A dreamlike homage to David Lynch’s haunting universe — where dance becomes the medium for decoding silence, shadows, and the subconscious.
There are works that don’t just tell a story — they unsettle reality. David Lynch’s Rabbits is one of them: a disorienting video piece where humanoid rabbits move through a dark living room, repeat cryptic lines, and pause for inexplicable laugh tracks. Created in 2002 and later integrated into Lynch’s film Inland Empire, Rabbits has become a cult object of study for cinephiles, psychologists, and artists alike. It is an experiment in time, perception, fear, and abstraction — a slow-motion descent into something deeply human and profoundly unknowable.
From the Screen to the Body
In May 2023, Movimento Centrale – Dance & Theater Collective responded to Rabbits not with analysis, but with movement. Inside the evocative halls of Castel Sismondo in Rimini — once the cinematic dreamland of Fellini and now home to surreal encounters — they performed a physical meditation on Lynch’s language of absence.
No linear narrative, no clear beginning or end. Just bodies moving through space, crossing thresholds between visibility and the unseen. The performance was not a reenactment of Rabbits but a reflection through another medium: where Lynch works with shadow and sound, Movimento Centrale moved through silence and stillness. Together, they evoked the same sense of impending something — a tension that never resolves, a fear that never fully forms.
Lynch, Fellini, and the Architecture of the Subconscious
The event was part of La Settima Arte – Cinema e Industria, a multidisciplinary festival dedicated to the intersection of imagination and industry. Organized by Confindustria Romagna, Khairos, the University of Bologna – Rimini Campus, and the Municipality of Rimini, the initiative brought the David Lynch – The Unified Field exhibition to Italy for the first time, thanks to the Fellini Foundation of Sion.
Fittingly, it all unfolded in Rimini — a city where the surreal has a long history. Fellini, another master of dreams and fragments, once called Rimini home. Decades later, Lynch’s ghosts entered the same halls, echoing that shared sensibility: not storytelling as explanation, but as atmosphere. Movement as meaning.
What Rabbits Whisper
In Rabbits, phrases are repeated without resolution: “Something’s wrong,” one rabbit says. Laughter erupts, then silence. A door opens. Nothing enters. The rain falls endlessly. There is no plot. Only unease.
For Movimento Centrale, this was fertile terrain. Their performance aimed to intercept the invisible, to bring forth the silent charge that lives beneath Lynch’s imagery. Through choreography, light, and presence, they guided the audience through a space where time bent, logic flickered, and the known became unfamiliar. It was not interpretation. It was immersion.
Still Running, Still Dreaming
The Lynch exhibition continues at the Primo Piano Gallery in Rimini until July 14 — a space where his visual works invite viewers to step out of certainty and into the cracks between dream and perception.
In parallel, the performance by Movimento Centrale stands as a gesture of kinship — a physical echo of the Lynchian universe, where stillness hums and every movement holds a secret. A brief encounter with the invisible, staged not to explain, but to feel.