Inland Empire movie review & film summary (2007) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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Inland Empire movie review & film summary (2007) | Roger Ebert (1)

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Put on the watch. Light the cigarette, fold back the silk, and use the cigarette to burn a hole in the silk. Then put your eye up to the hole and look through, all the way through, until you find yourself falling through the hole and into the shifting patterns you see on the other side.

That's a metaphor for watching and making movies, and it's one way to watch "Inland Empire" -- a way that is, in fact, specifically recommended in the movie itself. This is David Lynch's film -- the one he's been making since "Eraserhead" -- and it offers you multiple ways to view it as it uncoils over nearly three hours, encouraging you to see it from all of them at once. It is, after all, overtly about the relationship between the movie and the observer, the actor and the performance, the watcher and the watched (and the watch).

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In this sense, you might say, "Inland Empire" is a digital film, through and through. Not because Lynch shot it with the relatively small Sony PD-150 digicam and fell in love with the smeary, malleable and unstable texture of digital video (where the brightest Los Angeles sunlight can be as void and terrifying as the darkest shadow), or because the first pieces of the movie were digital shorts he made for his Web site before they grew and crystallized into a narrative idea. "Inland Empire" unfolds in a digital world (a replication of consciousness itself -- hence the title), where events really do transpire in multiple locations at the same time (or multiple times at the same place), observers are anywhere and everywhere at once, and realities are endlessly duplicable, repeatable and tweakable. This is a digital dimension where, to paraphrase Jean-Luc Godard, there's no difference between ketchup and paint and light and blood: On the screen, it's red.

"Inland Empire" presents itself as a Hollywood movie (and a movie about Hollywood) in the guise of an avant-garde mega-meta art movie. When people say "Inland Empire" is Lynch's "Sunset Boulevard," Lynch's "Persona," or Lynch's "8 1/2," they're quite right, but it also explicitly invokes connections to Stanley Kubrick's "The Shining," Jean-Luc Godard's "Pierrot le Fou," Bunuel and Dali's "Un Chien Andalou," Maya Deren's LA-experimental "Meshes of the Afternoon" (a Lynch favorite), and others.

Of course, it's also a tour-de-Lynch, in which we virtually revisit spaces and images and faces (Laura Dern, Justin Theroux, Grace Zabriskie, Harry Dean Stanton ... ) that resonate with memories of "Eraserhead," "Blue Velvet," "Twin Peaks," "Wild at Heart," "Lost Highway," "Mulholland Drive," "Inland Empire" itself -- and some perpetually unfinished Lynch movie of the future. Because, in the Inland Empire, nobody can quite remember if it's today or two days from now, because yesterday and the day after tomorrow are all transpiring in the present tense. Or, as one character puts it so memorably, "I suppose if it was 9:45, I would think it is after midnight."

You probably already know by now if you're inclined to want to see "Inland Empire," which is a good thing because it's practically impossible to review in a newspaper. It has a story -- multiple stories, all intertwined and interconnected at various nodes -- but it's structured more like a web than a yarn. Synopsis is futile, but the tag line states its elemental appeal as succinctly as possible: "A Woman in Trouble."

Let it suffice to say that the actress Laura Dern plays a Hollywood actress named Nikki Grace who is hired to play the character of Sue Blue in a movie called "On High in Blue Tomorrows," directed by Kingsley (Jeremy Irons) and co-starring Devon (Justin Theroux) as Billy Side. Turns out their movie may be some kind of shadow remake of a film that was never finished because of something that went wrong -- "something inside the story," as Kinglsey describes it.

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There you have it. Something inside the story goes awry, the watch spring snaps and the works go flying in all directions, from the intersection of Hollywood and Vine to Poland to Pomona. Gypsies and gangsters and whor*s and animals appear. Blood and circuses! "Inland Empire" works -- and works spectacularly -- as a kind of fractal telenovela. Take any moment -- any shot or sequence or motif -- and you'll find it repeated throughout the film at greater and lesser degrees of magnification. Like a fractal image, any single fragment contains within it a representation of the whole picture.

As they pass before you, you recognize the familiar stock images, characters and dramatic templates -- often employed to build suspense, deliver a shock, jerk tears -- from a million other movies, especially the climactic moments in noir thrillers (like the one on TV at the start of "Blue Velvet"), melodramatic serials and soapy romances. There's the dark hallway, the shadowy stairway, the gun in the drawer, the seduction scene, the portentious expositional dialogue, the bedroom/sex scene, the ominous foreshadowing.... But here they're deliberately disjointed because the usual connective tissue has been moved, removed or replaced.

Lynch knows all stories are all in our heads; we make them up and then inhabit them. "Inland Empire" plays with our movie-fed storytelling expectations line by line, shot by shot, scene by scene, even reel by reel (pay attention to those changeover marks in the upper right). He toys with the building blocks -- establishing shots, reaction shots, POV, and especially closeups -- to get us to look at them in unfamiliar ways. It's poetry: We recognize the individual units of meaning, but the grammar and syntax have been altered.

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And "Inland Empire" is very much a movie about acting, built around a towering performance by Dern that is itself about giving (and watching) a towering performance. There's a moment, when Dern's distorted, clown-like face is actually projected onto someone else's head, which has got to be the ultimate actor's nightmare: "This is what I do: I make big, grotesque clown-faces to parrot human behavior." You'll want to scream; you probably will. Lynch has actively campaigned (with a cow, on Sunset Boulevard) for an Academy Award nomination for Dern, and for very good reasons. Not only is Dern mind-blowingly terrific, but a nomination itself would be a meta-expansion/continuation of "Inland Empire," and the performance(s) she gives in it.

