Lost Highway review

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A funny thing happens as you travel down David Lynch's Lost Highway. During a fight, a man falls heavily onto the edge of a marble table, which drives deep into his brain, almost splitting his head in two. Blood pools around his bisected noggin, and yet your first instinct as you watch this fatal scene is to chuckle nervously. It's absurd, so much so that you can't help wanting to titter at the strangeness of the moment - and, of course, this is a typically Lynchian thing - - forcing you to laugh at the outlandishness of life even as you gag on its horror.

Attempting to rationalise the plot of Lost Highway is an exercise in futility. You can't make sense of it on a traditionally logical level, because it was never intended to be logical. As Lynch has explained, his movie is there to be understood intuitively, if at all: "These days, most films are pretty easily understood, and so people's minds stop working."

A splendid resurgence for Lynch, and his blackest film to date. With barely a trace of humour, lashings of menace and a decidedly non-linear approach, Lost Highway isn't going to win him any new fans. But those who stick with it will discover a lovingly made, consistently intriguing journey into the human psyche.

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