I think that this log of yours is on to something. If Richard embodies Saturnial energy, it would make perfect sense that our unseen wounded war vet, Linda, is his fraternal twin, who embodies the Jovian. Just musing here:
I think that this log of yours is on to something. If Richard embodies Saturnial energy, it would make perfect sense that our unseen wounded war vet, Linda, is his fraternal twin, who embodies the Jovian. Just musing here:
I'm assuming she originally spoke with bad Chad, who then tipped Richard off that there was a witness.
So far, all we know is that Richard Horne is the son of either Johnny or Audrey, (or, possibly, Donna or some unknown child of Ben's). If he's not Johnny's, then how he came to have the Horne name is another story.
Going back to this great scene, seething with unspoken emotions, here is the entire conversation:
Miriam said: "I already told the police it was you who ran over the little boy.
… But I don't know why you're not arrested, so I also wrote a letter."
Cooper's always had the higher powers guiding him, like The Giant, which I always saw as his spirit guide. MIKE and The Arm also watching over him.
She is credited as Becky Burnett, so we assume they tied the knot.
For sure. He's accomplished much good during his time in Vegas as a torchbearer for truth, justice, and the American way.
I kind of feel like the intrepid young Special Agent Dale Cooper we all knew and loved died when he entered the Black Lodge. Even if he had come back the way he came in, with his mind intact, there's no way he would be the same person after all this time in limbo. Mark Frost said that the relentless passage of time…
Credited as "Freddie Sykes," as played by British YouTuber, Jack Wardle, in his screen debut- he doesn't seem like a very important character.
I mentioned this last week, but it seems like everything the doppelganger throws at Cooper has, so far, not only failed, but been deflected back to damage either itself or some related aspect, Karma Police-style.
He is exactly in Bobby Peru territory, in that he is an impotent, psychotic rage-fueled man-child. Possibly, like Peru, Frank Truman's late son, the mysterious wheelchair-bound Linda, and maybe Chad and Richard, he, too, could be another veteran of foreign combat.
Hell-OH-oh-OH-OHHHHH! *Ka-Ching!* *Ka-Ching!* *Ka-Ching!*
His name is Steven Burnett, and he and Becky (Shelly's daughter) are married.
I've been re-watching the old series between the new episodes, and it would be pretty funny if that scene was all we see of James in The Return.
Discussed this further a few posts below, but the Log Lady originally said that Laura is "the one," in that she connects the many. None of this would be happening had she not been who she was and killed by BOB, which was the catalyst for Cooper coming to Twin Peaks and uncovering all its secrets, etc.
"Laura is the one," is also the last line of the Log Lady's introduction to the pilot episode:
No, I think Rodney says: "Now I know how Brando felt. [*sigh*] Calling him tomorrow, this Douglas Jones, to set up a meeting."
"Arm Candie"
Exactly- well put. As with Frank Booth and Bobby Peru, the sexual gender-based violence committed by deeply damaged men in Lynch's films is often a pathetic mask for impotency.