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Blue Velvet
(1986)
In director David Lynch's polarizing,
bizarre and nightmarish film of the dark-side of life with many
strange images and scenes - his definitive and original
film presented a horrifying look at sex, violence, crime and power under the peaceful
exterior of small-town Americana in the mid-80s. Beneath
the familiar, peaceful, 'American-dream' cleanliness of the daytime
scenes lurked sleaziness, prostitution, unrestrained violence, and
perversity - powerful and potentially-dangerous sexual forces that
might be unleashed if not contained.
The plot of the film was about a returning college
student to a sleepy town who discovered a severed ear, a finding
that set him off on an odyssey to discover that "it's a strange world."
He became embroiled on the dark side of town (beyond
the white picket fence exterior), when he witnessed, first as a voyeur,
a sexually-depraved, blackmailing relationship between a monstrous,
loathsome, nitrous-oxide sniffing kidnapper and an
abused/brutalized mother and fragile nightclub singer.
The bizarre, erotically-charged
and nightmarish cult film was considered controversial, shocking,
and lurid when released. The compelling film was often criticized
for its depiction of aberrant sexual behavior, as well as highly
ridiculed and disdained as an extreme, dark, vulgar and disgusting
film, especially for its cinematic treatment of Isabella Rossellini
- director Lynch's wife at the time.
- in the film's masterful opening scene, there were
images of small-town, white-picket fence Americana (in the logging
town of Lumberton), accentuated by perfect, budding blood-red roses
and yellow tulips, a red fire-truck, children at a school cross-walk,
and concluding with a zoom-close-up into the grass finding insects
and beetles fighting to the death
The Idyllic Small Town of Lumberton - With Corruption
Lying Underneath
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School Cross-Walk
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"Welcome to Lumberton"
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A Severed Ear Covered with Ants in a Field
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- the town's clean-cut, innocent, All-American returning
college student Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle MacLachlan)
was called home after his father Tom Beaumont (Jack Harvey) suddenly
suffered a heart attack and stroke while watering the lawn, and was
hospitalized;
- during his visit (while tending to his father's
hardware store) and while walking back home, he discovered a severed
ear in the grass (covered in ants) carelessly discarded in tall
undergrowth; he brought the ear in a brown paper bag to the police
department station, and gave it to investigative local
police officer Detective John Williams (George Dickerson)
- as he took a neighborhood walk that evening, the
camera zoomed in for a gigantic close-up of the severed ear and
descended slowly into the disembodied, dirty ear - as it probed into
its depths with an exaggerated howling sound; it was a metaphor for
the voyeuristic Jeffrey, who now embarked on a bizarre journey
to discover more about the severed and decaying body part (excised by scissors)
- before returning home, Jeffrey visited the neighboring home of the Williams
family - Det. Williams was the father of a virginal, innocent
and wholesome Sandy Williams (Laura Dern) - a senior in Central
HS (where he had graduated) and the 'girl next-door'; the inquisitive
Jeffrey was warned by Det. Williams that he was to keep quiet and
secretive about his grisly anatomical find, and ask no more questions
- as he left the Williams' home, Sandy suddenly appeared
from the darkness in a bright pink dress - asking: "Are you the
one that found the ear?"; the eavesdropping
Sandy shared clues with Jeffrey about the ear, and then mentioned
how many of her father's cases involved a nightclub singer - "one
thing that keeps coming up is this woman singer. She lives in an
apartment building that is real close to your house. It's also
close to the field where you found the ear"; Sandy explained that
the woman was under surveillance - and then showed him the singer's
brick-building apartment (on the 7th floor) near where he lived
- the next afternoon, Jeffrey met Sandy outside her
HS, picked her up in his red convertible, and drove her to Arlene's
Diner, where he discussed taking a risk to find out more about
the intriguing nightclub singer, by sneaking into her place, hiding,
and observing; although she was intrigued by his daring and willingness
to sleuth and investigate, she also cautioned that it would be
very dangerous
- they devised a plan to enter nightclub
singer Dorothy Valens' (Isabella Rossellini) 7th floor apartment in a building (the
Deep River Apartments) on the other side of town, with Jeffrey
posing as a pest exterminator; the sultry,
glossy red-lipped and red-dressed Dorothy Vallens answered the door and let Jeffrey in
- during his pest-spraying visit,
a "Yellow Man" (Fred Pickler) wearing a yellow sports coat - knocked and entered,
allowing Jeffrey to steal Dorothy's duplicate pair of keys, to
let himself back in later that evening; at 8pm that
night, during a decoy-date between Jeffrey and Sandy, they drove
to a sleazy nightclub (the Slow Club) to watch Dorothy ("The
Blue Lady") perform "Blue Velvet" on stage; she was
bathed in the blue fog of stagelights, wearing a blue velvet dress,
bright aqua-marine blue eye shadow, bright red lipstick, and a black wig
- while Dorothy continued
to sing on stage, Jeffrey and Sandy drove back to trespass in Dorothy's
unoccupied apartment; as he searched for clues, he didn't hear Sandy's
4-honk warning from his car outside, as Dorothy returned home;
hiding in Dorothy's apartment's closet, Jeffrey watched through the
slats of the closet as Dorothy disrobed to a black bra, black panties,
and red high-heeled shoes; he listened as she received a phone call
(confusing at this point without any references) - it was later
interpreted as a cryptic call from a sadistic, criminal kidnapper
named Frank who was holding her husband Don and son little Donny
hostage while making her his sexual slave
- after the call, she crawled on the floor to briefly
look at a framed photograph hidden under the sofa (a picture of
Dorothy's husband and child), then removed
her black wig, walked to the rear bathroom where she stripped naked
and wrapped herself in a red towel; then, she came back into the
living room to reach for her blue velvet robe from the closet;
she sat on the sofa and heard a noise from the closet; Jeffrey
saw her rise and proceed to the kitchen, where he heard a drawer
open as she reached for a large knife; suddenly, she flung open
the closet door where he was caught hiding; she threatened him
at knife-point into intimidation and forced him to get on his knees;
Dorothy remembered that he had been her "exterminator";
she cut his face with the knife blade, turned the tables on him,
made him her voyeuristic prey, and forced him to undress in front
of her: ("I want to see you get undressed"), all the way
down to his boxer shorts and socks
Jeffrey's First Sexual Confrontation with Dorothy
(Isabella Rossellini)
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- she pulled down his boxer shorts
to the floor ("Don't move, don't look at me"), and began touching,
fondling, and kissing (and fellating?) him, and forced him to remain
motionless; she asked: "Do
you like that?" and then asked a question combining domination,
pain, power, pleasure, and humiliation: "Don't touch me or I'll
kill you? Do you like talk like that?"; responding
with nervous ecstasy, arousal, but defenseless fear, he was led to
the couch to lie down where she straddled him and kissed him, while
still threatening him with the knife
- their encounter was interrupted
by three loud knocks at the door - the arrival of Frank - frightening
Dorothy; she frantically feared the man's arrival and with the
knife gleaming above Jeffrey, she told him to head back into the
closet: ("Go hide in the closet. Don't say anything or he'll kill you");
Jeffrey watched in horror, hiding behind a wardrobe closet door, as Dorothy was terrorized
by her visitor - evil, psychotic, blackmailing, perverse and depraved
villainous kidnapper Frank Booth (Dennis Hopper) [Note: It would
become clear that Frank held her husband Don (Dick Green) and son
little Donny hostage while sexually-enslaving her. Don was the
owner of the severed - or castrated ear.]
