|
|
|
search movies
Genres
World Cinema
UK Premier
US Premier
Indie-Arthouse Cinema
Film Noir
UK Classics
US Classics
Australian
All genres
showcase
Now Available
Kino Hot Picks
Directors
Actors
collections
Kino All-time Top 100 rental titles
Christmas Movies
Blu-Ray High Definition
Featured Genre
Director's Cut
Actors' Studio
AACTA - AFI Winners . . . Best Picture
Oscar Winners . . . Best Picture
Cannes Classics
Members' Top 100 requested Titles
Service
Send a Gift
Contact Us
|
|
Titles
|
|
|
|
Inland Empire (2 disc set) (2006) |
<<back |
|
|
|
Director: |
David Lynch
|
Starring: |
Laura Dern, Jeremy Irons, Justin Theroux, Jerry Stahl, Cameron Daddo, Harry Dean Stanton, Peter J. Lucas, Amanda Foreman, Bellina Logan, Karen Baird, Ian Abercrombie, Grace Zabriskie, Krzysztof Majchrzak, Jan Hencz, Karolina Gruszka
|
Genres: |
Indie-Arthouse Cinema, Crime, Adult, Mystery-Suspense, Thriller
|
Origin: |
USA
|
Certificate: |
MA
|
Languages: |
English,
Polish
|
Aspect ratios: |
1.85 : 1
|
Running Time: |
180 min
|
|
|
Laura Dern stars as Nikki, an actress signed to star in a new movie - an adulterous love story - directed by Kingsley (Jeremy Irons) and co-starring the womanising Devon (Justin Theroux). But the film is actually the cursed remake of a project that was abandoned after its two leads were murdered, and so Nikki and Devon find themselves struggling to distinguish between fantasy and reality as their worlds collapse around them in a bizarre sequence of events. Inland Empire combines striking, nightmarish imagery to perpetuate Lynch's unique world view.
Special Features:
* David Lynch Masterclass
* David Lynch Interview at the Cartier Foundation
* Guardian Interview with David Lynch at the National Film Theatre
* A short interview in London
* A conversation with David Lynch by Mike Figgis
* Trailer
|
member reviews
|
1 member review(s)
|
|
|
!
20 April 2009
|
|
If you like Lynch, especially the more bizarre aspects, then this film will intrigue and perhaps please you. It is a collections scenes threaed together by coinciding characters, loose themes, and repetitve symbology. It has humour and horro in equal measure with some drawn out and bewildering scenes for good measure
|
|
100% of members found this review helpful
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|