The best films you’ve never seen are coming to The Capitol
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19.06.2023

The best films you’ve never seen are coming to The Capitol

Best Films You've Never Seen
Words by Staff Writer

The Best Films You've Never Seen Series returns to RMIT The Capitol with a night of surrealist cinema.

The double screening will include Maya Deren’s experimental and ground-breaking avant-garde short film Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) and David Lynch’s surrealist neo-noir Mulholland Drive (2001).

For the first time, both films made it into the Top 20 of the recent British Film Institute (BFI) Sight and Sound magazine The Greatest Films of All Time list.

The Best Films You’ve Never Seen Series – A night of surrealist cinema
  • Meshes in the Afternoon (1943)
  • Mulholland Drive (2001)
  • 6.30pm Tuesday, 18 July 2023
  • RMIT The Capitol, 113 Swanston Street, Melbourne
  • $10 tickets
  • Book at thecapitol.tv/whats-on

Find Melbourne’s latest film, TV, literature and gaming news here.

Meshes of the Afternoon debuted in The Greatest Films of All Time list at an impressive ranking of #16, acknowledging Deren’s contribution to cinema.

Deren directs and stars in Meshes of the Afternoon with her husband and collaborator Alexander Hammid. It is shot on 16mm in the couple’s Los Angeles home and explores its central character’s interior experience through its formal repetition and variation.

The spiralling dream sequences in Meshes of the Afternoon has cemented its place in cinematic surrealism. However, critic and scholar, Adrian Martin described the renowned work as a proto-film noir.

Previously, Mulholland Drive was included in top 100 The Greatest Films of All Time, but the recent ranking skyrocketed from #28 to #8.

Made almost sixty years after Meshes of the Afternoon, Mulholland Drive includes a similar menacing Los Angeles imaginary based on Lynch’s distinctive brand of contemporary surrealism.

Starring Naomi Watts in her career-defining performance, Mulholland Drive interrogates a Hollywood actress and femme fatale through a narrative that twists back in on itself. It explores the duality of Hollywood as a place that is both dream and nightmare.

The two films have sparked countless interpretations of their meaning and symbolism. RMIT academic Alexia Kannas will introduce the films and provide context for first-time viewers and fans alike.

“Meshes of the Afternoon is Maya Deren’s ground-breaking and influential work of experimental cinema,” Doctor Alexia Kannas, RMIT University Lecturer of Cinema Studies in the School of Media and Communication, said. “It’s a must-see for anyone interested in surrealism, avant-garde filmmaking or the art of visual storytelling.

“David Lynch’s distinctive take on surrealism is on full display in this neo-noir, Mulholland Drive. The dreamlike sequences and unexpected plot twists leave the audience questioning what’s real and what’s not. The film’s lush cinematography captures the dark side of Hollywood in a way that is both beautiful and unsettling.”

The Best Films You’ve Never Seen Series includes:

  • February – Spirited Away (2001) and Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2019)
  • March – Psycho (1960)
  • April – Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975)
  • 18 July – Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) and Mulholland Drive (2001)
  • 5 September – Tokyo Story (1953) and My Neighbour Totoro (1988)
  • 7 September – Haunted technologies screenings as part of Social Sciences Week 2023
  • November – Screening to mark the 20th Anniversary of the AFI Research Collection

Book at thecapitol.tv/whats-on.