Blank Check with Griffin & David - Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me with Arkasha Stevenson
Episode Date: October 13, 2024One of the more harrowing films we’ve covered on the podcast (and the second film we’ve covered in 2024 with a memorable “gobble gobble” line), 1992’s TWIN PEAKS: FIRE WALK WITH ME was not t...he quirky, enjoyable plotline wrap-up fans of Twin Peaks wanted. David Lynch instead challenged the audience to identify with Laura Palmer’s humanity and pain, making her a real person - not just a girl wrapped in plastic. THE FIRST OMEN director Arkasha Stevenson joins us to talk about how this film (and WILD AT HEART) inspired her to become a filmmaker, the uncanny experience of watching it without any prior knowledge of the Twin Peaks series, and the directorial choices Lynch makes that create the film’s deeply unsettling atmosphere. Join our Patreon for franchise commentaries and bonus episodes. Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter, Instagram, Threads and Facebook! Buy some real nerdy merch Connect with other Blankies on our Reddit or Discord For anything else, check out BlankCheckPod.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Blank check with Griffin and David Blank check with Griffin and David
Don't know what to say or to expect All you need to know is that the name of the show is Plague Check?
Good afternoon, ma'am.
When this kind of podcast starts, it is very hard to put out.
The tender bows of innocence burn first, and the wind rises, and then all goodness is in jeopardy.
That's why your episodes end up being three hours long, David.
Okay, why is that?
Because when it starts, it's hard to put out.
Fires are hard to put out.
Innocence is burning, and yeah.
You know.
Yeah.
OK.
Yeah, well, this one's not going to be three hours.
I'm just telling you that right now.
Yeah, it's going to be 3.30.
Uh-huh.
OK.
Hello.
Three and a half bucks.
Hello.
Hi, how are you doing?
I'm fine.
Me?
I'm fine. I just knocked your water over. It's been a tough morning. Let's a half bucks. Hello. Hi, how are you doing? I'm fine, me? I'm fine.
I just knocked your water over.
It's been a tough morning.
Let's just say this.
Yeah, let's just say it.
We've had some technical difficulties.
Look, in the grand scheme of things, could be worse.
Watched a movie last night that depicts someone
whose life is full of much greater struggles
than what we've gone through.
Wait, sorry, actually, we've had technical difficulties!
Okay, that's what's going on. Sure, yes.
It's been a frustrating morning!
He's doing coal, is what he's doing. Is what he is doing, is doing coal. Yes.
Introduce our show, and please introduce our poor guest.
This is Blank Check with Griffin and David. I'm Griffin.
I'm David.
It's a podcast about filmographies, directors who have massive success early on in their careers
and are given a series of blank checks to make whatever crazy passion products they want.
Sometimes those checks clear and sometimes they bounce baby.
Sometimes your check clears on television and then it bounces.
And then you're like, I can catch the check.
And then you bounce it further.
Right.
And then 20 years later, people are like, I think that was a masterpiece. Right? That's basically the insane life cycle of this whole...
Of this movie and this world. Yes, absolutely.
We're talking about the films of David Lynch and his television, frankly, to be honest.
To be quite honest. Today we're talking about Twin Peaks Fire Walk with Me on a mini-series
that we've titled Twin Pods Firecast with
me.
Yes.
Yes, that's true.
This is the moment where everything's lining up.
We're in an unusual studio.
Yes.
This is a, is this a black lodge compared to our red lodge?
Black lodge and white lodge.
It's okay.
Aren't there three lodges?
No, there's just the black lodge and the white lodge.
The red room is the black lodge. They're the same thing. Okay, well. It's okay. Aren't there three lodges? No, there's just the black lodge and the white lodge. The red room is the black lodge. They're the same thing.
It's okay. Don't worry about it.
Well, then maybe this is the red room. No, yes.
Introduce our guest.
Guest today.
We're just putting through hell. We're really sorry.
Fantastic filmmaker, director of the first dome,
Arkesha Stevenson.
Hello.
Hi, Arkesha. How are you doing?
I'm good. How are you guys?
Oh, we're fine. Chill.
The word is chill.
Apparently Griffin hasn't eaten anything today.
It's 1250 p.m.
Cool as ice. I asked for a granola bar.
It's been 45 minutes.
Everything is going, as Ben said. Everything is going great.
Ben said everything is going well.
Arkasha is in New Orleans in a podcast studio that is surrounded by saints and Vikings and
Pelicans logos.
Yes.
Yes.
I never travel without my sportswear.
Right.
This is yours.
Yeah.
You brought it. Yeah.
Here to talk with us about
Twin Peaks Firewalk with me.
Arasha, I heard you on the big picture.
And you talked about how this movie and Wild at Heart are like the two sole reasons you became a filmmaker.
That is not a lie. It's very true.
Did I tell the story about how I was first introduced to David Lynch on that podcast?
Please tell the story.
Okay. I had dropped out of college,
was living on my mother's couch, and was at-
You had been studying photojournalism, is that right?
This was even prior to photojournalism.
This was when I was picking my nose
and doing nothing important, you know?
And I went to this bar that is now condemned,
but it was called Hell.
And it was this, it's a wonderful bar.
It's, you know, you pee in a trough, both in the men's and women's bathrooms.
It's just an absolute carnival ride.
Wait, where is this bar?
It is now condemned, but it was in Chapel Hill,
North Carolina.
Chapel Hill.
It's now condemned.
It's condemned.
It's below bubs if anybody from Chapel Hill is listening.
Okay.
And they... It was a dance party, and on a projector, they were playing silently by our walk with
me.
And so mid-dance, because this is how I dance.
Right?
And for the listener at home, our Kasha's doing probably the best dance I've ever seen.
Thank you. I saw the scene where the one-armed man Mike is trying to drive Laura and Leland
off the road. And so, you know, people are, he's screaming at Laura and there's no sound.
So I'm just trying to read his mouth and his lips. And I just keep catching the word corn. And... What the hell is this?
And I actually left the bar and I might be aging myself, went across the street to the
video rental store.
And it's like I described the scene and they're like, that's definitely David Lynch, but that
movie's out right now.
Here's Wild at Heart.
And so I went home, watch wild at heart.
My brain exploded and, um, yeah, there's another like 10 hours story from there,
but that that's the gist.
So when did you watch this movie in full?
Um, it was probably after that, I started devouring every Lynch movie I could
find and it was in the mix of everything.
But it strangely enough is the movie I watched the most.
I watched it multiple times a year and, but also the film I know the least about
at the same time.
Did you watch it before Twin Peaks?
Like, did you ever, you know, go back and watch the whole show as well,
or was the movie separate for you?
Because I feel like for some people, the movie is separate.
I didn't even know there was a show.
I watched this movie,
and then when I realized months later,
this is a prequel to a TV show,
I was just like, well, now howdy, this is really exciting.
Because you're not the only person I know who feels that way.
Who is like, oh yeah, I just like that movie.
And to me I'm like, is this movie, like, does it make any sense outside of Twin Peaks, the
TV show?
But it must make a strange sort of sense.
Well, and a lot of people who were diehard fans of the show were furious when this movie
came out. Came in with loaded expectations, wanting it to be something it wasn't trying to be.
I, uh, our cash, a full, full transparency.
I now feel more comfortable admitting this.
When this podcast started, the first year of our show was this incredibly dumb bit that
David and I constructed where we decided we were only going to talk about the Phantom
Menace as if no other Star Wars movies had been made.
We thought it was the funniest thing in the world. And it was just like, here's a failed franchise that never went forward.
Who knows what the rest of this was supposed to be? And so sometimes when the opportunity presents itself, and it rarely does,
I do kind of like to try to engage with something in the quote-unquote wrong order that is also an order that the
narrative of the universe almost is suggesting. Like our whole take was like, if George Lucas
is claiming that you actually should watch this movie first, then let's pretend that
the other movies don't exist. I did watch this before watching Twin Peaks.
Before watching any Twin Peaks at all.
Yeah, I saw this like a month or two ago because it was playing at the Paris Theatre. I'd only ever seen the pilot.
And then after seeing this, I then watched all of the show
and then watched it again last night.
I will say, it definitely made more sense to me
having watched the show.
It's so interesting because I had almost
the opposite experience where I probably was like,
no, Twin Peaks is this movie and this world.
And the TV show is the Shirley Temple
that you give your child before you start
giving them mixed drinks.
It's like.
Yeah, I think what was interesting for me was that,
here's this thing that I've been so aware of
for such a long time that I've just never engaged with.
And especially with television, I have like a tremendous amount of blind spots where there
are things I feel like I know through osmosis, but I've just never watched a lot of these
totemic shows.
And in this weird sense, I had sort of this like a bird's eye view of the reputation of
both the show and the movie, and ostensibly what both of them were trying to do and how
they were different and how they were similar.
And then in reality of actually watching both of them, I feel like my notion of what the
series was is actually a little closer to what the movie is.
And my notion of what the movie was is actually a little closer to what the series is.
Right, right, right.
That makes sense.
In that, I feel like in cultural reputation,
and we talked about this on the season one episode,
but like the stuff that like jumps out
in the sort of like memeification culture
is like all of the Red Room stuff and the weirdest elements.
And then you watch the series and so much of it
is like interpersonal soap opera,
done with this uncanny David Lynch tone,
but it's about the sadness and the social and romantic and sexual entanglements of all these people.
And then it has this layer of weird supernatural stuff kind of happening at the margins.
And then I had always heard that people didn't like the movie because the movie was the swerve
of him being like, I'm just going to place you in the last week of this woman's life and make you deal with the pain and the suffering of her as a real
person.
And when I heard that people didn't like it, I assumed that it was like, oh, because he
got away from the genre elements.
But in a way, this movie is more about kind of like the curse of the Twin Peaks universe.
A little, sure.
And the main theme of Twin Peaks for me, which is just sort of like, what is evil?
Well, exactly. And that's what I love about the movie so much is that it feels it's,
the priorities get switched, right?
Yes.
Where instead of talking about, I guess it re anchors you first and foremost in,
in that Laura is the protagonist of this entire
story. And there's that story that or that intro that log lady gives where she says every
story starts with one story. And I think when you're watching that show, you forget that
it's about Laura. Laura is kind of just this woman, a corpse wrapped in a plastic wrap.
But then I was thinking a
lot about blue velvet for some reason. And, and that line where, uh, comic clock one says,
why are there men like Frank Booth in this world? And why I love fire walk with me is
because it, it says, let's talk about that. Let's talk about where evil comes from in
mind to the core of this whole universe.
Yeah. I, I do feel like I keep coming back to and watching his movies.
There is this almost like childlike reckoning David Lynch has with like, I don't understand
how people are capable of things this terrible.
And I'm trying to understand like where this energy comes from.
And especially how someone can like present one way and do things so separate from that
behind closed doors.
Like how can both of these things be contained within any single person?
Right.
Bob, we'll talk about, we're going to talk about all this.
But I also feel like the genesis of this movie slightly is Lynch's fixation on Laura.
Yes.
Fixation, I mean it in a good way,
that he probably didn't see coming when he conceived
of a gigantic soap opera with 45 characters
that's about a whole town.
Well, that's the thing.
And then he keeps being like,
I just can't get over what happened to Laura.
The thing that I thought of as an impetus for the show,
not what the show is.
I feel like the line I've heard a lot of people use
is that like the radical act of this movie
is that it transforms her from object to subject.
Yeah.
And it does feel like you watch the series
and you see Lynch in real time.
And it's the part of just the kind of idea
of this movie existing that I find very emotionally
affecting, which is what he talked about of like,
he cast this local actor who's mainly just supposed to be a still photo and a prop basically and
Is immediately taken with like this person has something
There's like a real actor here and is working to try to fit her into the show and have reasons to put her in front
Of camera and give her dialogue and agency but all of this is like backed into the corner of we've killed off her ostensible main
Character sure and then you kill off her ostensible main character.
Sure.
And then you kill off her secondary character, you know?
And it's like here's him devoting this entire movie that's sort of in real time,
he became very connected to like what he felt Cheryl Lee was capable of doing,
that no one was letting her do.
And what he felt was profound about Laura Palmer as a character that he felt he needed
to put on screen, not just as like other characters talking about her in the past as a plot.
That's why people were so upset when this movie came out because people, you know, this
isn't just a movie. It's a character study of a young girl who's experiencing and navigating
all this horrible drama. And when you're used to Twin Peaks, this show, you're like, no,
I want more Douglas Serk. I don't want to have to deal with this. And I think
that's why I became so obsessed with this film because I think he portrayed all of this
so accurately and so in a strange way. It doesn't feel surreal, I think, to have lived
the life of a teenage girl and understand how treacherous it is and then to watch this movie and say like, oh yeah, they're demons. Yeah, they're
evil spirits, you know. But it's actually, I was, I was reading not too long ago. Have
you guys seen the movie Peyton Place?
No, no, I've never seen Peyton. They've never seen the movie Peyton Place, obviously.
Ironically, also made a soap opera based on it. Yes, obviously turned into a TV show, right?
Yeah, so Peyton Place, and do you mind if I do spoilers here?
Attention, attention.
This is a spoiler alert for the 67-year-old movie Peyton Place.
Yeah, no, spoil away.
