The contrasting 'blue velvet' subconscious is, in contrast, one of the most attractive and hardly described aspects of human behavior. What is more interesting than mere subconscious is the concept of a darker, more repressive aspect. Many of them do not admit that they exist in it. In the movie "Blue Velvet" by David Lynch, the director attempted to explore the psychology of a young man named Jeffrey Beaumont, especially the first dark face and his "good" face in his life. Collision between.
The opening scene of David Lynch's blue velvet depicts the theme of the whole movie. In this sequence, he uses a pattern to present a looking image to the viewer, then intercepts that image and compares them. The first shot of the rose of the fence and the title track "Blue Velvet" (Lumberton) are identified as a typical suburban town. The camera starts with a blue sky, the birds last long, jump over and lean back to a bright red rose above a bright white fence
This brings us a blue velvet. Eraserhead and The Elephant Man have been in tune, Blue Velvet sees the American culture as a true focus, a movie that cuts voyeurism and violent women at first glance. The dirty abdomen community on the outskirts of the movie, the cry of Laura Dern, and the reversal of the prototype of that classic black movie. Blue velvet has influenced passionate support and harsh criticism. Roger Albert criticized Lynch especially that Isabella Rossellini's role is completely disgusted, and he was dissatisfied with the movie. The doctor surprised him and reassessed him, but he never really appreciated the blue velvet.