David Lynch: The Art Life (June 9 2017)Film & TV / NewsFilm & TV / NewsDavid Lynch is receiving an honorary OscarTook them a while, didn’t itShareLink copied ✔️June 4, 2019June 4, 2019TextAnna Cafolla David Lynch, the revered, idiosyncratic director and gloriously weirdo mind behind Eraserhead and Twin Peaks, has finally bagged an Oscar – an honorary one, but all the same, it’s kind of about time. The Academy of Motion Picture Art and Sciences announced that Lynch would receive an honorary Oscar at October’s Governors Awards, alongside Geena David, Wes Studi, Lina Wertmuller, and others. Lynch has been nominated for the best director award three times and once for best adapted screenplay, for The Elephant Man (1980), Blue Velvet (1986), and Mulholland Drive (2001). Geena DavisDavid LynchWes StudiLina WertmüllerThese four filmmakers have transformed the film industry. This year, we celebrate them. #HonoraryOscarshttps://t.co/t5gV89q7jM— The Academy (@TheAcademy) June 3, 2019 A statement from the Academy said the event will “recognise individuals who have devoted themselves to a lifetime of artistic accomplishment and brought outstanding contributions to our industry, and beyond.” 2017’s revival of Twin Peaks, which Lynch directed and co-created with Mark Frost, received widespread acclaim. Back in March, Lynch announced that he was leading a new online filmmaking masterclass – teaching idea generation, translating ideas into narrative, and going beyond formulaic storytelling. “A desire for an idea is like putting a little piece of bait on a hook and lowering it into the water,” Lynch said in a trailer for the course. “You don’t know when they’re going to come, or what will trigger them; lo and behold, on a lucky day, bingo – you’ll catch an idea.” A whole extra hour of the director’s Oscar-nominated Blue Velvet also emerged earlier this year – a 51-minute compilation of deleted scenes and alternate takes from the 1986 classic, assembled for a special edition Blu-ray release to mark its 25th anniversary. Lynch then more recently starred in Flying Lotus’ “Fire is Coming” video – in the video, he narrates a scary story of a group of wolf-children, and things just get even more weird from there. For someone with a pioneering, dappled oeuvre and expansive outlook like Lynch’s, someone who’s films have reinvented modern cinema in the most startling, dazzling ways, an honorary Oscar seems like a bit of a farce TBH. Justice for Fire Walk With Me! Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORE6LILITH6: Inside the witchy femme mall cult of Forbidden FruitsDJ Ahmet, a coming-of-ager about an EDM-obsessed teen sheep farmerOnMeet the creatives turning up the heat in Lagos with Burna Boy and OnWho is Takashi Miike? An intro to Japanese cinema’s cult provocateurThe Good Boy is a sick, twisted nightmare about delinquent teensArco, a striking, soul-stirring sci-fi about lonely kids in 2075Bill Skarsgård and Gus Van Sant on their scrappy thriller Dead Man’s WireScarlet: Anime legend Mamoru Hosoda’s trippy new take on Hamlet7 unmissable films from South by Southwest 2026 Why fans are turning against Timothée ChalametOscars 2026: The biggest snubs from this year’s nominationsCasting is finally getting its flowers at the 2026 OscarsEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy