This is a 90 second short film where a severed head on a black room type patterned floor repeats a statement about "not going fishing today."This is a 90 second short film where a severed head on a black room type patterned floor repeats a statement about "not going fishing today."This is a 90 second short film where a severed head on a black room type patterned floor repeats a statement about "not going fishing today."
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- TriviaIf you google "The Adventures of Alan R." You should be able to find this 90 second short movie.
- Quotes
Alan R.: I am not going fishing, mom.
[pause]
Alan R.: Mom.
[pause]
Alan R.: I am not going fishing.
Featured review
Whatever those adventures were - if real or imagined, conscious or subconcious or not visible, as usual with David Lynch - I liked it. I know I won't
hit Lynch's exact ideas and we can all have different interprations for the work (it's all valid he says) but my take on Alan R's adventures is one of
uncertainty about the things of life with this strange head repeating and affirming that he's not gonna fish today. That might be true, after all the face
can't move at all except for the mouth and there's another character on the side who doesn't respond to him. Maybe Alan is the one waiting to be fished this
time, I mean he stuck there doing his insane act, fighting for certainty, all is well and good but to be certain of one act alone isn't an affirmation at all
if one does not act upon it. Wait...I was supposed to help guys and gals.
So, that was just one take from this very good filmed art by the genius creator of "Eraserhead" and "Blue Velvet" - just to name a few - and whenever Lynch breaks a little from the "normal" path of movie characters, always coming to deliver an experience that is more about to think first and feel later, he can generate confusion, hatred, amazement or enlightnement. As with life, it's tough to understand but we keep insisting; his films may never explain anything but the toughest of us keep on insisting too. Why? There's always something there to be explored, analyzed, looked at in a different way and the more you exercise your mind and heart to it the less frustrated you get and the more in love for the experience. I could be putting those thoughts in any of his movies and it'd apply (not so much for "The Elephant Man" or "The Straight Story" since they're on a more natural level. It's for all audiences, world cinema at its best). And don't forget: with time, you can't always look back at what you didn't understood when younger and with life, films, books and other experiences you can get a little closer to Lynch's puzzle. It's all there for us to fix it, put it together and imagine what the final image will be like.
What makes this short a little strange and lacking in appeal is the time. Sure, for those being introduced to his films it's a great to get a minor comprehension of the artist, to create an impression and then move on to his longer films. I felt a sense of greatness and enjoyment while watching but when it came to time to rationalize it, or feel it more intensively it got something lost. What was funny wasn't later on but that's just me.
It was an adventure though not in the traditional sense. After all, if Alan R. can have fulfillment just by lying there without a body and repeating what he won't do and the figure next to him doesn't complain or support him (just staying silent), I guess we as audiences can't judge much what the other side is expressing. It's all valid and we try not to be so severe or critical of things. It's complex, difficult but it's worth the challenge, the headaches for some. Lynch always makes me come back even when the experiences isn't all that great or memorable. Maybe 10 years later I'll understand what this was about. Check it out! 8/10
So, that was just one take from this very good filmed art by the genius creator of "Eraserhead" and "Blue Velvet" - just to name a few - and whenever Lynch breaks a little from the "normal" path of movie characters, always coming to deliver an experience that is more about to think first and feel later, he can generate confusion, hatred, amazement or enlightnement. As with life, it's tough to understand but we keep insisting; his films may never explain anything but the toughest of us keep on insisting too. Why? There's always something there to be explored, analyzed, looked at in a different way and the more you exercise your mind and heart to it the less frustrated you get and the more in love for the experience. I could be putting those thoughts in any of his movies and it'd apply (not so much for "The Elephant Man" or "The Straight Story" since they're on a more natural level. It's for all audiences, world cinema at its best). And don't forget: with time, you can't always look back at what you didn't understood when younger and with life, films, books and other experiences you can get a little closer to Lynch's puzzle. It's all there for us to fix it, put it together and imagine what the final image will be like.
What makes this short a little strange and lacking in appeal is the time. Sure, for those being introduced to his films it's a great to get a minor comprehension of the artist, to create an impression and then move on to his longer films. I felt a sense of greatness and enjoyment while watching but when it came to time to rationalize it, or feel it more intensively it got something lost. What was funny wasn't later on but that's just me.
It was an adventure though not in the traditional sense. After all, if Alan R. can have fulfillment just by lying there without a body and repeating what he won't do and the figure next to him doesn't complain or support him (just staying silent), I guess we as audiences can't judge much what the other side is expressing. It's all valid and we try not to be so severe or critical of things. It's complex, difficult but it's worth the challenge, the headaches for some. Lynch always makes me come back even when the experiences isn't all that great or memorable. Maybe 10 years later I'll understand what this was about. Check it out! 8/10
- Rodrigo_Amaro
- Sep 15, 2020
- Permalink
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