Well, so apparently, David Lynch's agent said that before, when the idea of Twin
Peaks first came about, he hosted the screening of Peyton Place and that this was like the
impetus for Twin Peaks, the series.
And Peyton Place is about this like very small bucolic town that is dealing with all this,
you know, these horrible scandals and, and, um, gossip and trauma.
And there's a girl in this film who is raped by her mother's husband and, um,
and the town and impregnated and impregnated and the big scandal is that
the doctor in town gives her an abortion.
and impregnated and the big scandal is that the doctor in town gives her an abortion. But she really, like she's this beautiful blonde sweet girl. And so after seeing Peyton
Place, I couldn't re-watch Fire Walk with me in the same way, you know? It feels like
these two films are so married.
And it is right. It's the most obvious inspiration for Twin Peaks, right? I mean, he cites it
when he's coming up with the show, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think the other thing that kind of disarmed me watching the movie first, and it makes sense,
I mean, for you to watch the movie first, but not have the awareness of the TV show,
whereas I was watching it knowing I was doing the wrong thing, and trying to like fit it into the
notion of like, so what is the show relative to this and
The thing that caught me off guard so quickly in just my dumb
surface level understanding of what the show was where it's like
I've seen the the high school prom photo of Laura Palmer and I've seen the photo of the corpse and I know the show is
Centered around this figure and I know the movie is the prequel of the last week of her life
The thing I didn't know is that, like, I think I assumed, oh, the movie is going to be this
tragedy about a woman's life, a young woman's life going off the rails, ending in her death
at the end.
And instead, this movie is about the first week of her life, or the last week of her
life, excuse me, but her life is already fully off the rails.
Like the, you're just watching the end of the spiral.
She's accepted, I think, her death in the first scene,
basically, in the gobble gobble scene.
Like, there's already a sort of serenity to her.
Which, let's say, this is the better gobble gobble movie
covered on this podcast in 2024.
We did G. Lee recently.
Yeah.
But yes, that's the thing that I think is so disarming
about it, is you're basically
watching a movie that starts with someone pretty close to rock bottom, and then you're
just seeing how it fully falls apart.
And here's the thing, when I first watched the movie, I didn't know Laura Palmer was
going to die.
Like, that's how fresh and clean I came into this.
I was watching it with totally, and there's something so beautiful about the filmmaking
to where I was just accepting every riddle and I wasn't expecting that to tie into some
greater context.
I was just like the gobble gobble scene, this is a secret language between two lovers and
that makes sense. And then later people are speaking in code and in this secret language at,
you know, the bar in Canada. And it just all, I didn't question any of it.
It's such a funny flip too of like when the show is airing at its peak and people
are loving it, right?
The audiences like pumping their fist and hooting and hollering anytime some new weird element
is introduced that isn't explained.
By the time they get to this movie
and it's a year after the show's been canceled,
they're so frustrated that they're not getting answers.
And you have the opposite response to that,
which is like the one-armed man shows up in this
and you're like, I love this unexplained element.
And everyone else is like,
where's my closure on the one-armed man?
And where's my closure on the show and the show had this cliffhanger and like then it's
you know we can we can talk about all of this.
I mean we'll talk about it and obviously he thought this was going to be the first of three movies
sure but it speaks to his priorities where he's like no the thing is to remind everyone that
like this is a real person and it's the thing is to remind everyone that like, this is a real
person. And it's the thing, especially in a world and I think this is part of this movie's reputation,
improving so much, especially in the last decade is like, our increasingly true crime obsessed
culture often kind of loses the actual victims in a way, you know? It's sort of, even if it's paying attention to
them, it does it in a way that sort of abstracts them and dehumanizes them and
flattens them. And this is a movie that like, it's a weird comparison point,
but there's a clip I'm obsessed with of Bob Odenkirk on the Howard Stern show,
where Stern is asking him about Farley and how close he was with Chris Farley.
And he's like still clearly angry about it.
And he's like the frustrating thing is it was so inevitable and it was so cliched.
You kind of knew where it was going and yet.
Right.
And when there are those stories about celebrities who are caught in this cycle where you're
just like they seem to be just circling the drain and this is going to end bad and we
all know it.
And I always sit back and wonder like how do they not have a support system?
How they're not have friends and family who are physically pulling them back from this
and getting them back on the rails.
And this is a movie where Laura Palmer kind of exists in that way relative to her town.
And everyone is just kind of like I don't know what to do.
And everyone who deals with her is kind of clearly saying like this isn't gonna end well. I don't know what to do. And everyone who deals with her is kind of clearly saying like,
this isn't gonna end well. I don't know how to pull her out.
And they know she's in trouble.
And she knows she's in trouble.
And she knows she's in trouble, right.
And there's, right, a Shakespearean tragedy or whatever.
There's a powerlessness collectively across the town.
Well, I don't...
And this is gonna sound terribly misanthropic,
so just like pull the cord at any point.
I think we can be misanthropic on the Fire Walk With Me episode. This is a very sad, dark, misanthropic. So just like pull the cord at any point. I think we can be misanthropic on the Fire Walk with Me episode. This is a very sad,
dark, misanthropic film. And lovely in its weird way, but go ahead.
I think it's so obvious what state she's in, but nobody wants to deal with it. And that's
a... I do love this scene. For some reason, this scene was really,
like just pierced my heart when I first watched it,
is when the mom allows, she knows she's being drugged.
She knows that Leland Palmer is drugging her at night.
And instead she still, you know, drinks the milk
and then has this beautiful vision
of this wonderful unicorn.
And I was like, well, of course she's gonna, you know,
turn a blind
eye to all of this because wouldn't you rather look at this beautiful unicorn than have to
face real life? Horrible dark fact. And so it's very like there's a willingness to all
of this, you know, which is I think why all of the evil thrives so fiercely.
Right. Because people want to just try to survive rather than fight it, which seems impossible.
Which I also think, yes.
And that is what Bob is to me is just like, right.
It's like we already, we talked about this when we talked about the first season of Twin
Peaks, but like it's like, yes, Bob, you can just be like, Bob's a monster.
Right.
Like it's like a science fiction monster, but it's also just like, yeah, Bob's just
like a force you can't defeat. Like he's ineffable or whatever. Like there's no resisting it. Like there's
or there's no defeating it. I don't know. Whatever.
Interesting thing is that, you know, you think about, um, this is why I love rewatching this
film is because you have this one explanation where evil is coming from the Black Lodge, it's perpetrated by spirits. Meanwhile, you have Leo
and Jacques and all these other really nasty characters who are perpetrating just horrible
cruelty and they're not possessed. There's nothing to indicate that there's something
supernatural going on there. And this is another layer, another layer deep, like even more misanthropic is that you think about like, okay, why is all of this allowed to
happen? And, and, you know, Laura is when she's in this state, she's easier to take
advantage of, she's easier to control. She's part of the economy. She's part of this trade
between Canada and, and this small town, you know, it's, it's? It's kind of a really damning commentary on humanity.
Yes. I mean, again, it's hard to talk about.
We're sort of talking about Twin Peaks over many episodes, right?
We're spreading this sort of project of his over the TV seasons
and then the return in this movie or whatever.
But I mean, Ben Horne,
who I will bring up again, like,
is this character who is evil,
but a banal, capitalistic kind of evil guy, right?
Just wants to screw people over, get money.
But he also like clearly has sex with Laura,
doesn't, you know, admits it,
but doesn't really atone for it.
Loses everything, but also isn't punished.
Like, his arc is Lynch talking about like mundane, banal evil.
While there is, yes, also a Black Lodge with a monster in it
that possesses Leland Palmer and makes him do bad things.
And I agree with you that he is, in my read,
the most evil character across the Twin Peaks universe.
Yes, sure.
But part of what makes him the most evil to me
is he is a guy who is not in conflict
with his evil. Like there's nothing supernatural. He's not like fighting the possession of Bob,
which whether you take it literally or allegorically, it's like this guy's just making calculated
decisions and living with them.
Ben's not even in this movie. I mean, he's in the deleted scenes.
And Ray Wise is so good in this film. And you read about how Lynch didn't tell him
that he was the one who killed Laura
until right before they shot that episode.
He was very unnerved.
That was not how he was consciously playing the character.
Even though if you watch the show,
it does feel like it lines up very well.
It feels like screamingly obvious.
Right.
And he was worried about, I've come to like this guy,
and now you're gonna assign like these horrible actions to him
And he said that he ultimately felt
very pleased with the arc Lynch gave him and like not that the character was redeemed but that he's like
Depicted as having this struggle which doesn't make anything he does more forgivable
But it's sort of like there were these two sides of the thing where it's like here's a guy who's like in the throes of madness
Right, like he is trying to fight these horrible compulsions
he has there is like a struggle within him versus like Ben Horn who just does shit and
Like justifies the means right or doesn't you know?
Right and as you said like Jack and Leo are just like guys who are kind of creepy.
Like I love the Jack performance so much because it's like, and Leo to a lesser extent, but
especially Jack is like, everyone in this town is kind of like horrible and is putting
a nice face on it.
And Jack is like the one guy who's just sort of like, this is, we all want this.
I'm a scumbag. We all want sex and drugs. Right. And Jacques is like the one guy who's just sort of like, this is, we all want this. I'm a scumbag.
We all want sex and drugs.
Right.
And get fucked up.
This is Jacques in a strange universe kind of comes full circle, almost like Humphrey
Bogard, where Humphrey Bogard is so ugly that he has become extremely handsome. And Jacques
is so off-putting that you're kind of like, do I like this guy? You know?
Also, cause you're like, he's sort of the most honest person in the town.
Right.
He, there's no veneer to Jacques Renault even compared to like Leo or whatever.
Is that commendable?
But yes, it's all these different like forms of, of evil and like what drives people to
do things.
It's almost an advertisement for just simplicity.
And that's what I really love about the doppelgangers in the Twin Peaks show, just knowing that
it's almost too much for us to fathom that so much complexity exists within one being.
And so it's almost, he's doing us a solid by kind of dividing it up into two different bodies for us, you know?
And there's this, um, you know, the moment with Leland Palmer, when he, it's after the
whole, um, nobody's eating until Laura washes her hands argument.
And then he's sitting on the side of the bed and you, you physically see him switch when
Bob leaves his body.
And then all of a sudden he realizes,
oh, I did something horrible. And that was so brilliant and perfect to, and helps me
really kind of metabolize what was going on, you know?
Well, the moment at the very end before the actual sort of killing takes place,
when Leland says, like, I read your diary, I'm going to paraphrase it,
but like, I didn't realize you didn't know it was me.
And then he moves out of frame, and then Bob enters frame from the opposite side
and said, like, I didn't know you always knew it was me.
It's kind of the whole movie to me in a way. Yeah.
Right. The hand washing as well is such a good...
There's so many ways to take the, like, you know,
does Leland know he's, you know, corrupted her
and wants her to, like, or is he, you know,
is it his own, like, feeling of I need to clean myself,
or you know what I mean? Like, it's...
I love all that creepy metaphorical stuff. I'm opening the dossier. Okay. This is just some research
we have on the movie, Arkesha. But Pierre Edelman, who is a guy Lynch works with a lot,
who is a French guy he meets making Dune, who apparently was kicked off set for being
annoying by Raffaella de Laurentiis,
and made a fortune in blue jeans and also went to prison?
Yeah, I was gonna say, I mean, this is what I want more of. Can we get this back into the film
industry? Just eccentric, dungaree tycoons who are like, you know what, I like bankrolling weird art.
Yes, he worked for CB2000, which was a boutique French production company.
And after Wild at Heart does so well, he basically, at Cannes, wins the Palme d'Or, he crashes
a party and grabs Lynch and is like, I will make anything you want to make.
Like, you know, what can we do?
I'll give you money.
Ronnie Rocket is what they think, which is this long gestating never made Lynch project is what they think they're going to make. Like, you know, what can we do? I'll give you money. Ronnie Rocket is what they think,
which is this long, gestating, never made Lynch project
is what they think they're going to make.
The way people say life is what happens
when you're making other plans.
David Lynch's career is what happens
while trying to make Ronnie Rocket.
Like every single project starts with,
his plan was to make Ronnie Rocket next,
and then instead we end up with whatever we end up with.
Yes. So, Lynch accepts, signs a three picture deal with these guys, and Twin Peaks around
this time is flagging on ABC basically after, you know, exploding and, you know, the sort
of brief phenomenon of it, the ratings start going down.
I mean, just to snapshot this moment quickly, right?
Like, first season of Twin Peaks is like this out-of-the-box
surprise phenomenon.
Then like two weeks later, Wilderher premieres at Cannes,
gets booze, and wins the bomb tour.
And you're like, they're starting to be like,
he's at his absolute cultural peak,
and people are starting to turn on him at the same time and then
it's like that fall Twin Peaks comes back falls off a cliff Wild at Heart gets
an Oscar nomination does fairly well commercially for his movies at that time
but then it's already by like 1991 it's like our people over all over he go too
far up his butt and so when Twin Peaks gets canceled,
he is like, let's do the third season as a movie.
So they start working on that.
They had a third season idea
and it was all gonna be all about Cooper's doppelganger.
And there's a lot you can read about it.
Like they have a plan.
And then Lynch switches to,
no, I actually wanna do a prequel.
I wanna do everything up to when Laura dies.
And I want it to be called Fire Walk with me.
