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WILD AT HEART follows the troubled romance of Sailor (Nicolas Cage) and Lula (Laura Dern), two lovers who struggle to remain together even when fate seems intent on keeping them apart. In this case, fate is Lula's mother, Marietta Fortune (Diane Ladd), a desperate woman who hates Sailor and will do anything to keep him away from her daughter. After Sailor is released from prison for murdering a man--albeit in self-defense--he and Lula embark on a sex-filled, rocking road trip, aware that they are being hunted by one of Marietta's cronies. When they pull off the road in order to hide out in a small trailer park, Sailor befriends Bobby Peru (Willem Dafoe), an incredibly intense war veteran with a rotten set of teeth. Bobby convinces Sailor to help him rob a bank, much to Lula's objections (for she has discovered that she is pregnant). Sailor must decide if he wants to go straight and be there for his child or remain under Bobby's influence and risk returning to jail. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (8)

J*A*S*M 

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English The most insane romance I’ve ever seen. Even though it has plenty of Lynch’s abnormality, Wild At heart was missing something that would make it not just weird, but unforgettably weird. That said, Cage, Dern and especially Defoe deliver remarkable creations that help the film to get somewhere just below the summit of the audience’s refined tastes (in the good sense). 7/10 ()

lamps 

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English I was very worried about what David Lynch would serve me this time. From the premise, however, it seemed that this film couldn't possibly turn out to be an intellectual mess, though with Lynch you really never know. In any case, I was once again treated to a terribly weird film, with weird characters, a weird story and a downright weird and unpleasant atmosphere that lingered with me long after it was over. But weird can also mean original, interesting, engaging, distressing... And that’s exactly how I see Wild at Heart. It's another unconventional Lynch for the discerning viewer, but it has charm and excellent direction, which this time makes all the strange and mystical work for the cause. And it also has a great cast led by a young Cage, the resilient Laura Dern and the disgustingly sleazy Willem Dafoe, whose verbal seduction I'm not likely to forget, though I'd quite love to. Lynch really knows his stuff, I'm sorry that I don't have such an appreciation for his "mindfuck" gems anymore. ()

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Kaka 

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English Not a dynamic road movie, but a brutal and somewhat crazy ride, whose content I either didn't understand or is really as idiotic as it seemed to me. David Lynch himself in his prime again, serving one oddity after another. Some scenes were so insane that I absolutely didn't get them, others were completely unrelated to the story, and Lynch also edits in a terribly confusing way for my taste. ()

Goldbeater 

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English "A genuinely wacky romance directed by David Lynch with one really great head shot and numerous references to The Wizard of Oz. As the years go by, I find that Lynch's films mature like wine with each viewing, and I appreciate Wild at Heart more and more." That's what I wrote here about the film exactly ten years ago, and today, after several more viewings, including one on a big screen, I can only add that it is simply a unique achievement, both in David Lynch's filmography and in world cinema in general. [KVIFF 2022] ()

Lima 

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English "Fuck Me. Fuck Me," or the pleading of the wonderfully slimy Willem Dafoe in one of the memorable scenes in a typical showcase of madness by Lynch – you can think what you want about it, but you can't take your eyes off it. Three stars for Lynch’s poetics and one star for Dafoe’s rotten teeth and blown off head. ()

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