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David Lynch’s films, particularly his humor, are considered asemic—meaning they function as a form of writing or art that has no specific semantic meaning, allowing viewers to interpret its "meaning" freely. Instead of relying on a coherent, logical narrative to deliver jokes, Lynch uses a "film language" of surreal images, erratic sounds, and disquieting scenarios that feel emotionally or dreamlike "right" while defying rational explanation. [1, 2, 3]
Here is how Lynch’s movies and humor function in an asemic way:
1. Humor as Deconstruction (Breaking the Narrative)
Lynch uses humor not for entertainment, but as a deconstruction tool to break the automatic, logical perception of a scene, creating "anxious viewing". [1]
- The "Creepy-Funny" Mix: Lynch mixes "sublime" and "base" elements, such as in Blue Velvet, where a violent, menacing scene is punctuated by Frank Booth's absurd, infantile behavior, making the viewer laugh at what they should fear.
- Juxtaposition of Discourses: In Twin Peaks, Agent Cooper is shown bleeding to death while an elderly, slow-moving waiter provides polite service, balancing intense trauma with absurdist sitcom-style comedy. [1, 2, 3]
2. Asemic Humorous Tropes and Techniques
- Erratic/Abjective Humor: Many scenes in Mulholland Drive and Twin Peaks: The Return are built on a "non-communicative" style, where characters interact in ways that seem "broken" or out of sequence with standard film dialogue.
- Physical Absurdity: The use of slapstick in moments of darkness, such as in Twin Peaks, where a character walks into a scene, gets hit in the face by a falling board, and wanders around in a daze while blood runs down their face.
- The "Uncanniness" of Repetition: The Mitchum brothers in The Return doing a conga line, or the repetitive, slow-motion actions of elderly men bringing coffee in Twin Peaks, are designed to frustrate normal pacing and create a strange, hypnotic humor. [1, 2, 3, 4]
3. Asemic "Signifiers" over Semantic Meaning
- The "Lynchian" Object: Just as an asemic text might feature scribbles that look like language without being language, Lynch includes "signs" that lack a clear, singular meaning, such as the mysterious blue box in Mulholland Drive or the coffee-choking scene.
- Mood Over Logic: Lynch often stated he works off feeling rather than a strict, premeditated plan, treating film as a "moving painting". His humor is a direct, visceral response to a feeling he had during the creative process, designed to elicit an "emotional extreme".
- The "Deadpan" Approach: Often, the funniest moments arise from characters acting 100% sincerely in completely absurd situations, such as the "I'm making my lunch" line in Wild at Heart, which defies logical context but resonates emotionally. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
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