Ronnie Rocket is an unfinished film project written by David Lynch, who also intended to direct it. Begun after the success of his 1977 film Eraserhead, Lynch shelved Ronnie Rocket due to an inability to find financial backing for the project. Instead, he sought out an existing script on which to base his next film, settling on what would become 1980's The Elephant Man. Lynch returned to Ronnie Rocket throughout the 1980s but by the following decade had stopped considering it to be a viable prospect.
Ronnie Rocket | |
---|---|
Directed by | David Lynch |
Written by | David Lynch |
Starring | Dexter Fletcher Michael J. Anderson (Both attached at different times) |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Ronnie Rocket, also subtitled The Absurd Mystery of the Strange Forces of Existence, was to feature elements which have since come to be seen as Lynch's hallmarks, including industrial art direction, 1950s popular culture and physical deformity. The script featured a three-foot tall man with control over electricity; Lynch first met Michael J. Anderson when tentatively casting for this role and later worked with him in Twin Peaks and Mulholland Drive.
Overview
editRonnie Rocket concerns the story of a detective seeking to enter a mysterious second dimension, aided by his ability to stand on one leg. He is being obstructed on this quest by a strange landscape of odd rooms and a mysterious train, while being stalked by the "Donut Men", who wield electricity as a weapon. Besides the detective's story, the film was to show the tale of Ronald d'Arte, a teenage dwarf, who suffers a surgical mishap, which leaves him dependent on being plugged into a mains electricity supply at regular intervals; this dependence grants him an affinity over electricity which he can use to produce music or cause destruction. The boy names himself Ronnie Rocket and becomes a rock star, befriending a tap dancer named Electra-Cute.[1]
The film, subtitled The Absurd Mystery of the Strange Forces of Existence,[2] was to make use of several themes that have since become recurring elements in David Lynch's works—a write-up for The A.V. Club described the script's contents as "idealized 1950s culture, industrial design, midgets, [and] physical deformity".[3] Writing for LA Weekly, John Dentino suggested that the screenplay "reads like the source work for all [Lynch's] films, as well as Twin Peaks".[2] The film was to have featured two separate but connected worlds, another hallmark of Lynch's writings.[4] The film's art direction would have featured a heavily industrial backdrop; Greg Olson described the action as taking place against an "oil slick, smokestack, steel-steam-soot, fire-sparks and electrical arcs realm", similar to the direction ultimately taken in the depiction of Victorian England in The Elephant Man and the planet Giedi Prime in Dune.[5] Although Lynch shot his first two feature-length films in black-and-white, he intended to film Ronnie Rocket in color, inspired by the works of French film-maker Jacques Tati. Lynch planned to experiment for some time to find the right balance and application of color for the film.[6]
Background
editAfter releasing 1977's Eraserhead, a black-and-white surrealist film and his debut feature-length production,[7] Lynch began work on the screenplay for Ronnie Rocket. He and his agent, Marty Michaelson, of William Morris Endeavor, initially attempted to find financial backing for the project.[8] They met with one film studio on the matter. Lynch described the film as being "about electricity and a three-foot guy with red hair"; the studio never got back in touch with him.[9]
Lynch met film producer Stuart Cornfeld at this time. Cornfeld had enjoyed Eraserhead and was interested in producing Ronnie Rocket. He was working for Mel Brooks and Brooksfilms, and when the pair realized Ronnie Rocket was unlikely to find sufficient financing to be produced, Lynch asked to see some already-written scripts to work from for his next film instead. Cornfeld found four scripts he felt would interest Lynch, but on hearing the name of the first of these, the director decided his next project would be The Elephant Man.[10]
Lynch would return to Ronnie Rocket after each of his films, intending it, at different stages, as the follow-up not only to Eraserhead or The Elephant Man but also Dune, Blue Velvet and Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me. After producing The Elephant Man, Lynch had planned to cast Dexter Fletcher in the title role.[4] Brad Dourif, Dennis Hopper, Jack Nance, Isabella Rossellini, Harry Dean Stanton, and Dean Stockwell have also been considered for roles in the film at various times; each has worked with Lynch on other projects.[11]
In 1987, after having released Blue Velvet, Lynch again attempted to pursue Ronnie Rocket. While scouting actors for the eponymous role, Lynch met Michael J. Anderson, whose work in short films Lynch had seen previously. As a direct result of meeting Anderson, Lynch cast the actor in a recurring role in the television series Twin Peaks; his first appearance was in 1990's "Episode 2".[12] Anderson also appeared in Lynch's 1990 short film Industrial Symphony No. 1,[13] and the 2001 film Mulholland Drive.[14] Lynch visited northern England to scout a filming location for Ronnie Rocket, but found that the industrial cities he had hoped to use had become too modernized to fit his intended vision.[15]