- the next scene was disturbing, cruel, sadomasochistic,
and kinky; demanding and condescending to her; Frank quickly established
an abusive master/victim relationship over Dorothy as she accommodated
his depraved preferences; the 'dark' scene was intercut with a
frightened Jeffrey (stark naked) surreptitiously viewing the shadowy,
broken images between the slats of the distasteful ordeal from
his hiding place in the closet
- the evil, ether-addicted, drug-pushing psycho Frank
with an oxygen inhaler abusively began to terrorize the blue velvet-robed
Dorothy; he ordered her to sit in the living room across from him: "Spread
your legs. Wider. Show it to me"; she slowly opened her legs wider
and adjusted her robe, while Frank
stared at her crotch and drank his bourbon; he repeatedly demanded
that she look away from him - denying her the sight of his 'dark'
nature; he also began to inhale (helium?) gas to heighten his sexual excitement
- he play-acted being both her Daddy and Baby: ("Baby wants to
f--k. Get ready to f--k. You f--ker's f--ker. You f--ker. Don't you
f--kin' look at me!...Baby wants blue velvet"); as he began
to feel her breasts, he sucked, chewed, and bit velvet cloth (part
of Dorothy's blue robe); and then after forcefully touching her genitals,
he mounted her and started humping her with his unbuckled pants still on; he moved frenziedly
faster and faster until climaxing in a brief and brutal f--k; after
getting off of her, he slugged her again in the face, hideously
threatening her again: "Don't you f--kin' look at me"; standing
astride her on the floor before he left, he warned: "Stay alive,
baby. Do it for Van Gogh"; then he marched out of the apartment,
shutting the door behind him and leaving her crumpled on the floor
- after Frank left the scene of victimization, Dorothy
surprised Jeffrey by pleading with a consoling Jeffrey to embrace
her, touch her and further abuse her: "See my breast? You
can feel it. My nipple. Still hard. You can touch it. You can feel
it." Jeffrey responded by touching her. "Do you like the way I feel?...Feel
me. Hit me." She banged her fist into the wall, as Jeffrey refused:
"No. Dorothy no. Stop it." She continued to plead with him: "Hit
me! Hit me! Hit me!"; soon after, Jeffrey descended the dark
staircase outside the apartment building and the scene turned dark;
that night, Jeffrey experienced a nightmare of the haunting and
repulsive scene of Frank's victimization of Dorothy
- the next night, the troubled Jeffrey met with Sandy
parked outside the town's white church to describe Dorothy's nightmarish "strange
world" from the previous evening; he described how he had learned that kidnapper
Frank had taken Dorothy's husband Don (Dick Green) and Little Donny
(Jon Jon Snipes) as hostages to extort and coerce sex from her:
("Frank has done this to force Dorothy to do things for him. I think she
wants to die"); Jeffrey asked himself: "Why are there people
like Frank? Why is there so much trouble in this world?"
- in response, Sandy shared a euphoric description
of her own dream world, using imagery including robins and transcendent
Love; she told how robins would be returning to Lumberton, and
her belief that there would be trouble before their arrival: ("I
had a dream. In fact, it was the night I met you. In the dream,
there was our world and the world was dark because there weren't
any robins, and the robins represented love. And for the longest
time, there was just this darkness. And all of a sudden, thousands
of robins were set free, and they flew down and brought this Blinding
Light of Love. And it seemed like that love would be the only thing
that would make any difference. And it did. So I guess it means
there is trouble 'til the robins come")
- as the film progressed, Jeffrey was now dangerously
attracted to the overwhelming power of sex and pleasure, and was
becoming less of an observing detective and more of a participating
pervert; in the next scene, he returned to Dorothy's apartment,
to become the bad-girl's lover; he also visited her again at the
nightclub to watch her perform
Another Visit with Dorothy in Her Apartment
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Jeffrey and Frank Both Watched Dorothy Performing
at the Slow Club
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- Jeffrey also began to investigate and stake out
Frank (who also was seen watching Dorothy's nightclub act, while
