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‘Twin Peaks’ Review: WTF Was That & Did David Lynch Just School Peak TV?

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Frankenstein's Monster
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« on: May 21, 2017, 11:33:00 pm »

‘Twin Peaks’ Review: WTF Was That & Did David Lynch Just School Peak TV?
by Dominic Patten
May 21, 2017 8:00pm



Showtime

SPOILER ALERT: This story contains details of tonight’s Twin Peaks debut on Showtime.

Related
David Lynch Travels Back To 'Twin Peaks': 'The Story Was Not Over' — Deadline Disruptors

After all the hype, anticipation and secrecy, Twin Peaks is finally back. But WTF was that premiere that just aired on Showtime all about? With Kyle MacLachlan back as FBI Agent Dale Cooper and more, the first two parts of David Lynch and Mark Frost’s new 18-part installment was weird, sometimes intentionally tedious, and amazing at the same time – and something you have to watch.

As I say in my video review above, there are a lot of perfumed tea leaves and dank soil to rummage through as you absorb the visceral onslaught of the two-hour, two-episode debut of the new Twin Peaks, but WTF has to be the question. Look, along with the more than 30 million viewers who tuned in and more than a few producers over the years, I was a huge fan of the original medium-shattering Twins Peaks when it debuted on Sunday night, April 8, 1990. Though the second and final season started to quickly wane once Laura Palmer’s killer was revealed, this return truly intrigued me – unlike so many cash-grabbing reboots and revivals that populate the small screen in this era of Peak TV.

So, like I also say in my review above, well played sirs and welcome back; you were missed. Also, watch your self-appointed heirs reel and scurry into their own creative woods for a while because, from what I’ve seen so far going almost full Eraserhead, Lynch has embraced the vistas and madness that define his best work. Despite not having made a feature since 2006’s Inland Empire, the Blue Velvet director (who helms the entire new series) has shown he still can conjure dread and darkness. While it may give new fans and old fans narrative vertigo, this Twin Peaks stands in proud succession to its original and solidly on its own.

You can see more of my take on the new Twin Peaks by clicking on the video above, but here’s a recap of tonight’s two-episode debut. Almost always one to keep things close to his chest, the often-cryptic Lynch has told Deadline and others that the fundamental reason he resurrected Twin Peaks after more than two decades is that “the story was not over.” Word is that almost no one besides the Palme d’Or winner, Frost, MacLachlan and some Showtime execs know where this is all going and what happens in this latest installment.

Here’s what we know from the opening two episodes. Starting with footage from the original series, the whole thing is seemingly launched by that lingering “I’ll see you in 25 years” line from Laura to MacLachlan’s Agent Cooper in the evil den of the Black Lodge back in the once assumed final episode of the second and final season in 1991.

Cut to more than 20 years later, the soul of Dale Cooper is still trapped in the Black Lodge where we last saw him more than two decades ago as his doppelganger possessed by the demonic murderous spirit known as Bob woke up in Twin Peaks. The trapped Cooper is visited with warnings by from a disturbing flesh topped talking tree and a soon to be abducted again and aged Laura — again played by Sheryl Lee, like in the original series and the terrible 1992 Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me prequel movie. Picking up from the end of that last season of Twin Peaks, that Cooper doppelganger, who seems pretty clearly still possessed by Bob — and now looks a lot like the Portlandia alum dressing up as Michael Madsen in Kill Bill — is loose in the world on a killing spree and something more.

As a secondary story, though it could turn out to be the main plot knowing Lynch and Frost, there’s a well wired and well watched by cameras and a young attendant glass box that sits in what seems to be a billionaire’s care in NYC. The point of all that surveillance is to see if anything appears in the box – at one point a confused and floating Agent Cooper is in the glass box unnoticed and at another point, a blurred naked beast appears. To that, because sex often seems to kill in the lore of Twin Peaks, two new additions to the series are horrifically mauled if not killed by said beast as they are getting it on in the room. At almost the same time, local police in South Dakota discover a gruesome beheading of a women in a blood-soaked bed with a bloated body.

