Synopsis
It is happening again.
Picks up 25 years after the inhabitants of a quaint northwestern town are stunned when their homecoming queen is murdered.
2017 Directed by David Lynch
Picks up 25 years after the inhabitants of a quaint northwestern town are stunned when their homecoming queen is murdered.
Kyle MacLachlan Sheryl Lee Laura Dern David Lynch Miguel Ferrer Chrysta Bell Naomi Watts Grace Zabriskie Michael Horse Robert Forster Kimmy Robertson Pierce Gagnon Harry Goaz Al Strobel John Pirruccello Don Murray Mädchen Amick Dana Ashbrook Brent Briscoe David Patrick Kelly Jane Adams Jim Belushi Richard Beymer Giselle DaMier Eamon Farren Patrick Fischler Jennifer Jason Leigh Robert Knepper Erica Eynon Show All…
me: :(
twin peaks:
* ☕️ . * . * . *
. * . . * * 🍩 . . *
* . * . 🚓 * . * . * . 🌲
🦉 . * . . * 🔥 * . * .
. 🏔 * . . * . * 🙍🏼♀️ .
me: :)
"Is it future or is it past?"
"We live inside a dream."
Spending an eternity trying to fix what was broken. But was there ever a time when it wasn’t broken? Where exactly are we now? Are we even the same people anymore? Genuinely think the final scene of this will haunt me forever.
TWIN PEAKS SEASON 4 PREDICTION: DAVID LYNCH IS GONNA COME OUT OF MY TV AND KILL ME.
one of the greatest artistic accomplishments I’ve ever experienced. the final shot will haunt my memory from now until the day I die. words cannot explain this.
“Through the darkness of future past
The magician longs to see
One chance out between two worlds
Fire walk with me.”
FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, DON’T READ THIS IF YOU HAVEN’T SEEN “TWIN PEAKS: THE RETURN”
In the original run of Twin Peaks David Lynch and Mark Frost were never going to say who killed Laura Palmer. Only after pressure from executives at ABC did they reveal the murderer. Lynch called Laura Palmer’s death “the goose that laid the golden eggs” and when you look at the history of episodes that immediately happened after, it’s clear there’s no bullshit there. The ship was righted by the Season 2 finale and we were left with a cliffhanger that promised a…
It would take an entire monograph to be able to remotely tackle the vastness of this project. How it manages to filter the original through Lynch’s subsequent interest in TM and various Buddhist arcana. How it perpetuates Mulholland Drive’s half-prankish, half-generous doling out of “clues” that are as absurd as they are genuinely important. How it both parodies and adheres to the legacy of serialized mystery that the original show helped to pioneer by stringing out its narrative to the point that even its own characters can only say “Finally!” when things fall into place in the end stretch. How Lynch responds to the increasingly frantic, constant motion of our entertainment by holding compositions for agonizing stretches, demanding that we…