Showing posts with label David Lynch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Lynch. Show all posts

Saturday, April 20, 2019

PACIFIC NORTHWEST #4: A Trip to Twin Peaks



I have never been shy about expressing my love for David Lynch’s TV series TWIN PEAKS.  I did it here.  Here.  And here.

Somehow, this series manages to balance the uncanny darkness of a feverish nightmare with the transcendent lightness of a mystical experience.  The series isn’t everyone’s cup of coffee, but I recently re-watched Season Three and I remain spellbound by Lynch’s unique method of storytelling.  There is an undeniable mystique about his fictional universe—and much of it is rooted in the Pacific Northwest, where the filmmaker grew up among shadows and tall trees.

I visited the Pacific Northwest for the first time this past week, and was overwhelmed by the lushness of spring.  Maybe it’s because I have been living in a desert for 12 years, but I just couldn’t get over all the moss.  It seemed to me that if I stood in any one place for very long, I would end up looking like Jordy Verrill.  (Sorry, I just couldn’t resist one more Stephen King reference.  Somehow, his stories seem to belong here too.)  



We started our TWIN PEAKS tour near the town of Edgewick, in the shadow of two small mountain peaks, at the Twin Falls Trail.  I don’t think these specific places inspired the series, but it’s hard to know for sure.  So many places along the Snoqualmie River (especially businesses) share names from the series that it’s hard to know which came first; hard to tell where reality ends and fiction begins.  This area was used as the backdrop for a gateway between worlds in Season Three.

The "twin peaks" above Edgewick.  Note the name of the gas station on the right.
Twin Falls trailhead in Olallie State Park
"Nursery tree" or Day of the Triffids?
Does this image make you nervous?
Or this one?
Really?
Welcome to David Lynch's world of shadows and tall trees
Twin Falls overlook on the Snoqualmie River
 
We followed the Snoqualmie River east to the town of North Bend and one of the most iconic locations in TWIN PEAKS: the Double R Diner.   The real diner, called Twede’s Café, is actually pretty unassuming.  At least, it was on the lazy Tuesday afternoon when we stopped by for some damn fine coffee and cherry pie.   The interior is thoroughly decorated with behind-the-scenes photos and news clippings related to the series.  And, yes, the cherry pie is amazing.


We drove north and continued east on Reinig Road, beside the river and beneath the looming monolith called Mount Si.  This is where the “Welcome to Twin Peaks” sign stood in the opening credits of the original series.  More recently, a replica of the sign was placed in the same spot—but quickly stolen by vandals.  So you’ll have to use your imagination. 


Just a few hundred steps to the east is a fork in the road where we found three more sites associated with the show.  In the original series, this intersection was known as Sparkwood and 21.  To the north on 396th Drive is the old Twin Peaks Sheriff Department, now the DirtFish rally school.  The building and the lobby still look pretty much the same, but I was stunned to see what was out the front door.  It had never occurred to me that, throughout three seasons of TWIN PEAKS, we never see a turnaround shot.  Apparently, at one time, the Packard Sawmill sat right next to the Sheriff Department.  Today, there’s not much left of the old mill. 
 
The former Twin Peaks Sheriff Department
The turnaround view
The remains of the Packard Sawmill
Back on Reinig Road, just past the turnoff for 396th, we encountered a small railroad bridge that has been converted into a footpath.  It leads down into the town of Snoqualmie, which is the closest thing you’ll find to an actual town of Twin Peaks.  This is where the kids went to high school in the first two seasons, at Mt. Si High School (currently under construction and unrecognizable from the show).   

Fans will recognize Reinig Bridge as the spot where the traumatized Ronette Pulaski is seen wandering back toward town.  Despite the fictional air of torture and tragedy, it’s a beautiful location and a great place to observe the swirling, hypnotic eddies of the Snoqualmie River as seen in the opening of the original series.

Sparkwood and 21

Just a bit further east on Reinig Road is another significant intersection.  To the left is a one-way bridge leading down into Snoqualmie.  To the right, the road meanders along the banks of the river toward Snoqualmie Falls—and the location of the iconic “Great Northern Hotel,” a.k.a. Salish Lodge and Spa.  The view from the upper observation deck beside the hotel looks even more impressive in real life than it does in the series, especially at this time of year when there’s so much water rushing over the falls. 

The view from the lower observation area was also featured in TWIN PEAKS.  I had to make the hike down there because I read that there’s a hidden cave at the base of the falls, and also that “strange things” have appeared in photos taken down there.  I took more than my fair share of photos, but didn’t see anything strange.  Still, it’s a beautiful spot—and the juxtaposition of this majestic natural beauty with the imposing machinery of a nearby hydroelectric plant is certainly worthy of David Lynch.
  