Related
‘Twin Peaks’ Fans in Italy Get Episodes Early Due to Sky Italia Gaffe

The subsequent arrest of a local high school principal, played by Scream alum Matthew Lillard, for murder suggests a connection – at least when Evil Cooper gets on his straight-out-of-1997 laptop for some looking around the FBI database and prison security systems. Laying off the new series slogan of “It Is Happening Again,” the portal and the case in the Dakotas seem an indication that the punishing violence that defined the original Twin Peaks is back — with the gore cranked up to and sometimes beyond cable levels.

Related
Cannes Lineup: Todd Haynes, Sofia Coppola, Noah Baumbach, ‘Twin Peaks’

Speaking of being back, we’ve already seen a number of the old cast and old haunts with more than just MacLachlan, Lee, plus Carel Struycken as the Giant and Al Strobel as the One Armed Man. The Great Northern lodge in rural Washington state is still standing and open, but the Horne brothers, played by Richard Beymer and David Patrick Kelly, are making a lot of their cash from the pot business nowadays. In the town of Twin Peaks itself, hooked up to an oxygen tank and with most of her hair gone, Log Lady Margaret Lanterman warns deputy Sheriff Tommy Hawk that “something is missing.” On the phone with Catherine E. Coulson’s character, the Michael Horse-portrayed Hawk goes searching in the dark forests with promises of pie later, only to discover a dank and murky pond that looks like a portal of some sort.

Meanwhile, had to say it, at the Bang Bang Bar roadhouse, James Marshall, played still by James Hurley but having had a motorcycle accident in the past, arrives with a pal for a beer and the Chromatics’ show. James sees Shelly Johnson, still played by now-Riverdale regular Mädchen Amick, having drinks with friends. The damaged and often quiet biker, who left Twin Peaks in the second season, can’t stop staring at their table, though who he is actually looking at is unclear. At the same time Shelly sees what appears to be her old lover Bobby Briggs, again played by Dana Ashbrook, at the bar making a pistol hand gesture to her. That concludes the two-hour debut as the Chromatics play out the end of the opening episodes in a way that is so very familiar to fans of the original.

We have not seen new and old castmates Laura Dern, David Duchovny, the late Miguel Ferrer, Robert Forster, Harry Dean Stanton, Naomi Watts, Jim Belushi, Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder or Monica Bellucci or many others, but there’s a lot of coffee and pie promised too. Of course, if you are a Showtime subscriber you can stream episodes three and four right now instead of waiting for next week and see how much further Lynch and Frost go and where the rotting breadcrumbs lead.

What does it all mean?

Well, at the L.A. premiere of Twin Peaks on May 19, Lynch told the invited crowd “I love trees, I love wood.” Hard to tell still if that is a hint or a tailless tease, but it is clear Lynch’s enthusiasm was genuine as was his love of getting his hands dirty. The result has got me hooked on the new Twin Peaks, just like I was with the original all those years ago.
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Deanna Witmer
Superhero Member
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Posts: 4985



« Reply #1 on: May 21, 2017, 11:57:54 pm »


Indiewire
‘Twin Peaks’ Season 3 Premiere Review: David Lynch Remains a Master — But The Brutality Toward Women Feels Dated
The return of this iconic series proves plenty watchable, but there are a few elements that don't go down as easy as damn good coffee.

Liz Shannon Miller

2 hours ago

@lizlet   

Twin Peaks Season 3

“Twin Peaks”

Suzanne Tenner/SHOWTIME
View Gallery
17 Photos

<<Page 1: Spoiler-Free Thoughts, Including a Puzzle Metaphor.

[Spoilers start here.]

“Twin Peaks” began as the story of a dead girl, and while the world of the show is so much bigger, there’s no denying that Frost and Lynch built this franchise on the back of violence against women.

And in the first two episodes, said violence against women is pretty staggering. First, Tracy (Madeline Zima) is met with an uncertain but definitely bloody fate after stripping down to have sex with a hapless camera operator (Ben Rosenfield). A school librarian gets decapitated, her head left in her apartment while her body goes missing. An adulteress gets shot in the back by Evil Dale. Even dead, Laura Palmer can’t escape torture — she gets sucked up into an unknown void, screaming.

The worst is probably this: Daria, in an excruciatingly painful sequence, is terrorized, beaten, and eventually murdered by Evil Dale, as he has figured out that she and Ray have betrayed him. Daria wears just a bra and panties for the entire scene as Evil Dale beats her, tells her again and again that he’s going to kill her, and then does so, shooting her in the head after repeatedly slamming her against the wall .

