Subject: Re: Wood, plastic, floating From: cicero@hotcity.COM (Andreas Locicero) Date: 1992-09-08, 13:29 Newsgroups: alt.tv.twin-peaks In article <1992Sep6.211420.18741@cs.mun.ca>, georgen@pooky.cs.mun.ca (George Noel) writes: > >I was re-watching some episodes lately and from what I can see, the Palmer > >house isn't a different "set", actually, don't they use a real house? In the > >TV series, we see the house from a different perspective.. mainly from the > >living room into the dining room whereas in the movie we see it mainly from > >the front door to the dining room or in the dining room itself making it *seem* > >smaller. > > > > -=*George*=- > > > > Yes it clearly is a real house, but it is also just as clearly not the same house (I went back and looked at the pilot episode too). You are right that the angle is different, but I think that was done to try to disguise the fact that the house is different. In fact, I noticed that many of the locations in the movie are different than the ones used in the show. I think much of the show was shot on location. Perhaps the people who live/work in those spaces didn't want to have the movie shot there after 2 years of being disturbed by the series' filming? A.J. LoCicero >> cicero@hotcity.com This message comes to you from beautiful Morgan Hill, California, U.S.A.: The front line in the war against Suburbanization!
Return