Snoqualmie Falls is a pretty tough act to follow, but we rounded out our trip with a meal at The Roadhouse in nearby Falls City.  This was a good reminder that things are not what they seem in TWIN PEAKS.  The filmmakers only used the exterior of The Roadhouse in the show.  Interiors of the biker bar, also known as the Bang-Bang Bar, were shot in the Raisbeck Performance Hall at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle.  (Apparently, this was one of several interior scenes there were shot close to the city.  The inside of The Great Northern Hotel is actually the Kiana Lodge in Poulsbo, and Laura Palmer’s body was found on the beach near that hotel.  The Palmer house is in nearby Everett, Washington.)

 
One last twist: According to the menu at The Roadhouse, the exterior of The Bookhouse (meeting place of the TWIN PEAKS secret society) was shot right out back, in a currently-abandoned—and, naturally, moss-covered—shack.  The interiors, however, were shot at The Old Place in Cornell, California.
 


During our time in Snoqualmie, we happened upon a place that might have been an inspiration for The Bookhouse—a historic meeting hall known as “The Woodman Lodge,” which sits right behind the Northern Pacific Depot in downtown Snoqualmie.  I shudder to think that David Lynch’s Woodsman is hiding in there. 
 
 



PS - For a more expansive virtual tour of Twin Peaks, check out this website.   Or, let this Snoqualmie local be your guide.  The Salish Lodge and Spa gift shop also provides a free map of the main locations.  And if you reeeeeally want to make an event out of it, there's an annual Twin Peaks Festival in North Bend and Snoqualmie.  This year, it takes place over the weekend of July 12 - 14.

Saturday, December 24, 2011

MOVIES MADE ME #36: LOST HIGHWAY


This is a difficult movie for me to write about – not just for the obvious reason that it’s a difficult movie to logically explain, but also because my first feature-length script was a (failed) attempt to re-create the tone of dread in this film. LOST HIGHWAY got under my skin in a way that very few films do. It’s a thinking person’s horror film, technically brilliant and intellectually challenging. At first I couldn’t easily explain why it made such a strong impression on me, so I resorted to mimicry instead. All these years later, I still haven’t made that first script work the way I want it to, and I remain spellbound by LOST HIGHWAY.

In an extended interview with Chris Rodley, David Lynch says that neither he nor his co-writer Barry Gifford thought much about “meaning” when they were writing LOST HIGHWAY. What Lynch wanted was to be true to a “feeling.” The feeling originated with the simple phrase “lost highway” (used in one of Gifford’s novels) and with an extended sequence that came to the filmmaker on his last night of shooting TWIN PEAKS: FIRE WALK WITH ME. (Lynch has said that he sometimes “receives” ideas the way a shortwave receiver picks up radio waves.) This is how he describes it:

It was like the first third of the picture, maybe, minus some scenes we had in the final script. A couple are living in a house and a videotape is delivered. When they look at it, it’s of the front of their house. They don’t think anything of it and then they get another one, and this one is going through the living room, and watching them asleep in bed. This thing I had went all the way up to the fist hitting Fred in the police station – to suddenly being in another place and not knowing how you got there or what is wrong.


A few years ago, I sat down to watch LOST HIGHWAY with my future wife. She made it through most of this extended sequence without saying a word – clearly hypnotized by the deliberately slow pacing and unsettling silence (except on the low end, with Trent Reznor’s bass-heavy drones unhinging the subconscious mind like the first few seconds of a powerful earthquake). The sequence perfectly illustrates Lynch’s ability to create an atmosphere of dread. With shadows and whispers, he draws the viewer in. I found myself turning up the volume on the movie… the way Father Karras does when he’s listening for the voice of the devil in THE EXORCIST. More recently, THE SIXTH SENSE and PARANORMAL ACTIVITY have used the same scare tactic. In LOST HIGHWAY, this gimmick is more than a simple setup for a jump scare. What Lynch’s carefully crafted dreamscape does is amplify the overall sense of mystery.