"Inland Empire" opens and contracts in your imagination while you watch it -- and you're still watching it well after it's left the screen. It's a long but thoroughly absorbing three hours (perhaps necessary for a movie that continually readjusts perceptions of time), but I feel like it's not over yet. It's still playing in my head, like a downloaded compressed file that's expanding and installing itself in my brain. This David Lynch, he put his digital virus in me.

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Film Credits

Inland Empire movie review & film summary (2007) | Roger Ebert (8)

Inland Empire (2007)

Rated Rfor language, some violence and sexuality/nudity.

172 minutes

Cast

Harry Dean Stantonas Freddie

Peter J. Lucasas Piotrek Krol

Jeremy Ironsas Kingsley

Laura Dernas Nikki/Sue

Justin Therouxas Devon/Billy

Written and directed by

  • David Lynch

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Inland Empire movie review & film summary (2007) | Roger Ebert (2024)

FAQs

What is the plot of the Inland Empire? ›

Was Inland Empire filmed in Poland? ›

Quirky director David Lynch's last feature film was the 2006 Inland Empire, which fans will also be delighted to learn was shot primarily in Łódź – viewers will note several scenes shot in the Rubinstein Suite of the Grand Hotel, Manufaktura, ul. Wschodnia and the spinning mill on ul. Ogrodowa.

How much did Inland Empire cost? ›

Inland Empire (film)
Inland Empire
CountriesFrance Poland United States
LanguagesEnglish Polish
Budget$2.9–3 million
Box office$4.4 million
11 more rows

How many stars does Roger Ebert use? ›

A critic must be honest enough to admit he is that man." He tried to judge a movie on its style rather than its content, and often said "It's not what a movie is about, it's how it's about what it's about." He awarded four stars to films of the highest quality, and generally a half star to those of the lowest, unless ...

What is the main plot line of the story? ›

A plot is the sequence of main events in a story. These events generally take place in a specific order, which gives the story a specific structure. This structure can be divided into five basic elements: Exposition, rising action, climax, falling action and the resolution.

What is the meaning of the Inland Empire film? ›

If the movie could be summed up, perhaps it could be best defined as the idea that, as Vier Sieben suggested, the world was merely a reflection of the person viewing it, and the Lost Girl's dark experience produced a dark world.

Why is it called the Inland Empire? ›

The "Inland" part of the name is derived from the region's location, generally about 60 miles inland from Los Angeles and the Pacific Ocean. Originally, this area was called the Orange Empire due to the acres of citrus groves that once extended from Pasadena to Redlands during the first half of the twentieth century.

Where exactly is the Inland Empire? ›

The Inland Empire is a region east of Los Angeles, covering more than 27,000 square miles of Riverside and San Bernardino Counties. The area has a population of approximately 4 Million people.

Which country is Inland Empire? ›

United States

How scary is Inland Empire? ›

Their appearance is intentionally disturbing, it's David Lynch after all. Considered to be one of the scariest and weirdest films of all time, Inland Empire is dark, suffocating and horrifying to watch at times but even in times where the film is not scary there is a sense of dread and mystery.

What is the black population in the Inland Empire? ›

Census data from 2020 reflect how diverse the IE is today. African Americans accounted for 7.4 percent of the IE's population, while Asian Americans made up 8.7 percent.

What is the film Inland about? ›

What was Roger Ebert's net worth? ›

Ebert's personal net worth was U.S. $9 million.

What was the last movie Roger Ebert watched? ›

Roger Ebert continued to review movies until the end of his life, despite the challenges of his cancer, which inspired others facing the same disease. Terrence Malick's To the Wonder was Ebert's last review and showcased the director's iconic style and departure from his previous period pieces.

Who did Roger Ebert marry? ›

Chaz Ebert (born Charlie Hammel, October 15, 1952) is an American businesswoman. She is best known as the wife and widow of film critic Roger Ebert, having been married to him from 1992 until his death in 2013.

What is the plot of the book inland? ›

Inland (2019) is a literary Western by American author Téa Obreht. Set in the late 19th century, it follows two pioneers—“cameleer” Lurie Mattie and Arizona homesteader Nora Lark—as they commune with their personal ghosts in the harsh conditions of the newly settled deserts of New Mexico and the Arizona territory.

What is the Inland Empire known for? ›

The Inland Empire was previously known as the Orange Empire because of the vast amount of oranges and other succulent fruits that grow here. Apricots, peaches and passion fruit will become a staple of your diet.

Is the Inland Empire about anything? ›

While it does not have a 'plot', "Inland Empire" has a story. In fact it has several stories to tell, including that of actress Nikki Grace (Laura Dern), that of a battered housewife (Laura Dern), and that of a hooker working Hollywood boulevard (Laura Dern).

What is the detailed plot of Empire of the Sun? ›

Empire of the Sun is a semi-autobiographical novel that tells the story of a young boy named Jim, who is separated from his parents during World War II and ends up in a Japanese internment camp in China. It explores the themes of survival, resilience, and the impact of war on a child's innocence.

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