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TO LIVE IS TO DREAM: A NORTHWEST TRIBUTE TO DAVID LYNCH

2025 Now Playing

Celebrating the life and art of David Lynch with the independent cinemas of greater Seattle!

Find all upcoming Lynch screenings in Seattle HERE. And be sure to catch our supplemental program THE ABSURD MYSTERY OF THE STRANGE FORCES OF EXISTENCE: “LYNCHIAN” CINEMA.


Every little region of the world treasures the works of art which come to define our home in the collective imagination. We celebrate the expressions which give voice to the strange alchemy of history, environment and experience which makes each place on Earth unique. In our sleepy corner of the Pacific Northwest we have the screaming guitars of ‘60s garage rock, Hendrix, and grunge; the mystic visions of painters like Morris Grave and Mark Tobey; the immortal words of writers such as Richard Hugo, Carolyn Kizer, Raymond Carver and Tom Robbins. We also make a justifiable claim on a piece of the legacy of Bruce Lee. Yet in the realm of cinema no one has ever put forth as searing and definitive of a statement on what it truly feels like to live around here than the late David Lynch in his sprawling saga TWIN PEAKS. Despite Lynch only having lived in the state of Washington for a portion of his childhood, we the cinemas of Seattle proudly declare TWIN PEAKS to be the quintessential and defining work of PNW motion pictures and David Lynch as one of our greatest artists. And this year we will celebrate the totality of Lynch’s contribution to the arts by collaborating on an exhaustive retrospective of his towering body of work. As Kyle MacLachlan says as Agent Cooper, beginning to employ the logic of the unconscious while investigating the murder of Laura Palmer in the fictional North Cascade town of Twin Peaks, “I have no idea where this will lead us, but I have a definite feeling it will be a place both wonderful and strange.”

The groundswell of grief that followed David Lynch’s death on January 15 was a testament to his reach and the life-altering encounters his art offers to anyone who comes into contact with it. With his passing we have lost a conduit to a profoundly singular way of seeing the world—the vision of someone attuned to the universe at its most subliminal frequencies. Describing the oft-(mis)used term ‘Lynchian’ in a remembrance for Film Comment, critic Dennis Lim writes, “It was a sensibility at once elusive and ubiquitous, a way of seeing and sensing that applied to entire categories of experience and yet suggested something possibly different to each of us. No wonder this loss feels so profound.” The generosity in Lynch’s refusal to offer interpretation of his works leaves them open for each of us, grasping through the darkness and confusion, to find in them our own solutions to “the absurd mysteries of the strange forces of existence.”

Lynch’s work speaks to us in symbols, emotions, abstractions and dreams. Yet it always remains anchored in the specificities of human experience in the strange places and times we find ourselves in. It tells us that what we experience as reality is, maybe, just one fragment of something incomprehensibly larger — the echeloned layers of unreality that subsume our fragile consciousness. It reminds us that something within this shared experience is very, very wrong — and that the only transcendence can be achieved through love. In Lynch’s film BLUE VELVET, Dennis Hopper as the terrifying psychopath Frank Booth ominously intones the words, “Now it’s dark.” And so it is. But art lives on and we aim to keep the projector bulbs flickering in that dark with the wondrous visions which Lynch leaves behind.

Join with us this year, all year, as the independent cinemas of the greater Seattle area celebrate the legacy of this sublime artist with TO LIVE IS TO DREAM: A NORTHWEST TRIBUTE TO DAVID LYNCH. We’ll see you in our dreams.

Films in this Program

David Lynch

180 minutes

The role of a lifetime, a Hollywood mystery, a woman in trouble.... David Lynch’s final feature - and his only film shot digitally - makes visionary use of the medium to weave a vast meditation on the enigmas of time, identity, and cinema itself. Featuring a tour de force performance from Laura Dern as an actor on the edge, this labyrinthine Dream Factory nightmare tumbles down an endless series of unfathomably interconnected rabbit holes as it takes viewers on a hallucinatory odyssey into the deepest realms of the unconscious mind.

"Now it’s dark, in the immortal words of the psychotic Frank Booth—really fucking dark—and it is unmooring not to have Lynch around to help us feel our way through the darkness. Lynch was fearless, and utterly unselfconscious, when it came to tackling the biggest, vaguest, most all-consuming themes, the most primal and least articulable; he approached them more seriously and sincerely than many others could, with curiosity, wonder, and a healthy dose of sick humor. Countless artists have sought in their work to confront or to deny death, and Lynch did both, in ways that transcended the sentimental commonplace. He was committed to making us feel the shape of absence, the slow and deranging time of bereavement, and he rejected narrative closure as the worst kind of death—one that left no possibility of a lingering afterlife. There is a sense in which Lynch has been preparing us for this moment all along. We will be taking the measure of this loss for some time. For now, we can be grateful that he knew in his bones that art stands a better chance than we all do against mortal rules." - Dennis Lim

David Lynch

137 minutes

Looking for something like his own Star Wars-level sci-fi franchise, maverick producer De Laurentiis opened up his pocketbook for an adaptation of Frank Herbert’s cult novel helmed by visionary young director Lynch. The resulting epic tale of intergalactic spice wars and warrior Kyle MacLachlan’s messianic meeting with destiny was anything but a smash hit, but is certainly one of the most eccentric and eerily gorgeous would-be blockbusters ever made.

Condensed down to a lean 137 minutes, the plot of DUNE is as murky as the air during a desert sandstorm, especially for those unfamiliar with the books. But it still has more than enough Lynchian panache to be worth absorbing. Plus, it's got Sting running around crazy-haired and mostly naked, and a soundtrack by Toto! Fear is the mind-killer.

David Lynch

120 minutes

The year is 1957. A new program entitled "The Lester Guy Show" is debuting on the Zoblotnick Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC). Most of the cast is nuts, the crew is incompetent and everything that could go wrong always does. Of course, this makes the show a hit.

While mixing the sound for an episode of the second season of TWIN PEAKS, Lynch was hit with a sudden inspiration. "It just came into my head, the idea of people trying to do something successful and having it all go wrong." Following the initial success of TWIN PEAKS, David Lynch and Mark Frost were hot properties in Television. When they approached ABC with the idea for ON THE AIR, the network was eager to take them up on the offer. The show itself was a half-hour absurdist comedy featuring many of the cast and crew from PEAKS. The pilot tested very well, and six more episodes were ordered. However, by the time it came to scheduling ON THE AIR, things with TWIN PEAKS had already fallen apart, and the network was no longer eager to work with Lynch. "During that time everything was going belly up and there wasn't any support from ABC for this show at all. They really hated it." As expected, the show received poor ratings, and only three of the seven episodes were aired by ABC before they gave it the axe.

The series is a weird and sometimes upsetting take on the traditional American sitcom. It's full of Lynch's trademark surrealism with a cast of bizarre characters with strange maladies and personality quirks. In a conversation with the Los Angeles Times, one of the series' stars, Miguel Ferrer, described the show as David Lynch doing "I LOVE LUCY on acid." It stands as a testament to Lynch's low-key absurdist sense of humor and tantalizes as a fragment of lost Lynchiana.

We're showing the Lynch-directed pilot alongside a smorgasbord of other of Lynch's rare televisual oddities!!!

David Lynch

134 minutes

In the town of Twin Peaks, everybody has their secrets—but no one more than Laura Palmer. In this prequel to his groundbreaking 1990s television series, David Lynch resurrects the teenager found wrapped in plastic at the beginning of the show, following her through the last week of her life and teasing out the enigmas that surround her murder. Homecoming queen by day and drug-addicted thrill seeker by night, Laura leads a double life that pulls her deeper and deeper into horror as she pieces together the identity of the assailant who has been terrorizing her for years.

Nightmarish in its vision of an innocent torn apart by unfathomable forces, TWIN PEAKS: FIRE WALK WITH ME is nevertheless one of Lynch’s most humane films, aching with compassion for its tortured heroine — a character as enthralling in life as she was in death.

Beacon Cinema

Like a lot of ambitious artists, David Lynch was no stranger to unfinished projects. There was the DUNE movie sequel, DUNE MESSIAH; the Marilyn Monroe biopic GODDESS; the surreal comedy ONE SALIVA BUBBLE; and the TWIN PEAKS spin-off I’LL TEST MY LOG WITH EVERY BRANCH OF KNOWLEDGE, starring the Log Lady. But no abandoned Lynch project has been more discussed, by fans or Lynch himself, than RONNIE ROCKET. Combining many Lynchian thematic obsessions - haunted memories of 1950s culture, industrial design, physical deformity - RONNIE ROCKET was the film he originally intended to make after ERASERHEAD. It never happened and aspects of the project wormed their way into various other works for the rest of Lynch’s career.

Now, join us at the Beacon as we present a live table read of the original unproduced screenplay!

RONNIE ROCKET concerns the story of a detective seeking to enter a mysterious second dimension, aided by his ability to stand on one leg, in order to solve the case of missing person Ronald D'Arte. As the detective and his new companion from the Inner City, Terry, navigate a strange landscape of interconnected rooms, they are stalked by the Donut Men and a sinister group of men in black coats wielding cattle prods. Meanwhile, two mad surgeons and their sexy benefactor bring back to life the very corpse of the missing boy that the detective is seeking. Using the power of science (by redirecting all of the city's electricity to their lab) a new boy by the name of Ronnie Rocket is born and sent off to high school. Ronnie's dependence on being plugged in every fifteen minutes grants him an affinity over electrical forces which he can use to become a rock star or to destroy the planet.

Presented by a full cast of performers, but be prepared... Even YOU might have a line of dialogue!