"Well, Catherine, why do not you follow me?" Katherine chased me with a smile. I took her to an expensive corner of the underwear section and pulled out some of the bra shows shown. "Madam, what do you think about this?" I asked with a smile. "Yes ... yes ... all these are good ... Yes!" She moaned and turned over what was scattered in front of me. She picked up a pink designer's brassiere and ran it in front of my face. "I will have this!" I took a fake cello with a smile on my face, took out one underwear from her and checked the size of it.
"I am dead, but I am still alive." Laura Palmer spoke these magical words to Dale Cooper in the second part of Twin Peaks: Return ("TP: TR"). What does this mean? I am writing three articles about TP. TR is trying to solve the problem by creating a coherent answer to that topic. In this article - the last thing written before the TP broadcast: the end of the second part of the TR constructed based on the concept built on the first two articles (ie, these concepts should be read first Take a look at the link above)) - Twin Peaks' core story is a story about dealing with terrible cruelty from beginning to end, from the beginning to the end. I think the audience is aware of this to a certain extent, but I do not think that all aspects of Twin Peaks completely reflect this. In this article, I am trying to fix this process and help the process. - TP: Explain what TR's "return" is
Twin Peaks was a television series first and foremost. A story of handsome and courteous FBI agent, Dale Cooper, who visited the quirky Twin Peaks town in the northeastern part of Washington and investigated the murder case of a local high school student's lover Laura Palmer. The original show of the show includes two seasons in the early 1990s. At the end of the series, Twin Peaks: A prequel film called Walking Fire with me was released. The third season has recently been announced and is canceled in the second quarter. We premiered on 21st May 2017. I'm so excited
I think I have to stand here and admit something. I am finally enthusiastic about revisiting the Twin Peaks world, and I strangely did not notice which episode I chose with the Showtime app. In order to shorten a long story, I erroneously read the fourth episode, I thought it was a premiere. As Gordon Cole has heard Albert wash his feet, this knows that David Lynch, especially people see his work in the right environment plagued by pain, but he did. The fourth part is my first experience of seeing the new Twin Peaks.
Twin Peaks followed by Twin Peaks: Return is a thorough search for singularity and discomfort. One thing that David Lynch does in order to master a degree is to meet the audience's expectations. One of my favorite examples is to intentionally detain the Twin Peak protagonist, Agent Dale Cooper. In the next 15 episions, Cooper was involved, waiting for him to make everything better with his weird authority. But as time went by, not only did we suffer from the lack of Cooper, but also caused deliberate insanity due to his absence.