MULHOLLAND DRIVE: David Lynch Tribute at FOMO Cinema Tbilisi
Saturday 13. June at 18:30 - 21:00
FOMO Secret Cinema, Tbilisi
This week I'm celebrating actors, directors, editors and artists who are no longer with us, but whose work continues to shape the films we watch and love. Some became icons. Others worked quietly behind the camera. Together, they helped make cinema what it is today.
I'm showing MULHOLLAND DRIVE as part of In Memoriam Week in honour of David Lynch. Few filmmakers created worlds as singular as his. From ERASERHEAD and BLUE VELVET to TWIN PEAKS and beyond, Lynch spent decades expanding the possibilities of what cinema could be.
David Lynch | 2001 | USA / France | 2h27m | Presented in the original English audio
I still remember seeing MULHOLLAND DRIVE for the first time and realising I had absolutely no idea where it was going. 20 years later, nothing has changed.
It begins like a Hollywood fairy tale. A hopeful young actress arrives in Los Angeles chasing the dream of movie stardom. At the same time, a mysterious woman survives a car crash and finds herself wandering the city with no memory of who she is. Their paths cross, a mystery begins to unfold, and then reality itself starts to feel increasingly unstable.
What I love about MULHOLLAND DRIVE is that it somehow manages to be both deeply mysterious and completely absorbing. Lynch doesn't withhold information to frustrate the audience. He invites you into a world where emotions matter more than explanations, where dreams and desires shape reality and where every answer seems to generate two new questions.
The film is often described as a puzzle, but I think that's slightly misleading. I've never felt that Lynch was interested in making films that could be solved. What makes MULHOLLAND DRIVE so rewarding is how it changes every time you watch it. New details emerge. Connections appear where you never noticed them before. Entire scenes seem to transform depending on where your mind's at and what you're bringing to the film.
It's also one of the great films about Hollywood itself. Not the glamorous version sold to tourists a la LA LA LAND, but the strange psychological landscape that exists beneath it. A city built on dreams, reinvention, fantasy, ambition, and disappointment. Lynch captures Los Angeles as both a real place AND a state of mind.
More than twenty years after its release, MULHOLLAND DRIVE remains one of the defining films of the twenty-first century. Strange, beautiful, funny, unsettling, romantic, and impossible to forget. Every time I return to it, I find something new waiting for me..
FOOD AND DRINK POLICY: FOMO Cinema Lounge Bar opens 1 hour before the first screening of the day and closes at 02:00,.serving a wide selection of beer, wine, cocktails, and non-alcoholic refreshments including coffee and tea, as well as fresh hot popcorn! Outside food is allowed in the bar but not in the cinema. No alcohol from outside allowed. All guests are invited to arrive early and stay late!
LOCATION: FOMO Secret Cinema, Bazari Orbeliani, Tbilisi. A five minute walk from Liberty Square metro.
HOW TO FIND FOMO: Enter Bazari Orbeliani via Atoneli St above Carrefour and take the stairs on your left to Level 1. Signage on the door. You can also check our Instagram story highlights for a video showing exactly how to find us: https://www.instagram.com/s/aGlnaGxpZ2h0OjE3OTMzMTA2Mjk0MDI5MjM1
FOMO Secret Cinema • Bazari Orbeliani, 0105 Tbilisi, Georgia