The life of David Lynch has left a mark on Hollywood, especially for those who worked with the 4x Oscar-nominated writer and director. Patricia Arquette, who starred in Lynch’s 1997 neo-noir thriller Lost Highway,
Sundance: Writer/director Alireza Khatami's disquieting diptych gazes into the violent undoing of a Turkish literature professor with a nightmarish lens.
UMG Nashville and T Bone Burnett are bringing the Lost Highway Records imprint back. The label’s first release was Ringo Starr’s 'Look Up.'
Anyhow, for cult fans, Lost Highway will do nicely until Lynch's new film - another enigma with a similar kind of title, Mulholland Drive - arrives here from its Cannes premiere.
David Lynch has saddly left this world, leaving us with plethora of projects to marvel in years into the future.
Patricia Arquette was on-camera Thursday when she found out that David Lynch, who directed her in the 1997 film Lost Highway, had died. She and the cast of Apple TV+ show Severance were being interviewed on SiriusXM's Radio Andy.
For those who may not know, Patricia Arquette and David Lynch collaborated on the 1997 neo-noir thriller Lost Highway. In the film, Arquette portrayed two distinct roles, with Balthazar Getty also being part of the cast.
Patricia Arquette was on-camera Thursday when she found out that David Lynch, who directed her in the 1997 film Lost Highway, had died. She and the cast of Apple TV+ show Severance were being ...
A serious collision involving four vehicles shut down a section of Highway 1 in Langley before the morning commute on Jan. 30. The crash occurred around 6:20 a.m. near 200 Street. Two people were taken to the hospital, as a precaution, for non-life-threatening injuries.
The site of ’20s and ’30s starlet Thelma Todd’s tragic—and confounding—death is one of the rare buildings to survive the wildfires.
Holiday commuters and transport deliveries on one of the nations busiest highways have been thrown into chaos after a truck carrying a massive load of fresh green prawns crashed and lost it’s load.
Firefighters in Florida said drivers on a stretch of interstate faced a slippery -- and potentially smelly -- mess when a truck spilled approximately 4,160 gallons of milk.