Subject: Little Things From: blojo@xcf.berkeley.edu (Jon Blow) Date: 1992-08-30, 14:51 Newsgroups: alt.tv.twin-peaks I find it interesting that the movie answered a lot of the "little things" about the series that only die-hard fans ever really wondered about anyway, like: * Why Donna was so entranced with wearing Laura's sunglasses. * Why Donna burst into tears when sitting at a certain booth in the Roadhouse. Now I'm going to launch into some random speculations about the movie. They may not be too coherent since I've been up 32 hours (and am going to see the movie again in another 2): * Maybe Senor Droolcup, Old Mrs. Tremond, the Dirty Old Patch-Eyed Lady at the Trailer Park, and the Ancient Teller at the Bank Where Audrey Blew Up are all the same. * I was totally hit hard by the parallelism between the party in the red-colored room in Canada (where the music was loud and thus subtitles were used) and the events in the Red Room with which we are so familiar. I sort of had this concept as of the 2nd season fanale and the movie has strengthened it: The Gang From Another Place is sort of having a perpetual party hanging out in the Red Room. They spend a lot of time doing trite things to amuse each other, and also perhaps minimally to show each other their "worthiness" of being there-- The Little Man's "Wow, Bob, Wow" in response to Bob's playing with the cup of coffee's viscosity in the season finale, as well as Leland's levitation trick in the movie, both seem to be examples of this. As is sort of demonstrated by the creamed corn, I have for a while had the idea that they work to create "interesting situations" in humanity and feed off them. A while ago I sort of worked BOB's existence and the usage of spotlights into a theory that "BOB" was an "active" version of the audience. By this I mean that the audience watching a show like this thrives on characters' tragic situations as well as sensual ones, but whereas the audience is only capable of taking in what has been written for them, BOB goes out and creates his own situations. Leland's "levitation trick" in the movie also seemed like some sort of formal ceremonial bow or something. The other people in the room were looking at him in a proud/impressed manner; I get the feeling that he was taking a bow in connection with the impressive situation he had managed to create. Laura's most important question seemed to be when she asked Bob, "Who are you, really?" The personalities of the Gang From Another Place seem to be blended, indistinct; even though each seems to perform separate functions, I sort of get the feeling that they are all acting as parts of one entity which is a metaphor for something else, which is, well, where "Electricity" comes in. But I don't dare say anything else about that until I see the movie again. Someone a long time ago on this newsgroup had a theory that time in the Other Place actually ran backward with respect to "normal" time; this could be well-borne-out by the appearance of the dead Annie, but which would not explain how Laura was in Cooper's dream there in the original season. Perhaps time there goes in both directions. The ring under the trailer was placed on a mound of dirt with a depression in the top. If I remember correctly, there was a similar mound in the railroad car, with the half of Laura's heart necklace on it. Well, I have a lot more to say about this movie, but I'm a bit tired. Besides, this post is long enough already. I must say that this is a terrific movie and, though I don't like to make "best" comparisons, it's the best movie I've seen in quite a while. It sort of irks me when people like jsnell@ocf say things like: > > Flawed-- VERY flawed. But fun nonetheless. Just as TP is a fascinating > > television show, but flawed -- VERY flawed. because they're trying to sound cool or something. Folks, if you're going to say something like that, please give reasons why. It takes a few seconds to read that sentence but it has almost no content-- and I'm more or less against content-free Usenet. Why was it flawed? How was it VERY flawed? I don't buy that assertion. -Jon "Electricity!"