TV Rewind: Twin Peaks

By Eric Hughes

November 29, 2011

Now if you put that hand on my...

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So I let slip at work the other day that I’d embarked on a several months-long trek to watch every episode of Twin Peaks to a friend of mine who’s reading the Game of Thrones series and has seen every Christopher Guest movie at least a handful of times. She’s a bit older than me, too, so I figured Twin Peaks would be in her wheelhouse.

Turns out I was right. And in addition to that, I found out from her that the ending to Twin Peaks will be disappointing.

This is news to me, in that I’ve done so well up to now to not ask friends about Twin Peaks, to not bombard its Wikipedia page and what have you, whatever can be done to make me as much of a first-run Twin Peaks viewer as possible.

And then my co-worker had the nerve to chime in about its, you know, finale.

To her credit, she doesn’t have a clue that I’ve been uploading my thoughts to a movie and TV website. My guess is she thinks I’m pretty normal and assumed I’m watching the show and then doing nothing with my opinions.

Whatever the case may be, I’ve been told -- by a source whose word I trust - that the end is a bit of a letdown. And with “Episode 21” out of the way, we’re only eight episodes away from whatever I’m about to see in early 2012.




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Honestly, “disappointing” isn’t a surprise. As fun as the last few episodes have been, I can’t argue that there’s been much of a direction for most of the lead characters to move to. Storylines seems to be spinning off in all sorts of directions. I have a hard time figuring out anymore what might have been planned from the first season to what may have been concocted to spare a little time.

One thing I’ve known from the start that 1990s-era viewers would not have known is that the series ends with “Episode 29.” I’ve finished “Episode 21,” so eight episodes to go. That kind of thing affords me the wisdom in knowing that somehow this whole thing has to wrap itself up, so to speak, in what amounts to a third of a broadcast season. Given how disjointed Twin Peaks seems now, I don’t know that I see that happening.

If there’s one guy on Twin Peaks working his share of the load when he’s on screen, it’s the dude playing Major Briggs. Now there’s a guy who digs into his role as an intelligent man with too many secrets. He spits out his lines with such gusto, and knows how to pause (and when) for desired effect. He feels like the smartest man in the room whenever a scene calls for him, and that’s not the work of his character, but of the real-life guy doing his thing as Briggs.

In “Episode 21,” we only get him for a few seconds, and yet it was a memorable few seconds. Perhaps I’ve a bit of a bias since his storyline of getting mysteriously kidnapped in a flash of light seems to be substituting in for (or better yet, continuing) the show’s “giant mystery” enforced by Bob, who’s apparently gone out to lunch. At the station, Briggs tells Cooper and Truman that he believes he was taken to the White Lodge during his kidnapping, but unfortunately remembers nothing. As well, he predicts trouble is ahead, and as such he’ll be lurking in the shadows. But he’ll be back when need be.


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