Twin Peaks movie plot
2021-10-22 14:30
In 1989, David Lynch filmed Twin Peaks: Pilot, telling the story of FBI agent Dale Cooper going to Twin Peaks to investigate the murder of female high school student Laura Palmer. In David Lynch’s usual style, the whole film is full of mysterious events and weird points, and there is no ending at all. This probably caused the audience's dissatisfaction or curiosity. Therefore, the TV station or the creative team decided to use this as a starting point and develop it into a series. For mysterious reasons, David Lynch did not want to be the director, but as the executive producer, and found another director to film the show. As a result, the first episode of Twin Peaks is already a sequel, which is why there is "Before Twin Peaks" in the opening of the first episode, which explains the previous story.
David Lynch’s "Twin Peaks" is one of the most famous American TV series in the 1990s. Won the 1990 American Television Critics Association Award, the 1997 American Golden Globe Award for Best Actor and Actress, 8 American Emmy Awards in 1991, and the 1991 American Broadcasting Association Award for Best TV Series, and David Lynch is also for this reason. Boarded the cover of "Time" magazine.
This series is very different from David Lynch’s film works. There are many characters but distinct personalities. The story clues are not many but the plot turns back and forth. Many people are attracted by Lora’s death mystery, and they are also weird by the detectives. The method of detection is fascinating. Although the mystery was not explained in the TV version at the end (although Lynch claimed that he told the audience who the murderer was in the second episode), the dissection of the life of the middle class of human desire is quite profound. And Lynch’s loyal fans will not be disappointed. The peculiar style presented in the whole series, entangled with the grotesque aesthetics and blurred atmosphere, are the classic qualities of David Lynch. Among them, Lora was also hailed as the sexiest dead body in TV history by "Time".
Extended Reading
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Ben Horne: We've lain a gala reception for your fair-haired boys tonight; all of Twin Peaks' best and brightest.
Jerry Horne: We're holding it in a phone booth?
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Dale Cooper: Fellas, coincidence and fate figure largely in our lives.