And that is the point, you know,
I guess at which people like Mark Frost,
who obviously co-created Twin Peaks, are like,
I'm done with this.
I'm sick of this.
They've sort of also had a falling out of sorts
at this point, basically, where like-
The way season two went, I think,
caused so many problems.
Whose fault is this?
And he's sort of taking it back.
And he always talks about like,
I was in love with that world,
and I was in love with those characters,
and I wasn't ready to let them go.
But it also feels like it makes sense where
you do an eight episode first season
where they wrote it all in advance,
and they had a certain amount of control
and there wasn't a ton of oversight
and everyone sort of viewed this as a flyer.
And then season two comes in and the show
is forced onto the demands of a 22 episode season.
Now it's time to make the donuts.
How do you stretch this out?
How do you keep it going?
And the thing collapses.
I understand his thinking of like,
is the way to bring this back movies? Can I refocus it back to I only have to deal with two hours at a time?
I can re-exert the control over it.
I'm in my Jerry Lewis phase where the French are willing to give me money.
They like anything I do, even if everyone else is starting to turn on me.
Maybe I can reclaim this.
But what's fascinating is he's making this movie based on some personal compulsion to like reclaim what he liked about
this universe and
The public I think assumes oh he's gonna make a movie to fix this
He's gonna solve the show. He's gonna give us a sense of resolution
We didn't get right and those two things are happening at odds and aren't in conversation at all
David yes, you know what we like?
If you had to name one thing that you and I both like.
I think we love the movies.
We love the movies.
What?
And what do we love?
We love going to see the movies at the theaters.
That is very, very true.
That's very true.
It's a very important to us.
It's a thing we stump for a lot.
The theater experience is worth preserving,
is the best way to experience a movie. The theater experience is worth preserving,
is the best way to experience a movie.
And let's just say it, David, we're thrilled.
We're excited, we're overjoyed.
This has long been in the works to celebrate
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because Regal Cinemas is offering Blankies
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You know from the Regal Unlimited program, David.
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We're both fans of this program.
We're both members!
Regal Unlimited, exactly. We're both members.
Card-carrying members!
And it is insane how easy it is to use it.
It is so simple.
It's easy peasy.
And you know what else is easy peasy?
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I mean, this is a big deal.
Huge.
This is a movie company that shows movies in theaters, which we love
Sponsoring our movie podcast. Yeah, and the two of us go to regal cinema all the time see movies
Once again for DX you don't understand how exciting this is for us guys
And I also want to say here's some benefits you sign for regal unlimited you get the free tickets for your one subscription fee
Right per month you also can earn points
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I do this all the time. Oh, how do you get figure-roll cup toppers months later? Click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, It's the embarrassment of riches. On your birthday, you get a free popcorn. I love my birthday. Every time you visit him and take it to a movie,
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I sound a little more excited about it, David.
That's incredible.
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What ease of use.
Once again, go to the Regal app
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your three month subscription.
I mean, you can go see movies.
I go to the Regal Essex a lot,
that's sort of my local Regal.
I'm a humble brag.
Where do you go?
I go to Union Square because they got the 4DX.
A classic, right, you like the 4DX.
Yeah, I love the 4DX, David.
Regal.
I know, Arkasha, you probably,
you came to this movie fresh,
you did not know about all this drama,
but of course, if you watch it, it's fairly obvious
that the prologue section of the film with Chester Desmond,
that's just supposed to be Cooper.
McLaughlin, Colin McLaughlin just doesn't want
to do this movie at all, is sick of being Dale Cooper,
is sick of like being typecast.
They kind of talk him into like,
what if you do just a little bit, five days of shooting, which is what they get out of him.
But also McLaughlin.
And then they restructure it to just, it's another guy, you know, who's kind of Coopery.
McLaughlin, Fenn and Boyle, I feel like have all talked about how raw they felt at the
time of feeling like we were abandoned by Frost and Lynch.
They set the show up, it took off, we're young, our careers are banking on this thing.
And then it was sort of left to its own devices.
And like Fen refuses to do this.
Jared Ranere Sherrilyn Fen says she was quote unquote being a brat.
Laura Flynn Boyle says that she had other stuff going on, so they recast her with Moira
Kelly.
Richard Boehmer was basically, did shoot some,
was in the script.
Was written but never shot.
But was kind of not into it.
There's obviously 90 minutes of deleted scenes
that now exist as, quote, the missing pieces.
I've watched it.
Yeah, as have I.
But that is a lot of the supporting townspeople
of Twin Peaks stuff that is not in the film at all,
once he really realized anything that isn't about Laura's story,
isn't really important to this movie.
Yeah, it felt like you read all three of them and they were sort of like, I had other stuff going on.
I had conflicts. I couldn't be in the movie. And then with Distance, all three of them were like,
I was kind of just like bitter about the whole thing.
McLaughlin said the typecasting thing, but I think with Distance was also just like,
I felt burned by how everything went down.
The Chris Eyes character in this is very much an astronaut Brent in Beneath the Planet of
the Apes language.
Sure, sure.
Where you're like, here's a guy who's like so similar to the type of the other guy going
through an almost identical arc before the original guy comes in and sort of takes over again.
Right. Like, Arcrusha, what do you make of the prologue,
especially someone not familiar with the show or whatever,
like, that we don't even really get to Laura initially,
and it's instead this odd murder investigation
to, like, kick things off?
Well, first off, with the Kyle McLaughlin thing,
that kind of hurts my heart.
I had no idea that it wasn't immediately destined for Chris Isaac and that totally made sense
in my mind.
Beyond that, it was like, announced they're making the movie, Kyle MacLachlan says, I
don't want to be part of it.
They announced the movie's canceled.
Like if he can't do it, then they're not going to make it.
And then he like comes back and is like, I will give you five days.
We'll give you a little bit if that will.
So that's when they sort of bifurcate it
and go like, we only need him for the sort of.
I love Chris Isaac in this film.
I don't mind how it turned out,
but you can tell there's sort of odd surgery to it
of just like, well, okay, we'll just sort of
do a Cooper type.
In this way that's so odd where Lynch has made
several works that are clearly working
around major logistical issues or like recutting a TV pilot or recasting parts or any of these
things and somehow sort of knows how to own it as intentionality.
But like, yeah, it's an odd structural thing because you're like, well, he wants to make
the Laura Palmer movie.
You could imagine people said, you can't make a Twin Peaks movie and not have Cooper in it
So he writes this wraparound of Cooper and then Cooper doesn't want to do it
But you know for somebody who was just entering totally blind totally fresh
It was almost the the perfect entryway because the whole point for me as a viewer with that beginning was
Telling me like,
okay, this, we're going to be operating in mystery and riddles.
You know, nothing's going to be as it seems, nothing's going to be explained to you.
Just like buckle up, enjoy the ride.
And, and that's what I was ready for.
And I'd been primed for already was that this was going to be a film that was dealing with
that that can't be quantifiable. And yeah, and that's kind of I'm already kind of exhausted by
that by trying to be rational and figure out why you're saying in your like daily life.
Yeah, just in life, you know, trying to figure out answers for who, why, when,
know, trying to figure out answers for who, why, when, where all the time, when, when really, you know, I think the Lynchian world, but then also our world doesn't really operate
that way. You know, that's how we try and make sense of the world, but that's not really
how things go down. So, um, so when Lil comes out and she's wearing a sour face and it's
all a riddle, I was just like, yes, I'm in.
I don't really know what this means, but we're tapping into something like some sort of childlike
way of calculating and functioning in the world. I was ready to kind of regress to that
state and just let this stuff flow. And then I just I just love Chris Isaac and, uh, Kiefer Sutherland's
performance might be one of my favorite of all time.
I think Kiefer is like incredible.
So fun in this movie and strange.
He, he's such a great fit.
I don't want to be the negative Nellie.
I do butt up against Isaac a little bit, just in that it's like the feeling of
he's so much the Cooper type.
Like here's another Cooper type, right?
He's kind of like a grumpier Cooper.
He's got more, he's gotten sort of, right,
a dirtier edge to him, right?
He's more willing to fight.
Like he doesn't feel.
Yes, he's got less of the boyish sort of enthusiasm.
I think if Chester Desmond didn't vanish, I would not like the Chester Desmond thing.
I kind of like the Chester Desmond thing
because it's sort of like what will happen to Cooper one day, right?
Where it's like you'll get invested in this inscrutable mystery.
You'll go to kind of try, start posing, and then you just go away.
And where did you go? Well, you know, we don't know. You'll go to kind of try start posing and then you just go away.
And where did you go?
Well, you know, we don't know.
Which is another big Twin Peaks thing of like these things just keep happening over and
over and over again.
These like cycles that don't stop.
The Kieffer character to me is so interesting because he's so different than any like law
enforcement agent we've seen across the series so far.
And Kieffer's at such a weird career point in the 90s where
you're like, he's sort of this guy who is like kind of a movie star but seems to prefer
playing like supporting parts and being the guy who doesn't have the story weight. And
he's like equally good at playing like unbridled like id crazy like guy and also playing like
weird bookish man-air guy.
He perfectly disappears into the role to the point where I almost didn't even realize it
was him when I first watched it.
So he was like, oh, and Kiefer Sutherland's great.
And I was like, what are you, we're talking about different movies.
And then I was like, the blinking guy.
Because yeah, I guess at this point, he'd done like Young Guns and Flatliners.
Like he's in Lost Boys, I feel like he's big.
Obviously that's his launch.
And he's... when does the Julia Roberts thing happen?
Not to be.
Right around this time.
Right?
Like it's sort of this odd moment where it's like, is this going to be right?
Because they obviously...
But he has a couple like rock and roll bad boy parts.
And then you're like sort of zooming towards like
a 90s where he's gonna like be the one guy
who's unafraid to play like the horrible,
unredeemable racist in like John Grisha movies.
Sure.
But also like Dark City,
which is one of the most insane performances of all time.
Yeah, I love that performance.
Yeah.
Yeah, he's good at being a little goblin
and this is kind of a little goblin, like a friendly little goblin. A different type of that performance. Yeah, he's he's he's good at being a little goblin And this is kind of a little goblin like a friendly little goblin a different type of goblin. Yeah, yeah a benevolent goblin
Yeah, yeah
um, but as you said like here's
This inscrutable like opening scene where lynch comes in and he's yelling and then
Lil does this weird dance and then like two minutes later in the car
Kiefer's just like, what was that?
And Chris Isaac's like, you didn't get it?
Well, it's just-
Isn't it obvious?
Everything, like from the very beginning,
you open up on static and so you know, like, okay,
this is gonna be a portrait of an unclear
or impenetrable image, you know?
And there's going to be a lot of distortion.
And then immediately afterwards, you have, you know, Gordon, who can't hear anything.
And so it's, it's, there's so many setups to let the viewer know, like, stop questioning,
just feel your way through it. Because this is going to be a movie about two worlds that are butting up against each other
and eventually permeating into each other.
And it's probably, I think that's why,
it's so interesting, it's so divisive,
just like Steely Dan, you gotta be careful
when you bring it up in bar conversation.
Please, bring up Steely Dan, that's totally acceptable.
Okay, we're in the right crowd, cool.
But some people hate this movie,
and I think it's because it asks them
to let go of control and also enter the POV
of a young woman, you know,
which also really upsets people.
Yes, I think the main reason,
this movie is so profoundly upsetting.
It's one of the more upsetting films I've ever seen.
And so if you, I think some people, somewhat understandably, somewhat not,
put up with this force field essentially
that was, you know, outwardly just kind of like,
well, it's not, you know, this isn't the Twin Peaks I know.
Like, where's the pie? Where's the, you know, whimsy?
Right. There's a feeling of like,
is this movie punishing me?
Is it trying to make me feel bad for enjoying old Twin Peaks
by saying like, hey, someone was impinged here.
Which I think the key thing, not to be overly pat about it,
is like, this is a movie that does not allow you to look at the unicorn.
Right?
Right.
It does not allow you to check out.
For most of them.
I would say at the end, it is finally trying to, when, you know, the sort of angelic stuff
at the end, trying to be like, it's okay.
Like, she's in a better place.
It's good that she moved on from this world in a way.
Like she was in such suffering.
But it's not like you don't feel like happy about it.
You're more just sort of like, maybe there's some peace at the end of this.
Like that's the best you can hope for.
Yes.
It's a movie that says you are looking at a unicorn.
Right.
It lets you know like you are being distracted by pretty things because those are nicer to
look at. Meanwhile, there is existential mold growing in your home, you know.
Right. In that way, it's like one of those movies that kind of implicates the audience.
Especially if you're someone who is wrapped up in the sort of like pop-cultural phenomenon,
the water cooler like guessing of Twin Peaks when it was going on. Which is like you're
making sport of this, you know?
And in a way, Twin Peaks, the series, is the unicorn, you know?
Yes.
Yeah. So I definitely think that's a really good way to put it. I think that's probably
why people are so upset.
They feel very implicated.
Right.
It's like you're making me feel bad for liking the thing that you made.
And I'm always fascinated by things that are sort of punishing of the audience like that
in a way that isn't vindictive, but is trying to like sort of litigate our relationship
to different works.
But like you read about people being like violently upset
with Peeping Tom when it came out, right?
