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Legendary Filmmaker David Lynch Passes Away at 78

Hafiz Usman Aftab

Jan 17

David Lynch passed away at the age of 78. He was a talented filmmaker, writer, and artist and is famously known for getting Oscar nominations for best director in Blue Velvet, Mulholland Drive, and The Elephant Man. His family announced his death as a person and an artist on Facebook. A statement is written on Lynch’s Facebook page saying, “There’s a big hole in the world now that he’s no longer with us.”

Lynch was known for surrealism and was one of the most creative film directors in the modern world due to his eye-popping and deeply mysterious works. He was also known to combine dream sequences with strange imagery. It led him to become the master of surrealism. However, he received the Honorary Academy Award in 2019 for his long-term achievements.

Among the films that attracted large audiences were Eraserhead (1977), Lost Highway (1997), and Wild at Heart (1990), which won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival. He was an artist who enjoyed meditating and often found talking about his films complicated and somewhat mysterious, so he frequently got involved in explaining them.

“A film or a painting, each thing is its own sort of language and it’s not right to try and say the same thing in words. The words are not there,” he told The Guardian newspaper in a 2018 interview.

Lynch’s filmmaking style gave rise to the term “Lynchian.” Vanity Fair magazine characterized it as strange, mysterious, and highly slow-motion. He used music to heighten the macabre and unsettling elements he inserted into the everyday and mundane in his films.

“A great author once said, ‘Killing anybody is terrible. When he began again, a great author talked about the business of making mood through visual and audio elements and cooperation,” said Lynch.

The New York Times glided into the style: “An eye for the absurd detail that thrusts a scene into shocking relief and a taste for risky. It often grotesque material perhaps made him Hollywood’s most revered eccentric, a kind of psychopathic Norman Rockwell.”

Mel Brooks described Lynch as “Jimmy Stewart from Mars” as a young Eagle Scout. Lynch’s creator became a counterculture icon. However, the roots were already emerging from a wholesome America.

People’s Reaction to David Lynch Death on the Internet

Social media has turned into a divisive and hazardous place for some people. In a survey on this topic, the Pew Research Center found that 64% of Americans believe that social media has had a mostly negative effect on the United States.

It might be hard to argue that the internet is not perfect. However, it might be harder to tell how much impact it has. Social media has had several negative and positive effects, such as David Lynch’s death.

As the authors of the study “Grieving Online” assert, “Grief is a taboo affair that forces individuals to come to grips with their grief alone.”

People can often feel invalidated or guilty for grieving and thus choose to go through their grief alone. Because of this, things can feel even more challenging. This could amplify if a public figure died.

Most people know that they do not know that famous person, but because of the profound impact that person’s work has on one’s life, it can sometimes feel like they did. It evokes strong feelings of loss even though there is not a real connection to discuss loss.

Social media helps people cope with this complicated emotion.

Read More: Mac Miller Releases “Balloonerism” alongside short film on Prime Video

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