This book seeks the implications of the Deleuzian analyses in the work of film director David Lynch, taking him as a privileged case in the evolution of contemporary cinema, where concepts of the French philosopher Gilles Deleuze around the image and thought are revealed. Therefore, we find a becoming cinematic of philosophy and a becoming philosophical of cinema in the works of these two authors. The study includes the last creative period of Lynch´s to the present, emphasizing the meaning of images in Lost Highway, Mulholland Dr. and Inland Empire, where we can see the expressive capacities of the American director that help him create variables of the image, an unprecedented cinematic experiment that allows us to move from the psycho-cinematography to the neuro-film.