David Lynch's Blue Velvet
Title: David Lynch's Blue Velvet
Category: Literature / Novels | Words: 1665 | Pages: 7.1 (approximately 235 words/page)
David Lynch's Blue Velvet
David Lynch's Blue Velvet
David Lynch’s Blue Velvet is an exploration of things above and below the surface. This surface is really a borderline between not only idyllic suburban America and the dark, perverted corruption that lies underneath but also between good and evil, conscious and subconscious, dream and reality. Although this division seems quite rigid and clean-cut some of the most important implications of the film stem from the transgressions of these borderlines.
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showed last 75 words of 1665 total
on a bench in a peaceful, sunny park. The perverted eroticism that used to ooze from her pores is all gone, replaced by the appearance of a caring, loving mother. There is, however, deep sadness in her eyes as we hear the last lines of her song—“and I still can see blue velvet through my tears”—and we know that she will never really be able to escape from the evil in her past.
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