USC Fisher Museum of Art
Discover art spanning five centuries at USC Fisher Museum of Art.
Ongoing
Discover art spanning five centuries at USC Fisher Museum of Art.
Ongoing
Screening of Lost Highway and Q&A
Outside the Box [Office]

Tuesday, November 20, 2012 : 7:00pm to 10:00pm
University Park Campus
The Ray Stark Family Theatre, SCA 108
Free
Fred (Bill Pullman) is an avant-garde jazz saxophonist who shares a luxurious but fashionably barren house with his wife Renee (Patricia Arquette). Fred suspects that Renee may be unfaithful to him, but realizes he has bigger things to worry about when a series of videotapes appear at his door that prove someone is watching his home from the outside and inside.
Outside the Box [Office] and Focus Features invite you to a special evening with Patricia Arquette, Bill Pullman, SCA Professor Mary Sweeney and a screening of David Lynch's Lost Highway (1997), Directed by David Lynch, written by David Lynch and Barry Gifford, produced by Mary Sweeney, Deepak Nayar, and Tom Sternberg, edited by Mary Sweeney. Followed by a Q&A with Patricia Arquette, Bill Pullman and SCA Writing Professor Mary Sweeney
About Lost Highway (1997)
Fred (Bill Pullman) is an avant-garde jazz saxophonist who shares a luxurious but fashionably barren house with his wife Renee (Patricia Arquette). Fred suspects that Renee may be unfaithful to him, but realizes he has bigger things to worry about when a series of videotapes appear at his door that prove someone is watching his home from the outside and inside. When Renee is found murdered, Fred finds himself behind bars, but one morning Fred is no longer in his cell. He has seemingly been transformed into Pete Drayton (Balthazar Getty), a young auto mechanic who foolishly allowed himself to get involved with the wife of gangster Dick Laurent (Robert Loggia), a luscious blonde named Alice who looks exactly like Renee.
35mm print provided courtesy of Focus Features. Rated R. Running time: 134 minutes.
About Lost Highway (1997)
Fred (Bill Pullman) is an avant-garde jazz saxophonist who shares a luxurious but fashionably barren house with his wife Renee (Patricia Arquette). Fred suspects that Renee may be unfaithful to him, but realizes he has bigger things to worry about when a series of videotapes appear at his door that prove someone is watching his home from the outside and inside. When Renee is found murdered, Fred finds himself behind bars, but one morning Fred is no longer in his cell. He has seemingly been transformed into Pete Drayton (Balthazar Getty), a young auto mechanic who foolishly allowed himself to get involved with the wife of gangster Dick Laurent (Robert Loggia), a luscious blonde named Alice who looks exactly like Renee.
35mm print provided courtesy of Focus Features. Rated R. Running time: 134 minutes.