Isabella Rossellini: Illuminated
Film Retrospective and Regis Dialogue
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  November 4 - 18, 2006
“[Isabella Rossellini] is sometimes an awestruck little girl, sometimes a regal serenity, sometimes a bawdy beauty with a hair-trigger laugh and a taste for Grand Guignol. She’s always frank and practical, vulnerable and perceptive, refreshingly morbid and jaw-droppingly surprising.”
—Director Guy Maddin

This year marks two significant milestones in Isabella Rossellini’s film career: the 20th anniversary of her breakout performance in David Lynch’s Blue Velvet, and her entry into the realm of filmmaker. In her collaboration with Guy Maddin on My Dad Is 100 Years Old, she writes and performs a cinematic love letter to her father, Italian neorealist director Roberto Rossellini. Each of these two events underscores the ways that her spirit permeates her filmography. She has a boundless capacity to surprise us, the unsuspecting audience, with her fresh, courageous performances in a range of films. The retrospective features nine diverse selections of her work.

Although Rossellini had already been making films for 10 years, it was Blue Velvet that catapulted her into the American consciousness. This devastating upending of middle America, described by Lynch as “the sickness beneath the surface of what appears to be a very beautiful world,” sparked a furor of controversy over Rossellini’s character, the battered and sexually abused Dorothy Vallens. In retrospect, the firestorm of opinion speaks to how completely Rossellini immersed herself in the psychology of the victim—which is by turns fascinating and repulsive to watch. In one dramatic example, the scene in which Vallens wanders the streets naked and in a daze (a scene rooted in an event from Lynch’s own childhood) is terrifying rather than titillating. . . .
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