Unfinished and unrealized projects
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Gardenback: After the success he had enjoyed with "The Grandmother", Lynch moved to Beverly Hills to participate in the AFI's Center for Advanced Film. Lynch began working on a script for a short film called "Gardenback" in 1970. Lynch spent the whole year working on a 45-page script. The film was to explore the physical materialization of what grows inside a man's head when he desires a woman that he sees. This manifestation metamorphoses into a monster.
Cinematographer/director
Caleb Deschanel, who was also at the AFI at the time and wanted to shoot the film, introduced Lynch to a producer at
20th Century Fox. The studio was interested in making a series of low-budget horror films and wanted to expand "Gardenback" into a feature film. The studio was willing to give Lynch $50,000 to make it but wanted the 45-page script to be expanded. This involved writing dialogue -- something Lynch had never tried before. Lynch said in
Lynch on Lynch, "What I wrote was pretty much worthless, but something happened inside me about structure, about scenes. And I don't even know what it was, but it sort of percolated down and became part of me. But the script was pretty much worthless. I knew I'd just watered it down." Consequently, Lynch became disenchanted with the project. Some of the elements in "Gardenback" would later surface in
Eraserhead, such as its main characters Henry and Mary X.
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Dune Messiah: Lynch was in the process of writing the sequel to film
Dune (which was partially adapted from the book), but the box office failure of the first film killed the project. From the
Inner Views Lynch interview, "...I was really getting into
Dune II. I wrote about half the script, maybe more, and I was really getting excited about it. It was much tighter, a better story." From a
Prevue article from 1984: "Lynch has written two sequel screenplays to
Dune –
Dune Messiah and
Children of Dune, based on Herbert's succeeding novels – which currently await the author's approval. Back-to-back lensing is expected if the first film is a success. Although Kyle MacLachlan will portray Paul Atreides in the three
Dune spectacles, Lynch promises a different cast each time."
*Untitled animated short, 1969 or 1970: Though David doesn't remember what the film itself was about, he distinctly recalls that he was paid to produce a short film and the negatives came back from the lab messed up.
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Ronnie Rocket
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Red Dragon: Before making
Blue Velvet, the film's producer, Richard Roth, approached Lynch with another project -- an adaptation of
Thomas Harris' novel,
Red Dragon. Lynch was turned off by the content of the book and Roth subsequently took the project to
Michael Mann who went on to direct the film as
Manhunter (1986).
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The Lemurians: This was a TV show that Lynch was going to do with Mark Frost based on the continent of
Lemuria. Their premise for the show was that Lemurian essence was leaking from the bottom of the
Pacific Ocean and becomes a threat to the world. It was intended to be a comedy but when Lynch and Frost tried to pitch this show to
NBC, the network rejected it.
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Goddess: When Lynch and Frost first met, they began working on a project about
Marilyn Monroe. Lynch had been fascinated by the actress' life and met with
Anthony Summers who wrote a biography of the same name. The more they worked on it, the more they became embroiled in conspiracy theories involving Monroe and the Kennedys which turned Lynch off the project. Twin Peaks was created soon after, which has similarities with the story of Monroe.
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One Saliva Bubble: This was a comedy that Lynch co-wrote with Mark Frost and intended to direct with
Steve Martin and
Martin Short starring. It was set in Kansas. Robert Engels describes the premise of the film in
Lynch on Lynch: "It's about an electric bubble from a computer that bursts over this town and changes people's personalities – like these five cattlemen, who suddenly think they're Chinese gymnasts. It's insane!"
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The White Hotel: Lynch was attached to Dennis Potter's adaptation of D.M. Thomas' novel during the late 1980s.
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I'll Test My Log With Every Branch of Knowledge: Around the time that Lynch and Catherine Coulson made "The Amputee", he had an idea for a TV show. He told Chris Rodley in
Lynch on Lynch, "It's a half-hour television show starring Catherine as the lady with the log. Her husband has been killed in a forest fire and his ashes are on the mantelpiece, with his pipes and his sock hat. He was a woodsman. But the fireplace is completely boarded up. Because she now is very afraid of fire." This project never got off the ground, but when it came time to film the pilot for
Twin Peaks, Lynch remembered this idea and called Coulson up to appear as the Log Lady.
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Metamorphosis: This was intended to be an adaptation of the story written by
Franz Kafka. Lynch has expressed on several accounts his desire to film the story of Metamorphosis. He has even written a script. The main reason that Lynch has not filmed it is a matter of money and technology involving the transformation of a man into a beetle.
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The Dream of the Bovine: Lynch and Robert Engels wrote the screenplay for this film after
Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me. According to Engels in
Lynch on Lynch, the film was about "three guys, who used to be cows, living in Van Nuys and trying to assimilate their lives."