
In the last installment of this piece, I will be moving up
to the present, by exploring Lynch's prequel film and the new Showtime
series. The “spoiler alert” for the skittish appears below – I'm
assuming that readers have had a good chance to see FWWM
while it's been available for the last 25 years.
First, the film: Opinions are pretty sharply divided over
Lynch’s "prequel" theatrical feature Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With
Me (1992). Critics loathed it when it came out and now revisionists
have embraced it as a masterpiece, perhaps Lynch’s best work.
I am somewhere in the middle, as I admire some sequences in
it and feel that even the most uneven Lynch film is better than most
filmmakers’ entire output. But for me the film is disjointed in its
construction and oddly jarring when seen in any kind of tandem with the
original TP series.
Two wonderful re-evaluations of the film make a very good
argument that it is a “lost classic” in Lynch's filmography – the first was by
Tim Lucas in Video Watchdog #16, and the other was by John
Thorne in The Essential Wrapped in Plastic. Their wonderful
insights into the film make one want to revisit it again – only I have now seen
the film a few times and each time I appreciate its craft more, but still can't
connect to it emotionally.
Here are the two problems with the picture that I can't
overcome: its narrative structure is flat-out bizarre, and the sadism implicit
in some of the scenes is disturbingly confrontational. The more you read about
it, the more you realize it's one of Lynch's most ambitious works (outside of
Dune, which wasn't his own material), but it's the ambition
that ends up sinking it in certain aspects – the “smaller” worlds of
Eraserhead and Blue Velvet and the
disjunction-with-no-references nature of an underrated masterwork like
Inland Empire are more vivid and “relivable” than this
particular slice of Pacific Northwest pathology.
First, the structure of the film. It unfolds in three “acts”:
first, the investigation of the Theresa Banks murder (the first victim of BOB
in this incarnation, months before Laura Palmer); second, Agent Cooper's
investigation into what happened to agent Chet Desmond, who disappeared while
investigating the Banks case; and lastly, the final week in the life of Laura
Palmer.
The first is the element that throws off most viewers and
came into being because one of the most-loved Twin Peaks
stars couldn't decide whether to be in the film or not. It was already
established in the TP series and Scott Frost’s tie-in novel
The Autobiography of F.B.I. Special Agent Dale Cooper (see
part one in this series here) that Agent Cooper investigated the Banks
murder. Kyle MacLachlan initially refused to be in Fire Walk with
Me, thus making it important for David Lynch to rewrite the TP
“canon” and insert another agent, Chet Desmond (Chris Isaak) in the continuity.
(Mark Frost completely divorced himself from the project, not wanting to do a
prequel to the TV series.)

Lynch welcomed the opportunity to rewrite
TP “history” since he enjoys thinking on his feet as a
filmmaker. “… What [Kyle] did worked out just fine… there’s no such thing as a
problem, there are only solutions, and you just go forward.” [Thorne, p. 319]
The only problem is that, once this whole “other agent really examined the
Banks case” notion was formulated, Kyle MacLachlan wanted back in to the
production.
Thus, there's a bizarre instant “disappearance” of Agent
Desmond and the long-awaited “return” of Agent Cooper a short while into the
film. The only problem is that Cooper is investigating Desmond's disappearance
as much as the Banks murder – and that none of this other stuff with Desmond
was ever mentioned before (in events that took place later!). In fact, that
becomes a big problem with FWWML: Certain things occur in
this prequel that would've *had* to have been mentioned in “later” times (read:
the TP series continuity) because it would be just too
strange if they weren't.
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Sheryl Lee, Lynch, Moira Kelly |
Cooper had mentioned the Banks case to Sheriff Truman, but
never the agent who disappeared (of course). Another glaring problem is the
involvement of Donna Hayward in the narrative – with Moira Kelly in the role,
since Lara Flynn Boyle disappeared from the ranks of the Peak cast after the
second season ended (our only clue as to what might've happened there is stray
gossip from Sherilyn Fenn in an Internet interview: Boyle had dated Kyle
MacLachlan while the show was shooting, and then they broke up).
