I kinda don't think he'll show up (unless it's recycled footage) because others who have died since filming were on the list AND I doubt Showtime would deliberately ignore the promotional possibilities of "David Bowie's last acting job!"
I kinda don't think he'll show up (unless it's recycled footage) because others who have died since filming were on the list AND I doubt Showtime would deliberately ignore the promotional possibilities of "David Bowie's last acting job!"
In the director's commentary to "Drugstore Cowboy", Gus Van Sant says she'd tried for or was offered a role in "Heathers" and I think her mom wouldn't let her be in it, so she was adamant that she end up in "Cowboy" because of that.
I hope she plays piano over the closing credits.
The first episode of the return didn't end with a song either. The Chromatics performance was at the end of episode two.
I honestly haven't had any problems with her acting at all. I find it fits the character of someone who is very successful while being somewhat younger than most at his/her job. There's a robotic quality that comes from the drive for excellence at what you do at the expense of typical human behaviour. I don't find her…
No, the pan across the cells to the blackened man who disappears and whose head floats away happens in episode two, when Shaggy's alone sobbing in his cell after his confrontation with his wife. The next scene is the wife returning home and DoppleCooper shooting her.
Did you miss his appearance as he walked up the hallway throughout the duration of her call to Col. Davis?
That was the time Andy and the guy who had his truck stolen were supposed to meet.
Are we pretending "Boxcar Bertha" doesn't exist?
I didn't say that. I'm saying I personally have waited more than a quarter of a century for something I never thought would happen and am thrilled to let the ride take me where it goes. There's still 12 hours to go; that's more than most individual seasons of prestige TV shows now.
My prediction: DoppleCooper dies at the end of the series. The name and reputation of Dale Cooper in tatters from the evil unleashed, Cooper replaces Dougie permanently; with the real Dougie no longer existent, Cooper is able to have the family he lost out on having trapped in the lodge for 25 years. Series ends with…
Yeah, I've seen FWWM a ton of times over the last 25 years, but have never seen the deleted scenes (no Blu-Ray player), until I saw a few posted on YouTube the other day. I couldn't believe all the stuff from the new series that was referenced in the clips.
When Twin Peaks first aired, it wasn't unusual for articles to reference Cooper as Jeffrey Beaumont's amateur sleuth gone pro.
Yeah, that has to have been a fuck-up in that Vanity Fair article where they misinterpreted Dern talking about Blue Velvet.
Yeah, really. This past weekend marked the 26th anniversary of ABC burning off the two last episodes, and I can remember the minutes after it ending just in awe of what I'd witnessed, and kinda sad we would never know an ending. If we'd gotten a third season then, we would've been stuck with a not-Cooper Cooper…
Yeah, I kinda thought this was Carter's thing. The last time I saw this story was in January when someone posted a video on Twitter of Carter shaking everyone's hand on his flight home after attending the Trump inauguration.
I'm hoping Gordon Cole is Becky's father.
Jerry Horne (aka "& brother") was in last week's episode.
I seem to be viewing this differently than most people commenting on the Internet. Because I know it's an already completed 18-part story, I view this whole thing as a novel. We just "read" chapter 6 of 18; at this point in a novel we are nowhere near a conclusion, yet a lot of people want this finished. This a story…
The ring was inside the body, which makes it seem like it was put there to obscure matters. If Dougie was created to be replaced by a returning good Cooper, it makes sense that Bad Cooper would set up a trap to frame Good Cooper for murder upon returning.