960s and 1970s Lynch took part in the documentary through a series of interviews The production covers six films which are credited as creating and popularizing the genre also included are Night of the Living Dead El Topo Pink Flamingos The Harder They Come and The Rocky Horror Picture Show 67 In 2010 the Online Film Critics Society compiled a list of the 100 best directorial debuts listing what they felt were the best first time feature films by noted directors Eraserhead placed second in the poll behind Orson Welles s 1941 Citizen Kane 68 Lynch collaborated with most of the cast and crew of Eraserhead again on later films Frederick Elmes served as cinematographer on Blue Velvet 69 1988 s The Cowboy and the Frenchman and 1990 s Wild at Heart 70 Alan Splet provided sound design for The Elephant Man Dune and Blue Velvet 71 Jack Fisk directed episodes of Lynch s 1992 television series On the Air 72 and worked as a production designer on 1999 s The Straight Story and 2001 s Mulholland Drive 73 Coulson and Nance appeared in Twin Peaks 74 and made further appearances in Dune 75 Blue Velvet 69 Wild at Heart 76 and 1997 s Lost Highway 77 Following the release of Eraserhead Lynch attempted to find funding for his next project Ronnie Rocket a film about electricity and a three foot guy with red hair 78 Lynch met film producer Stuart Cornfeld during this time Cornfeld had enjoyed Eraserhead and was interested in producing Ronnie Rocket he worked for Mel Brooks and Brooksfilms at the time and when the two realized that Ronnie Rocket was unlikely to find sufficient financing Lynch asked to see some already written scripts to consider for his next project Cornfeld found four scripts that he felt would interest Lynch on hearing the title of The Elephant Man the director decided to make it his second film 79 While working on The Elephant Man Lynch met American director Stanley Kubrick who revealed to Lynch that Eraserhead was his favorite film 80 Eraserhead also served as an influence on Kubrick s 1980 film The Shining Kubrick reportedly screened the film for the cast and crew to put them in the mood that he wanted the film to achieve 81 Eraserhead is also credited with influencing the 1989 Japanese cyberpunk film Tetsuo The Iron Man the experimental 1990 horror film Begotten and Darren Aronofsky s 1998 directorial debut Pi 82 83 84 Swiss artist H R Giger cited Eraserhead as one of the greatest films he had ever seen 85 and said that it came closer to realizing his vision than even his own films 86 According to Giger Lynch declined to collaborate with him on Dune because he felt Giger had stolen his ideas 87 See also EditList of films with longest production timeReferences Edit Eraserhead X British Board of Film Classification January 15 1979 Retrieved March 18 2016 a b Eraserhead Box Office Data DVD Sales Movie News Cast Information The Numbers Nash Information Services Retrieved August 22 2012 a b Films Added to National Film Registry for 2004 Press release Library of Congress December 28 2004 Retrieved August 22 2012 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 pp 192 6 a b Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 p 27 a b c d Woodward Richard B January 14 1990 A Dark Lens on America The New York Times Retrieved August 22 2012 Olson 2008 pp 56 59 Olson 2008 pp 59 60 Olson 2008 p 54 von Busack Richard Diving In Metro Silicon Valley Retrieved February 25 2017 David Lean Lecture David Lynch British Academy of Film and Television Arts October 27 2007 Retrieved February 26 2017 a b Olson 2008 p 87 a b Olson 2008 p 51 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 pp 27 28 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 p 28 Rodley amp Lynch 2005 p 67 Rodley amp Lynch 2005 p 60 a b Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 pp 28 29 Rodley amp Lynch 2005 p 55 Hoberman amp Rosenbaum 1991 pp 242 243 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 pp 35 36 Rodley amp Lynch 2005 p 54 Patterson John September 6 2008 Film David Lynch s film has scarred many an innocent viewer including a teenage John Patterson The Guardian Retrieved August 24 2012 a b c Dargis Manohla December 7 2007 Distorted Distorting and All Too Human The New York Times Retrieved August 23 2012 Rodley amp Lynch 2005 pp 165 167 Olson 2008 p 72 Hoberman amp Rosenbaum 1991 p 234 Hoberman amp Rosenbaum 1991 pp 234 235 Hoberman amp Rosenbaum 1991 p 235 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 p 34 Carlson Dean Listen to Eraserhead by Original Soundtrack Album Reviews Credits and Awards AllMusic Retrieved March 19 2016 Eraserhead Original Soundtrack Recording Sacred Bones Records Retrieved August 23 2012 Larson Jeremy D July 6 2012 David Lynch s Eraserhead soundtrack to receive deluxe reissue on Sacred Bones Records Consequence of Sound Retrieved August 23 2012 Richardson Mark August 9 2012 David Lynch Alan Splet Eraserhead Album Reviews Pitchfork Media Retrieved August 23 2012 a b D Angelo Mike May 14 2012 David Lynch shows how audio can be creepier than any image in Eraserhead The A V Club The Onion Retrieved August 22 2012 a b Wierzbicki 2012 p 182 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 p 32 a b Skal 2001 p 298 Stewart 2007 p 7 Olson 2008 p 62 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 p 33 Hoberman amp Rosenbaum 1991 p 215 Hoberman amp Rosenbaum 1991 p 220 Guest Haden November 13 2019 Fever Dreamer Suzan Pitt s Feminist Fantasias The Criterion Collection Retrieved January 11 2023 BFI Film amp TV Database 22nd British Film Institute Archived from the original on December 13 2013 Retrieved August 23 2012 a b c d Ankeny Jason Eraserhead Review AllMovie AllRovi Archived from the original on January 11 2012 Retrieved