It’s not that men aren’t murdered in the show, but as just one example, we don’t see Jack, Evil Dale’s male henchman, go through the ordeal that Daria does. Evil Dale plays with his mouth for an uncomfortable period of time, but Jack doesn’t die on screen — and he gets to keep his clothes on.

Kyle MacLachlan, "Twin Peaks" (2017)

These hard-to-watch scenes aren’t just hard to watch because Lynch is a master of suspense. They’re hard to watch because they represent an antiquated attitude toward this genre. “Stupid young couple **** where they shouldn’t and dying as a result” is a trope that is officially played out — as is the assumption that a sexual woman deserves to be murdered, as exemplified in countless horror films.

That’s what we always forget about “Twin Peaks” — it might enjoy its moments of absurd comedy, as well as whatever you want to call Dale Cooper plummeting through the cracks of reality. But this is a horror story, and from time to time it means to scare you, whether that be with supernatural murders or the awfulness that exists in our basic humanity.

But the show is entering a new era, when audiences are maybe hoping to be hooked on narratives that don’t consider women to be victims and/or sex objects. The violence against women in the first two episodes, especially in comparison to what was experienced by men, stands out as perhaps the most antiquated element of the new series — a series we’re looking forward to following, but hoping that it remembers women deserve as much a chance to be heroes as men.
The Quotes that Haunt Us (Because We May Or May Not Understand Them)

“Your log and I are on the same page.”

“I am dead. Yet I live.”

“I don’t need anything, Ray. I want.”

“You followed human nature perfectly.”

“Aren’t you nice and wet?”
Kimmy Robertson and Harry Goaz, "Twin Peaks"

Kimmy Robertson and Harry Goaz, “Twin Peaks”

Showtime
Additional Observations

    The obvious fragility of Catherine E. Coulson, returning as Margaret (better known as “The Log Lady”), is heartbreaking to see. Coulson passed away in the fall of 2015, and we’re grateful that she was able to reprise her iconic role one last time. And, as IndieWire’s Hanh Nguyen pointed out, of all the women on this show, so far she shows the most agency.
    Michael J. Anderson wasn’t asked to come back for the new season, and perhaps this is because Lynch had already decided to depict the Arm (AKA The Man From Another Place) as a disembodied CGI brain stem. It makes as much sense as anything. It’s too bad we won’t get to see Anderson again, but major points to “Twin Peaks” for the weirdest recasting moment of all time.
    Matthew Lillard is a real grown-up actor now, and his performance in these first two episodes is really impressive.
    Favorite sound design moment: The audio of a record skipping, every time Laura Palmer takes a step in the Red Room. That one will stick with us.
    The way in which Lynch’s mastery of modern technology to enhance the Black Lodge is impressive on a level beyond compare. Good Dale’s descent between the cracks of reality is maybe the most visually impressive sequence we’ve seen this year. And Lynch has 16 more hours left to top that.

Grade: B+

http://www.indiewire.com/2017/05/twin-peaks-review-season-3-premiere-david-lynch-showtime-spoilers-1201829732/2/
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Deanna Witmer
Superhero Member
******
Posts: 4985



« Reply #2 on: May 21, 2017, 11:58:26 pm »


Indiewire
‘Twin Peaks’ Season 3 Premiere Review: David Lynch Remains a Master — But The Brutality Toward Women Feels Dated
The return of this iconic series proves plenty watchable, but there are a few elements that don't go down as easy as damn good coffee.

Liz Shannon Miller

2 hours ago

@lizlet   

Twin Peaks Season 3

“Twin Peaks”

Suzanne Tenner/SHOWTIME
View Gallery
17 Photos

<<Page 1: Spoiler-Free Thoughts, Including a Puzzle Metaphor.

[Spoilers start here.]

“Twin Peaks” began as the story of a dead girl, and while the world of the show is so much bigger, there’s no denying that Frost and Lynch built this franchise on the back of violence against women.

