Thanks Ross! The last cinematic contribution (for theaters and premium cable channels) by director David Lynch to this day, not counting Twin Peaks: The Return (2017), which technically was a very long movie rather than a series. Oddly enough, Inland Empire never made it to cable TV around here, the only film he ever made that did not. Still not available to this day. I was fortunate enough to download a number of long segments and clips back in the 2010s and in 2020 and read reviews and analyses about the film, right down to the meaning behind his use of the color blue. But still not the same as actually seeing the entire film, which I never have. But it is true, the film is very, very dark and wonderfully surreal ... the footage used here worked well with the Bauhaus music like a charm. Some people have told me this song by Kill Switch ... Klick is the best Bauhaus cover ever done. I still think 'Muscle In Plastic' is one of my favorites, including the raw version by Bauhaus, it almost sounds like Talking Heads.
Very dark and disturbing video, which matches the music perfectly.
Thanks Ross! The last cinematic contribution (for theaters and premium cable channels) by director David Lynch to this day, not counting Twin Peaks: The Return (2017), which technically was a very long movie rather than a series. Oddly enough, Inland Empire never made it to cable TV around here, the only film he ever made that did not. Still not available to this day. I was fortunate enough to download a number of long segments and clips back in the 2010s and in 2020 and read reviews and analyses about the film, right down to the meaning behind his use of the color blue. But still not the same as actually seeing the entire film, which I never have. But it is true, the film is very, very dark and wonderfully surreal ... the footage used here worked well with the Bauhaus music like a charm. Some people have told me this song by Kill Switch ... Klick is the best Bauhaus cover ever done. I still think 'Muscle In Plastic' is one of my favorites, including the raw version by Bauhaus, it almost sounds like Talking Heads.
@@mikemunrowsretro8973 Speaking of which, "Bela Lugosi's Dead" would be a good project.