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Mulholland Drive

Original title: Mulholland Dr.
  • 2001
  • R
  • 2h 27m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
407K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
467
37
Naomi Watts in Mulholland Drive (2001)
Trailer for Mulholland Drive
Play trailer1:26
4 Videos
99+ Photos
Psychological DramaPsychological ThrillerShowbiz DramaSuspense MysteryTragedyDramaMysteryThriller

After a car wreck on Mulholland Drive renders a woman amnesiac, she and a Hollywood-hopeful search for clues and answers across Los Angeles in a twisting venture beyond dreams and reality.After a car wreck on Mulholland Drive renders a woman amnesiac, she and a Hollywood-hopeful search for clues and answers across Los Angeles in a twisting venture beyond dreams and reality.After a car wreck on Mulholland Drive renders a woman amnesiac, she and a Hollywood-hopeful search for clues and answers across Los Angeles in a twisting venture beyond dreams and reality.

  • Director
    • David Lynch
  • Writer
    • David Lynch
  • Stars
    • Naomi Watts
    • Laura Harring
    • Justin Theroux
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    407K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    467
    37
    • Director
      • David Lynch
    • Writer
      • David Lynch
    • Stars
      • Naomi Watts
      • Laura Harring
      • Justin Theroux
    • 2.2KUser reviews
    • 258Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 50 wins & 61 nominations total

    Videos4

    Mulholland Drive
    Trailer 1:26
    Mulholland Drive
    Remembering David Lynch
    Clip 1:46
    Remembering David Lynch
    Remembering David Lynch
    Clip 1:46
    Remembering David Lynch
    'Mulholland Drive' | Anniversary Mashup
    Clip 1:34
    'Mulholland Drive' | Anniversary Mashup

    Photos848

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    Top cast81

    Edit
    Naomi Watts
    Naomi Watts
    • Betty Elms…
    Laura Harring
    Laura Harring
    • Rita
    • (as Laura Elena Harring)
    • …
    Justin Theroux
    Justin Theroux
    • Adam
    Jeanne Bates
    Jeanne Bates
    • Irene
    Dan Birnbaum
    Dan Birnbaum
    • Irene's Companion
    Randall Wulff
    Randall Wulff
    • Limo Driver
    • (as Scott Wulff)
    Robert Forster
    Robert Forster
    • Detective McKnight
    Brent Briscoe
    Brent Briscoe
    • Detective Domgaard
    Maya Bond
    • Aunt Ruth
    Patrick Fischler
    Patrick Fischler
    • Dan
    Michael Cooke
    Michael Cooke
    • Herb
    Bonnie Aarons
    Bonnie Aarons
    • Bum
    Michael J. Anderson
    Michael J. Anderson
    • Mr. Roque
    Joseph Kearney
    Joseph Kearney
    • Roque's Manservant
    Enrique Buelna
    • Back of Head Man
    Richard Mead
    • Hairy-Armed Man
    Sean Everett
    Sean Everett
    • Cab Driver at LAX
    • (as Sean E. Markland)
    Ann Miller
    Ann Miller
    • Coco
    • Director
      • David Lynch
    • Writer
      • David Lynch
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews2.2K

    7.9407.1K
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    Summary

    Reviewers say 'Mulholland Drive' is a surreal, complex film by David Lynch, exploring identity, dreams, and Hollywood's dark side. Its nonlinear narrative, dreamlike atmosphere, and enigmatic storytelling are often praised. Lynch's meticulous detail, symbolism, and Angelo Badalamenti's haunting score contribute to its mesmerizing quality. Naomi Watts and Laura Harring's performances are highlighted for depth and emotional resonance. However, its abstract nature and open-ended conclusion have divided opinions, with some finding it brilliant and others confusing or unsatisfying.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    8ccthemovieman-1

    Another Strange-But-Fascinating Film From That Strange Director

    Wow, what a strange film. It's a David Lynch movie so it's no surprise that it is weird.

    I defy anyone to totally explain everything in this film. I can't be done. After some research following my second viewing of this film, I pretty much know most of the story but on a first look, and with no aid from other reviewers or outside help, it is hard to figure things out. So, if you're in that boat and was confused, don't feel bad; that's normal. Let me just say the key to the film is Naomi Watts' character.