The bare-bones plot alone generates questions. In the first scene, Fred Madison receives a message that “Dick Lurant is dead.” We are left to wonder: Who is Dick Lurant? How did he die? Did Fred know him? And who delivered the message? This is the first round of questions in what seems like a straightforward murder mystery. Next, we meet Fred’s wife Renee, who is beautiful and aloof. Anyone who has any familiarity with a basic film noir plot must be asking themselves: Did she have something to do with the murder? Is she having an affair? Can she be trusted? Lynch doesn’t need his characters to ask any of these questions. He trusts the audience to ask them, based on what the characters don’t say. The director explains:

To me, a mystery is like a magnet. Wherever there is something that’s unknown, it has a pull to it. If you were in a room and there was an open doorway, and stairs going down and the light just fell away, you’d be very tempted to go down there. When you only see a part, it’s even stronger than seeing the whole. The whole might have logic, but out of its context, the fragment takes on a tremendous value of abstraction. It can become an obsession.

The videotapes escalate the mystery. We want to know who is stalking them and why. The first time I saw the movie, I thought of the novel RED DRAGON, in which a serial killer videotapes his prey before murdering them in their own beds. In that story, the police eventually establish that the killer does this so he can re-live the murders over and over again. The actions in LOST HIGHWAY are even more unsettling, because they suggest a different motive. The killer (or killers) want Fred and Renee to see the tapes. They tapes are intended to create fear. The police, in LOST HIGHWAY, offer no other thoughts or consolation, and David Lynch continues to torment us with his own video just as surely as his red dragon is tormenting Fred.

The first moment of relief (though it’s a very mild relief) comes when Fred remembers a dream he had the night before. In his dream, he saw his wife but didn’t recognize her as his wife. “It wasn’t you,” he tells her, “It looked like you, but it wasn’t.” This reinforces the viewer’s probable perception of Renee as an icy femme fatale… maybe even a schizophrenic… or, for viewers more inclined toward horror than film noir, a pod person. Lynch is deepening the mystery, forcing us to ask what is real in the world that Lynch has drawn us into. At this point, we – by association with Fred – are completely at the mercy of the unknown. We sense that we are vulnerable. Because we don’t have any clues about what we might be vulnerable to, we are defenseless. That is the “feeling” of the first act of LOST HIGHWAY.

The plot turns on a party sequence, in which Fred meets Renee’s enigmatic sleazy friend Andy (and prompting us to wonder,How do they know each other?) and a Mystery Man (Herk Harvey’s pasty-faced ghoul as played by the eminently creepy film noir actor Robert Blake) who introduces himself with a haunting pronouncement: “We’ve met before.” As with the rest of the film, what makes this scene so disturbing isn’t what’s said, but what’s felt. Fred tries to laugh off his nervousness. Surely, he would remember a face like this – pale, wide-eyed, sardonically smiling, Peter Lorre on meth. “Where is it that you think we met?” Fred asks. The Mystery Man answers: “At your house… You invited me. It is not my custom to go where I’m not invited.” To prove his point, he performs a kind of magic trick, allowing Fred to talk to his “other self” on the phone. When Fred recoils in horror, the Mystery Man laughs maniacally – the sound reverberating endlessly as if in an echo chamber. At this point, my wife got so creeped out that she left the room, never to return. Probably, the mysteries seemed insurmountable to her. There was simply too many overwhelming questions: Was the Mystery Man a vampire? A demon? Some kind of inhuman monster that could manipulate or travel through time? Or just a messenger, delivering the truth of a reality much worse than anything a straightforward horror movie could conjure?

Lynch found his answer in the reality of 1995 America. In his book Catching the Big Fish, the writer/director points to the most likely inspiration for the second and third acts of LOST HIGHWAY:

At the time that Barry Gifford and I were writing the script for Lost Highway, I was sort of obsessed with the O.J. Simpson trial. Barry and I never talked about it this way, but I think the film is somehow related to that… What struck me about O.J. Simpson was that he was able to smile and laugh. He was able to go golfing later with seemingly very few problems about the whole thing. I wondered how, if a person did these deeds, he could go on living. And we found this great psychology term – “psychogenic fugue” – describing an event where the mind tricks itself to escape some horror. So, in a way, Lost Highway is about that. And also the fact that nothing can stay hidden forever.

In the second act of LOST HIGHWAY, Fred Madison seems to physically and psychically transform into a different person – a younger man named Pete Dayton. One way of interpreting this illogical story twist is to view LOST HIGHWAY as a narrative coming from inside O.J. Simpson’s head. Or Michael Peterson’s head. Or even (as fate would have it), Robert Blake’s head. All three of these men were accused of murdering their wives. At present, all three of them have been cleared of murder charges. Not one of them has ever confessed to murder… perhaps not even to themselves. I wouldn't be the first to suggest that, like Fred Madison, they prefer to “remember things my own way.” Many a commentator has noted that it’s difficult to convict someone who genuinely, thoroughly – to the very core of their being – believes that they are innocent. And many of those same commentators, using terms like “fugue state,” argue that it is entirely possible for a person to be a killer and not know it. The greatest horror in LOST HIGHWAY – as in everyday life – exists in the mind.