And you watch that now and you're like,
how could anyone be like ripping a chair out of the studs
in the theater over this movie?
Which I, you know, whatever.
I understand people being like, I don't like it at the time,
but people were like, how dare you?
Right, this is culturally offensive.
Everyone who worked on this should be in jail.
And the answer is that people were just like,
you're making me feel bad for buying a ticket
to a horror movie.
People feel judged.
I do also think- I feel judged.
Now that he has done Twin Peaks The Return,
this is no longer the final thing
that came out of that world.
He made a series after this that is darker and more violent
and more explicit.
So this no longer feels quite as incongruous.
Like, this just makes more and more sense to.
But like, I've always loved this thing.
So I am not the offended Twin Peaks fan of 1992.
I will add on to that.
I think also the legend for so long, the missing pieces didn't come
out until the early 2010s. We had 2010s finally got on a DVD release. There was always this
sort of legend of like, there are 90 minutes of deleted scenes that have all the characters
who aren't in this movie. And I think people pinned a lot on the idea of like, is that
the movie I want to see? Is there a version of this that gives me everything I want
that he just chose to withhold for me?
There's a fucking vault with 90 minutes
of the townspeople doing bits?
This movie is two hours and 15 minutes long,
which is already long, but the initial cut that he had
was something like four to three and a half, four hours.
And they kind, Mary Sweeney especially,
who's working on this movie as the editor,
big collaborative, Lynch's has to kind of help David Lynch realize like,
it's Laura's story.
Right.
A lot of this stuff just kind of has to go.
If they don't relate to her.
Right.
But it's not just like, oh, there's a longer lot of this stuff just kind of has to go. If they don't relate to her. Right.
But it's not just like, oh, there's a longer cut of this movie.
It's like there are 15 characters who don't appear in it for a second.
And they shot entire scenes.
I mean, it's like so funny where you read like David Bowie was saying like he was kind
of frustrated with his experience on this movie because he was on tour, I think.
And he wanted to play the part,
but the scheduling was limited.
And he was like, they had to cram all of my scenes
into only five days and it wasn't enough time
to get it done.
And then if you're going to see this movie at the time
and you're like, David Bowie appears in three shots,
what do you mean five days wasn't enough time
to get it done?
Right, right, right.
So Twin Peaks Firewalk with me.
I have nothing more for you on the production really.
Making this was not like a complicated experience really.
I think they did it fast.
They kind of enjoyed it.
Obviously there are things that were I think pressurized.
Like David Bowie has always complained
that he didn't have much time to work on his accent.
Yes.
Or things like that.
But it was not like a bad experience.
The bad experience is them showing it at Kent.
That's when this curdles for them.
But we should talk about the movie.
Akasha, I have a question for you.
And I apologize if this is getting into like dissecting the frog territory and I don't
want to demystify your process in this way.
But I'm very fascinated because of, you know,
you talking about this experience you had,
seeing this movie projected at a bar.
I feel like we've covered movies before in this show
where I will like use that term of like,
if this were playing at a bar with the sound off,
I would think I was seeing the greatest movie of all time.
I cannot imagine how profound these pieces must be if I had the context, if I had the
full awareness.
But this idea of this thing that Lynch is, you know, uniquely capable of doing, of creating
these moments, these images, these weird, these things that can grab you and create
some feeling, even sort of split up, divorced, removed from their proper environment.
And I think you are similarly skilled as a filmmaker
and he talks a lot about, you know, his creative process
and where these things come from
and not trying to over explain them.
As someone who like sees this,
this is basically the entry point
to you becoming obsessed with film.
You then went to AFI because you had heard that Lynch went there.
Like you basically built an entire road off of like trying to understand
the power of what his work meant to you and how you could sort of do that yourself.
Do you now like watch Lynch movies and try to analyze what is it that is making this
effective and put that into your work? Or do you have
your own process of just like, how do I filter my obsessions into an image that feels like
it could have a similar power and meaning?
Oh, gosh. I think analyzing, that's why these podcasts are so dangerous, I feel like, because
we're talking-
Yeah, we're very dangerous.
We are. We're kind of the bad because we're talking. We're very dangerous. We're dangerous.
We're kind of the baddest boys in podcasting.
We are.
It's because we are trying to dissect something
that can't be dissected or the frog dies on the table
once you do, right?
But you can't help but try and do it.
And I actually, you know, when I first,
I have a really hard time articulating myself.
I'm very shy.
I'm not a very linear thinker. So I have a very hard time articulating myself. I'm very shy. I'm not a very linear
thinker. So I have a very hard time with process, you know? And then I watched Wild at Heart
and Fire Walk with me. And those films are not interested in those things either, you
know?
It was an immediate sort of like, this is my wavelength. Finally, a movie is operating the way my brain works.
And that was my first time experiencing that, where I was like, I have clicked into this
way of thinking and communicating that finally makes sense to me and I don't feel like such
a freak anymore, you know?
And then simultaneously thinking like, I didn't know you were allowed to make this kind of art.
And like, this blew my, you know, I was aware of like the Creme Master cycles.
I was aware of Björk. Like I knew that there was some, you know, magical stuff out there.
But for some reason, while that heart really tapped into my own heart so strongly,
to where I was almost scared of wanting to
be a filmmaker. So I didn't want to touch it for a very long time. But instead, it kind
of led me into photojournalism. Because I wasn't looking at Wild at Heart through the
lens of surrealism. I didn't really know what surrealism was. And this is going to sound kind of crazy,
but a lot of the characters in David Lynch films were not dissimilar from people that I knew in
real life. And definitely not so once I got into photojournalism. And so I was like, oh, this isn't
a surrealist. This is somebody who's really interested in fringe populations, you know
And people like genuinely interested in people. Yes
Yeah, like um somebody who understands I think the mindset of a teenage girl so well
um because he's so interested in people and so
so that sorry i'm kind of rambling now, but
No, but once I I got brave enough and photo
journalism definitely forces you to be, you know, to work on your confidence and your
bravery.
Um, that's when I was like, okay, now I'm going to go to if I and try this.
Yeah, no, I mean, it makes sense to me because I think there was like an era of people who
clearly seemed inspired by Lynch and were trying to sort of like retrofit,
deconstruct the process and do it themselves. And it felt like an affect to a certain extent.
And I feel like there's a wave of filmmakers now that I think you're part of, where I feel
like you have movies that are able to capture, once again,
that same kind of feeling of like there's something primal here that's not literal,
that has intense power.
And I do think it makes more sense what you're saying of like watching this and the turnkey
being, oh, I can do my version of this, not I can make something the way he makes something, but if he's able
to filter his interpretation of the world into something that is legible to others,
then I can trust, I can communicate that and it can mean something to other people.
That's perfectly said. It's so empowering for you to get extremely personal, right?
And that doesn't necessarily mean like trauma dump on people, but that, you know, just like personalize in the way their juices flow, you know?
And then it's also, I think he's such an exceptionally American filmmaker to where
I think, like I find a lot of comfort in 1950s, 1960s iconography.
You know, that's kind of like a pacifier for me.
So to be watching something like Blue Velvet, it makes what's so disturbing really palatable
because you're simultaneously being comforted while you're watching, you know, Frank Booth
do these horrible things to Isabella Rosalie.
So it's, yeah, just the experience in itself is very conflicting and confronting.
Not to be glib about it, but it's what can I say?
David Lynch taught me it was okay to be weird.
Yeah, and it worked so good, you know?
It's like...
Yes.
Okay.
So this movie opens with the little thing, as we said, that feels like the closest to
sort of like the weirdo funny twin peak stuff
that people liked on television.
Like, I wonder if the first four minutes of the movie people were kind of on board.
Kimberly Ann Cole as Lil, the interpretive dancer who gives clues to the FBI agents.
Sour face.
Right.
Before sending them on their way.
It does feel to me very like David Lynch, the Eagle Scout too, like where like his idea
of being an FBI agent, I think he loves codes and, you know, being in a secret club, right?
And the fact that Chester knows what a Blue Rose case is, but, you know, Sam Stanley is
not allowed to know yet, right?
Like the sort of levels.
It's funny. I mean, with everything we're talking about that, like, so much of Lynch's
thing is like, feel it, don't try to decode it. And then this movie starts with being
like, this is a code.
Right. Yeah, it's true. It is making fun of writing.
Also, I feel like intuition presents itself to you in codes, right?
Yes.
Yeah.
So they do kind of start to meld.
Yeah.
But I'm sure, yes, if you're a viewer of the show, you are like, what is going on?
But this is something that is in the show, you know, this mention of a prior murder that
was similar to Laura's murder, Teresa Banks. And then we have this kind of odd showdown of them in this hostile, mean
town with a bunch of nasty sheriffs and deputies and stuff.
That isn't like Twin Peaks.
That isn't like Twin Peaks. Exactly.
It doesn't have the surface charming quaintness.
Right. Versus, like, versus, right, Cooper wandering into Twin Peaks and just being like,
I love this
place.
Everyone at the diner is hostile.
You can go in here for something terrible.
Harry Dean Stanton is sad.
Harry Dean Stanton is mean and sad.
Who's the sheriff?
Who's the local cop?
Able.
Right, yeah, you know, and like, and...
Yeah, they walk into the sheriff's office and they're just like, who the fuck are you guys?
They're just immediately antagonistic with them versus we've talked about on Twin Peaks,
like part of the charm is that weirdo Dale Cooper shows up,
and everyone's like, whatever you say, Dale.
Yes.
We'll throw rocks at bottles if that's
what your dream told you.
Right.
The best ongoing gag in Twin Peaks
is that everyone's cool with Dale.
Right.
The Truman, the most straight arrow guy,
is into Dale's sideways approach.
Right. And Chris Isaac's so much less weird than Cooper, and they act like he is the weirdest
outsider possible.
Right. And he has to prove himself by punching them, by having a fight with them.
Yes.
And that is one of the missing pieces, a prolonged fisticut.
The fight.
Yeah.
It's so weird. Have you watched the missing pieces?
Yeah. Yeah, the missing pieces has like a They Live-style fight. I mean, weird. Have you watched The Missing Pieces? Yeah. Yeah, The Missing Pieces has like a They Live style fight.
I mean, why did they think that was gonna make the movie, I guess is the question.
It's so long and irrelevant. It's funny.
Yeah. To me, I just, yes. You watch The Missing Pieces stuff and you're like,
how could he ever have thought most of this would possibly fit into this movie?
I do wonder if part of
it was him just being like, is this my last chance to play in this world? As much as the
hope was to make multiple movies, he was just like, I have to do everything I can in Twin
Peaks while I have the chance. Just shoot it.
Yeah, I think you're right. But the trailer park, the Fat Trout trailer park,
is very scary.
I'm very... I watched this... I've seen this movie many times.
My latest watch, I watched it on my laptop in bed at night.
Which is not something I do a lot of anymore.
And I was very to this... I'm still so spooked
by Chris Isaac just poking around the trailer park. and the car and like just the dilapidation and just the sense of, you know, what Lynch
is so good at of like there's something over your shoulder or whatever, you know, there's
a question mark thing, right?
Like it's, he's so good at monstrous vibes without actually having to show you anything,
or just showing you Harry Dean Stanton looking bummed out or a weird,
dirty woman with an ice pack on her face or whatever, you know, things like that.
It's interesting because it feels like very, I think superficially,
it feels simplistic, right?
Like it feels like there's no crazy camera moves.
There's no crazy makeup effects or anything.
But then, you know, rewatching it, you realize that like in an atmosphere like that, in like
a trailer park, you don't see a lot of people, but a lot of people see you, you know?
And he does that.
There's a simple moment where they are first entering the trailer and Harry Dean standing outside
and all of a sudden you just pop out to this wide, boyer stick angle and you're just like,
oh yeah, everybody's staring at them, you know?
Right.
Right.
Because there's a cop here.
Like, this is a well-dressed man amongst them as well.
This is, he's so out of place.
But also, I mean, that's a good point where like in a town like Twin Peaks where people
are spread out, but everyone is converging.
Everyone's sleeping with everyone else.
Everyone has a history with everyone else.
They're meeting in these common spaces.
They're all interloping.
And then like a trailer park is this very bizarre community where it's like everyone
is so close and yet sort of separated by design.
And kind of wants to be left alone. Right. our community where it's like everyone is so close and yet sort of separated by design.
And kind of wants to be left. Right. It's like my home is three inches away from your
home. But like I'm closing my door and I'm staying in my little sardine can.
So you know everything about everybody else, but you don't even ever spoken to them, you
know? And then they, there's that added layer of the electric poles. And you start to get the
sense that, okay, there is something supernatural flowing through the electricity. Like electricity
is this force that we think we've harnessed, but really, you know, all these other beings
are using it for, you know, communication or whatever.
Again, dissecting the frog. But that was just another, like, just a simple shot of the power
lines. You're like, oh, there's so much going on that these guys don't realize yet that have to do
with the pros. Yeah. It is this thing I love about Lynch, how much it feels like sometimes
his greatest source of like power is him just asking a question a five-year-old would ask.
Of being like, isn't it weird that there are just like things that travel through like
lines in the sky that power everything?
That we all just accept that the like electricity flows through everything?
And that's why we should stay away from children.
Yes. Those terrifying questions. electricity flows through everything. And that's why we should stay away from children.
Yes.
There's terrifying questions.
