

Questions fans have asked regard whether or not the deleted and extended scenes were cleaned up to improve color and remove scratches, etc. The MGM special edition DVD boasts a “stunning new transfer supervised by David Lynch, with upgraded picture and sound.” The Shout! Factory Blu-ray appears to be the same transfer with an update to support 1080p High Definition. “Specific Spontaneity: Focus on David Lynch” Featurette.“Dell’s Lunch Counter” Extended Interviews.“Love, Death, Elvis, & OZ: The Making of Wild At Heart” Featurette.Still, referencing my copy of the 2004 MGM Home Entertainment “Special Edition” DVD of “David Lynch’s Wild At Heart” (title from cover), many of the special features on Shout! Factory’s release were already included there. It was released by e-mail on May 16 th, 2018. The original release date was set for May 22 nd.Īlso, those who pre-ordered the disc from Shout! Factory received a poster of the cover art. Those who ordered the disc before May 16 th directly from Shout Factory will be receiving a corrected re-issue of the disc before that date. This article is specific to the new Blu-ray edition, which has had its street release pushed back to August 21st. This Shout! Factory Blu-ray edition also includes a brand new interview with novelist Barry Gifford, which will be discussed here. It includes the special feature of 75-plus minutes of deleted and extended scenes, which have not been on any officially accessible edition since the rare Lime Green box and Twilight Time DVD editions. This special edition Wild At Heart Blu-ray by Shout! Factory was announced at the end of January 2018, just a few months after the finale of Twin Peaks: The Return. It has been well-analyzed over the years, a film made in the years of Nicholas Cage’s best one-liners and during Lynch’s indeterminable period pieces-the fifties or the nineties, the future or the past? Special Agent Chester Desmond in Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me. Chris Isaac’s most famous song, “Wicked Game,” a perfect bridge from Lynch’s use of Roy Orbison’s “In Dreams” in Blue Velvet, would premiere here only a few years before Isaac’s performance as F.B.I. Elvis had a presence in more than one of these. Originally released in 1990, it would usher in a decade of rebel love with big soundtracks, directors, and screenplays to match- True Romance, Natural Born Killers, Love and a. Wild At Heart, David Lynch’s rainbow-infused Romeo and Juliet on an ultra-sexed, mega-violent road trip through Southern Gothic Oz, where the Wicked Witch of the West threatens true love, but Glenda the Good Witch rewards it all to a soundtrack of heavy metal, big band jazz, and rockabilly.
