David Lynch’s Unsolvable Puzzles
Critics at Large | The New Yorker
The New Yorker
4.4 • 679 Ratings
🗓️ 6 February 2025
⏱️ 49 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
David Lynch, who died last month at seventy-eight, was a director of images—one whose distinctive sensibility and instinct for combining the grotesque and the mundane have influenced a generation of artists in his wake. Lynch conjured surreal, sometimes hellish dreamscapes populated by strange figures and supernatural forces lurking beneath wholesome American idylls. On this episode of Critics at Large, Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz revisit Lynch’s landmark works and reflect on their resonance today. They discuss his 1986 film, “Blue Velvet”; the television series “Twin Peaks,” whose story and setting Lynch returned to throughout his career; and “Mulholland Drive,” his so-called “poisonous valentine to Hollywood.” Lynch’s stories often resist interpretation, and the director himself refused to ascribe any one meaning to his work. In a way, this openness to multiple readings is at the heart of his appeal. “Reality, too, offers many unsolvable puzzles,” Cunningham says. “The artist who says, ‘I trust that if I offer you this, you will come out with something—even if it’s not something that I programmed in advance’—that always gives me hope.”
Read, watch, and listen with the critics:
“Eraserhead” (1977)
“Blue Velvet” (1986)
“Twin Peaks” (1990-91)
“Mulholland Drive” (2001)
“Dune” (1984)
“Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me” (1992)
“Twin Peaks: The Return” (2017)
“David Lynch Keeps His Head,” by David Foster Wallace (Premiere)
David Lynch’s P.S.A. for the New York Department of Sanitation
“Severance” (2022—)
“David Lynch’s Outsized Influence on Photography,” in Aperture
Comme des Garçons SS16
Prada AW13
David Lynch’s Weather Reports
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| 0:00.0 | What comes to mind when you hear the words, David Lynch? |
| 0:06.0 | The image for me is of a white picket fence seen from the vantage of the ground. |
| 0:14.0 | Americana with a hint of menace. |
| 0:18.0 | And then what lies beyond that picket fence? |
| 0:22.6 | Somewhere beneath, beyond, near it is, of course, an ear poking up from the ground. |
| 0:27.5 | Yes, it sure is. |
| 0:29.3 | Riddled with vermin. |
| 0:31.4 | Maggots and flies. |
| 0:33.1 | Yeah. |
| 0:34.0 | How about you, Alex? |
| 0:35.3 | Oh, so many things. |
| 0:36.9 | And especially when I've been watching Lynch, which I have been in concentrated form these past couple of weeks, the whole world really does become lynchian to me this morning as I was walking to the studio. |
| 0:48.1 | Yeah. |
| 0:48.9 | I was emerging into the Oculus, this kind of dinosaur fossil of architecture that the three of us walked to, |
| 0:58.3 | a mall in name only, this soaring piece of bone over our heads. |
| 1:05.1 | In the dying Empire of America. |
| 1:06.7 | That's right. |
| 1:07.3 | As we prepare to ascend at One World Trade. |
| 1:10.5 | And there was a blinking light everywhere in the Oculus, flashing lights, and a garbled voice came over a loudspeaker to explain that an alarm in one of the World Trade Center buildings had gone off, but it was almost impossible to understand the voice because it was bouncing off the marble. And as I walked in this eerie, almost empty environment, |
| 1:29.8 | I passed a grand piano. |
| 1:32.4 | The piano. |
| 1:33.6 | And a man sitting at it playing a fun, upbeat, jazz piece, |
... |
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