Repeatedly in the series (and in Jennifer Lynch's
Secret Diary tie-in book) it is mentioned that Donna never
knew about Laura's “other side.” In FWWM, though, she is
present while Laura is seducing some truckers (while topless) and she herself
nearly succumbs to being raped by them after being drugged (Laura pulls the guy
off her). Did Donna somehow *forget* that she saw all this by the time the
events of the series take place? Incongruities make perfect sense in a totally
original disjunctive Lynch work like Inland Empire or a
“dream life” creation like Mulholland Drive, but
FWWM does connect to an earlier creation, and turns some of
its plot elements upside down because certain things seemed right in
this context.

The other element that predominates in the film is
a sadistic streak that ran through Lynch's work in the Nineties. Certainly,
Blue Velvet had a large amount of sadism, but it was
referred to in the plot (one of the most complained-about aspects of the film
when it came out was that Dorothy enjoys Frank's hitting her in sexual
situations, and she asks Jeffrey to do the same). Brutal violence also appears
in his two later masterworks, Mulholland Drive and
Inland Empire. In those context, there doesn't seem to be
the jubilance (read: cool rock “thrash” guitar chords and kinetic editing) that
accompanies the violence in Wild at Heart (1990).
Lost Highway found Lynch indulging in
these moments but beginning to tone it down – by Mulholland
Drive, it became one smaller aspect of the whole. One of his most
shocking violent moments wasn't in a feature, though – it was the brutal
beating and killing of Maddie Ferguson by Leland Palmer in the “big reveal”
second-season episode of Twin Peaks, where we learn that
Leland killed his daughter.

The scene was intended to be shocking and horrible, but even
given that, it was, and is, still incredibly brutal for network TV, mostly due to
the way that Lynch added to its duration by slowing down the action and the
voices (in order to create a truly horrifying nightmare sequence). Maddie was a
character who was barely there to begin with (she was supposedly created to
give Sheryl Lee a presence on the show, since Laura was dead throughout and
only seen in the context of flashbacks). Thus, she is innocence personified –
not that Laura is “guilty,” but she indeed has a bad girl side and was
self-destructive for several months before her death. (She sees death as the
only way out of her waking nightmare in The Secret Diary.)
The killing of Maddie was a landmark in TV violence and it also remains one of the most memorable and disturbing scenes in the whole series.
It was indeed echoed in Wild at Heart, which has at its
start a scene where Sailor (Nicolas Cage) kills a man by smashing his head
against stairs over and over again. Lynch's attitude at this point was to
amplify the violence, perhaps to underscore the “nightmare” aspect, or more
simply to show the underside of human behavior. Whatever the case was, this
same sadism shows up in Fire Walk With Me, and is another
reason the film is a hard one to watch over and over.
We know how Laura died from the series – seeing Leland
commit the murder is something else entirely. Her life in her final week is a
downward spiral that is unabashedly tragic, therefore the “redemption” offered
her at the end (an angel in the Red Room) is touching and too little, too soon
– it can't erase the memory of the humiliation she's gone through.
The steady stream of misery that is Laura's life in the film
is offset by the FWWM outtake collection edited into a
feature called The Missing Pieces. Here, we see many of the
scenes with the original TV cast members that were cut to focus the film
entirely on Laura – oh, and the Theresa Banks murder, and Cooper's
investigation into Chet Desmond's disappearance.
One can easily imagine the loss of the whole first “two
acts” of the film in favor of the footage that was scrapped, which contains the
characters viewers loved from the original series – but that would leave out
Agent Cooper entirely, and since MacLachlan was the star of the series, it was
a natural that there be an FBI story in the film (and instead of the one that
would solidly connected the Banks murder to that of Laura, we instead get more
FBI-related mysteries; only in the Lynch universe can such a button-down group
be plagued by so many paranormal experiences).