And in the first two episodes, said violence against women is pretty staggering. First, Tracy (Madeline Zima) is met with an uncertain but definitely bloody fate after stripping down to have sex with a hapless camera operator (Ben Rosenfield). A school librarian gets decapitated, her head left in her apartment while her body goes missing. An adulteress gets shot in the back by Evil Dale. Even dead, Laura Palmer can’t escape torture — she gets sucked up into an unknown void, screaming.

The worst is probably this: Daria, in an excruciatingly painful sequence, is terrorized, beaten, and eventually murdered by Evil Dale, as he has figured out that she and Ray have betrayed him. Daria wears just a bra and panties for the entire scene as Evil Dale beats her, tells her again and again that he’s going to kill her, and then does so, shooting her in the head after repeatedly slamming her against the wall .

It’s not that men aren’t murdered in the show, but as just one example, we don’t see Jack, Evil Dale’s male henchman, go through the ordeal that Daria does. Evil Dale plays with his mouth for an uncomfortable period of time, but Jack doesn’t die on screen — and he gets to keep his clothes on.

Kyle MacLachlan, "Twin Peaks" (2017)

These hard-to-watch scenes aren’t just hard to watch because Lynch is a master of suspense. They’re hard to watch because they represent an antiquated attitude toward this genre. “Stupid young couple **** where they shouldn’t and dying as a result” is a trope that is officially played out — as is the assumption that a sexual woman deserves to be murdered, as exemplified in countless horror films.

That’s what we always forget about “Twin Peaks” — it might enjoy its moments of absurd comedy, as well as whatever you want to call Dale Cooper plummeting through the cracks of reality. But this is a horror story, and from time to time it means to scare you, whether that be with supernatural murders or the awfulness that exists in our basic humanity.

But the show is entering a new era, when audiences are maybe hoping to be hooked on narratives that don’t consider women to be victims and/or sex objects. The violence against women in the first two episodes, especially in comparison to what was experienced by men, stands out as perhaps the most antiquated element of the new series — a series we’re looking forward to following, but hoping that it remembers women deserve as much a chance to be heroes as men.
The Quotes that Haunt Us (Because We May Or May Not Understand Them)

“Your log and I are on the same page.”

“I am dead. Yet I live.”

“I don’t need anything, Ray. I want.”

“You followed human nature perfectly.”

“Aren’t you nice and wet?”
Kimmy Robertson and Harry Goaz, "Twin Peaks"

Kimmy Robertson and Harry Goaz, “Twin Peaks”

Showtime
Additional Observations

    The obvious fragility of Catherine E. Coulson, returning as Margaret (better known as “The Log Lady”), is heartbreaking to see. Coulson passed away in the fall of 2015, and we’re grateful that she was able to reprise her iconic role one last time. And, as IndieWire’s Hanh Nguyen pointed out, of all the women on this show, so far she shows the most agency.
    Michael J. Anderson wasn’t asked to come back for the new season, and perhaps this is because Lynch had already decided to depict the Arm (AKA The Man From Another Place) as a disembodied CGI brain stem. It makes as much sense as anything. It’s too bad we won’t get to see Anderson again, but major points to “Twin Peaks” for the weirdest recasting moment of all time.
    Matthew Lillard is a real grown-up actor now, and his performance in these first two episodes is really impressive.
    Favorite sound design moment: The audio of a record skipping, every time Laura Palmer takes a step in the Red Room. That one will stick with us.
    The way in which Lynch’s mastery of modern technology to enhance the Black Lodge is impressive on a level beyond compare. Good Dale’s descent between the cracks of reality is maybe the most visually impressive sequence we’ve seen this year. And Lynch has 16 more hours left to top that.

Grade: B+

http://www.indiewire.com/2017/05/twin-peaks-review-season-3-premiere-david-lynch-showtime-spoilers-1201829732/2/
Report Spam   Logged
Deanna Witmer
Superhero Member
******
Posts: 4985



« Reply #3 on: May 21, 2017, 11:58:37 pm »


Indiewire
‘Twin Peaks’ Season 3 Premiere Review: David Lynch Remains a Master — But The Brutality Toward Women Feels Dated
The return of this iconic series proves plenty watchable, but there are a few elements that don't go down as easy as damn good coffee.

