wease wrote:About 2/3 thru the second season.Teeeeeekay wrote:What's this now?wease wrote:Ha ha! The pine weasel!
Haha. Not remembering. Seems to happen a lot with this show.
wease wrote:About 2/3 thru the second season.Teeeeeekay wrote:What's this now?wease wrote:Ha ha! The pine weasel!
I think you'd need at least a primer on the original series before jumping into this. Maybe some others could jump in with points I've missed? (granted, I've only watched the first two of the new season, and it's been a few years since I watched the original) Only read below the spoiler tag if you want to know what happened in the first two seasons, and I'm trying to paint with really broad strokes:Strat wrote:is this something i can watch with having no familiarity with it?
McParadigm wrote:lol
No! But I fucking love them now.washing machine wrote:Probably exactly what The Chromatics were thinking when they got picked to play over the credits of the premiere. Classic case of who influenced who? Loving these ending credit music cameos a lot, by the way. Was anyone already familiar with the Cactus Blossoms?New York Times wrote:There are shades of “Lost” in that glass mystery box — especially when it eventually fills with a murderous apparition in black smoke. There’s more than a little “Fargo” in the darkly funny subplot in which a South Dakota man (Matthew Lillard) may have committed murder, à la Leland Palmer, under paranormal influence. There may be too much of “True Detective” and other hard-boiled kill-dramas in the journey of Evil Cooper, which culminates in his murdering his lingerie-clad partner (Nicole LaLiberté) in bed.
Of course, it’s ridiculous to suggest that “Twin Peaks” is borrowing these elements so much as borrowing them back.
parasolmonster wrote:So far this has been my first introduction to all of the bands. Lynch has great taste in music.washing machine wrote:Probably exactly what The Chromatics were thinking when they got picked to play over the credits of the premiere. Classic case of who influenced who? Loving these ending credit music cameos a lot, by the way. Was anyone already familiar with the Cactus Blossoms?New York Times wrote:There are shades of “Lost” in that glass mystery box — especially when it eventually fills with a murderous apparition in black smoke. There’s more than a little “Fargo” in the darkly funny subplot in which a South Dakota man (Matthew Lillard) may have committed murder, à la Leland Palmer, under paranormal influence. There may be too much of “True Detective” and other hard-boiled kill-dramas in the journey of Evil Cooper, which culminates in his murdering his lingerie-clad partner (Nicole LaLiberté) in bed.
Of course, it’s ridiculous to suggest that “Twin Peaks” is borrowing these elements so much as borrowing them back.
I called up my mom today to talk about last night's episodes. We were talking about how great the bands at the Bang Bang Bar have been. I mentioned how I assume that Eddie Vedder and Trent Reznor will all be performers at the bar at some point because I can't imagine them having actual roles in the show. She responded with, "How could Eddie remember lines when he can't even remember the lyrics to his own songs?"
Do not under any circumstances watch this current season of Twin Peaks before watching the previous seasons and the feature film, Fire Walk With Me.Strat wrote:is this something i can watch with having no familiarity with it?
Agreed.durdencommatyler wrote:Do not under any circumstances watch this current season of Twin Peaks before watching the previous seasons and the feature film, Fire Walk With Me.Strat wrote:is this something i can watch with having no familiarity with it?
Okay then. Somebody link me up to all this stuff. I am completely in the dark with it.Birds in Hell wrote:Agreed.durdencommatyler wrote:Do not under any circumstances watch this current season of Twin Peaks before watching the previous seasons and the feature film, Fire Walk With Me.Strat wrote:is this something i can watch with having no familiarity with it?
The original series is currently on both Netflix and Hulu. I've not been able to find Fire Walk With Me anywhere online. I guess I'm gonna have to break down and order it from Amazon.Strat wrote:Okay then. Somebody link me up to all this stuff. I am completely in the dark with it.Birds in Hell wrote:Agreed.durdencommatyler wrote:Do not under any circumstances watch this current season of Twin Peaks before watching the previous seasons and the feature film, Fire Walk With Me.Strat wrote:is this something i can watch with having no familiarity with it?
If I'm not mistaken, if you have Showtime, it is available on the Showtime app.wease wrote:The original series is currently on both Netflix and Hulu. I've not been able to find Fire Walk With Me anywhere online. I guess I'm gonna have to break down and order it from Amazon.Strat wrote:Okay then. Somebody link me up to all this stuff. I am completely in the dark with it.Birds in Hell wrote:Agreed.durdencommatyler wrote:Do not under any circumstances watch this current season of Twin Peaks before watching the previous seasons and the feature film, Fire Walk With Me.Strat wrote:is this something i can watch with having no familiarity with it?
dimejinky99 wrote:I could destroy any ai chatbot you put in front of me. Easily.
dimejinky99 wrote:I could destroy any ai chatbot you put in front of me. Easily.
Now... THAT is interesting.washing machine wrote:I try not to look too hard for meaning with things like that. I'd rather just experience it as one weird dream or the imagined happenings in a parallel universe.
I can't help but getting sucked into pet theories when I read them, though. That eye thing is an interesting one. When I read it, I immediately thought of Laura winking to Cooper in the original finale.
durdencommatyler wrote:Now... THAT is interesting.washing machine wrote:I try not to look too hard for meaning with things like that. I'd rather just experience it as one weird dream or the imagined happenings in a parallel universe.
I can't help but getting sucked into pet theories when I read them, though. That eye thing is an interesting one. When I read it, I immediately thought of Laura winking to Cooper in the original finale.
dimejinky99 wrote:I could destroy any ai chatbot you put in front of me. Easily.
McParadigm wrote:lol
I do love those scenes that just streeeeeeeetch and fuck with your perception of how long you've been watching, how much attention you can keep, and so on--like almost anything in the Black Lodge, or the great scene with "Dougie" and his son at the breakfast table. But the scene with Michael Cera, for instance, dragged in a way where I just ended up bored. They ain't all hits, but the great ones are just so damn great.durdencommatyler wrote:I'm one of those people that just never wants any David Lynch scene to end. I can't imagine a scene of his that "goes on too long."
McParadigm wrote:lol