Lynch is, he's always been very interested in electricity, I think.
Like he, you know, he is, he's asking those questions.
That's what I'm saying.
He's like, isn't that crazy?
Electricity has its own story arc in this film.
It starts out as just this hum in the power lines and then it ends as this
massive lightning storm while Laura is realizing that Bob is her father. You know, just tracking
the electricity through this film is pretty fascinating.
Yeah, that's a great point. So after...
This is 30 minutes, this sort of cold open.
Yes, it's a sort of mini movie onto itself in a way.
And then at like the 30 minute point you cut to the Twin Peaks sign and the theme song.
Oh, sorry, sorry.
In between, there is this even odder interstitial of the FBI.
Finally introducing Dale.
Dale is there, Gordon is there, Miguel Ferrer, Albert is there, but then David Bowie appears as a guy called Philip
Jefferies who's another agent with a Nolans accent who went missing and has reappeared
and yells about a convenience store.
And there's, you know, that's basically it.
I think actually we see that and then we cut back to, oh no, then right, then Cooper goes
to the trailer park
and sees Let's Rock written on the car.
Right, and that it went missing
and that no one has any sense of it.
I would say, you know, if you're sitting down
watching Twin Peaks Fire Walk with me
ready for some Dale Cooper action
and that's what you get,
you probably are gonna be a little befuddled.
I also find that scene very unsettling.
I don't know.
Is this where we see the convenience store?
I guess almost all of the actual convenience store stuff
is not in the movie.
It's in the missing pieces.
Like Jørgen Prochnow as a woodsman or,
is that what they're called?
The woodsman, right?
Do you know what I'm talking about?
No.
Do you know what I'm talking about, Arkasha?
Are these the Norwegians?
So, the woodsmen... So, in Twin Peaks The Return,
the woodsmen are these sooty, uh, you know, uh, black,
uh, creatures with, like, flannel shirts.
They look like this.
I have not gotten to the return yet.
They're kind of a major part of the show.
I'm moving through all of this.
But the original woodsman is, uh, Jürgen Prochnell wearing a big beard.
And you see him for one second.
Jürgen Prochnell obviously is in Dune.
He'd worked it.
And he's in the convenience store,
where you see Bob eating corn with the arm.
And the boy with the pointy face mask.
The jumping guy, all that stuff.
And it just amuses me so much that these were just
ideas rattling around in his head.
He tries to get them in there.
And then, like, I just love to think about him
calling Juergen Prochno and being like,
do you want to, like, wear a big beard
and sit and have no dialogue for, like,
30 seconds in my movie?
And he's like, yeah, sure, whatever.
David?
This episode, can you guess?
Can you guess who brought this episode to our listeners?
Could it be Moobie?
Correct.
Look, it's a reasonable bet.
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I don't know, what do you make of the Cooper interstitial?
Or it's the most inscrutable part of the movie.
And we do not need to dissect the frog at all.
I'm not asking for fan theories here.
More just sort of its flow in the movie.
Well, the really interesting thing
that I always hooked on was the first thing David Bowie says is we're not going to talk about Judy.
Yeah.
Right.
And I was, so then when I did realize that there was a show, I was like, who the hell
is Judy?
And she ends up being a concierge at the Great Northern, right?
She's in the scene and you never see her again.
And then you realize like, oh, is he talking about Judy Garland?
Like what is he?
What is that?
It's something that, have you seen Twin Peaks The Return?
Have you seen the, you know?
Yeah, I watched it when it came out, but I honestly, it felt like I had malaria for a
moment and had all these fever dreams.
And so I feel like I need to rewatch it, right?
It's worth rewatching, which I'm doing right now.
Judy is sort of obliquely a part of that too.
I don't feel, again, I'm with you on the dissecting of Frog.
I'm not going to explain in some kind of nerdy fan, but Judy is sort of like another Bob,
another sort of like thing that's bad and scary and a monster that they're kind of nerdy fan, but Judy is sort of like another Bob, another sort of like thing
that's bad and scary and a monster that they're kind of talking around a lot. But it's not like someone in that show sits down and is like, so the deal with Judy is this. Like, it's another
word they have for a thing they don't understand. And Jefferies, the David Bowie character, clearly encountered this other world
in the same way that Chris Isaac's character gets zapped to wherever he gets zapped to,
and that Dale will eventually end up in the Black Lodge.
My rea— I just feel like he's—
The reason you have so many people in, like, various aspects of law enforcement
who become either, like like corrupt or sort of like
Checked out and apathetic and lazy at their job is it is like so painful to imagine
Building a life around constantly staring into the the eye of the worst things happening in humanity
Yeah, right
It is like a thing that will like if you're actually open and feeling and engaged with it,
even if you're doing that in the name of trying to
help people and stop things,
it is going to hurt you so profoundly that you go mad,
or you check out and you create a distance,
or you need to find some other way to like,
get your vices to balance that or whatever it is.
And you're seeing sort of like different versions
of these agents eventually going over the edge.
Right, right.
This is like a conspiratorial side tangent
on what you just said.
But when I was a kid, I was really obsessed
with hearing gossip about these,
When I was a kid, I was really obsessed with hearing gossip about these, like these CIA programs that would enlist basically empaths or people who are schizophrenic or needed
to be heavily medicated and see what was the line that they could toe by reducing their
medication to the point where they could still tap into these extra sensory abilities.
Wild. Yes. medication to the point where they could still tap into these extra sensory abilities.
Wild.
Yes.
That do not go absolutely mad.
Right.
Yeah.
And that's so, sorry, when you just said that, that made me think about that a lot because
that's kind of Dale Cooper in a way, right?
Yes.
Make a movie about that, Arkasha.
I'm into it.
I know the men who stare at goats or whatever was something along those lines, right?
But like, I love that.
But that's the whole sort of-
I love that era of, right, like the government being like, should we like do spooky stuff?
Like, I mean, I know that's what the X-Files is eventually.
But like, is there, like, should we just devote a billion dollars just seeing if there's anything
to spooky stuff?
Maybe there isn't.
Like, let's just take a look.
That's what the Blue Rose thing basically is.
But Dale Cooper being this guy who does seem to have
what you're saying these sort of like extra sensory
abilities, right?
Or this like sense of like feeling and perception
and compassion that allows him to like get clues
and dreams and whatever.
And he literally like looks like a Chester Gould
illustration.
Like Comic Glock as a person looks like Dick Tracy
as drawn.
And he's like this G-Wiz damn, that's great coffee kind of guy,
who we're watching be this sort of like funny steady hand in the show
that makes the universe feel right.
And we can sort of watch Twin Peaks, the series,
and believe that he's ultimately gonna fix everything.
And we're just like trucking towards this narrative
where he's just gonna get fucking caught in the Red Room room. You know, like he goes like one step too far and
he can't get out of it.
Which if this were a documentary, it would be what would happen. You know, somebody would
feel just a little too much and it drives them mad.
Yeah. And either, right, either that happens or you start to construct walls to stop yourself
from going mad and in the process you stop feeling as much
Which is its own problem its own danger
Yeah
So from there, yes, then suddenly we are in Twin Peaks the music is back
But it's truly like 30 minutes back. Yes sign
theme song
You imagine audiences settling in and being like,
okay, now is the real movie starting.
Now is he going to do the thing I want?
And he sort of is.
He's really only engaged with the teenage characters.
Yes, and of course, Donna has been recast
with Moira Kelly, who is not bad in the film at all.
I quite love as an actor, but it's so wildly different
from Laura Flynn Boyle. And it is just the recasting problem
I always have, where it's hard to track it as...
the same character. Like, I watch this,
and I sort of think of her as a different character
than the same Donna...
from the series.
That's sort of how I deal with it.
I'm like, this is almost Laura's view of Donna at this point.
Laura's so lost or so loopy or so resigned.
Or it's like we're viewing Twin Peaks through a slightly darker veil and Donna just kind
of feels different because of that.
Because Laura Finn-Bloyel's performance is very sort of sweet.
And Moira Kelly's is also sweet, but just a little more,
whatever, like, tinge with darkness, I guess.
She's not bad in the film at all.
No, I think she's quite good.
I mean, she's also a little more like,
I don't know how much of it is literally just their faces,
right?
But there's something a little steelier about Laura Flynn Boyle
that exists in an interesting contrast with her playing so sweet on the show
and being kind of the one character on the series
who's like, this was a person.
You know?
Do you have a take on this? Obviously, Laura Kelly's your first Donna Hayward.
Yeah, she is.
And I do find Maura really interesting because for me she seems almost more sweetly
naive.
I was gonna say.
Yeah.
And then there's also quite a bit of sexual tension between her and Laura in Fire Walk
with Me where it doesn't feel like there's that ever, or a hint of
that in Twin Peaks, which is, I mean, if we're going to look at kind of the more complex
version of things in the film format, that's there.
But I mean, because like, as you said, like the only characters who really matter deeply
in this movie from the show are Laura, her parents.
Right.
And then to a lesser extent, like James, Bobby, and Donna, you know, her friends.
That's basically it. Like, yes, we see, uh, Shelley or, you know, whoever, you know,
we see other characters, but really it's like...
Yeah. It's her friends at school and her parents.
Right. And, you know, her relationship with Bobby is, you know, completely sort of busted.
Her relationship with James is like quite not, you know, she's, you know, you feel like
like she understands him and he's trying to help her and she's kind of, you know, like,
you know, that dynamic is set.
It's almost like a figure of pity for her.
A little bit, right.
She's just like, you haven't crossed over.
Like, your view of the world is still a little clean.
And you think you can protect me,
but like, I know that's so, you know, far beyond you.
Yeah.
It's sweet that you're trying.
And then her relationship with Donna is also protective,
where she, Laura is so off the rails,
but she's, you can, like,
I feel like Donna being there is partly Laura.
We need to understand that Laura does have
some internal awareness and knows Donna can't, like,
go as far as she can go.
As much as she's sort of, like, spiraling the drain,
the stakes for her are, like,
she cannot let Donna get pulled down with her.
Like it's the one thing that kind of snaps her into like reality in the movie is the
fear of like, am I infecting Donna?
I don't want her to suffer as well.
I mean, it's interesting how like the series obviously is unfolding the layers and revealing
to you the darkness underneath these people
Right this show Bobby's introduced with like his drug running at the forefront. Yeah, that is basically his introduction
Yes, and Laura is introduced doing coke right?
100% yeah, the veneer of the show is gone even though the aesthetics and the music remain.
Right.
Right?
Yeah.
And James, you know, the whole thing with James being like,
having the aesthetics of like the biker bad boy,
but being the sweetheart.
I think this movie even plays it up.
It really makes him like naive and childlike.
Yeah. How do you feel about James Sarkasho?arkozy? What's so interesting about the movie is that I actually end up liking Bobby so much more
because you realize like, oh, he's not trying to be somebody he's not.
He's actually quite sweet when she's in trouble and realizes, oh, she doesn't love me.
She just loves my coke.
He still gives her drugs, you know, whereas James,
which seems to be the person, he abandons her in the middle of night in the woods and
drives off, you know, and she does scream at him. But, but you kind of stop liking him
because he's the one who's supposedly closest to her, sees that she's in a lot of tumble and still leaves. And it's, that's probably one
of the more upsetting moments of the film, I think, is when he drives off.
Bobby is low key kind of my favorite character. In the whole universe. You've said this before.
I think that performance is so special. But I like him in this.
I love him in The Return.
I also love Garland. I love the scene in the move,
in the show...
where he and Garland have this big kind of, like,
tearful understanding, which is, that's in season two,
so we'll talk about it later.
I think you probably just watched it.
Yes, yes, yes, yes, I have seen that. But yes, I agree with you, Ak is, that's in season two, so we'll talk about it later. I think you probably just watched it. Yes, yes, yes, yes, I have seen that.
But yes, I agree with you, Akasha, like...
it would be easy for Bobby to just be
the soap opera teen villain you root against, right?
This is the, oh, it's the golden boy,
but actually he's bad.
And instead, he is oddly sympathetic
in his patheticness.
And he, I think, understands the rock bottom Laura is at
quite well in a way. He can't do anything for her.
Right. Right. But, like, there is some self-awareness to Bobby.
It is crazy that he shoots someone in the head in this movie.
Yes.
Like, that seems pretty crazy, especially since it's never addressed
again on Twin Peaks.
No.
Bobby straight up murdered someone in the woods and no one found the body.
When Laura says it to James, he's like, what the fuck are you talking about?
That's not a plot point.
Like it would be, the way Bobby has an altercation with a Canadian drug dealer and then shoots
him and his head explodes, you're like, oh, there must be something in the TV show
where they found a dead body.
No, no, that just never comes up again.
Isn't it the piece of shit cop that we meet in the beginning?
Cliff.
Oh, yes, yes, it's, uh, yes.
The guy he shoots is Cliff Howard, who, yes, is the, um,
right, the cop from Dear Meadow.
Not the sheriff, but the...
I didn't notice that. Yeah, yes.
But again, that doesn't...
It's odd that that happens.
It ties into Fire Walk with me.
It does not tie into anything that happens in the rest of the Twin Peaks.
I'm not mad about it. It's just very dramatic out in a movie that is already incredibly dramatic.
Yes.
They did hide that body well.
With that thin layer of soil. Yeah, clearly.