August 22 2012 New Video Releases Billboard Vol 94 no 31 August 7 1982 p 34 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved August 22 2012 a b Umbrella Entertainment Eraserhead DVD Umbrella Entertainment Archived from the original on May 14 2013 Retrieved August 23 2012 a b Umbrella Entertainment Eraserhead Blu Ray Umbrella Entertainment Archived from the original on June 25 2012 Retrieved August 23 2012 Eraserhead 1997 The Criterion Collection Retrieved June 17 2014 a b Variety Reviews Eraserhead Film Reviews Review by Variety Staff Variety 1977 Retrieved August 22 2012 Tom Buckley October 17 1980 The Screen Eraserhead The New York Times p C15 a b Rose Lloyd October 1 1984 Tumoresque the films of David Lynch The Atlantic Atlantic Media Company Archived from the original on May 13 2013 Retrieved August 22 2012 subscription required Wilmington Michael November 19 1993 Eraserhead Makes Its Mark As A Monument To Alienation Chicago Tribune Retrieved August 23 2012 Rosenbaum 1995 p 23 Simon 2005 p 123 Eraserhead Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved August 24 2021 Eraserhead Reviews Metacritic Retrieved November 13 2021 Beard Steve Empire s Eraserhead Movie Review Empire Retrieved August 22 2012 a b Haflidason Almar January 16 2001 BBC Films review Eraserhead BBC Retrieved August 22 2012 a b Eraserhead 1977 Film Review Film4 Channel Four Television Corporation Retrieved August 22 2012 a b Lee Nathan January 9 2007 David Lynch Made a Man Out of Me The Village Voice Village Voice Media Retrieved August 24 2012 a b Bradshaw Peter September 12 2008 Film review Eraserhead Film TheGuardian com Retrieved August 22 2012 Evans Marc Monahan Mark October 5 2002 Film makers on film Marc Evans The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on January 12 2022 Retrieved August 22 2012 Cheal David October 22 2008 DVD reviews Charley Varrick Iron Man Eraserhead The Short Films of David Lynch Festen 10th Anniversary Edition The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on January 12 2022 Retrieved August 31 2012 a b Hall Phil February 10 2006 Film Threat Eraserhead DVD Film Threat Archived from the original on February 8 2012 Retrieved August 24 2012 Southern Nathan Midnight Movies From the Margin to the Mainstream Cast Reviews Summary and Awards AllMovie AllRovi Archived from the original on December 8 2011 Retrieved August 22 2012 Online critics post top 100 directorial debuts of all time The Independent October 6 2010 Retrieved August 23 2012 a b Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 p 53 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 pp 62 63 Alan Splet Move and Film Biography and Filmography AllMovie AllRovi Archived from the original on January 17 2013 Retrieved August 22 2012 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 p 87 Jack Fisk Move and Film Biography and Filmography AllMovie AllRovi Archived from the original on January 17 2013 Retrieved August 22 2012 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 p 69 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 p 46 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 p 63 Odell amp Le Blanc 2007 p 95 Rodley amp Lynch 2005 p 91 Rodley amp Lynch 2005 p 92 Lynch 2006 p 89 Roberts Chris Eraserhead The Short Films Of David Lynch Uncut Archived from the original on December 12 2013 Retrieved August 26 2012 Harper 2007 p 140 Snider Eric D April 13 2011 What s the big deal Eraserhead 1977 Film com Archived from the original on January 3 2014 Retrieved August 28 2012 Vaughan Robin Pi movie adds up to stimulating analysis The Boston Herald Herald Media Inc October Ironh4 2004 Levy Frederic Albert H R Giger Alien Design PDF littlegiger com Retrieved December 25 2012 Giger Hans Ruedi 1993 HR Giger Arh Translated by Karen Williams Taschen ISBN 978 3 8228 9642 6 Alex HR GIGER WORKS WEEKENDS vice com Retrieved December 25 2012 Sources Edit Harper Graeme 2007 The Unsilvered Screen Surrealism on film illustrated ed Wallflower Press ISBN 978 1 904764 86 1 Hoberman J Rosenbaum Jonathan 1991 Midnight Movies Da Capo ISBN 0 306 80433 6 Lynch David 2006 Catching the Big Fish Meditation Consciousness and Creativity Jeremy P Tarcher Inc ISBN 978 0 641 91061 6 Odell Colin Le Blanc Michelle 2007 David Lynch Kamera Books ISBN 978 1 84243 225 9 Olson Greg 2008 Beautiful Dark illustrated ed Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 5917 3 Rodley Chris Lynch David 2005 Lynch on Lynch 2nd ed Macmillan ISBN 0 571 22018 5 Rosenbaum Jonathon 1995 Bad Ideas The Art and Politics of Twin Peaks In Lavery David ed Full of Secrets Critical Approaches to Twin Peaks illustrated ed Wayne State University Press ISBN 0 8143 2506 8 Simon John 2005 John Simon on Film Criticism 1982 2001 Applause Books ISBN 978 1 55783 507 9 Skal David J 2001 The Monster Show A Cultural History of Horror Macmillan ISBN 0 571 19996 8 Stewart Mark Allyn 2007 David Lynch Decoded AuthorHouse ISBN 978 1 4343 4985 9 Wierzbicki James 2012 Music Sound and Filmmakers Sonic Style in Cinema illustrated ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 89894 2 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Eraserhead Eraserhead essay by David Sterrit at National Film Registry 1 Eraserhead essay by Daniel Eagan in America s Film Legacy The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry A amp C Black 2010 ISBN 0826429777 pages 742 743 2 Eraserhead at the American Film Institute Catalog Eraserhead at AllMovie Eraserhead at IMDb Eraserhead at Rotten Tomatoes Eraserhead at the TCM Movie Database Eraserhead at Trailers from Hell Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eraserhead amp oldid 1133074168, wikipedia, 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