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Right after the show aired, Sacred Bones announced a forthcoming 7" by Trouble, the band who played last night (which featured David Lynch's son and his frequent music collaborator).

Yeah, I read a quote from a Showtime exec who said specifically that David Lynch did not want to spend three years working on something just for people to consume it over a weekend. I'm loving how things morph every episode, both in content and style, and having a week to digest and think about what has happened

You've just made me think about this: have we actually heard Sonny-Jim speak? He's laughed at his dad's antics but I don't think he's said anything.

Bobby was a creep, though. The series made him a cuddly tough guy as it went on, but FWWM showed him as the cop-killing drug runner he was.

Heather Graham is not coming back, and Annie seems to have been completely written out of Twin Peaks lore, so that's probably the wrong path you've set yourself along.

Was it actually coke they were doing, or was it the designer Chinese drugs Bobby and Truman discussed?

Which is weird, because wasn't he pushing 30 in the original series?

I remember re-watching Twin Peaks when it came out on DVD having not seen it since its original airing 15 years prior, and I remember being slightly devastated in the finale when Nadine regained her memory, and immediately scorned Mike.

Actually, the line is "Fix their hearts or die", which is much better. Change implies working to accept, fix implies there is something wrong.

Having read through these comments, I can only hope you keep writing this exact same comment another dozen times every week for the duration of the series.

If you want to tie scenes to other Lynch projects, Jeffrey has to urinate badly in "Blue Velvet", which arguably causes the film to fall in place, because he misses the horn honking to let him know Dorothy has returned home, and leaves him caught in the apartment when Frank Booth shows up.

Yes, but Bobby was one of the people running drugs into the town when he was in high school. Don't forget, he was working with (and killed) a small town cop in "Fire Walk With Me".

It's funny, I never thought much of the Log Lady character one way or the other when the series aired. It wasn't until the DVD's came out, and I saw the intros made much later for the repeats that I saw her importance.

Oh, I don't doubt she wanted to appear in it, I know of their long relationship. But having had family members appear in the same physical condition she did, the amount of effort to do even simple activities seemed Herculean made me think "Catherine Coulson really is giving everything she has for this," not, "Wow, the

I don't know. I watched the final episode a couple of days ago, and yeah, my reaction to it was different than it was when I was 15 and had been waiting for ABC to finally air it after a two month hiatus. And the movie was a massive disappointment to me when it came out when I was 16. But over the last 24 years any

I read a good quote yesterday from a Showtime exec who said Lynch didn't want to spend three years working on something only to have people consume it in a weekend.

We watched the show when it aired and the movie when it came out and have had a quarter of a century to digest it all.

I've never heard him say he was off doing "Wild At Heart", but people do often use that as an excuse, which makes no sense because "Wild" won the Palme D'or the same week the first season finale air and the show was renewed for a second season, and had already bombed in theatres almost a month before the second season

Maybe it's me, but I felt bad for Catherine Coulson in those scenes. For all the shit Lynch gets for putting Richard Pryor in that condition in "Lost Highway" at least he never looked like he was dragged off his deathbed to shoot the scene.

Wasn't it the spirit of Cooper's doppelgänger? It listened to the conversation, then went to couple's house and killed the wife.