Liz Shannon Miller

2 hours ago

@lizlet   

Twin Peaks Season 3

“Twin Peaks”

Suzanne Tenner/SHOWTIME
View Gallery
17 Photos

<<Page 1: Spoiler-Free Thoughts, Including a Puzzle Metaphor.

[Spoilers start here.]

“Twin Peaks” began as the story of a dead girl, and while the world of the show is so much bigger, there’s no denying that Frost and Lynch built this franchise on the back of violence against women.

And in the first two episodes, said violence against women is pretty staggering. First, Tracy (Madeline Zima) is met with an uncertain but definitely bloody fate after stripping down to have sex with a hapless camera operator (Ben Rosenfield). A school librarian gets decapitated, her head left in her apartment while her body goes missing. An adulteress gets shot in the back by Evil Dale. Even dead, Laura Palmer can’t escape torture — she gets sucked up into an unknown void, screaming.

The worst is probably this: Daria, in an excruciatingly painful sequence, is terrorized, beaten, and eventually murdered by Evil Dale, as he has figured out that she and Ray have betrayed him. Daria wears just a bra and panties for the entire scene as Evil Dale beats her, tells her again and again that he’s going to kill her, and then does so, shooting her in the head after repeatedly slamming her against the wall .

It’s not that men aren’t murdered in the show, but as just one example, we don’t see Jack, Evil Dale’s male henchman, go through the ordeal that Daria does. Evil Dale plays with his mouth for an uncomfortable period of time, but Jack doesn’t die on screen — and he gets to keep his clothes on.

Kyle MacLachlan, "Twin Peaks" (2017)

These hard-to-watch scenes aren’t just hard to watch because Lynch is a master of suspense. They’re hard to watch because they represent an antiquated attitude toward this genre. “Stupid young couple **** where they shouldn’t and dying as a result” is a trope that is officially played out — as is the assumption that a sexual woman deserves to be murdered, as exemplified in countless horror films.

That’s what we always forget about “Twin Peaks” — it might enjoy its moments of absurd comedy, as well as whatever you want to call Dale Cooper plummeting through the cracks of reality. But this is a horror story, and from time to time it means to scare you, whether that be with supernatural murders or the awfulness that exists in our basic humanity.

But the show is entering a new era, when audiences are maybe hoping to be hooked on narratives that don’t consider women to be victims and/or sex objects. The violence against women in the first two episodes, especially in comparison to what was experienced by men, stands out as perhaps the most antiquated element of the new series — a series we’re looking forward to following, but hoping that it remembers women deserve as much a chance to be heroes as men.
The Quotes that Haunt Us (Because We May Or May Not Understand Them)

“Your log and I are on the same page.”

“I am dead. Yet I live.”

“I don’t need anything, Ray. I want.”

“You followed human nature perfectly.”

“Aren’t you nice and wet?”
Kimmy Robertson and Harry Goaz, "Twin Peaks"

Kimmy Robertson and Harry Goaz, “Twin Peaks”

Showtime
Additional Observations

    The obvious fragility of Catherine E. Coulson, returning as Margaret (better known as “The Log Lady”), is heartbreaking to see. Coulson passed away in the fall of 2015, and we’re grateful that she was able to reprise her iconic role one last time. And, as IndieWire’s Hanh Nguyen pointed out, of all the women on this show, so far she shows the most agency.
    Michael J. Anderson wasn’t asked to come back for the new season, and perhaps this is because Lynch had already decided to depict the Arm (AKA The Man From Another Place) as a disembodied CGI brain stem. It makes as much sense as anything. It’s too bad we won’t get to see Anderson again, but major points to “Twin Peaks” for the weirdest recasting moment of all time.
    Matthew Lillard is a real grown-up actor now, and his performance in these first two episodes is really impressive.
    Favorite sound design moment: The audio of a record skipping, every time Laura Palmer takes a step in the Red Room. That one will stick with us.
    The way in which Lynch’s mastery of modern technology to enhance the Black Lodge is impressive on a level beyond compare. Good Dale’s descent between the cracks of reality is maybe the most visually impressive sequence we’ve seen this year. And Lynch has 16 more hours left to top that.

Grade: B+

http://www.indiewire.com/2017/05/twin-peaks-review-season-3-premiere-david-lynch-showtime-spoilers-1201829732/2/
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