Since he is obviously the “wrong man,” Pete is set free... just like O.J. With a guilt-free conscience (ostensibly due to amnesia), he returns to his own life. But almost immediately, his life becomes mixed up with Fred Madison’s mystery. As Lynch says, “Nothing can stay hidden forever.” Pete gets involved with a hot-bodied blonde named Alice who looks exactly like Renee Madison, as well as a hot-headed porn producer named Mr. Eddie who is later identified as “Dick Lurant.” Even Renee’s friend Andy turns up again. Alice asks Pete to murder him, so that they can run away together. Pete, taking a DETOUR from THE WRONG MAN to DOUBLE INDEMNITY and KISS ME DEADLY, never seems to have a choice. On some subconscious level, he knows that Alice is Renee, that she’s “damaged goods." He also knows that he himself is a killer, though he feigns shock after doing the deed. And he knows how this story – told a thousand times in a thousand Hollywood movies and sordid true crime narratives – ends. So do we (the movie geek half of the audience, at least).

Act 3 is the journey into endless night, a Freudian plunge into a predestined universe. Déjà vu means that Fred has been here before and will be here again – a helpless victim of cruel fate. The end (which shows him violently morphing into a new “self”) is his beginning, and the implication is that he may never be able to to escape the cycle of violence and denial, no matter how many times he is (literally or figuratively) reincarnated. The “lost highway” is his purgatory, and that’s the concept that makes this a true horror film to me.

Toward the end of LOST HIGHWAY, the Mystery Man offers the closest thing we have to a coherent explanation of Lynch’s metaphysical mystery. “In the Far East,” he tells Fred, “when a person is sentenced to death, they’re sent to a place where they can’t escape, never knowing when an executioner may step up behind them and fire a bullet in the back of their head.” Embedded in this explanation is the most profound question that the film poses to its audience: Is this what life must like for someone who completely denies responsibility for their own actions? Reflecting on the O.J. Simpson case (and the Michael Peterson case and the Robert Blake case), my mind wanders even further into the everyday darkness: What is the “reality” of a world where more and more of these kind of people run free among us?

Lynch’s focus, of course, is not on this world. I once glibly called LOST HIGHWAY the Limbo of David Lynch’s Divine Comedy, noting similarities to the inferno of TWIN PEAKS: FIRE WALK WITH ME and the paradiso of MULHOLLAND DRIVE. I don’t mean to draw out a Christian subtext in these films, only a mythological one. The focus of each story is not on dogma, but on love - in all of its incarnations, good and bad. On some levels the "Divine Comedy" theory is still a reductive theory (as is any clean-cut theory of Lynch's movies), but I think it suggests an appropriate level of philosophical thought. In my mind, the dreamscapes in these three films are definitely “of a piece.” It’s worth noting that Lynch served as sound designer on the trilogy; his only other films on which he performed this function were ERASERHEAD and INLAND EMPIRE. Mary Sweeney edited all three films (her only other collaboration with Lynch being THE STRAIGHT STORY) and Angelo Badalamenti composed the scores for each of them. I can’t believe that the filmmaker wasn’t, on some subconscious level, aware of a subtle progression from Laura Palmer’s fiery private hell, through the purgatory of Fred Madison / Pete Dayton, into the transcendent light shared by Rita and Betty Elms / Diane Selwyn at the end of MULHOLLAND DRIVE. Which must have left him with an overwhelming question: What comes next?

Saturday, April 23, 2011

MOVIES MADE ME #16: TWIN PEAKS


One drug-induced night during my sophomore year of college, I cozied up to a very unusual double feature: Gregg Araki's THE DOOM GENERATION and David Lynch's TWIN PEAKS pilot. The evening made a lasting impression on me. I spent the next several weeks listening to Slowdive (a British band that is prominently featured in all of Araki's films) and reading everything I could find about David Lynch.

I've only re-watched THE DOOM GENERATION once, and it didn't live up to my memory of it. On repeat viewing, I found it more annoying than harrowing... I couldn't sympathize with any of the characters (though I was perfectly happy to watch Rose McGowan), and it seemed to me that their overbearing cynicism stifles the often remarkable subtleties of lightning and art design. That said, I remained impressed mostly impressed with the neo-noir aesthetic and the music. Araki always picks exactly the right music to convey the emotional content of his scenes.

