

It's a sad and powerful moment on its own, but as soon as they leave, it's completely forgotten and irrelevant to the rest of the film.īut that's not even necessarily a criticism, because it's a great scene and we're richer for having seen it.

Cage and Dern meet Sherilyn Fenn, dying on the road after a car accident. What did it have to do with anything? Nothing! No connection to the plot, no affect on the characters. Cage and Dern meet Freddie Jones ( Dune, Elephant Man) at a bar, where he speaks in a bizarrely high-pitched voice about pigeons, and then they leave. That's pretty much it over the course of 2+ hours, the lovers drive through one eccentric encounter after another, none of which manage to effect the plot in any way until the ending.

Nicholas Cage and Laura Dern are a pair of hyper-romantics being chased across the country by agents of Dern's mother (both in real life and in the story), Diane Ladd. It's interesting compared to the bewildering puzzles that much of Lynch's later work has become, this story couldn't be simpler or easier to follow. As I said, I haven't actually read Wild At Heart: The Story of Sailor and Luna, or any of his work, so this really isn't intended to be any kind of criticism of his work, just a relation of my response to this particular film. Now, if any Barry Gifford fans read this, please don't take offense.