Yeah, and a time where they're really good at finding dead bodies.
Right.
This one stays buried.
The Earth just claims him, I guess.
I don't know.
So, but yes, mostly we're with Laura.
What's happened in this movie, I guess, right, is that it's what you said earlier.
It's like Laura has finally realized there's a monster,
that's part of what's happening.
She has a foot on the other side of reality now,
versus before she was just disassociating
when these terrible things were happening to her.
And now it's kind of, I feel like, like she's up against the membrane.
When did you say that?
I said that in our 20th season one episode,
poking the membrane.
Right.
That's my clearest way of describing Laura's
like state of mind in this movie.
Obviously she's also just generally spiraling and, you know, but like it's like there's
an awareness and that's what I think is bringing her both clarity and bringing her to the end
of her life.
It's like feeling a kind of suffering that you can't unknow.
That cannot be rolled back.
Oh God, it's so depressing.
Cheryl is so good in this.
Yeah.
I mean, it feels like you read the response at the time and people were sort of begrudgingly
like,
I can't deny she gives a very good performance.
But it's an incredibly painful performance
because you're just watching someone kind of accurately
depict that level of like complete collapse of self.
There's also this interesting idea that,
and throughout the whole film,
you're not quite sure upon first viewing,
what's a delusion and what's fantasy
and what's not and what's real life.
And so when I first watched Fire Walk with me,
I thought the shooting was actually just a fantasy,
like a drug-fueled fantasy, I wasn't even sure.
And then, especially now that we talk about it,
never coming up in Twin Peaks,
and it's like, oh, maybe it was. And then also, and this is, this is traveling into the dissecting
the frog territory. But these theories that, that Laura and Leland are actually joined
within this shared delusion of Bob, that neither of them can really face what's happening.
And it, there is, do you guys remember this movie?
It had Kiefer Sutherland in it.
No, not Kiefer Sutherland, Donald Sutherland in it.
All the American horror story.
No, American.
I think it was American horror story, but.
Is it called An American Haunting?
An American Haunting, that's it.
There you go, sure.
I do remember that movie, like a sort of
spooky witch movie from the mid-2000s, but I have not seen it.
Yeah, me neither.
Okay, I saw it.
Sissy Spacek.
And it does, it posits a theory about Salem witch trials
and stories of possession really stemming from really horrible trauma within
families like in this, this movie, Donald Sutherland was actually, you know, raping
his daughter and his daughter thought that she was being possessed by a ghost. And then
Donald Sutherland thought he was being possessed by the same ghost. And so they started to
meld these weird fantasies together and it's
interesting thinking about it through that lens of like how tubular it is.
Right, we talked about this a little bit already right but like it's like
Bob is I think that is you can just deal with Bob as a metaphor and the movie
functions just fine. Correct. You can deal with Bob as a spirit or a manifest state, but like he can...
Or worst impulses.
Right.
Or darkest state, yeah.
He can just be a metaphor for the both of them, like realizing the terrible thing that
is happening.
And like when they are seeing Bob is when they are thinking about it the most clearly
and it is the most distressing.
There is, look, this is all very difficult stuff to talk about, but there's a conversation
I had that I think about a lot with someone when, you know, whatever it was, 2016, 2017,
where there was the first real like kind of wave of reckoning of Me Too within the industry
and suddenly all these stories were being shared, right?
And the men who were being accused were putting out these denials,
these sort of like complete denials of, this has no basis in reality,
I support survivors, but everything that's being said about me is false.
And I was talking to someone who was like, look, this is kind of,
it's the sort of thing that's difficult to talk about because no one wants to hear this right now.
And there are obviously people who consciously did something and are choosing to just publicly
deny it to save face.
But I remember this friend of mine saying to me, I sometimes think that in some of these
cases the perpetrators have also disassociated from the acts.
That much like their targets, they actually do not have the memory of doing that as themselves.
That they've sort of like bifurcated their consciousness
around this thing, knowing they did something so harmful,
you know? Which is not to absolve them of responsibility,
but I think that's sort of the tragedy of Leland Palmer,
is like, he is fighting this horrible thing
that he is doing, and he is removing himself from it.
It's exactly what this film is about is taking your experiences and your impulses and divorcing
them from your physical body and put it in a little box. There's this really creepy quote
that Ted Bundy said after he was caught in Florida and And they're like, just, just confess and, and we won't,
you know, whatever. And he goes, even if I wanted to, my body physically will not allow
me to share the secrets I've been harboring for decades. And that really stuck with me,
you know?
Because it's like years of building up those walls have been happening with him with, but
yeah. those walls have been happening with him. Right. Whether Bob is like a justification or like a fragmentation or whatever it is,
there is that kind of split that tends to happen, I think, in these cases where people
cross that line into perpetuating such harm upon others.
Absolutely. And then you have that, I think so strongly in this movie, especially with
Michael Anderson being, you know, he presents himself and introduces himself as the arm. He is the second arm. And it's when
you think about how, how we harbor guilt in our bodies or evil in our bodies, it is, you
know, physical, but it's really interesting thinking about like the way Mike wanted to
rid himself of the evil he was committing was by cutting his own arm off and that evil in the form of an arm takes life.
Yeah, so okay, and I hate to get too theoretical about Twin Peaks, but yes, Michael J. Anderson
is the arm and Mike, the spirit Mike cut off his arm to sort of rid himself of Bob and evil.
But then I've long wrestled with like what...
Because the arm is malevolent-ish in The Red Room, Michael J. Anderson.
He's sort of helpful, he gives weird clues,
he's got this kind of jocular odd energy.
But he's also scary, He's somewhat allied with Bob. And I've long wondered what he represents
beyond this little trickster figure.
He doesn't seem like Bob.
Albert calls him in season two the evil that men do.
Bob, the malevolence is so surface level.
And I don't know. I mean, I just...
I don't know what you guys make of the arm.
Arkaasha, I don't know what you think his role is,
or if we even need to think about it.
Like, but I've long wondered how...
I sound like such a dork. Like, how good or bad he is.
I know it's so lame to think about Twin Peaks in this way
of like, who's the villain?
Who's the good guy?
You know, but.
I mean, my read as a recent, like, you know,
a dilettante into this world trying to make my way through
it has not spent as much time as you have.
It's what you said, Akash, about like the way our body holds
like trauma and memories and pain, right?
There's this sort of feeling of like the red room being the receptacle for all the worst things, the things
we don't want to think about, the things we repress, right? The way like the
the compartmentalizing
of the sort of darkness. And there's this feeling of Mike being like, if I sacrifice my arm to this,
Right and there's this feeling of Mike being like if I sacrifice my arm to this do I clean myself of this darkness?
Right and yet he's constantly haunted by Bob. He is now a one-armed man who like lives with Bob
Right, it doesn't do anything
The arm was like this sort of like sacrifice in vain that he said like if I surrender this to the room
Right. Am I clean of this the arm wasn't, which is why the arm isn't evil in there.
He's kind of evil, but he's not really. And Mike is now good, but you're right, Mike can't
do much.
Yeah. And Bob's still there. All he can do is say, like, I also see Bob, stay away from
Bob. Don't take the ring.
What do you think, Arkasha?
Well, this is definitely not an answer to that, but there... Great.
You know, years ago, I read this script online and there's this scene where...
Well, so first off, you know, in the Red Room, the arm does the...
Waa-waa-waa-waa-waa-waa thing.
I sound like this.
I sound like this.
Exactly.
Yes.
So then in the script, there's this scene that I don't think was ever shot where Laura
and her two Johns, Buck and Giggling Man, are driving from the Bang Bang Bar to this
bar in Canada. And they're speeding and they're drinking. And at one point, Buck turns to
Laura and he goes, la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la this idea that whatever this arm is, it's something that's going to permeate throughout.
You know, it's kind of that Or Mac McCarthy idea that evil won't hold in one physical
form but it's contagious.
And like, so in Twin Peaks, one of the funniest and strangest in the world of Twin Peaks notions
is that yes, Bob is this creature of evil and Garmin Bosia, you know, the pain
and suffering is what he gets from what he's doing, which is creamed corn, which we see
several times throughout all of the Twin Peaks things, including here.
And it's sort of like food, it's nourishment to these creatures that live in this other
world and the arm wants the corn. And it's sort of like food, it's nourishment to these creatures that live in this other world.
And the arm wants the corn.
The arm wants his garminbosia. He wants to eat.
Yeah.
And Bob, it's like, is like, malevolent in a crazy way.
And he's out there, whatever, breaking the rules.
I don't know how, you know, like, he's out in our world,
like, being awful.
Yeah. And the arm is like some sort of more restricted thing where he's like, I don't know how, you know, like he's out in our world, like being awful. Yeah.
And the arm is like some sort of more restricted thing
where he's like, I don't do that,
but I do need suffering to exist.
Like, you know, like even though I'm stunted
or I'm sort of like only here,
and I don't even maybe like Bob,
and I'm sort of working against Bob sometimes,
I do need his pain and suffering.
Because the end of the movie is Bob giving him
the pain and suffering.
Let me refine my read I was giving, right?
Like the idea that Mike sacrifices the arm to like,
well then that becomes the evil.
The evil was in the arm.
I can be good.
I send the arm to the evil place, I'm good,
I'm freed of that and yet his life is not, right?
By putting all of that on the arm,
the arm becomes the idea of the trauma.
Right.
Like he still had the experience of cutting his arm off, which means the arm is now a
place of trauma by the nature of deciding it's the problem.
And that's sort of like the conflicted existence of the arm as a character is like there was
no root evil, it caused no harm, but it became a point of harm.
I almost hate doing all this because like I said, I don't need Twin Peaks to write,
to have superhero logic to me at all. I think everything should have superhero logic.
I want my Easter eggs explained. But I do, you know,
Gunter at heart. Lynch does, obviously is so fascinated by symbolism and representation of mystical concepts
of consciousness and things like that.
He's not doing this just because it's random.
Has he ever tried meditation?
I feel like that would maybe chill him out.
If I'm at lunch, I just tell him, try meditation.
And I cannot deny that anytime we are in the Red Room in any kind of Twin Peaks, I'm so transfixed.
Yeah.
And I'm not parsing it for meaning,
but I am very fascinated by whatever thoughts
he's trying to process.
It was the great surprise of finally watching season one
for me that the Red Room appears one time.
It does.
And I'm like, I was made to believe that this show was like half in this place for how much
this is what gets recirculated in the conversation and the imagery. Yeah.
Do you care about The Red Room more or less than some things are,
Kassia, or like is it more Laura's story that you are taken by?
Oh, I think I definitely became obsessed with the Red Room
once I watched the show.
I think I was so obsessed with Laura initially,
but the Red Room is interesting in the sense that
it's another one of those areas where Lynch is able to tap
into this universal iconography that allows
us to make everything so intensely personal. I think that's why people are either fans
of Lynch or not. And if you're a fan, you're super, um, because not answering or having
very defined rules about what all this means allows you to really put your own imprint on it. And the red room is, is this little cubby hole of hell, you know, and, and when, when we were doing first
omen, we were doing a lot of research on, on the rules of hell. Like there's rules,
there aren't, but, but you know, reading that there's hell and Satan will, will take what
creates meaning and rip it to shreds and make it formless, you know?
And that is the function of Satan
and that is what hell is.
And so when you get into this red room
and all of a sudden people are speaking backwards
and, you know, communication is even more clipped
and it just felt so perfect and it felt so like there was so much depth in this
space that's very simplistic. There are no walls. It's just curtains, you know?
Curtains and a statue and a light.
Yeah, which lets you put even more of your own imagination into it and makes it inescapable.
But that's interesting. the idea that it's like
the most ultimate form of punishment
for the human consciousness is things that are inexplicable.
Like so often hell is depicted as like,
you are in a fiery pit and there's a little demon
and he's poking you with a pitchfork.
Like he's punishing you and people are like,
oh, eternal suffering, but you're like, there are rules to that. The thing- It's hot and the guy's poking you. He pitchfork. Like he's punishing you and people are like, oh, eternal suffering. But you're like, there are rules to that. It's hot and the guy's poking you. That's
a problem versus like, what's more terrifying than being in the red room being like, I don't
know why he's speaking backwards and no one can explain this to me.
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Beyond that, the Red Room is kind of comforting in a way.
The music is interesting.
The vibe is interesting.
Hotels are expensive.
It's just very overpriced.
In Twin Peaks Season Two, the very extended sequence
in the Red Room, kind of the longest sequence
he ever did in there, it's just Cooper moving
from one room to another through the curtains.
There's like a curtain space in the middle.
And it is such a great idea of hell of like,
no, maybe if I just go to this room,
nah, it's the same room.
If I go to this room, nah, that's that room again.
The only thing that happens in the Red Room
in Twin Peaks Fire Walk with me
that we haven't talked about really
is the ring is there, right?
The arm introduces Cooper to the, there's this ring
and Cooper is very intently like, don't take the ring.
Right, he's trying.
Mike says that to her as well.
Exactly, well, he's trying, right.
Cooper's like trying to end.
When she puts the ring on, not to jump ahead,
but you know, like when things are going down at the end,
she's in the train car, when she puts the ring on,
I think the notion is the ring protects her from Bob.
Bob can't possess her.