    At any rate, I find the film fascinating. I love the wonderful visuals and rich colors and find each character in this movie really different and fun to watch. The camera-work is excellent and the music is creepy, a la Lynch's "Blue Velvet." There also are some good sound effects to help some of the dramatic scenes. In all, it's very well scored.

    Like Lynch's "Twin Peaks" television series, this was a film in which the end was pieced together afterward since Lynch thought this film was going to be a long, drawn-out TV series. When that didn't happen, he pieced at the last minute this ending. That may account for some of the confusion at the end and the lack of explanations concerning characters we see earlier in the film but who mysteriously disappear.

    The theme of the story, supposedly, is a negative comment about Hollywood and what it does to people, especially those whose dreams of being an actor are crushed.

    Both Watts and the other leading lady, Laura Eleana Harring, are very interesting to watch, especially in their celebrated lesbian sex scene. Looks- wise, both women were chameleons, looking average at times, stunning at other times.

    I enjoyed this movie more on the second viewing than the first. It's not just a curiosity piece; it's a very intriguing movie.....just don't feel stupid if you can't make sense of a few things.
    9KnightLander

    Possibly Lynch's best; brilliant, enigmatic, and masterfully filmed

    Originally filmed in 1999 as a TV pilot, "Mulholland Dr." was rejected. The next year, David Lynch received money to film new scenes to make the movie suitable to be shown in theaters. He did so - and created one of the greatest, most bizarre and nightmarish films ever made.

    The film really doesn't have main characters, but if there were main characters, they would be Betty (Naomi Watts) and Rita (Laura Elena Harring). Betty is a perky blonde who's staying in her aunt's apartment while she auditions for parts in movies. She finds Rita in her aunt's apartment and decides to help her. You see, Rita's lost her memory. She has no clue who she is. She takes her name, Rita, from a "Gilda" poster in the bathroom. So the two set out to discover who Rita really is.

    David Lynch has been known for making some weird movies, but this film is the definition of weird. It's bizarre, nightmarish, and absolute indescribable. It's like a dream captured on film. By the 100-minute point, the film has become extremely confusing - but if you've been watching closely, it will make perfect sense. Having watched the movie and then read an article on the Internet pointing out things in the film, I now understand the movie completely.

    The acting is very good. Watts is terrific. Justin Theroux is very good as a Hollywood director facing problems with the local mob. The music is excellent. Angelo Badalamenti delivers one of his finest scores. And the directing - hah! David Lynch is as masterful a filmmaker as ever there was.

    Is this your type of film? Well, that depends. You should probably view more of Lynch's work before watching this movie. You'll need to be patient with the film, and probably watch it a second time to pick up the many clues Lynch has left throughout the movie. For Lynch fans, this is a dream come true.

    "Mulholland Dr." is a masterpiece. It's brilliant, enigmatic, and masterfully filmed. I love it.
    8drarthurwells

    Mulholland Drive - Lynch's cinematic art - reality vs. fantasy

    Lynch loves to realistically portray logical sequences interspersed by fantasy diversions, which entrances but confuses the viewer. Blue Velvet is his best film, and works well because of its overall logical coherency spiced up by fantastic deviations from the norm (the fantasy element of the film). This technique reminds me of Fellini's 8 1/2, where fantasy was often interspersed with a logical and coherent plot.

    Mulholland Drive starts off logically but then gradually abandons logical coherence as dream-like (but realistically presented) sequences are brought into the plot. Then there is a shift in the plot, from the fantasy of the first part, to the reality of the second part where roles and identities are reversed and reality reigns.

    Lynch's genius is in his artistic slight of hand where he presents a fantasy scene realistically, sucking the viewer in to expecting a meaningful depiction, then upending these expectations in shocking the viewer with the fantastic elements of the scene. I can imagine Lynch laughing in the background as he plays his joke on the viewer.

    The film Holy Motors presents pure fantasy in nonsensical and unrelated sequences, and is bad art. Mulholland Drive has enough organization and structure, with more skillfully accomplished fantasy, to qualify it as good art.

    Naomi Watts gives us an outstanding performance - better than the typical "Best Actress" Oscar award winner's performance in the last 20 years. Watts usually gets roles that don't allow her to display her considerable acting skills, but this role does, and she more than meets the challenge.

