Henry Spencer tente de survivre dans son environnement industriel à sa petite amie en colère et aux hurlements insupportables de son nouveau-né mutant.Henry Spencer tente de survivre dans son environnement industriel à sa petite amie en colère et aux hurlements insupportables de son nouveau-né mutant.Henry Spencer tente de survivre dans son environnement industriel à sa petite amie en colère et aux hurlements insupportables de son nouveau-né mutant.
- Récompenses
- 3 victoires et 2 nominations au total
- Henry Spencer
- (as John Nance)
- Beautiful Girl Across the Hall
- (as Judith Anna Roberts)
- The Boss
- (as Neil Moran)
- Person Digging in the Alley (long version)
- (as Peggy Lynch)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhen production on the film took longer than expected, David Lynch had to sleep in the same room used as Henry's bedroom for over a year.
- GaffesHenry takes off the wrong shoe/sock to dry off.
- Citations
Lady in the Radiator: [singing] In Heaven, everything is fine. In Heaven, everything is fine. In Heaven, everything is fine. You've got your good things. And I've got mine. In Heaven, everything is fine. In Heaven, everything is fine. In Heaven, everything is fine. You've got your good things. And you've got mine. In Heaven, everything is fine.
- Crédits fousThere are no opening credits, just a long, tilted close-up of the face of Jack Nance.
- Versions alternativesFirst DVD edition was printed in open matte format (1:1.33)
- ConnexionsEdited into The History of the Hands (2016)
- Bandes originalesLady in the Radiator Song
Composed by Peter Ivers
Lyrics by David Lynch (uncredited)
Performed (Sung) by Peter Ivers and Fats Waller (as "Fats" Waller) (Pipe Organ)
Eraserhead is the other film that excels in sound. A frankly disturbing concoction of industrial score and white noise with undercurrents of musical hall and sonorous church organ, it is almost an extra character in the film, and easily it's most prominent factor.
Yet Eraserhead is to be recommended for more than its incidentals. An impenetrable and gloomy work, what is it actually about? Who is the credited `man in the planet' who pulls levers that control giant spermatozoa? Many questions like this permeate a film which perhaps has to be seen several times to get over the initial shock of it's avant gardism. Lynch extracts the everyday and supplants it with the exceptionally bizarre. The experience of meeting a girlfriend's parents for the first time is never worse than here, where the parents in question gyrate spasmodically to the animated legs of a blood-spitting chicken. It's these scenes along with the deformed mutant baby that could lend the film the air of an abortion debate. Birth and repressed sexuality thrive throughout the film, from suckling puppies to the seductive appeal of the `beautiful girl across the hall' and a mother-in-law that gets too close for comfort. I guess the entire film could be a man's mental breakdown when faced with the premature responsibilities of marriage and fatherhood. Though to be honest I couldn't even begin to imagine what it's really all about.
Encroaching blackness fills every scene, where lights are intermittent at best, and at worse fail completely. Often sets particularly the bedroom when `Mary X' is feeding the child are like prison cells. Two of the most eerie segments involve a title-explaining dream (?) where Henry's (Nance's) head is carved into pencil rubbers and an unsettling musical number from the `lady in the radiator'. This is the same lady with two candyfloss-like lumps on her cheeks that alternates her stage appearances between stamping on giant sperm to singing with religious convictions.
Direction and cinematography are brilliant throughout, though the climax is the ultimate extension of a film that borders on darker, extremely unpleasant aspects of reality. I took a girl to see this film once, where the conclusion formed the final straw in what could be seen as a cycle of repellent imagery. I wonder why I never saw her again?
- The_Movie_Cat
- 29 janv. 2000
- Permalien
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Labyrinth Man
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 100 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut mondial
- 25 700 $US
- Durée1 heure 29 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Mono(original release)
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1