If you want to think about this somewhat literally,
Bob sort of is ready to move from Leland into her.
And she's warding him off,
and that's why Bob has to kill her.
Right.
And Cooper, in his more simplistic savior kind of,
he doesn't want her to die.
And he wants, like, so much of Twin Peaks is Cooper trying to save Laura.
Yes.
Right? Like, first he's trying to solve her murder,
but as the show goes on, and then the third scene,
you know, it's like him trying to be like,
how can I fix it? How can I save Laura?
But Laura wants to die.
Right, I mean, I keep going back to the...
This is a movie about someone who's ready to die.
The Russ Tamblin one.
She can't do it anymore.
I'm not suggesting she killed herself.
I'm just suggesting that maybe she let herself be killed.
And that's why it's sort of good that she puts on the ring
and that we see her in, you know, in an angel form
and that, you know, that it's like, I think Lynch is like, there's something, you know,
necessary about this as sad as it is and as tough as it is for someone like Cooper who
cannot grapple with that notion.
Yeah.
I don't know, Arcasio, if you agree.
This is such tricky territory, right?
It's very sticky because it's, that if we say Laura wants to die at the end, this is,
that's a pretty damning comment, I think, especially when, you know, the prologue of
all of this is Laura is representing one of many young women.
And this is really just a story of all the different ways that, you know, we use and
abuse young women. And so that's almost, strangely enough, almost too dark for me to think, you
know, which is why...
It is. It's horrifying to come...
Yeah, it's terrible. And we're so relieved when that angel shows up, you know, at the
very end. And it's like, you don't really know what that means, but you really needed
it. You know, at least I did at the at the end of the film. And I think that you in order
to not sacrifice your identity in the name of all the horrible trauma you
experience, you have to essentially kill yourself or let yourself be killed. That's, that's
essentially the message for women at the end of this film.
Right. Yeah. You're so broken that there's no coming back. It's pretty fatalistic.
I think one reason you're laughing is that this was a commercially released film
under a somewhat of a name brand.
Yes, it was European money or whatever, but nonetheless,
like to imagine audiences being presented with this,
especially in the guise of this show that's like,
yes, it's dark and yes, it's about a twisted murder case,
but also it's like a town where you get to go
have your coffee and pie.
I mean, there was a thing that JJ put in the dossier
about how like so quickly after season one took off,
they signed a four book deal.
Yes.
And that they were frustrated that the show collapsed
so quickly that only three out of the four books
got published.
And you're like, right, as much as it wasn't
like the fucking MCU, this very quickly was set up
as like a multimedia franchise.
You know?
Right.
Why can't this be a cash cow?
And this movie is the opposite of that approach.
Yes.
This movie's a slaughterhouse.
Well, it's like you said, it's very confronting.
And I laugh because it's really dark and this
isn't like a conversation, but it's because I think that's very, you know, very true. And I
think the, and you brought this up at the beginning of this discussion is that we have this
fascination with death. And you know, there is, all I think as a culture have a dead girl
fetish you know yeah right was what was so addictive about the first season is
that we were able to indulge in that dead girl fantasy and then you find out
who killed her and then kind of the the air is let out of the balloon right um
it's yes it's the sad, it's the saddest answer.
Right.
The saddest answer.
Yeah.
It's not like, oh, some crime wave or oh, some like conspiracy.
It's like this was happening in her home and everyone sort of was just trying to look away
from it.
And also not to repeat myself, but the fact that the movie starts at such a low point
that it isn't here's the week where everything went wrong.
Right. Here's the end of a very long decline.
Yeah.
Yes, what's happened to Laura is that she's become aware
of what's happening to her.
Yes.
And that's what's fueling, I think, somewhat,
you know, the destructiveness and the acceptance.
And, you know, that's so hard to consider for the audience.
Yeah.
And that's what's so, that was kind of a really depressing thing to watch the season afterwards
because you realize like, oh, this was such a beloved person and she's been murdered in
a terrific way yet nothing really changes after that.
You get to explore the rest of the town, but, but, um, but the drugs
keep flowing and the underage prostitution keeps, you know?
Yes. And like, it is notable that Twin Peaks, the show, yes, they, I guess they kind of
eventually shut down One-Eyed Jacks, kind of, but it is definitely not a show about Cooper
rolling up his sleeves and being like, all right.
We're solving this town.
Yeah, right, let's fix the town.
Now, because it's an ABC show, you don't see,
you know, it's mostly just spoken of.
You don't see the town continuing to like pump out
drugs and prostitution.
But yeah, I mean, certainly when The Return comes around,
it's not like Twin Peaks has been fixed. Well, can we talk about the scene in this movie that I find most upsetting is the scene at the bar
That feels like it goes on forever, right?
This sort of like musical loop of this live band performance
It seemingly is just playing the same ten notes over and over again for hours, right?
It truly feels like a cycle of hell.
And you're watching, this isn't happening at One Eye Jacks.
This isn't happening in the structure
of them wearing fucking masquerade masks
and being in their like nicely designed
sort of like satin rooms.
And the idea of this being like a proper business,
even if it's a business happening in secret.
It's like, this is just a woman sort of like being taken advantage of physically in real
time in a room full of other people and no one is reacting.
And it is this thing of like you can sort of track in this way that is incredibly dark
Laura's logic of why she's putting herself in this
situation, why she's going along with it, which is like to someone who has been commodified
this much physically and sexually, in her mind there is a form of agency to, I am choosing
to let this happen, right?
You can sort of see the sense of control that she thinks she's exerting over her environment
by being like, no, but this is the version of this that she thinks she's exerting over her environment by being like,
no, but this is the version of this that I'm, I chose to show up here.
Right. Right. And that's why she doesn't want Donna really sinking into it.
I think that this is such, this is such an important part of this film is that the only
sort of agency a young woman has is, is through like selfculpatory sexism and... Exactly.
Yeah.
Yes.
And commodification.
It's, and what's really terrible, well, not terrible, but what I think is so well crafted
about this part of the film is that it's presented in a way that engages you in a real way.
Like the lighting's super sexy, the music's super sexy.
Right.
You're really having fun with it until Donna gets involved and Laura starts screaming.
And that really is like the bucket of cold water where you're like, oh my God, this is
literal hell.
But also at that point, this scene has been going on for over 10 minutes.
The music is
so loud and droning that there are burnt-in subtitles for the dialogue, right? Where it's
like, no, we know you can't hear what she's saying. This guy sort of like pushes the boundary
of like, what if I take her top off while we're dancing? She doesn't react. No one
reacts. She pulls it down further. And then she's just continuing to exist in this room.
She goes into the booth. She's talking to other people she remains topless two things
I think this scene captures very very well are like the weirdness of when something that bizarre and
What's what's the word I'm looking for
How quickly things get normalized if something's strange happens in a public space,
and everyone's sort of...
You're either going to confront it immediately,
or it's just going to kind of be like,
I guess we're not going to talk about this.
If it doesn't get confronted immediately,
everyone just sort of adjusts to,
I guess this is the reality of the room.
And if I don't like it,
I'm just going to try to get away from it,
rather than deal with it.
Right, and as you said, Arkasha,
there's this feeling at this point,
like Laura is so beaten down
that it's like everyone views me as a sexual object, right?
I'm like sort of commodified and like fetishized as this like perfect prom queen girl, but
I'm like abused by my family and these forces of evil.
I'm like lusted over by all these teen boys.
At this point, she's gotten kicked out of One-Eyed Jacks.
So now she's doing even like the less structured version
of the idea of sex work, but also-
Newspaper ads or whatever.
Right.
With randoms.
Right.
And as you said, it's just like, well, the agency I have
is choosing the form in which my currency is my sexuality,
rather than her believing she has any other sense of self
at this point.
Right.
The other thing this scene captures so well is like, I think an actual accurate representation
of peer pressure, where before Donna gets drugged, when it's sort of the four of them
standing in a square, and you're just watching Donna sort of accept like, I guess this is
how grownups behave.
Right. Donna doesn't seem that into it.
It was more just kind of like, is this what I have to do here?
But there isn't even that much of like, come on, what are you, a coward?
Right. No, it's just, yeah, it's just the overwhelming atmosphere.
I guess I have to do this. I guess this is normal now.
It's a damning commentary on how desperately we need human connection
because that's...
Yes.
This is all in the name of relating to Laura.
Right. Which, you know, like, we've seen so many after-school fucking specials where
it's presented as a gang of five kids who are like, what are you? A coward? You don't want to smoke
this dude? And you're like, that's not not what happens It's you watch three other people doing something and immediately you put it on yourself and go like are they gonna reject me if I don't?
Do this? I want to be part of this or if I complain or if I say like you shouldn't do that
Or why is this happening to you? You don't want to be part of it because you think it looks cool
you want to be part of it because you want to be part of anything and if that's the space you're in right now you
don't want to be outside of it and
And if that's the space you're in right now, you don't want to be outside of it.
And, yeah, the fact that, like, the thing that flips Laura,
the one sort of moment in the last hour of this movie
where she seems to have some, like, clarity,
is seeing Donna, the fear of Donna, like, falling into this.
And her immediate response being...
Don't, like, become like me, essentially.
No, don't borrow my clothes.
Well, right, first the jealousy. You're right.
She just picks a different thing to sort of get upset about.
But she does say to Donna, like, you know,
like, don't become like me.
Yeah, she gets there eventually,
but I think don't borrow my clothes is her version of the unicorn,
which is like, it's too painful to actually verbalize her real fear.
In that moment. She has to fight to get that statement out.
But after this like profound deep conversation, I'm realizing now that at the bar whenever
anybody is not drinking their beer fast enough, my favorite thing to say is chug a lug, Donna.
Chug a lug.
Wow.
Gobble gobble.
Right. That's the only moment that is someone actually kind of saying to her, hey, are you
cool or not?
Right, right, right, right, right.
Right.
Otherwise, it's just her observing and trying to keep up.
We should wrap up soon.
Our time is coming to a close.
Not to sound portentous.
It's already portentous.
I mean, we're in an alien studio.
Our cautious screen is gone blank,
we're talking to a disembodied voice. I've eaten one granola bar all day.
So is there anything we want to say about the ending of the film, the absolutely horrifying train car sequence
before we like play the box office game? I should, and I note that, yes, this movie premiered
at canto boos and disappointment,
and, like, the entire adventure stops dead.
Yes.
Like, it's like, that's that.
Yeah.
This movie flops.
It does get indie spirit nods.
Like, there's clearly some awareness.
Yes.
Like, there are some critics who are with it.
Yeah.
But, you know, the Twin Peaks ride is over for a long time.
Right.
A lot of the Cheryl Lee notices for this movie
felt a little bit like the Anna de Armas
blonde Oscar nomination, where it's like.
Yeah, where there was a weird sort of patronizing sympathy,
even though she loves.
You went through this suffering.
Right, right.
Yeah.
But yeah, the ending, our cast, you know,
I actually find the ending, like, too difficult to watch,
and I usually sort of have to look to the side a little bit.
When she's just, like, screaming, you know,
in Leland's face and Bob's face. You know, it's just like...
What's the other part of it being wild
that he shot 90 minutes of these other scenes
where you're like,
this movie doesn't have many sequences.
They all go on longer than they feel like they should.
I mean, Arkasha also just made a movie
that I watched in a theater with my friend Emma,
where we both were, I love the movie,
but at times having to do the thing of like,
I kind of need blinkers on for a second.
I don't know what's gonna happen.
I'm, you know, unsettled.
Thank you.
I think this is, the train scene is kind of
the core of darkness where I actually
watch the movie. I don't really watch that scene. You know, it's, it's a little too much
for me. Although, although I do, there is like this wave of relief when this beautiful
angel comes. Um, yeah, but, but yeah, I mean, what, what I was saying before, the horribly dark thing
I was saying before is kind of, you feel that every time, especially when, you know, for
some reason, what's, what's most disturbing to me is that you do see Leland Palmer. It's
not just Bob and he uses the two, right? So you have this feeling like, Oh, is Leland
Palmer somewhat aware? I don't, the, for some reason, the, the little Jimmy Scott song makes me sob
like a donkey every time I hear it.
Cause it's just this, you know, it's almost this, um, you're all of a sudden
in Leland Palmer's point of view and just feeling terrible for him in this horrible
act that he wasn't, he seemingly had no control over.
So it's almost a little
too confronting.
Well, you also have the whole, we didn't even talk about it, but the sequence in the middle
where they're in the car and he's getting all the flashbacks of like trying to find
a sex worker who reminds him of his daughter. It feels like so he can put that energy somewhere
else without harming her.
And that's Teresa Palmer obviously as part of that, but then he almost stumbled
into having sex with his daughter in that context.
Right. Yes.
And it's like he's fighting the sort of like
growing awareness of what he's done and who he is.
And you're right, in that sequence,
it does feel like he's actually more present.
As much as Bob is there, physically, also represented, it does kind of feel like Leland is in his body
in those final moments of the worst things happening.
And then of course, that's why I feel like we need to have
that epilogue where Bob like sucks the blood out of him
and puts it on the floor.
Yeah.
Really for internal logic,
but also just for our understanding of Leland,
where it's like right now,
he's going back into a fugue, right?
Like now that this is over with,
like they're kind of taking that away from him
and he will exist in the form we know him in the show
is this man who's kind of like
aware and not aware of what happened.
