L’utopia egoista nei film di David Lynch: una ribellione contro i limiti della realtà

The present paper aims to reveal how the subject of utopia is dealt with by the film director David Lynch, with a particular focus on his works Lost Highway and Mulholland Drive. Fred and Diane, the protagonists of the two movies, in a moment of deep anguish and without seeing any escape from their...

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Main Author: Lorenzo Gineprini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università degli Studi di Torino 2019-03-01
Series:Philosophy Kitchen
Online Access:https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/philosophykitchen/article/view/4085
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spelling doaj-5cb8cb44adcf4b3b9ed4b09387d7f4672021-09-13T18:46:52ZengUniversità degli Studi di TorinoPhilosophy Kitchen2385-19452019-03-011010.13135/2385-1945/4085L’utopia egoista nei film di David Lynch: una ribellione contro i limiti della realtàLorenzo Gineprini0Freie Universität Berlin The present paper aims to reveal how the subject of utopia is dealt with by the film director David Lynch, with a particular focus on his works Lost Highway and Mulholland Drive. Fred and Diane, the protagonists of the two movies, in a moment of deep anguish and without seeing any escape from their situation, build, by means of the dream, an alternative world. This utopian creation both criticizes the objective limits of reality and shows alternative paths within it. Through the dream, the two characters not only fantasize a different reality closer to their aspirations and desires (a creation which reminds Bloch’s daydream and Bachelard’s rêverie), but they also create an alternative identity. This alter ego is very far from the typical embodiment of the unconscious evil sides of personality, as theorized for example by Otto Rank in his work The Doppelgänger; instead, it is the realization of all the possibilities which the characters could not, or were not able to, actualize. As the creations of new world by science-fiction literature and cinematography, the dreamworlds of Lynch movies, shaped by the character in an act of rebellion against an alienating reality, open new possibilities of existence as well as meaning. https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/philosophykitchen/article/view/4085
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lorenzo Gineprini
spellingShingle Lorenzo Gineprini
L’utopia egoista nei film di David Lynch: una ribellione contro i limiti della realtà
Philosophy Kitchen
author_facet Lorenzo Gineprini
author_sort Lorenzo Gineprini
title L’utopia egoista nei film di David Lynch: una ribellione contro i limiti della realtà
title_short L’utopia egoista nei film di David Lynch: una ribellione contro i limiti della realtà
title_full L’utopia egoista nei film di David Lynch: una ribellione contro i limiti della realtà
title_fullStr L’utopia egoista nei film di David Lynch: una ribellione contro i limiti della realtà
title_full_unstemmed L’utopia egoista nei film di David Lynch: una ribellione contro i limiti della realtà
title_sort l’utopia egoista nei film di david lynch: una ribellione contro i limiti della realtà
publisher Università degli Studi di Torino
series Philosophy Kitchen
issn 2385-1945
publishDate 2019-03-01
description The present paper aims to reveal how the subject of utopia is dealt with by the film director David Lynch, with a particular focus on his works Lost Highway and Mulholland Drive. Fred and Diane, the protagonists of the two movies, in a moment of deep anguish and without seeing any escape from their situation, build, by means of the dream, an alternative world. This utopian creation both criticizes the objective limits of reality and shows alternative paths within it. Through the dream, the two characters not only fantasize a different reality closer to their aspirations and desires (a creation which reminds Bloch’s daydream and Bachelard’s rêverie), but they also create an alternative identity. This alter ego is very far from the typical embodiment of the unconscious evil sides of personality, as theorized for example by Otto Rank in his work The Doppelgänger; instead, it is the realization of all the possibilities which the characters could not, or were not able to, actualize. As the creations of new world by science-fiction literature and cinematography, the dreamworlds of Lynch movies, shaped by the character in an act of rebellion against an alienating reality, open new possibilities of existence as well as meaning.
url https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/philosophykitchen/article/view/4085
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