


Eraserhead
- Artwork by Jeff Finley
- Printed on our super soft 4.5oz 100% pre-shrunk ringspun cotton shirts
- Custom Printed on DemandÂ
About Eraserhead (1977)
David Lynch's Eraserhead (1977) took five years to complete due to constant funding shortages, with Lynch working as a paper route delivery boy and receiving financial support from actress Sissy Spacek's husband Jack Fisk to keep the production alive. The film's nightmarish industrial soundscape—created by Lynch and sound designer Alan Splet over a year of experimentation—is as unsettling as its imagery, blending ambient factory noise with organic sounds that make viewers feel physically uncomfortable. Lynch has famously refused to explain the film's meaning or reveal how the grotesque "baby" puppet was constructed, fueling decades of speculation that ranges from fears of fatherhood to nuclear anxiety. Selected for preservation in the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress, Eraserhead became the quintessential midnight movie and established Lynch as one of cinema's most uncompromising artistic voices.
Original: $36.00
-65%$36.00
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Description
- Artwork by Jeff Finley
- Printed on our super soft 4.5oz 100% pre-shrunk ringspun cotton shirts
- Custom Printed on DemandÂ
About Eraserhead (1977)
David Lynch's Eraserhead (1977) took five years to complete due to constant funding shortages, with Lynch working as a paper route delivery boy and receiving financial support from actress Sissy Spacek's husband Jack Fisk to keep the production alive. The film's nightmarish industrial soundscape—created by Lynch and sound designer Alan Splet over a year of experimentation—is as unsettling as its imagery, blending ambient factory noise with organic sounds that make viewers feel physically uncomfortable. Lynch has famously refused to explain the film's meaning or reveal how the grotesque "baby" puppet was constructed, fueling decades of speculation that ranges from fears of fatherhood to nuclear anxiety. Selected for preservation in the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress, Eraserhead became the quintessential midnight movie and established Lynch as one of cinema's most uncompromising artistic voices.