I couldn't tell, at first, if TWIN PEAKS was a similarly mixed bag or if it was a work of freakish genius. I was certainly intrigued by it, but it left me worried that the show might ultimately provided answers I couldn't be satisfied with. (When I saw the pilot, the entire series had already come and gone on television... so mercifully I didn't have to wait long to find out.)

TWIN PEAKS is a delicate balance of Lynch's brand of horror and co-creator Mark Snow's brand of melodrama. At times, the balance is so tenuous that the show veers into random parody (a one-armed man in a TV murder mystery... really?). The soap opera elements mute some of the horror elements, creating a sense that every scene is filled with deep, dark secrets. After watching the pilot for the first time, I started reading books and articles on David Lynch like I was searching for sacred text in the Mona Lisa. I instantly understood why the question "Who killed Laura Palmer?" had been as important to some people as "Who killed JFK?" The fact is that TWIN PEAKS isn't a simple murder mystery. The question and the answer to the obvious murder mystery are one with the larger mysteries of an entire culture. The brilliance of the pilot is that it sets up that culture - the physical, emotional and psychological world of a rural town on the edge of nowhere - within the space of 94 minutes.

Because I saw TWIN PEAKS for the first time on video, I got an extra dose of things to come. The VHS version featured the 116-minute "European pilot," which included a longer version of Agent Cooper's dream sequence from the end of episode 3. The extra footage appears completely out of context - as a "solution" to the murder mystery that offers no real answers and about six hundred new questions. Bits and pieces of Cooper's dream sequence, about Mike and Bob and Mike's cousin and the dancing midget, were unraveled over the course of the series... but when I saw the pilot, I wanted to know immediately: What the hell does it all mean? This is where a viewer who needed a linear narrative and straightforward answers would have thrown in the towel... and where a viewer like me gets helplessly drawn in.

I immediately recognized some thematic similarities to Lynch's film BLUE VELVET, which had raped my unsuspecting eyeballs a few years earlier. Most obviously, the hero in both projects was played by Kyle McLachlan. In his TWIN PEAKS role as FBI Agent Dale Cooper, McLachlan seems like a wizened version of BLUE VELVET's Jeffrey Beaumont. BLUE VELVET is about the way that the hero's curiosity leads to the end of innocence. TWIN PEAKS is (at least partly) about the way that the hero's otherworldly experience might be used to protect the innocence of others. Of course, no one in the town of Twin Peaks is completely innocent. Every character in the show is guilty of something. It would be too simple to say that "everyone's a suspect" in the murder investigation. Instead, TWIN PEAKS might be summed up like this: "Everyone has a secret... some, even from themselves." Laura Palmer's murder just brings everyone's secrets to the surface.

Laura was a pretty, popular, well-liked teenager who spent her afternoons tutoring a mentally-handicapped boy and her nights freebasing cocaine and selling her body. When she'd found dead, friends and family learn that she was involved with at least two different lovers... like everyone else in the not-so-sleepy town. No one in Twin Peaks is loyal, but nevertheless all of the citizens remain likable (from a viewer's perspective) because they are all either deeply enigmatic and/or emotionally vulnerable. The fact that the show has an impeccable cast (including Michael Ontkean, Ray Wise, Lara Flynn Boyle, Sherilynn Fenn, Madchen Amick, Peggy Lipton, Jack Nance, Piper Laurie, Russ Tamblyn and Sheryl Lee) obviously helps, but what really sets the show apart from everything that came before and everything that's come along after is David Lynch's unique storytelling sensibilities... or, perhaps more accurately, his personal obsessions.

Lynch's stories, from ERASERHEAD to INLAND EMPIRE, are not so much about conventional narrative as about impressions made on his psyche. Lynch is an artist, and his canvases are filled with conflicting images and ideas: urban vs. rural environments; industry vs. nature; mechanical vs. organic; spirit vs. electricity, etc. One need not look too far to find testimony about Lynch's lifelong fascination with the rural Pacific Northwest ("Ghostwood" is an appropriate designation used in TWIN PEAKS, reminiscent of Steinbeck's story about The Dark Watchers) and with the dualism of 1950s American suburbia. Throw all these things in a blender and what have you got? Beats me... TWIN PEAKS is like a ridiculously cute suburban lawn gnome with blood-stained fangs.

Just as music holds Greg Araki's warped vision together in THE DOOM GENERATION, so the music of Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise holds the madness of TWIN PEAKS together. Badalamenti's main theme is elegiac, but his other tracks alternate between bone-chillingly foreboding ambient and distinctively quirky elevator music. Cruise's ethereal vocals bring humanity to Badalamenti's warmest and most haunting creations. Lynch knows exactly how to use the soundscape to complete his landscape, always producing something that defies expectations (who else would put Cruise's ethereal vocals in a rowdy biker bar?) and reinforces the kind of mystery that doesn't come from whodunit-type plotting, but from undeniably real characters in hypnotically surreal situations. And, of course, this is just the beginning...

