1. Chet Desmond has its own modus operandi
Modus operandi refers to the iconic style of behavior, which must be repetitive and consistent, especially in the scope of criminal evidence. Gordon said to Sam Stanley, who was innocent and confused about the situation, Chet had his own modus operandi. It’s hard not to doubt that it was for the convenience (same as Sam’s incomprehensible) audience to rely on him after Chet’s disappearance/identity change. The MO recognized him.
So what is Chet's MO? Unlike Agent Cooper’s dullness, cuteness and love, Agent Desmond doesn’t say a lot of ruthless people. The investigation method goes straight to the subject. Even hearing the voice of the Arm, finding the green ring, and entering the red room disappears faster than Cooper. Quickly, but this is more like purely to compare the [character characteristics] of Twin Peaks/Deer Meadow and their corresponding FBI agents, not MO; the only thing that can be called the MO mark is that Chet explained Gordon to Sam in the car He was able to see the old woman wandering outside the trailer that was invisible to others, and found the ring in the land by intuition... His detective method is the same as Cooper, relying on intuitive inspiration and the guidance of supernatural power. Even with a change of identity and personality, Chet first appeared on the timeline in the play to show his detective methods, and then he disappeared. Dale Cooper, who succeeded him to continue exploring the Blue Rose cases, has the same detective style. In the film, Gordon To remind Sam to pay attention to Chet Desmond's modus operandi, it is almost Lynch reminding us that Chet Desmond and Dale Cooper are essentially the same person. Their initials, CD/DC, also confirm this.
Perhaps the only meaning of the entire story of Chet Desmond & Dear Meadow is to serve as a reference for Dale Cooper & Twin Peaks, so the mystery of Chet's disappearance may not need to be investigated. Doesn't the third season give you a clear explanation of the beginning and end of Cooper's disappearance and reappearance? The story that happened to Desmond is the same.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=032Nwr5EeGY After reading this Missing Piece, I suddenly feel that none of the above is necessary. Desmond's MO just doesn't sleep (.)
2. Cooper said to Laura, don’t take the green ring
The ring first appeared in the hands of Teresa Banks. After she died, she fell into the grass under the trailer and was found by Chet Desmond-and then we knew Chet was missing. Combining FWWM and the third season, anyone who wears a ring and dies will enter the red room, and the ring will also fall on the floor of the red room and be recycled by Mike. Although Chet had no reason to die at this time (? Murdered by Deer Meadow's hapless police? After all, their deputy was a drug dealer), but we next found out that the ring was indeed recovered by Mike, so the ring is probably different. The way it works can make Chet enter the red room and even get trapped inside like Phillip Jeffries and Cooper.
So the question is: Why are Mike and Cooper's intentions for Laura being opposite? Mike recovered the green ring. On the night Laura was killed, he desperately tried to open the door of the car, threw the ring in and rolled to Laura, because he knew that for some reason the audience did not know, Bob/Leland just put the ring on Laura. She must be killed, and death will free Laura. On the other hand, the Arm said in FWWM that wearing a ring is equivalent to wed the Arm-considering that the Arm and Mike are one body, wed the Arm is equivalent to wed Mike (it happens that the Arm is also Mike’s left arm, and the left ring finger is pointing Is the position of the wedding ring), that is, combined with Mike, Laura can resist Bob from being possessed by him after wearing the ring. Perhaps it is precisely because Mike/the Arm, as Bob’s “controller” in a certain sense, gives She has such power.
However, after putting on the ring and dying Laura entered the red room, but did not meet Mike/the Arm, but came to Cooper's side. Although it is always said that Cooper has White Knight syndrome, the depth of his obsession with the action itself [Save Laura] may have affected his judgment-he may not know what Laura really needs; but there is no denying that There is a strong and rewarding bond between him and Laura. He finally watched Laura in the red room with Laura's guardian angel. He was even more like Laura's guardian angel than the five-mao special effect with wings floating in the air. In addition, Cooper predicted the death of the strange girl Laura a year ago. Laura saw the Arm talking with Cooper in her dream, knew that Cooper would be replaced by his doppelgänger 25 years in advance, and heard Cooper’s warning to her. -"Don't take that ring". Whether this advice is objectively correct or not, everything Cooper said and done to Laura was done in good faith.
On the contrary, what is Mike doing at this time? He first drove Leland/Bob to intimidate Leland/Bob, accused him of opening the warehouse and taking garmonbozia, completely ignoring that Laura was scared to death when he witnessed it in the co-pilot; after Laura died, he summoned Bob to the red room and recovered Laura from Leland. The blood of this harvest, and call it the garmonbazia of this harvest-it’s worth noting that these garmonbazias are not so much from Laura, but from Leland. The fear and pain of killing their own daughter by themselves is unparalleled, and the previous sexual assault on her daughter Leland can always blame Bob for his actions. Mike may just want more fear and pain to feed on, and Laura, as a strange example, she suffered from Bob’s torture but did not seem to produce much garmonbozia, even after witnessing Bobby's murder-the deceased seemed to be the Deer Meadow police station. The deputy—she didn’t panic at all, but smiled and even said "you just killed Mike"—Mike here obviously does not refer to the high school student in the previous two seasons, perhaps it refers to Mike in the red room, dark Means that she is no longer afraid of her controller. Therefore, perhaps only her death can allow Mike to reap a lot of fear and pain at once, and compensate for the garmonbozia that he had previously accused Bob/Leland of taking away from the "warehouse". In the third season, Mike's image was too positive, and he has been helping Cooper, but in FWWM, he is really not kind to Laura.
Or maybe Cooper's warning was for selfish purposes? If Laura does not take the ring, Leland/Bob will continue to torture her, she will not die, and Cooper will not come to Twin Peaks to investigate, and will not be trapped in the red room for 25 years-as long as Laura dies. Once an event is erased from the timeline, Cooper can immediately be free from the red room. However, this is impossible. It is impossible for our Agent Cooper to do this kind of thing hahahaha, so I would rather believe that Mike let Laura take the ring, on the one hand to relieve her pain with death, on the other hand it is also a kind of Wrong guidance-after watching the movie, I found out that I really like the role of Laura Palmer. I didn’t show interest in her in the previous three seasons. In Fire Walk With Me, she is like a person who lives in pain and shadow forever. People who can still hold on are indeed brave and cute, so death may not be the only way, but the beginning of the dream of "Twin Peaks" requires her death.
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