    The plot is secondary for Lynch since cinematic art is his focus. However, the movie is totally baffling unless you have some guidelines. Basically Mulholland drive is the story of a young girl who comes to Hollywood with high hopes of becoming an actress. The film is told in two parts. My interpretation is that the first (Watts as Betty) part is psychotic delusions of the young girl as she reconstructs her past leading up to the promise of a brilliant acting career. This is presented as reality and the viewer has no idea it is false. The shift to the second (Watts as Diane) part shows some shifting of roles, and depicts the true story whereby the young girl fails to become an major actress. Her identity is valid, as Diane, in the second part showing her dismal failure, while Rita of the first delusional part becomes Camilla in the second reality part.

    Naomi Watts thus plays two roles with different identities, in part one and in part two. The two parts are cued by the change in her name from the delusional Betty (part I) to the real Diane (part II). In a clever signal of this personality change, the waitress at Winkie's is named Diane when Betty and Rita go to eat there in the first fantasy part, while this same waitress becomes Betty when Watts as Diane goes to Winkie's in the real second part.

    The plot shift from fantasy to reality mirrors the high hopes and aspirations as fantasy (Part I as Betty) and dismal failure as reality (Part II as Diane), that happens so often as young would-be performers seek fame in Hollywood but end up as failures.
    10orangecatdancing

    love lynch, or hate lynch, admit he's a master

    "twin peaks" and "blue velvet" have always been two of my favourite pieces of film-making, and even though past films by lynch have been slightly disappointing for me they have always been worth watching a number of times. to be pretentious, lynch can be like a good wine - he must be savoured and mulled over. but in the end you must make up your own mind about what you have seen, for lynch never gives you the full answers.

    many people will walk out of "mulholland drive" possibly wanting to throttle themselves over the mind-bending visual jigsaw puzzle that has just unfolded before them. but there is a twisted logic to this film, you just have to look for the clues. betty (naomi watts) arrives in hollywood, doe-eyed and in search of stardom. she then finds an amnesiac in her bathroom who has escaped from an attempted murder on mulholland drive. together they try to uncover the secrets behind the amnesiac's life. this all leads to a club called silencio, where a blue box will reveal all. and that is when the film throws everything out the window. people we thought we knew are entirely different people altogether... is it a dream? a reminiscence about life's previous escapades? you will either love this film or hate it. david lynch always draws such extreme reactions from his viewers. but as his universe itself is always about extremes, it is fitting that his films provoke such reactions.

    It is best to look at this film thematically, rather than as a straight-forward narrative. and appreciate the fact that lynch is a film-maker who will still let you draw your own conclusions. he has had many imitators as of late, particularly in "vanilla sky", where a mind-bending film decides to give you all the answers in the last rushed five minutes, and you will probably forget about that film as soon as you walk out of the cinema. mulholland drive will haunt you.
    9bk753

    Sheer brilliance... but

    I feel it's hypocritical to call a movie a "masterpiece" (which this is), while at the same time slapping it a bit for the very essence of what it is and tries to achieve... but that's what keeps this from being a "10" for me. Because, after watching and then exhaustingly reading about the film (and understanding more about it that way), it's pretty obvious that many/most people won't "get it" fully the first time... and that detracts a little... even though the complexities are what ultimately makes it great. Does that make sense?

    It's a Catch-22. You can't KNOW about it before you start... that would ruin the presentation... and yet there's a very legit chance you won't fully understand it either if you go in cold. It needs either a 2nd viewing, or the post-movie research to understand (if you're willing to do that, and even if you DO, you're going to want to watch it again anyway). All the clues are there and it all makes sense, once you know. But it is so intentionally deceptive, it's hard to know what you don't know.

    But it's brilliant, artistic, evocative, and clever. It slaps hard at Hollywood and the dream machine, and the disillusionment of aspiration. There is quite simply nothing like it. It has been called "the best film of the 21st Century," and I won't dispute that. But it IS hard to follow and understand and demands more of the viewer than almost any film I've ever seen. So I'd say watch it, draw your own conclusions, read about it, hear what others think and believe... and then watch it again. You will be rewarded

    But there is no denying that it is absolute brilliance, and David Lynch's crowning achievement.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      On a particularly bad day of auditioning in Hollywood before she landed the role, Naomi Watts was driving along Mulholland Drive and imagined herself turning the wheel and going over the edge to her death. After several years of getting nowhere and largely being ignored by casting directors, Watts was shocked that not only did director David Lynch meet her in person but he asked her questions about herself, and she immediately felt relaxed. She was so moved by their conversation, she almost burst into tears after leaving his office.
    • Goofs
      When Betty and Rita are rehearsing for Betty's audition, Rita can be seen reading from a script with lines for "Betty" and "Rita." However, due to the dream logic of the film, this may be interpreted as a clue to what is really going on.
    • Quotes

      Cowboy: When you see the girl in the picture that was shown to you earlier today, you will say, "this is the girl". The rest of the cast can stay, that's up to you. But that lead girl is NOT up to you. Now... you will see me one more time, if you do good. You will see me... two more times, if you do bad. Good night.