Monday, March 31, 2008

THE WILD WEST, PART 1: DEATH VALLEY

(Map courtesy of DesertUSA)

Those who regularly check this blog might be wondering where the hell I’ve been lately. This week, I have a worthwhile answer. L and I just got back from a weekend trip to Death Valley – a place I’ve wanted to visit ever since we first moved to Los Angeles. We’d been putting off the trip for the past year or so because… well… the name alone sounds pretty daunting, doesn’t it? I decided to do a little reading first and try to figure out what we’d be getting ourselves into.

Death Valley got its name from a group of pioneers who wandered through in the summer of 1849, at the start of the California Gold Rush. Before that, the valley was known to the Shoshone indians as “Tumpisa” (meaning “rock paint”). The 1849 pioneers had set out from Hobble Creek, Utah, ill-prepared for their supposed “shortcut” to the coast. On the western edge of what is now Death Valley National Park, the Bennet-Arcan party waited while two members of their caravan went ahead to scout a path and obtain provisions that would allow the rest of the group to complete the journey. William Lewis Manly remembers his 8-day hike from Death Valley to a ranch near Santa Clarita – 290 miles away, by modern-day roads! – in his memoir Death Valley in ’49.

When Manly and his companion first set out to cross Badwater basin – the lowest point in North America – they surveyed the road ahead with grim determination: “Our task now before us looked very hard for two lone men to accomplish. Language is inadequate to express any one’s feelings without realizing our situation or without some realistic comparison. Those behind us anticipating more than they could realize. Maybe we were all lost, who could tell? Maybe we all might starve, who could tell from the situation as we now saw it? These were very sad reflections, and we weighed the matter to the best of our ability and came to the conclusion that there was no other course for us to pursue than to go ahead live or die.”

Thankfully, they lived and returned to rescue the others. On the way out, one of the weary pioneers said “Goodbye Death Valley.” The name stuck. For years afterwards, their story was embellished to no end. In many fictionalized versions of the tale, all of the pioneers died a horrible death. No doubt inspired by these exaggerations, an 1894 article in a New York magazine (reprinted in Death Valley Lore: Classic Tales of Fantasy, Adventure and Mystery – University of Nevada, 1988) proposed that the legendary death trap would never be conquered: “Civilization may claim our country bit by bit. The conquering flag of freedom may be planted on every square yard of our continent. The sons of liberty may make their home from pole to zone. They can never enter here.”

But such pronouncements didn’t keep people out of Death Valley. People came for the clean, desert air (purported to cure tuberculosis) and for the gold and silver that was alleged to be in the hills. There were plenty of prospectors, including the legendary Charles Breyfogle, who got swallowed up by the secret promises of desert mines. In 1883, workers began mining a less elusive product – borax – from the valley floor. For the remainder of the decade, twenty-mule teams were used to cart huge wagons (usually filled with 45,000 pounds of cargo) from Death Valley to Mojave, 165 miles away. Needless to say, there were people who didn’t survive the hardships of the environment – including summer temperatures as high as 134 degrees Fahrenheit.

In his book To the Edge: A Man, Death Valley and the Mystery of Endurance (Warner Books, 2001), Kirk Johnson explains that even high winds can’t provide relief from the oppressive summer heat: “Meteorologists say that when the air temperature rises above about 95 degrees Fahrenheit, the whole equation of airflow and heat absorption begins to shift. After that, wind increasingly adds heat, or at least compounds the difficulty of cooling down. By the time the temperature reaches a heat-index level of 122 degrees – typical conditions for the Badwater-Furnace Creek corridor in July – a wind gusting to 33 miles per hour, which is also not unusual for that time of year, can boost the apparent temperature by another 10 degrees, to 132 in the shade, if any were to be had.” To experience the heat of a summer’s day in Death Valley, he recommends heating your oven to 200 degrees and then sticking your head inside.

In Live! From Death Valley: Dispatches from America’s Lowest Point (Sasquatch Books, 2005), John Soennichsen describes the process of dehydration that results from this heat: “On an average summer day in Death Valley, you can lose over 2 gallons of water just sitting in the shade; hiking you can lose twice as much.” He explains that there are three stages of desert thirst: normal thirst, functional derangement, and structural degeneration. These can be broken down into five phases: the clamorous phase, cotton mouth phase, shriveled tongue, blood sweat and living death. That’s right. You sweat blood. It’s all down hill from there… more than one writer has lingered on the haunting final image of a sun-bleached human skull, so thoroughly dried out that it cracks open on top.