fondling a piece of Dorothy's torn blue velvet robe) with his cohorts
Raymond (Brad Dourif), Paul (Jack Nance), and Hunter (J. Michael
Hunter); by following their car that night after they left the
Slow Club, Jeffrey drove up to the location of
Frank's headquarters in a brick building; he remained there until
1:30 pm the next afternoon in his car, and then drove by the high
school to pick up Sandy (as she avoided her boyfriend Mike) and
the two returned to Arlene's Diner
- in the diner, Jeffrey shared his findings (in
a flashback) with Sandy about Frank's suspicious activities during
the day; with a hidden camera, he had snapped photos of a meeting
between the "Yellow Man" and Frank, and then between and a "Well-Dressed Man" with
a briefcase and the "Yellow Man", who left and drove together to
a factory downtown; Jeffrey watched as the two climbed up on a fire
escape, as they pointed to the deadly results of a suspected drug-deal
transaction nearby outside another brick building where there was
an active crime scene: a blonde woman had two broken legs after being
tossed to the ground, and her drug-dealing male partner was hanging
dead from a window; however, Jeffrey didn't tell Sandy of his increasing
romantic involvement with Dorothy
- although Sandy warned Jeffery about his dangerous
activities, he admitted that he would continue delving into the
criminal "mystery" by returning to Dorothy's apartment ("I'm seeing
something that was always hidden. I'm involved in a mystery")
- afterwards, Jeffrey was lured back to Dorothy in her bedroom, with a rendition
of Bobby Vinton's "Blue Velvet" playing in the background
- and the sonic signature of a cavernous howling in his ear was
heard; in close-up, their naked bodies made love on the blue-silky
sheets of her bed; she asked: "Are
you a bad boy?" and then the masochistic Dorothy demanded to
be hit: "I want you to hurt me...Go on, hit me. Hit me!" -
Jeffrey obliged by slapping her in the mouth as he overcame his resistance
to abusing her after she begged him to please her - her moist red
lips appeared with sparkling white teeth; again, he hit her, as the
flames grew and the animalistic howling sound intensified during
their violent, erotic love-making in the darkness; she told him: "I
have your disease in me now"
Jeffrey's Love-Making and Later Abuse of the Masochistic
Dorothy
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- as Jeffrey and Dorothy left the apartment, Frank
and his three thug-partners arrived, and in a harrowing scene, Frank
insisted on taking a "joy ride" with a knife-threatened
Jeffrey and Dorothy; Dorothy sat between the driver Frank and Hunter
in the front seat, with Jeffrey wedged in the back seat between Frank's
two other cohorts Raymond and Paul; their destination was a house
of prostitution ("THIS IS IT"), run by Frank's suave, clownish and
effeminante crime associate Ben (Dean Stockwell); at the front door
entrance, Frank held Jeffrey at knife-point as he criticized Jeffrey's
beer preference: (Frank: "Heineken?
F--k that s--t! Pabst Blue Ribbon!")
Paul (Jack Nance)
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Hunter (J. Michael Hunter)
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Raymond (Brad Dourif)
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- while Frank and his buddies were slugging at Jeffrey,
he also saw and overheard Frank exchanging money and drugs with drug-pusher
Ben, and bragging about their gun-toting accomplice Gordon, who
had murdered and stolen drugs from a rival drug courier-dealer
(the crime scene seen earlier); Frank also allowed Dorothy to see
her small son, Donny, who was being held hostage there in a back-room
- in another remarkably surreal sequence
in the bordello, the crazed, kabuki-like, Queen Bee proprietor-pimp
Ben lip-synched - in a cool, karaoke-style - Roy Orbison's cassette-taped
pop tune "In Dreams" - a workman's light functioned as
a spotlight and as a microphone: ("A candy colored clown they
call the Sandman Tiptoes to my room every night Just to sprinkle
stardust and to whisper Go to sleep everything is all right. I close
my eyes. Then I drift away. Into the magic night. I softly say A
silent prayer. Like dreams do. Then I fall asleep To dream my dreams
of you. In dreams, I walk with you. In dreams, I talk to you. In
dreams, you're mine, all the time. We're together...")
