A double amputee sits on a lounge chair smoking a cigarette and writing a letter. What she writes is read to us in voice-over, and is seemingly just the minutiae of social interactions the woman is obsessed over.
A nurse, played by Lynch himself, comes and unwraps one of the stumps left by her amputation, and snips at sutures of the wound on the end. Fluid starts to come out, he attempts to stem the flow, fails, and runs out, while the woman's ponderous voice-over continues, though we've long since stopped paying attention.
"The Amputee" was allegedly made by Lynch to help a guy he knows test film stock for the American Film Institute. I'm not sure what the outcome of the test was, but having just watched the test itself, I can't imagine they were too happy with the stock. The movie looks like it was shot for a CD-ROM game made in 1993. It's black and white, heavily letterboxed with black bars on all sides, and is extremely grainy.
I'm not really sure what to make of it. I'm surprised it turned up on the "Short Films of David Lynch" DVD, because it feels like kind of a joke between him, his star Catherine Coulson (who sounds exactly like Frances Conroy on the voiceover), and maybe the guy he made it for.
At least it's pretty short, and it's not boring. There's a dark sense of humour at work here as well.