Clearly a person would need a pretty damn compelling reason to subject themselves to this kind of environment. More compelling than borax. More compelling than gold and silver. Johnson proposes that most of the westward pioneers were motivated by “something bigger; call it the pursuit of a new beginning, a new Plymouth landing… The westward movement was a chance – perhaps the first and last that most families would have – to leave the crowded East Coast behind, to obtain land, to build a home, to carve out a bright new future for their children.” The author feels a sense of kinship with those pioneers, because he too was called to Death Valley by something deep inside him.

After his brother committed suicide, Johnson took up running… not because he needed a hobby, but because he needed answers. “I’d become a runner,” he explains, “like some people find God – suddenly, upon turning a corner, without preparation or warning.” He spends the bulk of his book trying to explain his search: “I’ve always believed that there are forces larger than logic, powers of the mind and body that go beyond the Western scientific methods of experimentation and proof and physical law. There are worlds that cannot be imagined, I think, because our imaginations are simply too limited. I’ve always felt a hunger – for something larger, something more, something beyond the accelerated, complicated, maddening, commercial-saturated, numbered, ordered, bought-and-sold world we live in.” This is a guy who talks about running and mysticism in the same breath.

Johnson wanted the ultimate, he wanted to be “burned clean,” and so he entered the most deadly ultramarathon yet devised – a 135-mile trek from the lowest point in the continental United States (Badwater basin) to the highest point (nearby Mt. Whitney in the Sierra Nevadas). This is a race, he tells us, designed to break the human spirit. In fact, most Badwater racers say that you simply can’t finish unless you can accept being broken. Fellow Badwater vet Dan Jensen explains that “the feeling of having nothing left… is simply one side of your brain – the rational part, or maybe the smarter part – analyzing a situation and saying that enough is enough. The joy and the power come from not listening, from pushing on to that desolate plateau where reason can’t follow. Time stops. There’s no past and no future, only a crystallized, clarified and overwhelmingly powerful present tense that swallows everything.”

Are these people mystics or just crazies? Death Valley seems to draw both kinds. Charles Manson came here in the summer of ’68 (a year before the Tate murders) seeking an entrance to an underground city. There have also been numerous UFO sightings over the years. In the northwestern corner of the park, there is a mysterious plateau where gigantic boulders are said to move without the aid of wind or gravity. All of this… nothing… has a way of infiltrating the imagination, prompting visions and hallucinations alike. John Soennichsen suggests that it is the very existence of such a mysterious wilderness that calls to us, and helps to make our lives worth living… Death Valley is a place where we confront the limits of human knowledge and endurance, and question what lies beyond. It’s an existential crisis just waiting to happen. Welcome to the middle of nowhere – the land of myths.

Our first stop, on the far western side of Death Valley National Park, was the town of Death Valley Junction. Originally known as Amargosa, this one horse town was founded as a railroad stop in 1914. In the following years it was maintained by the Pacific Coast Borax Company, who gradually abandoned it. By 1967, Death Valley Junction was practically a ghost town. That’s when New York painter / dancer Marta Becket passed through and decided to resurrect the local theater. For the past four decades, she’s been performing her one-woman show at the Amargosa Opera House, whether anyone shows up for the performances or not. She is still one of the only people living there, and she maintains that it’s the desolate location that has allowed her to fulfill her dreams.

Ms. Becket’s story is told in the 2000 documentary “Amargosa,” which purports that the town is haunted. According to one storyteller, a film crew (possibly for David Lynch’s “Lost Highway”?) came here a few years ago and attempted to summon ghosts in an abandoned building by using a Ouija board. Anyone who’s worked on the Discovery series “A Haunting” can tell you that this is just asking for trouble. The instigators were answered by an angry male voice and the smell of rotting flesh.

One more creepy factoid… the empty gas station in Death Valley Junction was the first stop in the 1986 horror film “The Hitcher,” with Rutger Hauer and C. Thomas Howell. Harry Medved and Bruce Akiyama’s excellent book “Hollywood Escapes” charts the rest of this duo’s onscreen journey down to the Imperial Sand Dunes near the Mexico border.









Abandon all hope, ye who enter here. That’s probably what William Lewis Manly was thinking as he looked down into Death Valley from a nearby peak. Dante’s View looks down on Death Valley itself – a long stretch of salt flats, 282 feet below sea level, lying between the Amargosa and Panamint mountain ranges.

