05:18 I’ve never actually seen this show, but the bit with the alpaca walking through the scene, starring him in the face, grunting and then continuing on is hilarious.
I like to use movie/film/play lines in real life to vibe check the people around me. The holy grail of lines that I've never once found the flimsiest excuse to use is "...there was a fish... in the percolator. Sorry."
Lo so lo so lo so. L'inglese scozzese fa un certo effetto. Tuttavia io aspetterei a trarre conclusioni semplicistiche. Un inglese ci sta e porta anche un cappello bianco da pescatore, pero' e' in mezzo ad altri 2 che non sono affatto inglesi. Io penso all'antico triangolo magico esoterico di torino. Torino milano genova e torino lione praga via marsiglia nizza, i vecchi triangoli cabalistici esoterici. Poiche' Laura Palmer era una mia amica, benche' retrospettiva, ogni tanto mi capito' di vedere alcuni effetti a cascata del suo punto morte. Una volta vidi persino uno che si tirava giu' i pantaloni in un campo, ad esempio. Mando il filmato.
How is the part when Leland comes into Hornes office and they all start dancing not in this 😂 also the log lady introduction makes me laugh every time.
To make a scene as stupid as the "Ben and Jerry Sandwich scene" and put it on international television for dozens of thousands to see is to be a brave and honest artist. I aspire to be one day as honest as both once Frost and Lynch were.
considering it went sharply downhill in the second half of the second season, im guessing it would probably not be very good and also very far from the original point
but i enjoyed that world so much, and the characters.... it would be cool to have seen what else the actors could do. and all the lynch mimicry... it would be fun, but not as pure, but i would accept that.@@invertedcastle
The real question is what would have happened if mark and David had full creative license with no network executives impinging on the pace and plot. The only reason I think it went so sour was because they were forced to reveal the killer too soon. That being said, no show should go on for more than 10 seasons. There is not one show I can think of that maintains it’s quality beyond 5-8 seasons.
S2 fell apart as first Lynch and then Frost stepped away, Lynch out of frustration with network interference, Frost in order to capitalize on the momentary fame to direct a movie (Storyville, which was just okay.) If they'd both stayed hands on involved, there wouldn't have been a dip in quality.
Ah, season 1, back when all the characters had purpose, nobody was floundering around thinking they're were 16 for twenty episode straight, everyone still remembered they're vendettas and nobody was trying to run insurance scams instead, and the show in general was good.
That timeline didn't but Laura wound up victim of something in the end, at least that's what I understood from the final episode. Cooper will endlessly try to save Laura but sadly she's destined to suffer at the hands of Jowday.