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David Lynch Showed He Was Really Just a Big Softy When He Changed the Ending of This Underrated Crime-Romance

Published 1 month ago4 minute read

was Major Garland Brigg's answer to the question, "What do you fear most in this world?" in season two of 's groundbreaking, surrealist soap opera, . Although Lynch did not write this episode, the dialogue exchange could just as well be used as about the most disturbing, confounding, and upsetting forces of evil that work against the human spirit. , and one element of his work that deserves more attention is his propensity to inject a great deal of love, hope, and sentimentality into his films.

In , and many of Lynch's masterworks, even in the face of love. But there's one movie in his batch of work that suggests that Lynch's answer to the question—what if love is not enough—may not be so hopeless after all. , starring and , is a lovers-on-the-run story; one in a long and storied subgenre including the likes of , , and . When you compare the works of Lynch to , , and , it may seem hard to believe that Wild at Heart actually has the happiest ending of all these movies.

Wild at Heart is based on a 1990 novel by American writer . The premise is largely the same: Sailor (Cage) and Lula (Dern) following a short stint in prison for involuntary manslaughter. This enrages Lula's mom, played by Dern's real-life mother, , who hires a hitman to track them down and kill Sailor. The story plays out like many lovers-on-the-run films do—they run from place to place, meeting a variety of characters who pose a threat to both their freedom and their love. But sadly, In a surprising twist, Lynch found this too upsetting and changed the ending in a manner that brought an underlining, fairy-tale aspect of Sailor and Lula's romance to the surface. In Lynch's Wild at Heart, Sailor leaves Lula after spending more time in prison, After leaving her, Sailor is attacked and left broken and bloodied on the ground.

When all hope seems lost for our protagonist, a vision of (portrayed by Laura Palmer herself, ) appears to Sailor and tells him that if he is truly "wild at heart," he cannot give up on his love for Lula. The two lovers reunite, and he sings an Elvis song to her in a gesture of his undying love. , in spite of the excessively profane, violent world that Sailor and Lula have traveled through together.

While and surreal imagery, one element of his filmography that is often overlooked is his genuine love and curiosity about all forms of human connection. People assume, because the films often have dark endings and disturbing subject matter, that Lynch cannot possibly see any beauty in the idyllic suburbs of Blue Velvet or the quaintness of the town of Twin Peaks. But . The evil at the heart of his stories always exists in stark contrast to something pure, good, and beautiful in its own way.

Twin Peaks: The Return is about as unsentimental as you can get; many of the legacy plot lines are left completely unresolved or conclude on devastating notes. But . His underrated, subdued examination of regret and redemption and brotherly love, , also ends on a sweeter note, and is a tragic movie, but one that consistently of compassion and empathy extended toward Merrick's character.

A custom image of David Lynch in front of a neon-colored Eraserhead background

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When Lynch originally changed the ending for Wild at Heart, he expressed concern that the softer resolution would be seen as a move motivated by commercial prospects. But if Lynch made a turn to the sentimental, it was because the story led him in that direction, not because he wanted to placate audience expectations. Whether his stories have happy endings or soul-crushing ones, and a man who brought dreams and nightmares to life like no one else before or after could ever manage. As bleak as some of his films could be, .

Wild at Heart is available to purchase from Shout! Factory in the U.S.

Wild at Heart Film Poster

Wild at Heart

Wild at Heart: This film follows a passionate young couple on a wild road trip across the American South, pursued by a cast of eccentric characters. As they navigate love, danger, and surreal circumstances, their journey explores themes of freedom and identity in a stylized, visceral narrative landscape.

August 17, 1990

David Lynch

Cast
Nicolas Cage , Laura Dern , Willem Dafoe , J.E. Freeman , Crispin Glover , Diane Ladd , Calvin Lockhart , Isabella Rossellini , Harry Dean Stanton , Grace Zabriskie , Sherilyn Fenn , Marvin Kaplan , William Morgan Sheppard , David Patrick Kelly , Freddie Jones , John Lurie , Jack Nance , Pruitt Taylor Vince , Gregg Dandridge , Glenn Walker Harris Jr. , Frances Bay , Blair Bruce Bever

Runtime
125 Minutes

Main Genre
Crime

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