Lost Highway

Lost Highway

Movie |

Headache | Prison

  • :
  • Genre(s): Drama, Thriller, Mystery
  • Language(s): English
  • Director(s): David Lynch, Cori Glazer
  • Cast(s): Bill Pullman, Patricia Arquette, Balthazar Getty, Robert Blake, Natasha Gregson Wagner See all Cast & Crew
  • Duration: 2h 14min
  • Music: Angelo Badalamenti,Frank Gaeta,Elmo Weber,Frederick Howard,Benjamin L. Cook
  • Award(s): Chainsaw 1998 (Won)
    Chainsaw 1998 (Nominated) Awards List
  • Similar To: The Lost Bus, Ballad of a Small Player
  • Story:
    A tormented jazz musician finds himself lost in an enigmatic story involving murder, surveillance, gangsters, doppelgangers, and an impossible transformation inside a prison cell.
    Full Story
7.6/10
IMDb

Lost Highway - Where to Stream?

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Videos: Trailers, Teasers, Featurettes

Lost Highway - Cast

Lost Highway - Crew

STORY AND RATINGS

Story
A tormented jazz musician finds himself lost in an enigmatic story involving murder, surveillance, gangsters, doppelgangers, and an impossible transformation inside a prison cell.
Ratings

7.6/10

IMDb

AWARDS

Won
Chainsaw Award

Best LimitedReleaseDirecttoVideo Film | 1998

Best Score | 1998 | Angelo

Best Supporting Actor | 1998 | Robert

Audience Award

Best Foreign Film Melhor Filme Estrangeiro | 1998 | David

Golden Train Award

Jury Prize | 1997 | David

Show more
Nominations
Chainsaw Award

Best Screenplay | 1998 | Barry

Felix Award

Best Sound Design | 2018

SIYAD Award

Best Foreign Film | 1998

Top 10 Film Award

Best Film | 1997 | David

Golden Train Award

Best Film | 1997 | David

Stinker Award

Worst Picture | 1997

Worst Sense of Direction Stop them before they direct again | 1997 | David

BOX OFFICE

Budget 15,000,000 USD

Box Office Collection 3,756,869 USD

TRIVIA AND POPULAR DIALOGUES

Trivia

According to co-writer and director David Lynch, the first scene in the film is based on an incident that occurred in his own life. He claims his intercom buzzed early one morning and when he answered it, a voice on the other end that he didn't recognize said, "Dick Laurant is dead." However, by the time he got to the front of the house to look out the window, there was no one outside.

Robert Loggia was the first (and only) choice to play the character of Mr. Eddy because of his former desire to play Frank Booth in Blue Velvet (1986). In 1985, Loggia showed up for an audition on the set of Blue Velvet, unaware that Dennis Hopper had already been cast, and proceeded to wait for three hours, growing increasingly agitated. Upon seeing Lynch, and learning of Hopper's casting, Loggia proceeded to give an extremely profane and angry rant to Lynch for making him wait only to tell him that the role had already been cast, which remained in Lynch's head for nearly eight years as what would eventually become Mr. Eddy's road rage scene. Nearly eight years later, Loggia received a phone call from Lynch requesting his performance for this movie. Loggia was more than happy to accept.

After Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert gave the film a negative review on their show, David Lynch issued a new poster calling the thumbs-down verdict "two more reasons to see Lost Highway." Asked for his opinion, Siskel said, "I found it petty."

The house, in which Fred Madison (Bill Pullman) lives, along with most of the furniture in it, belongs to, and was designed by, David Lynch.

In 2002, director David Lynch said he had only recently realized what subconsciously inspired the film. It was the O.J. Simpson trial. Lynch said that the trial was a major influence on his mind during the stage of writing this script, which deals with a man who was accused of killing his wife. Curiously enough, Lynch cast Robert Blake to play the Mystery Man, who is a major character in the film. Several years later, Blake was put on trial for killing his own wife.

Popular Dialogues

"Ed: Do you own a video camera? Renee Madison: No. Fred hates them. Fred Madison: I like to remember things my own way. Ed: What do you mean by that? Fred Madison: How I remembered them. Not necessarily the way they happened."

"Mystery Man: We've met before, haven't we. Fred Madison: I don't think so. Where was it you think we met? Mystery Man: At your house. Don't you remember? Fred Madison: No. No, I don't. Are you sure? Mystery Man: Of course. As a matter of fact, I'm there right now. Fred Madison: What do you mean? You're where right now? Mystery Man: At your house. Fred Madison: That's fucking crazy, man. Mystery Man: Call me. Dial your number. Go ahead."

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