solver345--disqus
Solver345
solver345--disqus

My first thought was that the frog-bug was saving the girl. The other listeners we see hear the Woodsman's broadcast seem to die (or possibly just fall asleep; but I read it as dying). Thus, absent any intervention, the radio broadcast would kill the girl too. So I saw it as being consistent with Laura's "good"

Well, YMMV, but after Gordon finishes by saying "You think about that, Tammy!" her eyes flit around a little and she takes a deep breathe which, to my subjective eyes, gives off a moderately-frustrated vibe.

Mind you, I'm not suggesting that the "tough __" line mirroring in these two episodes is clear proof that the Dougie stuff is a dream (far from it). But (a) there does seem to be a clear way that it *could* make sense as part of such an interpretation, and (b) Lynch and Frost seem too meticulously detail-oriented to

Following on the idea that all of this Dougie stuff is actually something of a dream (see https://25yearslatersite.co… , which is not written by me), I've been thinking that Janey-E is actually a stand-in (in Coop's mind) for Diane, similar to the way that much of the first part of Mulholland Drive was a stand-in for

From his past musical work with her (and the fact that he cast her in this role), Lynch clearly greatly respect Chrysta Bell, the actress, as an artist. (And as an aside: she really is a great musician; check out her new album, produced by PJ Harvey's longtime collaborator John Parish.) In watching interviews of

RE the lingering camera shot on Tammy — my take on it (further confirmed, in my mind, by this episode) is that that scene plays something of a role akin to the scene regarding 'dancing Lil' in Fire Walk with Me (i.e., this scene: https://www.youtube.com/wat…. In that scene, Lynch seems clearly to be intentionally