Me acaba de llegar una publicidad de DeepDiscountDVD con un enlace para esto, un preorder con fecha del 10 de enero


A must see for fans of the legendary filmmaker David Lynch, this collection features six short films from the master of the macabre. Spanning the director's career, from early experiments to more fully realized visions, this disc contains the shorts "Six Men Getting Sick," "The Alphabet," "The Grandmother," "The Amputee," "The Cowboy and The Frenchman" and "Lumiere". Each film is preceded by an introduction from the director.
Removiendo un poco he encontrado más info. Al parecer antes sólo estaba disponible a través de la propia web de Lynch.
Original short films from director David Lynch (Eraserhead, The Elephant Man, Blue Velvet, Mulholland Drive) including:

1. Six Men Getting Sick (1967-1 min. film loop projected on
a sculptured screen - repeated six times)
2. The Alphabet (1968-4 min.)
3. The Grandmother (1970-34 min.)
4. The Amputee (1973-Version 1: 5 min./Version 2: 4 min.)
5. The Cowboy and the Frenchman (1988-26 min.)
6. Lumière (1995-1 min.)

Each film preceded by an introduction by director David Lynch.

Custom packaged in an 8" by 8" box, containing a 16 page booklet.

David Lynch's short films,starting with his first projec (1967)t when he was primarily a painter, here entitled "Six Men Getting Sick". This is presented here as a short flm loop: the original exhibit combined sculpted models ("mannequins") with film images and sound for a very weird and (typically) unsetleing effect.
#2 is "The Alphabet",(1968) in which Mr.Lynch turns something as innocuous as the english alphabet into the stuff of troubled dreams. #3 is "The Grandmother"(1970), Lynch's first "longer" film, funded as were most of his early works, by the American Film Institute, whilst our hero eked out a bare living doing manual labor, paper deliveries & the like. The symbols of dreams, repression, sexuality, industrial & human decay, etc, leavened with the darkest of humor, comprise the subject here, much as they reached their pinnacle 4 or 5 years later in "Eraserhead".
#4: The Amputee (1973)
#5 The Cowboy & the Frenchman (1987) with Harry Dean Stanton & Lynch regulars
#6 Lumiere (1995) Lynch's contribution to the compilation film of the same title, for which a number of top directors were invited to
each create a film using antique methods & equipment.
¿Alguien puede aportar más info sobre los cortos y esta edición?