We are now several weeks into Showtime’s limited run of Twin Peaks: The Return, and we need to talk.
EPISODE 8
Good grief, David Lynch. Of all the David Lynch’s in the world, you’re the David Lynchiest.
Last nights episode of Twin Peaks is getting a lot of praise. It was 45 minutes of avant-garde, film school bullshit. It was Eraserhead, not Twin Peaks. It made no attempt to be accessible. It made no attempt to be coherent. It made no attempt to tell a story. But it is David Lynch, so it must be amazing. Here is Nine Inch Nails.
** Spoilers** ** DO NOT READ BELOW THIS LINE IF YOU DO NOT WANT TO KNOW WHAT HAPPENED** - Not that I really know what happened.
At the end of episode 7, Bob/Dale is released from prison. That is where this episode picks up.
Free from prison, Bob/Dale is shot by his partner - Ray (who Bod/Dale was planning to double cross). As Bob/Dale lay dead on the ground, a bunch of ghost coal miners dance, smear blood all over Bob/Dale’s body, and extract a bubble containing the essence of Bob from Dale’s body.
4 minutes of NIN performing at the roadhouse.
We are then taken back to 1945, and we witness a beautiful shot of the first nuclear explosion in super-slo-mo. The essence of Bob is ejected from this explosion.
There is a gas station, and time lapse footage of coal miners randomly milling about this gas station.
Then things get weird.
We are taken back to what is possibly the same dimension Dale visited when he was astral projecting. (Remember the woman without eyes?) Here we see The Giant and some woman. The giant levitates, and ejects a golden orb containing the essence of Laura Palmer from his mouth. The woman kissed the orb and loaded into some sort of tube, and sent the orb to Earth. Either the orb moved very slowly, or time between dimensions must be relative, because this is all happening in the 1940’s on Earth, and Laura Palmer was born in 1971.
We are then taken to the 1950’s, where we watch a frog/bug hatch from an egg in the desert.
A boy and a girl are on a date, and the girl finds a penny. At the end of the date the boy kisses the girl.
A coal miner drifter walks to a radio station, kills the DJ, and repeatedly recites a poem. This is broadcasted over the radio. This poem either hypnotizes the listener or kills them like the culling song from “Lullaby”. I’m not sure which.
Somewhere in there the body of Bad-Dale reanimates.