The Missing Pieces package (found on the
9- and 10-disc Blu-ray releases of the show) lends some levity to the
proceedings, and also offers us an earlier look at some of the characters'
dilemmas (Big Ed and Norma's romance, for instance). It would've made the film
more sympathetic, but it also would've thrown the focus off of Laura's tragic
existence.
As it stands, as Thorne outlines in the essays in his book
(some of which are exhaustive to the point of reader exhaustion), Lynch took on
too many tasks with FWWM: depicting the Banks murder
investigation; outlining Cooper's entry into this world; revisiting the
TP characters viewers loved; and showing Laura's descent and
final “transfiguration.” The fact that the film couldn't be five hours long
(the length of the original rough cut) was a problem from the start – it was a
theatrical feature and needed to be a reasonable length (and, as it stands, it
still feels too long).

It's an incredibly ambitious work, for which Lynch does
deserve credit. The oddest element he added, and kept through each phase of the
project, is a moment where Annie Blackburn (Heather Graham) appears, covered in
blood, to Laura, telling her that Cooper is stuck in the Black Lodge. This is a
moment intended to “close the loop” with the end of the series (keep in mind
that both Mark Frost and MacLachlan had wanted the feature film to pick up
where the series left off – which the Showtime season isn't even doing, since
it's taking place 25 years later).
The fact that Laura has never, ever met Cooper is not
supposed to be a problem – she has appeared to him in the Red Room, and there
was always a presumed psychic connection between them (although, when one party
is dead, there's not that strong a psychic connection, so it made sense to
include it in a prequel, and it made little sense in the series).
The original series counterbalanced its
nightmare sequences with the “normal” characters (whom I mentioned in the
second part of this piece).
FWWM leaves us entirely (once the oddly-structured first two
acts end) in the nightmare, and it's not a very enjoyable place to be.
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Theresa Banks and Leland Palmer |
It has been emphasized that Lynch treated
FWWM as a “free-form” experiment (co-scripter Robert Engels used that
phrase to sum up Lynch’s approach; Thorne, p. 324.), which created hurdles for
many viewers, myself included. It's been suggested by critics who revere the
film that one has to separate it entirely from the series for the film to truly
work – this requires, of course, that you have to forget all that you've seen
before about the Palmer family, Donna, Bobby, James, and of course the bizarro
characters (Mike, BOB, the little Man From Another Place).
Most of the action in the Showtime season takes place
outside of the titular town – one of the oddest things about
FWWM on first viewing was that it contained many scenes set
outside Twin Peaks, whereas the original ABC series *never* left the town (even
locations in other nearby towns, like One-Eyed Jacks, were depicted as a
being a short drive from Twin Peaks).
*****
[Note: Spoilers ahead – Skip down to the “bonus
videos” segment. I am not skittish about “spoilers,” but if you are one of
those “I can't know anything about it! Don't say anything!” I can only say two
things: Skip to the videos, and also, Why are you on the Internet?]
And now we have completely new Twin Peaks
episodes but, in true Lynchian fashion, they were not exactly what was expected.
As I write this, nine hour-long episodes have aired – we are in the exact
middle of the series – and what we've seen so far is truly amazing.
The season thus far has been an inventory of Lynch's approaches
from his preceding 10 features and numerous shorts, not forgetting the many
videos he made for his website and the preceding episodes of the original
Twin Peaks series. So far we've seen:
– thriller sequences
– psychodrama
– sci-fi/fantasy elements thrust into a real-world setting
– kinkiness (not too much of this, but I get the uncanny
feeling that more will be in store)
– deadpan comedy (also abrasive comedy, and Lynch's fave,
the comedy of repetition)
– pure, undistilled surrealism
– and dreams and nightmares. Lots of sequences that only
make sense if you think of them as dreams or nightmares.
In the process, we've moved forward from the original
narrative. It's been noted in various places that we are 25 years on from the
events in the original series, but we've also been treated to flashbacks, and
some Net-splainers have felt that the “present” in the show is taking place in
two or three different time frames.