- after the song ended, the raging Frank abruptly
turned off the cassette tape and then ordered everyone to leave
for another joy-ride: "Now it's dark. Let's F--K. I'll
f--k anything that moves"; the group drove off to a deserted
lumber saw-mill - an industrial site at Meadow Lane where
Dorothy's husband was being held prisoner; when Jeffrey attempted
to defend Dorothy from being taunted and sexually-abused by Frank,
by punching him in the face, Frank ordered the car stopped; after
he continued to inhale gas from his mask, he also smeared his
face with red lipstick, and then repeatedly forced kisses
on Jeffrey, transferring the lipstick to his face and emasculating
him in the process
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Frank Threatening Jeffrey: Inhaling Ether
Gas From His Mask and Smearing His Face With Lipstick
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- in the truly terrifying scene, Frank terrorized
and brutalized Jeffrey and communicated how he would kill Jeffrey
for helping Dorothy by shooting him with a "love letter bullet" -
as he distorted and butchered the metaphor of the lyrics of another
Orbison song "Love Letters (Straight From Your Heart)" playing on a cassette tape
in the car: ("Don't be a good neighbor to her. I'll send you a love letter straight from
my heart, f--ker. Do you know what a love letter is? It's a bullet
from a f--kin' gun, f--ker. If you receive a love letter from me,
you are f--ked forever. Do you understand, f--k? I'll send ya straight
to Hell, f--ker!"); and then, Frank repeated lines from the earlier song "In Dreams"
("In dreams, I'd walk with you. In dreams, I'd talk to you. In dreams,
you're mine. All...forever in dreams") before severely brutalizing
Jeffrey with blows to the stomach and face; Jeffrey was left in the
muddy dirt where he awakened the next morning with bloody bruises
- Jeffrey visited the police station to report his
savage treatment, where he was shocked to learn that Detective
Williams' partner in a nearby office was Detective Gordon ("The
Yellow Man"), who was implicated in murder and illicit drug dealing; he hurriedly
left the station, and privately spoke to Det. Williams later that
evening in his home, to show him his B/W photographs of Det. Gordon
with Frank, and then Gordon with a gang-member dubbed a "Well-Dressed"
Man with a briefcase, and to tell him
about the kidnapping of Dorothy's family members - Little Don and
husband Don; he also lied and vowed that Sandy was not involved
- a few days later, Sandy and Jeffrey went on a date
to a dance party with other teens, where the two danced as boyfriend-girlfriend,
and were soon in each other's arms, kissing and dancing and expressing
their love for each other - to the organ-accompanied love song: "Mysteries of Love"
- on their drive home after leaving the teen party,
they were pursued and harrassed by another driver (Sandy's very
jealous ex-boyfriend Mike) and were stopped in front
of Jeffrey's house; there, they were shocked to see a naked, vulnerable
and battered Dorothy appear on the Beaumont's front lawn; Jeffrey
sheltered her as he led her to their car, before they took her
to Sandy's house to call for an ambulance
In Sandy's House, Dorothy's Embarrassing
Declaration about Jeffrey: "He put his disease in me"
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Sandy Distressed by the Appearance of a Naked Dorothy
in Jeffrey's Arms: "What's going on here?"
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- Dorothy screamed out for Jeffrey to hold her (calling him her "secret
lover"), and then made the odd declaration ("He put his disease in me")
- referring to her clandestine sexual relationship with Jeffrey;
Sandy was terribly pained and distraught by the sordid, distasteful
accusation, hurt in learning that Jeffrey had a sexual relationship
with the nightclub singer ("What's going on here?"); Sandy slapped
Jeffrey in the face after the ambulance took Dorothy away for his
unfaithfulness, but then almost immediately, she phoned Jeffrey and
apologized when he admitted he had been dishonest with her
- Jeffrey immediately returned to Dorothy's Deep River
apartment, and upon entering saw the results of two gruesome murders:
Detective Gordon (the 'Yellow Man') was propped up dead (with a
gunshot head wound) in the center of the room, and Dorothy's husband
Don was seated on one of Dorothy's chairs with his hands tied and
mouth gagged (with a piece of Dorothy's blue-velvet robe) - he
had also suffered a gunshot head wound - and was missing an ear;
