Honestly, it's such a relief he found his way out. It made me realize how much I appreciated the show randomly cutting away to him for 30 seconds every week.
Honestly, it's such a relief he found his way out. It made me realize how much I appreciated the show randomly cutting away to him for 30 seconds every week.
RIP Jeanne Moreau.
Oh, and Diane's style is a source of endless fascination to me. Tonight, I couldn't keep my eyes off her multicolored nails.
…a revival of the "See how much David Lynch hates women? See?"
Haha, "turnip."
Stanton seems to have embarked on a little Straight Story side adventure, and it's great.
Even original run Bobby was a much better character than he's being given credit for.
I'm going to assume Tammy isn't going to be long for this world?
Best characters: Albert and Dougie Cooper.
Bobby's arc is a real good one. And much as I hate the character, I will give a shout out to Andy's subtle evolution from a doofus to fairly competent policeman.
Yeah, this was the first time I was mildly bored and not all that interested. Still, I thoroughly enjoyed the gratuitous scene of Lynch, em…. Gordon drinking some NICE BORDEAUX with a pretty lady draped over him, and whatever the hell was going on with Sarah Palmer.
As someone who wasn't really looking forward to Audrey showing up, I have to say I quite enjoyed this bit of near trolling from Lynch's part.
It does? When I go to TV Club, the first review is Orphan Black, plus a bunch of GOT-related things.
Yeah, that was the point - that electricity works both ways, for good and for evil.
The author was talking about how several of Lynch's supremely evil characters, like Frank Booth or Red are styled like a demonic variation of Elvis, and connected them to the scene in ep. 8 with the girl getting hypnotized via radio. The idea was that electricity would soon act as a conduit for Elvis' hypersexualized…
Definitely a lot of Kerouac too.
Sheer will force. Also, I assume he read a lot. That probably helped.
Wally can just be THAT nice of a person, despite having substandard parents. It's the mark of his nobility.
Perhaps he's being misquoted?
I've often wondered about that myself. Like, I genuinely think it's one of the most important artistic events I will witness in my lifetime, and I enjoy every second of it with such abandon, I'm suspecting myself of an almost irrational bias towards Lynch and the show. I don't know if that's an objectively accurate…