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Dr. Jacoby (Russ Tamblyn) |
We've also gotten a giant cast of characters that has, so
far, happened to include, in supporting roles, the original
TP roster. This is in line with the fact mentioned above –
namely, that this new show has barely taken place in the town. (All of these
items are subject to change, but as of ep. no. 9 that's where we stand).
It's been fascinating seeing the original cast members
again. They have all aged gracefully – well, maybe not Harry Goaz, but he's being made up to look very odd as “Deputy Andy.” The only completely
nonsensical item in all of this: Sheryl Lee of course looks terrific at her
present age, but it is weird that Laura Palmer has aged in the fantasy scenes
(esp. given that she's been dead since 1989).
Perhaps the biggest disappointment for TP
(at least this one) is the news that neither Windom Earle nor Annie Blackburn
will be in this season – Kenneth Welsh (75 years old, but he will be seen in
three new movies and two new TV episodes this year!) and Heather Graham (whose
part was considered seminal in the original series conclusion, and
FWWM) are not in the IMBD cast listing for the new season.

So far, the only downside of the current season is what fans
are calling “The Dougie Show.” In these segments we follow a brain-damaged
version of the “good Cooper” as he inhabits the body of a Vegas insurance man.
The premise is simple: Coop-as-Dougie repeats the last word of every sentence
said to him, and is an innocent guy who happens upon brilliant solutions to
problems (a la Chauncey Gardiner in Being There and Dustin
Hoffman's “Rain Man” character). These sequences are pretty endless, and I've
wondered as I've watched them if they will get better on second viewing (as
some of the “middling” Lynch films have).
I've noted several times in these pieces that Lynch loves
the comedy of repetition. The Dougie scenes are the perfect illustration of
this (making the “old, doddering men” in the second season of Twin
Peaks seem like Jerry Lewis by comparison). This particular fondness
of Lynch's does tap in to his feelings about how he works at a slower speed as
a director (although, as his viewers know, some of his scenes contain brisk and
sudden violence – and slapstick!).
“…Most directors like things to move a hair faster than I
like. But that’s not a conscious choice on my part. It’s just that if it goes
too fast, something is missing. In order to slow it down you have to start
talking about why it has to be this or that way, where it
goes and how it feels: interior thinking. If you start in the interior, your
moves will slow down. Once an actor tunes into that they will automatically do
it correctly.” [Lynch on Lynch, p. 227]
The “evil Cooper” is a much more interesting character than
lame-brained Dougie. In these sequences it appears as if Cooper has been
possessed by BOB, but Lynch has said that
BOB is “with” Cooper, not inside of him. [Thorne, p. 245]
As I noted previously, one of the most interesting things
about Twin Peaks for movie buffs is its overt references to
film noir. One of these is the fact that characters smoke (especially the
hard-bitten men and the “femme fatales” females). Lynch continues to draw on
these archetypes from classic Hollywood movies. In a recent article on Indiewire he was publicly chastised for perpetuating anti-Asian
stereotypes, because Diane (Laura Dern) wears a silk dressing gown and has
Asian artifacts in her apartment (since white people who collect that kind of
thing are all clearly racist).
The writer apparently wasn't aware of this trend in film
noir and the fact that Lynch (and possibly Frost, and other creating the show)
is probably well-aware of Sternberg and his own “Asianophile” tendencies. Also,
one must remember at all times – these are fictional characters, and people who
don't exist can basically be doing anything and it doesn't mean the
author endorses their behavior.
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A classic "slow scene" -- a guy sweeps for several minutes. |
The above-mentioned “slowed down” factor has made for the best
scenes thus far in the series. These usually involve an intrigue, as when, in
the seventh episode, Gordon Cole and Albert bring Diane (the character to whom
Cooper’s tapes were addressed in the original series – and the dreaded
“Orientalist” according to the p.c. police!) to see the evil Cooper in jail.