The project has suffered setbacks because of the bankruptcy of several potential backers. Both Dino De Laurentiis' De Laurentiis Entertainment Group and Francis Ford Coppola's American Zoetrope were attached to the project at different times, but went bankrupt before work could begin.[16] Lynch had stayed at Coppola's home in Napa County, California, while Coppola and Sting read the script several times; however, the failure of 1982's One from the Heart forced American Zoetrope to file for bankruptcy.[17]
Legacy
editHaving been temporarily unable to begin production on the film for some time because De Laurentiis owned the rights,[18] Lynch stopped actively pursuing Ronnie Rocket as a viable project in the early 1990s. However, he has never abandoned it officially, frequently referring to it in interviews as "hibernating".[3] The director has expressed interest in producing the film in the same manner as Eraserhead, using a small crew, building the sets himself, and living on them during the film's production. He has also claimed he will revisit the film when he is at a stage in his career "when I don't really care what happens, except that the film is finished".[19] However, in a 2013 interview, Lynch expressed the view that the passage of time—and the decline of "smokestack industry"—was making it more difficult to envisage the film, saying:
It was still really alive in the '50s and '60s, but this industry is going away [...] And then a thing happened. This thing called graffiti. Graffiti to me is one of the worst things that has happened to the world. It completely ruined the mood of places. Graffiti kills the possibility to go back in time and have the buildings be as they were. Cheap storm windows and graffiti have ruined the world for Ronnie Rocket.[11]
The Guardian's Danny Leigh has compared the script's reputation among film fans to those of Sergei Eisenstein's unproduced adaptation of An American Tragedy and Michael Powell's unmade adaptation of The Tempest. Leigh recalled having read a photocopied version of the script in the early 1990s, and felt that it "might have aged far better than Wild at Heart".[20] In an article for The Daily Telegraph, Simon Braund described the film as "an ambitious and difficult project", considering it potentially Lynch's strangest film. Braund believed that the difficulty in finding funding could be attributed to the film's abstract ideas and its unconventional title character.[21] In 2004, filmmaker Jonathan Caouette expressed interest in reviving the project, though he stated that Lynch will "do it someday".[22]
Speaking of the difficulty in attracting financing for the film, Dexter Fletcher said "I should imagine that the big money heads at whatever studio it was couldn't get their brains round it at all. It's fine for the artist to read and enjoy, but for accountants it was probably a very different proposition. But that's David Lynch all over in a lot of ways".[23] Themes present in the screenplay were revisited in Lynch's subsequent work; LA Weekly's John Dentino surmised that "it's almost as if, in the face of timid or broke producers and studios, [Lynch has] been forced to pillage his own seminal work for the key obsessions that will animate his cinema".[2]
Footnotes
edit- ^ Odell & Le Blanc 2007, pp. 140–141.
- ^ a b c Dentino, John (November 29, 1990). "Low... Dark... Strange". LA Weekly. pp. 41–42. Retrieved November 20, 2021.
- ^ a b Martins, Chris; Modell, Josh; Murray, Noel; Phipps, Keith; Pierce, Leonard; Rabin, Nathan; Robinson, Tasha; Tobias, Scott; Zulkey, Claire (November 23, 2008). "Vaporware no more: 31 lost projects we're hoping to see in the wake of Chinese Democracy". The A.V. Club. Archived from the original on March 8, 2021. Retrieved January 2, 2022.
- ^ a b Odell & Le Blanc 2007, p. 140.
- ^ Olson 2008, p. 145.
- ^ Hughes 2001, p. 90.
- ^ Ankeny, Jason. "Eraserhead — Cast, Reviews, Summary, and Awards". AllMovie. Archived from the original on January 11, 2012. Retrieved August 18, 2012.
- ^ Rodley & Lynch 2005, p. 90.
- ^ Rodley & Lynch 2005, pp. 90–91.
- ^ Rodley & Lynch 2005, p. 92.
- ^ a b Perrotta, Anthony (August 30, 2017). "Will David Lynch Ever Make Ronnie Rocket?". PopMatters. Archived from the original on April 15, 2021. Retrieved January 2, 2022.
- ^ Rodley & Lynch 2005, p. 165.
- ^ Odell & Le Blanc 2007, p. 77.
- ^ Woods 2000, p. 209.
- ^ Rodley & Lynch 2005, p. 110.
- ^ Barney 2009, p. 119.
- ^ Olson 2008, p. 144.
- ^ Barney 2009, p. 89.
- ^ Barney 2009, p. 85.
- ^ Leigh, Danny (March 20, 2009). "The view: The greatest movies never made". The Guardian. Archived from the original on March 11, 2021. Retrieved January 2, 2022.
- ^ Braund, Simon (October 22, 2013). "Five of the greatest movies never made". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on January 28, 2022. Retrieved January 30, 2022.
- ^ L'Official, Peter (October 7, 2004). "Mother of all home movies". Salon. Archived from the original on February 25, 2021. Retrieved January 2, 2022.
- ^ Hughes 2001, p. 91.
References
edit- Barney, Richard A. (2009). David Lynch: Interviews. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1604732368.
- Hughes, David (2001). The Greatest Sci-Fi Movies Never Made. Titan Books. ISBN 1840233257.
- Odell, Colin; Le Blanc, Michelle (2007). David Lynch. Kamera Books. ISBN 978-1-84243-225-9.
- Olson, Greg (2008). Beautiful Dark (illustrated ed.). Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-5917-3.
- Rodley, Chris; Lynch, David (2005). Lynch on Lynch (2nd ed.). Macmillan. ISBN 0-571-22018-5.
- Woods, Paul, ed. (2000). Weirdsville USA: The Obsessive Universe of David Lynch. Plexus Publishing. ISBN 978-0-85965-291-9.