over the Detective Gordon's radio, Jeffrey heard a police assault
with gunfire in progress led by Det. Williams at Frank's brick
apartment building
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Murder-Crime Scene In Dorothy's Apartment - Viewed by Jeffrey
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The "Well-Dressed Man" (Frank)
Approaching Closet Where Jeffrey Was Hiding - And Shot Point-Blank
in the Head
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- as Jeffrey was leaving, he saw the "Well-Dressed
Man" entering the building - he realized it was a disguised
Frank Booth with a police radio!; Jeffrey rushed back inside to
radio Det. Williams about Frank's disguise and his approach, but
then realized that Frank had been listening in; to fool Frank about
where he was hiding, Jeffrey radioed Det. Williams that he was
in the back bedroom, but then hid in the living room's closet;
as Frank finally realized Jeffrey's hiding place, he opened up
the slatted closet door, where Jeffrey was poised - Jeffrey blasted
him between the eyes - point-blank - with Det. Gordon's gun; Sandy
and then Det. Williams rushed in, who concluded: "It's all
over"; Sandy and Jeffrey - the heroine and hero kissed and hugged in the
hallway before the screen turned to complete whiteness
- in the film's denouement accompanied
by the love song, "The Mysteries of Love," it was springtime,
and Jeffrey was in his backyard on a lounger and a robin was in
a tree above him; Sandy had prepared lunch inside the kitchen;
Jeffrey's recovered father and Det. Williams were also in the garden,
while Mrs. Williams and Jeffrey's mother were in the living room;
the final scene was backed by peaceful organ music, romance, bright
sunshine in a kitchen, an optimistic future, friendly conversations
between neighbors, united families - all the false comforts of the
nostalgic 50s past that were symbolized by the return of the robins,
bringing Sandy's dream to fulfillment - the Blinding Light of Love:
(Jeffrey: "Maybe the robins are here"); Sandy (looking at Jeffrey and smiling)
told him: "It's a strange world, isn't it?" (Jeffrey nodded
in agreement) - as they looked at a robin consuming a bug
- as a neat bookend, the peaceful images from the
film's opening were replayed
- in another afternoon scene involving a second family
group in a local park, Little Donny was reunited with his mother
Dorothy, who cradled him in her arms and hugged him, although she
appeared bittersweet as tears formed in her eyes; she was heard
singing in the background: "And I still can see Blue Velvet
through my tears"
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Heart Attack-Stroke of Mr. Beaumont (Jack Harvey)
Cannibalistic Beetles Fighting In the Grass
Detective John Williams (George Dickerson) in Lumberton
Police Department
Camera Zoom into the Severed Ear
HS Senior Sandy Williams (Laura Dern)
Sandy with HS Graduate Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle MacLachlan)
Sandy and Jeffrey Taking a Drive to Arlene's Diner, Discussing Taking
Risks
Jeffrey Posing as a Pest Exterminator at Dorothy's Apartment
The Sudden Intrusion of the "Yellow Man" (Fred Pickler)
Dorothy Valens (Isabella Rossellini) Singing "Blue
Velvet" on Stage at The Slow Club
Gas-Inhaling Frank Booth (Dennis Hopper) with Dorothy
(Isabella Rossellini)
Jeffrey Consoling Dorothy After the Incident with Frank:
("Do you like the way I feel?...Hit me!")
That Night, Jeffrey Suffered a Nightmare - A Replay of Frank's Sadistic
Treatment
Sandy's Dream of Robins Told to Jeffrey Outside the Town's Church
Downtown Drug-Dealing Crime Scene Witnessed by Jeffrey
Frank Confronting Jeffrey Outside Dorothy's Apartment
Jeffrey's Scary Joy-Ride with Knife-Wielding Frank and His Buddies
Arrival at Ben's Bordello: "THIS IS IT"
Frank: "Heineken? F--k that s--t! Pabst Blue Ribbon!"
Frank in the Bordello with Dorothy
Suave Bordello Head and Frank's Criminal Associate Ben (Dean Stockwell)
Ben's Lip-Synch Rendition of Roy Orbison's "In
Dreams"
Det. T. R. Gordon (Fred Pickler) = The "Yellow Man"
Jeffrey's Photos of The "Yellow Man" with Frank - and Then with The "Well-Dressed
Man" - Shown to Det. Williams
Jeffrey and Sandy at a Teen Dance Party - Falling in Love
Battered Dorothy on the Beaumont's Front Lawn
Dorothy Found Naked and Vulnerable and Brought Into Jeffrey's Car
Sandy and Jeffrey Safely Reunited
Sandy to Jeffrey: "It's a strange world, isn't it?"
The Return of the Robins in the Beaumont's Backyard
Dorothy Reunited With Little Don in a Park
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