The best juxtaposition that has happened thus far was that the plot-centric
seventh episode was followed by the truly free-form avant-garde mini-movie that
was the eighth episode.
Tens of thousands of words have already appeared online
about this episode, and it truly is a landmark in terms of television. A
premium cable channel gives a noted filmmaker money to go back and “reboot” his
critical and popular success from 25 years earlier, and he uses a portion of
the budget to make a non-linear episode that draws on the history of
avant-garde film while offering up a slew of memorable images, odd and
unsettling sounds, and bizarre mind-fucks.

It was interesting to see the people who enjoyed the episode
compare it to the work of Terrence Malick (who is friends with Lynch through
the AFI, and their mutual long-time friend Jack Fisk) and Kubrick (whom Lynch
often cites as one of his favorite filmmakers, along with Fellini and Billy
Wilder). Lynch has admitted his debt to Kubrick in more than one interview, but
when Kubrick was releasing the turning point for commercial cinema,
2001: A Space Odyssey, in 1968, Lynch had already been a painter
for several years, and had made his first two shorts. By 1970, he made
The Grandmother, and he then spent most of the Seventies
making Eraserhead, which brought avant-garde cinema to the
midnight-movies world of cult cinema.
Lynch began as an avant-garde artist and has remained one as
a painter, a lithographer, a photographer, and a sculptor. His films have had
plots, but he has injected as much non-linearity as he could – with the eighth
episode of the new Twin Peaks, he went for broke and concocted
a mini-movie that has “narrative events” (the “births” of BOB and Laura, the
invasion of the Woodsman from Hell) but is mostly in the realm of
Eraserhead: an upsetting and sometimes openly disturbing
series of images that occasionally proves to be absolutely, breathtakingly
beautiful in its forlorn-ness.
While the “go for broke” aspect of the episode was very
impressive, it was also fascinating to see series television meet up with real
cinema, as it has done in only a few cases (Fassbinder's Berlin
Alexanderplatz comes to mind). The much-repeated refrain these days
is that we're in “another Golden Age of Television” when the best-written and
best-acted TV shows are “doing what cinema used to do” or “what literature used
to do” for previous generations.
Thus, a top-notch show – pick your favorite from the usual
suspects (The Wire, Breaking Bad, The Sopranos, et al) is
hailed as cinema. But these shows, as good as they are, are simply really
excellent TV (nothing to sneer at, since excellent TV can be, and has been,
wonderful art). It's not cinema, though – because there is nothing inventive or
intelligent about the visual style, there is no mise en scene (the astoundingly
beautiful production design in “Mad Men” was not a visual style, it was sublime
production design).
Lynch came along and did get real cinema into series
television, and numerous lunkheads then publicly complained, “I'm confused –
what does this have to do with Twin Peaks?” Well, the
“Eraserhead episode” (as I've taken to calling it) did have
ties to the narrative of the original TP, but it also linked
to the beginning of Lynch's filmography. The fans that watched and were
confused and annoyed were no doubt looking for “Lynchian surrealism,” but of the
Red Room sort (“look, isn't that dancing dwarf cute?”).
That initial
TP dream sequence was indeed radical TV for ABC in April
1990, but the eighth episode of this new “season” of the show was radical TV
for any network in any time span. (Along with things like the trippy, pre-psychedelia visual experiments concocted by Ernie
Kovacs, and a handful of the greatest programming on PBS in the early
Seventies.)
This week's show, the ninth episode, offered another jarring
juxtaposition by jumping back into all the plotlines with a vengeance. In one
hour we leapt from thread to thread, with some new “presents” for viewers. This
season certainly is a little gift-box for viewers who value quality; it also
represents Lynch and Frost successfully making the full-length, very long
project that FWWM could've been, if premium cable nets had wanted Lynch/Frost to work for them back in the early Nineties.
Among our new little treats: new performers (Tim Roth,
Jennifer Jason Leigh); bonding between two characters that no one with any
sense dislikes (Diane and Cole); and finally something substantial for the old cast
members to do (Major Briggs' “message” for his son and his fellow lawmen).
