Ever since he shocked and puzzled the world with Eraserhead in 1977, David Lynch cultivated a reputation as one of cinema’s most enigmatic yet visionary filmmakers. Striking visuals, perplexing plots, ...
Which is just one reason why there will never be another David Lynch. A movie like this would have ended most directors' careers, but he made the most surreal independent movie ever, and it endeared ...
Henry Spencer is a hapless factory worker on his vacation when he finds out he's the father of a hideously deformed baby. He moves in with his unhappy malcontent girlfriend, and the new parents ...
In Eraserhead, Henry Spencer (Jack Nance) finds out he is becoming a father and upon the child's birth, he notices that the baby is deformed. As he tries to raise the newborn in an industrial ...
Eraserhead featured Jack Nance as Henry Spencer, Charlotte Stewart as Mary X, Jeanne Bates as Mrs. X, Allen Joseph as Mr. X, and Jean Lange as Grandmother. The story follows Henry Spencer ...
Look no further than the high contrast cover photo of Benjamin Booker’s latest to know that there’s a new sheriff in town.
Despite its indecipherable reputation, Eraserhead actually has a deceptively simple plot: Henry Spencer (Jack Nance, rocking an I-just-stuck-my-hand-in-an-electrical-socket hairdo) lives in a ...
It's hard to believe that David Lynch was in a six-year struggle to make Eraserhead on a piffling ... performance as the frustrated father, Henry, has become a period piece. With his trademark ...
In 1977, he made his first feature-length film, Eraserhead, a black and white, surrealist body horror which follows Henry Spencer as he navigates a strange and gloomy industrial landscape filled ...
His feature debut, Eraserhead (1977), became a cult phenomenon ... Lynch’s feature debut is a surrealist nightmare about Henry Spencer (Jack Nance), a man grappling with his anxieties over ...