    • Crazy credits
      Credits have the movie director's name as 'Bob Booker' (not 'Brooker' as we hear). Furthermore, many of the characters' names are simply not mentioned at all during the course of the film (Billy Deznutz, Joe Messing, Bondar, etc.) but their character's names are all listed in the closing credits.
    • Alternate versions
      Some scenes were deleted to shorten the running time of the movie. Some of the missing scenes are:
      • An additional scene of the detectives McKnight and Domgaard in the police station talking about the car crash the previous night on Mulholland Drive.
      • A full scene of dialog with the hit man Joe and the pimp Billy in Pinky's Hot Dog stand with Joe asking about information on the missing woman and about the hot dogs served while the drugged out streetwalker Laney looks on.
      • A scene of the Castigliane limo arriving outside Adam Kesher's house where the goon, Kenny, gets out and talks briefly with Taka, the Japanese gardener in the driveway asking if he has seen Adam recently.
      • A scene of Betty arriving on the studio lot and meeting Martha Johnson outside the producer's office and Wally coming out the front door to meet her and take her inside.
      • An extended scene showing the introduction of Mr. Roque of Vincent Darby entering a large office building and taking an elevator to one of the top floors and asking the receptionist if he could enter Mr. Roque's office.
      • During the scene where Mr. Roque relays the message 'the girl is still missing' to various unseen associates, when the unseen man with the hairy arm on the yellow telephone rings his contact, the original scene was not of a telephone under a lamp with a red shade, but a white speaker phone on a bright blue table and a woman's hand (Camila Rhodes?) answering it, but cutting away before she says anything.
      • The scene of Adam meeting with the executives is longer with him first arriving holding a iron golf club demanding why he has been called away from the golf course to this meeting and Ray giving him a vague explanation to the movie he's filming. The scene ends with the Castigliane brothers leaving first and Adam yelling at the executives over them rigging the casting of the lead actress and about the film being kept locked up in the studio safe.
      • A bit scene where after the bruiser Kenny knocks unconscious Adam's wife and the pool man, he walks around Adam's house and sees Adam's wife's jewelry in the kitchen sink which is overflowing with water. Kenny then is shown breaking all of Adam's golf clubs as payback for trashing the limo and then leaves telling the gangsters in the back of the limo that Adam's not home.
      • There is another scene introducing Wilkins (Scott Coffee) who lives in a studio loft above Betty Elms's apartment where Adam phones him just before his meeting with the Cowboy and telling Wilkins about finding his wife in bed with the pool man, and asks Wilkins if he could come over to stay for a while since he has no money. Wilkins agrees, and after hanging up, he yells at his dog crouched in a corner about relieving himself all over the place.
    • Connections
      Edited into Zaum - Andare a parare: Apparire/sparire, essere/riessere: il trucco dell'anima e i fuochi d'artificio dell'immortalità (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Sixteen Reasons
      Written by Doree Post and Bill Post

      Performed by Connie Stevens

      Courtesy of Warner Bros. Records Inc.

      By Arrangement with Warner Special Products

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    Production art
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    FAQ23

    • How long is Mulholland Drive?Powered by Alexa
    • What actually happens in Mulholland Drive, and when?
    • What are the answers to David Lynch's clues?
    • Is Diane in "Mulholland Dr." a call girl?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 19, 2001 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Sueños, misterios y secretos
    • Filming locations
      • 1016 West El Segundo Boulevard, Gardena, California, USA(Winkies restaurant scenes)
    • Production companies
      • Les Films Alain Sarde
      • Asymmetrical Productions
      • Babbo Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $15,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $7,220,243
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $587,591
      • Oct 14, 2001
    • Gross worldwide
      • $20,391,793
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 27 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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