While the “Eraserhead episode" had distinctly “Lynchian”
qualities, this show seemed to be more the brainchild of Mark Frost, as it
included a number of plot threads and worked in a very intriguing paranormal
plotline.
*****
It is most definitely good to be living in a period when
David Lynch is still coming up with new things to frustrate, annoy, and
mindfuck a percentage of the populace. The idea that nine more, totally new,
hours of this stuff is waiting to be slowly doled out is pretty damned special.
And what is the single best aspect of all of Lynch's work,
linking him to the great filmmakers and artists of the past? His sincerity. As
has been noted by his colleagues in interview after interview, documentary
after documentary, he honestly believes in the world he depicts onscreen.
He
embraces the Norman Rockwell-esque American Fifties, while also acknowledging
the brutally violent underside of the American character. Nothing is “hidden”
or ironic in his work (even his deadpan sense of humor, which often seems to
have been put in place to mock his own style). Whatever you can say for or
against his work, it is genuine, it is American, and it is very, very,
wonderfully strange.
“There are things about painting that are true for
everything in life. That’s the way painting is. Music is also one of those
things. There are things that can’t be said with words. And that’s sort of what
painting is all about. And that’s what filmmaking, to me, is mostly about.
There are words and there are stories, but there are things that can be said
with film that you can’t say with words. It’s just the beautiful language of
cinema.” [Lynch on Lynch, pp. 26-27]
*****
And now for the last batch of “bonus videos”….
First a great profile of Lynch by Jonathan Ross from the
series For One Week Only. It’s an excellent “101” for newcomers and a time capsule for the diehard fan.
Another little peephole into what it was like when the show
exploded in its first season: Sherilyn Fenn and Michael Ontkean on the MTV
Awards:
A pure oddity: the complete video (missing sound in some
sequences) of the soap opera watched by the citizens of Twin Peaks, “Invitation
to Love.” I believe this is more of a Frost creation than one by Lynch:
When Lynch discovered the Internet and started making short
videos for his davidlynch.com website, he used to greet subscribers with a
daily weather report. Below is a sample item. For the real deal check out this one.
One of the best known Net-only creations was his series
“Rabbits,” a “Twilight Zone” blending of “The Honeymooners,” furries, and
deadpan humor. Dig that brilliant audience track!
“Out Yonder” was another Net-only series Lynch did for a
bit. It features David and his son Austin Lynch as two yokels who are confused
by most things and are fond of one particular phrase:
The single funniest thing Lynch produced in my opinion is
the web cartoon series “Dumbland.” It’s incredibly childish, mean-spirited,
sadistic, insane, warped, and seems like a reaction to the meaner side of TV
cartoon shows like “Beavis and Butthead” and “Family Guy.” I’m very glad the
poster in this case put up Italian-subtitled versions of these (unneeded by English speakers, but even funnier). This is my
favorite installment, where the phrase “Get the stick! Get the stick!” gets
quite a workout:
Lynch has directed many music videos. Here’s a good one for
Nine Inch Nails, “Came Back Haunted.” Any video that has to warn viewers with
epilepsy that they should not watch is bound to be an intense viewing
experience:
Although my favorite track from Lynch as a musician is his
spoken word slice of weirdness “Strange and Unproductive Thinking,” this
is the full-length video for another of his explorations of the weird impulses
in young America, “Crazy Clown Time”:
Lynch has continued to work in a number of media as an
artist. Here’s a very short video he did for an exhibition of his photos in
Paris:
And lastly, an amazing minute of film. Lynch took part in
the film Lumiere and Company, in which a host of filmmakers
(from Theo Angelopoulos to Zhang Yimou) were given an original Lumiere camera
and asked to make a film. The only stipulations were: no sound, no edits, one
minute in length (that’s all the film the camera could carry), and no more than
three takes.
Lynch came up with a short inspired by Melies and Feuillade
called “Premonitions Following an Evil Deed”: