File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
>> Anonymous
fake u can obviously tell the strings are pulling its legs up and down
>> Anonymous
Eraserhead o Eraser Head for more information..
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
We should also consider the hideous baby, who obviously symbolizes the repugnancy of man’s greatest achievement—the creation and nurturing of new life. All of our technological progress is measured against our offspring’s ability to evolve with it; 2001 believed this too, and it also ended with images of an unusual infant, though it was an angelic force looking hopefully over the earth. Lynch’s baby is the anti-Star Child—a creature that serves the same purpose but refuses to represent our progress as a thing of beauty. In one of the film’s most unnerving scenes, the baby laughs quietly to itself, seemingly at Harry’s inability to untangle himself from his own monotony. This moment serves the same purpose as the Star Child’s thoughtful hover over the globe; unlike the Star Child, Lynch’s Baby clearly isn’t impressed with what he sees. The film’s final sequences, centered on the Baby’s growth to proportions wildly out of control, reveal that our children’s chances against our rapid technological progress are malformed at best and impossible at worst. Lynch not only lacks Kubrick’s optimism, he scorns it.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
The infamous, gory “eraser head” scene deserves particular recognition, because it is the only moment in the film when something happens that we are allowed to predict. A boy runs into a pencil shop holding a decapitated head, and the clerk at the front desk rings a service bell. We foresee that someone will answer the bell, and this realization comes like an alien experience in a film in which unrelated images are tossed at us with calculated incoherence. The scene’s payoff, when the head is sawed open and brain matter is used to make erasers, couldn’t have been predicted, but for a brief moment when we listen to the service bell ring, we are allowed to assume that it will summon someone who will come through the back door behind the desk. It’s the notable exception to the film’s rule of randomness; it suggests that if human progress destroys us unsystematically, we can at least be assured that when the entrepreneurship bell rings, an opportunist will always rush to its aid, ready to drain man of his mind.
>> Anonymous
Eraserhead was shit. It's the "lol so randum xD" of film.
>> Anonymous
>>1269227
Didn't fucking get the point.
>> Anonymous
>>1269227

You couldn't follow Eraserhead? What are you? Fucking retarded?
>> Anonymous
>>1269238
It doesn't help when your roommate rents it and then proceeds to snicker and gape at how "super bizarre" it is, then tries to get your attention to the happenings on screen when you turn away to enjoy something more interesting than his erudite commentary.
>> Anonymous
>>1269238
>>1269233
lol so randum xD
>> Anonymous
WHYS THE CHICKENS ASS BLEEDING?
>> Anonymous
makes me want some chicken...
>> Anonymous
>>1269209
I love the radiator girl!
>> Anonymous
does anyone have the gif of the sick baby?
>> Anonymous
I read somewhere that David Lynch has never once seen a review of Eraser Head that got the interpretations right.
>> Anonymous
DAVID LYNCH RULES! DEMAND MORE ERASERHEAD GIFS.
>> Anonymous
The Elephant Man was a lot like it in many ways, despite its superficial optimism- which fooled even Robert Ebert:

"I kept asking myself what the film was really trying to say about the human condition as reflected by John Merrick, and I kept drawing blanks. The film's philosophy is this shallow: (1)Wow, the Elephant Man sure looked hideous, and (2)gosh, isn't it wonderful how he kept on in spite of everything? This last is in spite of a real possibility that John Merrick's death at twenty-seven might have been suicide."

Ebert fails to recognize that Lynch's Elephant Man commits suicide near the end of the film.
>> Anonymous
i just downloaded this shit and watched it and i have to say this movie is teh gay

only entertaining at a few parts and the "deep symbolism" is all bullshit
>> Anonymous
I used to think of Eraserhead has an endurance test.
You had to get through it in one sitting before you could move on to weirder, harder to watch stuff (Begotten, anything Jodorowsky, The Brood, Sweet Movie, Salo, and so on).