She had some issues about her return via social media but she has also said she was very happy with what she was given. At this point i think they have set up quite a bit when she does arrive.
She had some issues about her return via social media but she has also said she was very happy with what she was given. At this point i think they have set up quite a bit when she does arrive.
The closing moments of Dawn of the Dead stayed with me for a long time - the slow death of their friend, followed by what they think will be a new beginning, only to see that the worst is just starting when the biker gangs arrive. Of all the "humans are the worst…ever!" stories in post-apocalyptic films and shows,…
Me too. I still remember him smoking a cigarette, cool and unflappable. He and Barbara Bain would probably get the #CoupleGoals hashtag today.
I thought he'd passed away a few years ago. A very stylish, capable actor. Very unique, like all the best actors are. He pretty much made Mission Impossible for me, along with Barbara Bain.
Agreed. I'm not sure how coming out after a producer decides to trash you and essentially makes your story all about himself means you're doing it for credit.
Fuller seems to be another egomaniac, like most other overhyped TV producers.
I'm not sure it's his responsibility, but the whole thing comes across to me as a passive-aggressive wheeze to me in general. But he's always reminded me of Joss Whedon in that he tends to blather on and on anyway to the point where it distracts me from his actual work.
That's the Internet for you. Well that and Twin Peaks has its share of unhinged characters…
I don't think she wanted to be in FWWM.
Mostly because I don't really see Dougie that way and because I was never hugely invested in Cooper to the point where he defined the show for me.
The woman (Anne Marie Martin I think) is probably my favorite part of it, as she has the toughest role. I have always enjoyed David Rasche. The show is very very very very '80s but has some hilarious moments.
Andy had his moments, but Lucy was pretty much always like this. She spent most of season 2 talking about her pregnancy rather than doing work.
I don't want to see it, but I also sort of do, as the scenes would be so powerful and give closure. At least with Diane, since that is already established. I have no desire to see anything about Audrey and rape or any of that.
Ah. Well I don't really have a lot of investment in Matthew Lillard so maybe if I did I'd notice more. I appreciate him going all out but it just sort of felt like another day in Lynch country to me.
It wasn't really Twin Peaks to me even when Dale was front and center (the back half of season 2, which often felt like a brand new, much cheaper, program, and which rewrote Dale's personality so much I had to headcanon that he was being taken over by Bob). There's something peculiar in the mix for the show that only…
To me it captures the core of what Twin Peaks was, the undistilled Twin Peaks of early on and FWWM. I think that's what Lynch wanted back and as that was my favorite material on the show it works for me. There are times when I do think, "This has nothing to do with Twin Peaks" but then we go back to things like Bobby…
I'd probably go with that one too - anything with a lot of Lana, Windom Earle, Eckhardt, or all three.
That was a big part of it, yes. That is explored more in her diary, which is heartbreaking to read.
Beautifully put. I saw the "He still wouldn't be crying over Laura!" stuff too but it was about so much more than that. It's easy to forget just what a central part she was of who he was back then and he obviously still carries it with him. And like you said it's also about time and aging.
That would actually be pretty cool.