Groundbreaking cinema director David Lynch has died at the age of 78. As well as chalking up nominations for his filmmaking, he was also an acclaimed writer and artist.
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The family of US film director David Lynch on Thursday announced his death shortly before his 79th birthday.
"It is with deep regret that we, his family, announce the passing of the man and the artist, David Lynch," a statement read on social media.
"There's a big hole in the world now that he's no longer with us. But, as he would say, 'Keep your eye on the donut and not on the hole.'"
The cause of death is not yet known.
David Lynch: a life in surrealism
No other film director has created such mysterious works as David Lynch did with his world-renowned films like "Blue Velvet" and "Wild at Heart." He also revolutionized television with his hit series, "Twin Peaks."
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David Lynch: the master magician of the screen
The 1980s and 90s belonged to David Lynch, the successful American film director whose widely influential movies peaked during those decades. Despite his unusual style and the strange worlds in his movies, Lynch became a household name in the US and beyond. The inimitable mixture of surrealism and expressionism on the big screen drilled holes deep into the subconscious of the films' viewers.
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'Eraserhead': a shocking debut
Lynch made his cinematic debut in 1977 with his first feature film, "Eraserhead." A horror film with a soft touch, the movie was a low-budget production for which the money came directly out of Lynch's pocket. A surprising success, "Eraserhead" (featuring Jack Nance, pictured here) made the American director world-famous. The movie enjoys a cult following to this day.
Image: Mary Evans Picture Library/United Archives/picture alliance
'The Elephant Man': sympathy for humanity
Three years later, Lynch took to the big screen to showcase his gift for dealing with abstract subject matters again with "The Elephant Man." The film is regarded as a sympathetic study in humanity that evokes a wide range of feelings in its viewers. The black-and-white movie tells the true story of Joseph Merrick, a man living with a genetic facial deformity in 19th-century London.
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'Dune': a financial disaster
The sci-fi flick "Dune" is regarded as Lynch's singular misstep. Released in 1984, the high-budget film caved in under the combined weight of art and expectations of commercial success. Although many of the film's scenes remain fascinating even today, for the audience at the time of its release, "Dune" proved to be a bit too awkward.
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'Blue Velvet': a masterpiece
The gripping story of college student Jeffrey Beaumont as told in the movie "Blue Velvet" is perhaps one of Lynch's best-known works. With a minimal budget, the mysterious story featuring previously overlooked actors Kyle MacLachlan and Isabella Rossellini as its protagonists took David Lynch's directing to the next level. It is a stylistic masterpiece that wowed moviegoers then as it does now.
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'Wild at Heart': Golden Palm in Cannes
In 1990, David Lynch was at the height of his career when he released his fifth feature film, "Wild at Heart." The movie is a potent mix of genre elements as it tells the melodramatic story of a couple on the run. Although Lynch bagged a Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival for the film, not all critics were sold, with some calling certain scenes too brutal and speculative.
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'Twin Peaks': Lynch's revolution is televized
The end of the 1980s saw Lynch take his talents to the small screen as well, as he made his television debut with the cult series "Twin Peaks." Before long, people around the world were wondering "Who killed Laura Palmer?" (played by Sheryl Lee, pictured at center). The series proved a huge success on television and is still seen by many as the forerunner for today's bingeworthy TV shows.
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'Lost Highway': taking the plunge into the unknown
As Lynch began to dabble in transcendental meditation, his films also started to delve deeper into the depths of the human psyche. "Lost Highway" was the first of three movies ("Mulholland Drive" and "Inland Empire" followed) taking viewers on a gloomy, cinematic journey into the subconscious. The 1997 film remains a cryptic undertaking that has inspired tons of interpretations.
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'Mulholland Drive': a love story in the city of dreams
Regarded as one of Lynch's finest works, "Mulholland Drive" is another puzzle that has kept fans guessing since its release in 2001. The film explores the dark side of the lure of Hollywood after glamorous brunette Rita (Laura Elena Harring) suffers amnesia in a car crash. Rita becomes (more than) friends with Betty (Naomi Watts), who grows obsessed with finding out Rita's true identity.
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'The Straight Story': an unexpected surprise
"The Straight Story" surprised both critics and the viewing public alike when it was released in 1999. The most atypical Lynch film to date, the slow story follows a farmer as he makes his way through the United States atop a lawn mower. The movie was well received for its humane warmth and moments of quiet humor.
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'Twin Peaks: The Return': 25 years later
Fans of "Twin Peaks" waited for a quarter of a century to return to the Pacific Northwest town, when Lynch surprised them by announcing that another season would be released in 2016. With some extraordinary visual sequences dotted around, "Twin Peaks: The Return" is seen as a televized work of art. Like the original series, the 2016 production ends on a nail-biting cliffhanger.
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Lynch, the visual artist
Many people don't realize that Lynch was first of all a visual artist. He studied fine arts and produced a great body of mixed materials works, photographs and sketches. Whether people like his work or not, they can't deny that — like his films — they are impossible to ignore. Many feature images of strangely contorted humans with twisted limbs, as well as red dogs and scary houses.
Image: Bonnefantenmuseum/David Lynch
David Lynch: jack of all trades
Later in life, Lynch became the poster boy of the Transcendental Meditation (TM) community, traveling around the US in public appearances for TM. His art was featured in international exhibitions. His quirky weather reports from the 2020s became viral social media hits. He died on January 15, 2025, aged 78. The cause of his death was not revealed but he had been suffering with emphysema for years.
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Who was David Lynch?
An acclaimed artist who turned his hand to film, television, painting and music, Lynch was considered first and foremost one of cinema's great auteurs.
Lynch is best known for cinema pieces "Blue Velvet" and "Mulholland Drive," as well at the pioneering television series "Twin Peaks."
The filmmaker earned four Oscar nominations, including a trio of best director nods.
In 2019, he received an honorary Academy Award for his lifetime achievements.
Lynch's other recognitions included the crime story "Wild at Heart," winner of the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival; the biographical drama "The Elephant Man" and the G-rated, aptly straightforward "The Straight Story."
Some of Hollywood's biggest names appeared in his films, among them Kyle MacLachlan, Laura Dern and Richard Farnsworth.
'His films have stood the test of time and they always will,' says Spielberg
Steven Spielberg paid tribute to Lynch, describing him as a "singular, visionary dreamer who directed films that felt handmade," the Hollywood director said in a statement.
"The world is going to miss such an original and unique voice. His films have already stood the test of time and they always will," Spielberg said.
His close collaborator, actor Kyle MachLachlan, who starred in the "Twin Peaks" series and "Blue Velvet," also posted a lengthy tribute to the filmmaker on Instagram, stating that he owes his "entire career, and life really, to his vision."
"David was in tune with the universe and his own imagination on a level that seemed to be the best version of human. He was not interested in answers because he understood that questions are the drive that make us who we are. They are our breath."