Sci-fi fans might also recognize it as the wide view of Mos Eisley spaceport, seen in the original “Star Wars" when Obi Wan Kenobi promises Luke Skywalker that "you will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy."



It was from the highest peak at Zabriskie Point (on the far right of the third photograph below) that William Lewis Manly first saw Death Valley. This was also the locale of the hippie love-fest in Michael Antonioni’s film “Zabriskie Point” (1970), and the otherworldly terrain in Byron Haskin’s “Robinson Crusoe on Mars” (1964).









The lowest point in North America, this area was once known as “Poison Springs” because the bones of dead travelers seemed to pile up here. Not, mind you, because the water was actually poisonous… but because it was nevertheless undrinkable. The salt content is, on average, two or three times that of the ocean. Imagine how painful it must have been to stumble upon this little tease in the middle of the desert… Some travelers, it seems, just didn’t have the will to keep going after that.

When Eric von Stroheim shot his early silent epic film “Greed” here in the summer of 1923, his crew was a little more restless. According to Harry Medved, fights broke out due to the 128-degree heat and iced towels were needed to cool off cast and cameras alike.






To the northwest of Badwater is this strange and dangerous landscape, known as The Devil’s Golf Course. The jagged salt crystals are surprisingly strong and incredibly sharp. The name reinforces the popular idea of Death Valley as a “netherworld theme park.” Charles Manson must have loved it.



Slightly more inviting are these multi-colored hills, Artist's Palette & Golden Canyon, to the north of Badwater.

"Although Death Valley is the most formidable spot in all the desert region, it is not wanting in beauty. Color effects such as artist never dreamed of are here to be seen. It is not the coloring given by vegetation, however, for verdure is lacking. There are no velvety green meadows, neither are there fields of blooming flowers. The coloring of the mountains and plains of this region are penciled in unfading and unchanging colors. These colors are mineral and chemical and are blended in rare harmony - laid by the Master Hand which carved this remarkable region out of the edge of the Western continent. Green and blue of copper, ruddiness of niter, yellow of sulphur, red of hematite and cinnabar, white of salt and borax, blend with the black and gray of the barren rocks and the dark carmine and royal purple and pale green of the mineral-stained granites." - A.J. Burdick, "The Mystic Mid-Region" (1904)





This borax mining station was built by W.T. Coleman, an entrepreneur who came to Death Valley after borax was discovered here in 1873. Harmony Borax Works was active between 1882 and 1889, and "twenty mule teams" (actually 18 mules and two horses) hauled wagons full of the product from this site to the railroad in Mojave - a ten day journey.

"During the five or six years following the opening of the mines, large quantities of borax were taken out and placed upon the market. Then, in the spring of 1888, the mines were closed because it was impossible to find me to work the mines or drive the mules. It became known that few men who went into the mines came out alive. At the end of six or seven months the miner succumbed to the terrific heat and the poisonous atmosphere, or else he was a broken-down invalid incapable of doing further work. It came to be considered simply a form of suicide to engage in the work, consequently the mine-owners were unable to continue operations." - A.J. Burdick, "The Mystic Mid-Region" (1904)





Growing up on the east coast, this is how I always imagined the desert – miles and miles of yellow sand dunes. There’s surprisingly little of that in Death Valley, but these dunes at Stovepipe Wells (like many of the tourist-friendly sites in the park) were used to good effect in the original “Star Wars.” This is where C3PO and R2D2 separate after their arrival on the desolate planet of Tatooine (home to Luke Skywalker and Obi Wan Kenobi). This is also where scientists find a mysterious tanker in the special edition of “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.”





On the final leg of his 150-mile run across Death Valley, Kirk Johnson experienced one of “Badwater’s unwritten rules”: perfect hallucinations. He’d been told not to expect “trite mirages like shimmering lakes and such,” but rather to expect borderline-religious visions: "Expect the Sistine Chapel, with every detail down to Michaelangelo there on his scaffold; expect people from your junior high school English class to wander suddenly and impossibly out of the desert and say hello; expect, some people say, to see God. Or the devil, for that matter, who was spotted – in running shoes, competing in the race – in 1995. Expect the cacti to begin singing to you at 1 A.M. from the bottomless darkness of the roadside near Lone Pine, as they did to a man named John Radich in 1996. Radich was so lulled by the music that he sat right down where he was in the middle of the highway, oblivious to all else.” If you want to know what Johnson saw on that dark, lonely stretch of road between Panamint Springs and Lone Pine, check out the book… it's a good read.


Next -- "The Wild West, Part 2: Lone Pine & The Alabama Hills"