Right.
If I can try to wrap up a theme I was putting out there
and let's see if I can land this plane at all.
But like the feeling of these scenes going on longer than they should and part of it is just like this is so punishing,
he's not cutting away from it. We're living in this for so long.
But I also think Lynch kind of uses and I think he does this in other films as well, but this one he does in a perhaps a more subtle way of like using a sort of
incorrect editing, which isn't to say like, you know, crossing the line.
Gaffs.
Gaffs, goofs and spoofs, errors.
No, I mean like sort of the obvious like new wave kind of like jump cut and continuity
errors and things you do to like jostle the audience and that sort of disorientation. I feel like he creates too much air in scenes on purpose. He is like
slowing down time in the edit where things are happening at like an unnatural pace. And
I think about a very different movie that is also about coming to terms with death in
a certain way, in many ways, overtly, but Meet Joe Black, which we recently covered, and
is three hours long, and as we joked, and most of our listeners seem to joke when they
watch the movie for the podcast, like this movie truly has one hour of pauses in between
every single line of dialogue.
There is just a weird silence in response to every single line.
And for a movie like that that is going for something more
whimsical and romantic even if sad people are like this is so bizarre and
Then this is a movie that uses almost a similar technique as like a tool of disorientation, right?
I think you're right. I think this is I mean our cost you make movies. I don't know if like there is a subtle art to this, right?
How much to push sort of what you're talking about.
Well, it's interesting because it's, they say, you know, life imitates art or whatever.
It's a, it's, I feel like in the editing room, people are really afraid of these quiet moments
and these moments that you're not entirely sure what the purpose of this airspace is. And it almost just really supports the theme of all of his films.
It's like there's a lot that is happening and that is being said that words can't articulate
and you have to trust yourself enough to into it and feel about the unknown.
And here's a good long cross-room stare that's going to last three minutes.
That's the thing. Yeah. I feel like a lot of the unease he successfully creates
just comes from why aren't people reacting faster?
That's a real, I think, dangerous thing to be or seemingly dangerous thing to be doing when you're
making film, because at least on the studio level, you would have to fight tooth and nail for years to keep that airspace and it would still get hacked.
Right.
Like not only is the sort of traditional rule of editing to cut everything as lean as you
possibly can, remove anything that's extraneous, but also most people want to, even when they
identify what the valuable can't lose pieces are
You know you you cut in late and you cut out early, right? That's this like whole mantra, right? Right?
And he's always doing the opposite in that rule. Yes
And the movie is long, but I never feel like
Uncompelling like you know, right like the movies but it's? Like the movies. But it's punishing by design.
Yes, it is.
It's interesting because there's, I watched Pickpocket not too long ago on Criterion.
One of the best.
And how, and really watching how there's about eight frames extra at the beginning of scenes
where people are about to walk through a door and eight frames left over
when people leave. And it's, it's in a way creates this like ghost. You appreciate the ghost of the
person that was there. And, or this mystery of, of what this space was like before a person enters.
What energy they're going to bring into the room is, is really honored. And you would never have those eight frames now, you know,
ever. Um, those guys would get hacked right away, but,
but it almost creates this sounds really, um, I'm like waxing or episodic,
but it almost creates the spirituality to pick pocket.
Um, especially when it comes to his room and the space that he spends the most
time in.
And I like that about Lynch films. I feel like he honors that kind of space.
I think that's very well said.
I think we should play the box office game.
Sponsored by Regal Cinemas.
Our question, we're going to, this movie came out August 28th, 1992. Great release date.
Wow. I a lot of...
I do often think that is the single...
I think you and I both agree the single two worst release dates that feel still like the
absolute dumping ground...
Like a punishment, right.
Right.
Are the first week of January and the last week of August.
Right.
They even sort of salvage the beginning of September now.
Right.
But we're going to try and guess the top five...
Griffin is going to try and guess the top five movies Griffin is gonna try and guess the top five movies.
Because my brain is broken.
Actually an interesting, yes, okay, so.
Okay, August. August 28th, 1992. Oh, 92, of course.
Yes. Twin Peaks opened number eight at the box office, 1.8 million, and made about four million dollars.
Domestically. Yeah, not great. Yeah, But number one is a film I'm sure you like,
a rom-com starring an actor you love.
What's a rom-com starring an actor I love?
Maybe you don't like this movie.
I feel like you do.
Well, it's interesting.
You know I love the actor,
but maybe I don't talk about this movie much.
I don't know if I've ever heard you talk about this movie.
It's a comedy.
It's a comedy.
It's not House Guest, is it?
No.
It's not House Guest.
I don't know what to give you here. It's two major movie stars.
And one of them I love in particular?
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, he's one of your big guys.
He's one of my guys. Okay, the male star is the one who's...
He's not always a comic actor.
Right.
He's gonna win an Oscar in like two years.
It's not Hanks.
No. No, no, no. Come on, no.
One of your guys.
He's one of my guys.
Who are your guys?
And in two years he's gonna win an Oscar.
Why am I not thinking about this?
Come on, who are your guys?
Vin Diesel.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Early 90s, come on. Michael Keaton. Lock in, lock in. Keaton's a good answer, but no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no It's not Steve Martin, because he hasn't won an Oscar. Who wins an Oscar in the 90s and I'm very happy about it?
Nicholas Cage.
Nicholas Cage, there you go.
Is it Honeymoon in Vegas?
Honeymoon in Vegas.
I think the movie's okay.
See, it's not one of your favorites.
It's not one of my favorites.
Andrew Bergman movie. Have you seen Honeymoon in Vegas?
Arkasha, do you care about Honeymoon in Vegas?
Brought me to Vegas and turned me into a whore.
Hey. Hey.
Hey.
Yeah, Con Cage, young Sarah Jessica Parker,
Andrew Bergman movie, who's like kind of
an under-sung auteur, yeah.
Cage has his weird early 90s light comedy,
rom-com sort of like wave of that,
and it could happen to you, and...
I kind of like as well, like those are movies I kind of like them. Yeah. Yeah guarding tests is sort of interesting
It's obviously not rom-com, right? What is another like very light comedy?
Honeymoon in Vegas is opening number one also kind of getting dumped out. Yeah
Number two is the best picture winner of 1992. It's been out for a month. It's made a ton of money
in 1992 yes, it comes out in the summer.
It does, which is odd.
Okay, so wait, 1990 is Dances with Wolves, obviously.
1991 is Silence of the Lambs.
That's right.
1992, is it Unforgiven?
Unforgiven.
Wild.
It's just weird that that was a summer movie.
Yeah, and it takes a year to make 100 million.
Plays for a full calendar year in main theaters.
Great movie.
Yeah.
Number three, The Box Office is a horror sequel,
opening against Twin Peaks.
What number is it?
Two.
It's a two.
And the last.
And the last.
Yes.
Is it FX2?
No.
It's more of a thriller. I know, I was proud of the guess. I liked the last. And the last. Yes. Is it FX2? No.
It's more of a thriller.
I know, I was proud of the guess.
I liked the guess.
Commend the guess.
Great guess.
The guess had a certain...
A female horror director, not a lot of those.
Is it Pet Sematary 2?
Pet Sematary 2.
I've never seen it.
Mary Lambert.
Have you seen Pet Sematary 1 or 2, the Mary Lambert films, Arkasha? I've seen one. I haven't seen two.
I like one quite a bit.
One's pretty good.
Two is Eddie Furlong?
Yes. Eddie Furlong.
Pet Sematary, my favorite Stephen King novel, but I do not know to what extent the sequel
is drawing from that.
Sure.
Number four, The Box Office is a robust summer thriller.
How to describe it? It's not like an erotic thriller.
It's an erotic thriller.
Yes.
It's not Indecent Proposal.
No.
It's not Disclosure.
No.
But I'm kind of on the right line.
Kind of, but more horror-y than those.
More horror-y?
Yeah.
Huh.
The title is like something that could happen to you.
Sex.
It like becomes a euphemism for something
that could happen to you.
You could get thised.
Oh, sure.
Fuck.
Single white female?
Single white female.
There we go.
Do you like single white female, Akrasha?
I just watched it recently. It was on Cr any reason long ago. Oh, I was doing
You know Karina Longworth's erotic 90s. Yes. Yes. Yes. I was doing my homework
so it's a
Bananas movie. Yeah with a really wonderful performance in it. It's also dumb as rocks. It kind of it's kind of great
I don't know. It's a very silly, weird movie.
Great hairstyles.
The hair's very fun.
It's just, yeah. Another perfect example of like in the nineties, you had like
fucking Barbet Schroeder directed sort of like silly thrillers for grownups that
were like taking over the culture.
Roommate from Hell.
Number five in the box office. it's a film we've covered.
It's a black comedy, big movie star movie.
It's not, fuck, fuck.
It's not mixed knots.
No.
No, very special effects-y.
Oh, it's Death Becomes Her?
It's Robert Zemeckis' Death Becomes Her.
Okay.
It's a fun five.
Yeah.
You also have A League of Their Own.
You have Twin Peaks.
You have a movie called Rapid Fire,
which I've never seen, which is a Brandon Lee action movie.
Okay.
You have Three Ninjas, and you read Sister Act.
Yes.
That is the box office.
There are actually kind of a lot of sleeper hits in there.
And there's just a lot of options.
There are a lot of movies there that take like eight months
to crawl to $100 million.
Yes.
Different time.
Did Sister Act have to crawl to $100 million?
I feel like, I don't know the history of that.
It was just like a revelation.
I feel like Sister Act was like a long play, right?
Sister Act has been in long play, right?
Sister Act has been in theaters for four months
and has made $126 million.
Okay.
Yes.
I mean, that's also one of those movies where the sequel
is in theaters within 11 months of the first movie.
Yeah, they're just like, I don't care what it's called
or what it's about, as long as she's in it
wearing a habit, it's fine.
As long as she's back in the habit.
She is back in the habit.
You said, I don't care what happens or what it's called.
They were very firm about what it had to be called.
Is Sister Act Two better than Sister Act One?
Lauren Hill's in it.
Debatable.
That's like the Godfather question.
Who hides the parties?
There's a legitimate argument for Sister Act Two
being better.
I think so.
I think so.
That's it, we're done. We're gonna wrap up, I think so. I think so. Um, that's it. We're done. We're gonna wrap up, I think.
Arkaascha, thank you so much for doing this very haunted podcast recording.
Yeah.
Arkaascha, you've gotta come back on the show.
Hopefully you're in New York sometime and you can just come and see our faces and be
in a room with us.
In a room we control.
In a room we control.
With no evil, no backwards talk.
I want to particularly shout out our producer, Ben Hosley, who is a hero who goes above and
beyond for this podcast.
He's just been very relaxed.
People, you don't get that.
He's just been very relaxed.
He's been very relaxed.
He's been very relaxed.
He's been very relaxed.
He's been very relaxed.
He's been very relaxed. He's been very relaxed. He's been very relaxed. He's been very relaxed. He's been very relaxed. With no evil and no backwards talk. I want to particularly shout out our producer Ben Hosley, who is a hero who goes above and beyond for this podcast.
He's just been very relaxed.
People, you don't get this because he hasn't been on Mike much this episode,
but he's in a really good mood and everything's been working out really great all day.
But it was so wonderful to talk to you, Arkash, and then...
First Dominance is so fucking good.
It is. Check it out, everyone.
I feel like it is a rare instance in our current culture of a movie that just kind of immediately
became a cult object.
Yeah. I mean, I don't know if our costume is blushing right now. The screen is black.
I'm smiling real big. Sorry. I'm very proud. First Disney vagina shot. Spread the word.
Huge. Absolutely huge.
Yeah. Because they cut it out of Emperor's New Groove.
There was one they just didn't make the final cut.
A llama hand reaching out of a vagina.
No, it's such a great movie.
It's on Hulu?
It's on Hulu now, yeah.
Check it out.
I think it's parked and will be on Hulu for a bit.
Watch A Thirty Rock and then check in with Satan himself. Perfect double feature. No, it's a really awesome movie.
I don't know. Is there anything else you want to plug, Arkasha, before we wrap?
DVD's coming out soon.
Hell yeah. There you go.
Physical.
That's my plug.
Great.
Thank you guys so much for having me on. You can't see me, but I'm having a really good time.
Okay, great. I'm glad.
And I know you're now going to throw to your New Orleans sports podcast.
You got to weigh in on the Pelicans staying under the cap and...
Tough talk, more trace.
But Griffin, take us out, please.
Thank you for being here.
And thank you all for listening.
Please remember to rate, review, and subscribe.
Thanks to my best buddy, Ben Hosley.
We love him.
You're welcome.
Keep Ben stuff.
Go win.
Fun time.
Thank you to Marie Barty for helping to produce the show.
Thank you to JJ Birch for our research,
Adrian McKeon for our editing.
He's also our production coordinator.
He's gonna have his work cut out for him on this episode.
Thank you to Lay Montgomery and the Great American Novel
for our theme song, Joe Bone, Pat Reynolds for our artwork.
You can go to BlankCheckPod.com for links to some real nerdy shit,
including our Patreon Blank Check special features,
where we will have done Twin Peaks Season 2.
That's where that lives. Couldn't do it all in the main feed.
Sorry.
But we're also doing our tabletop games.
Yep.
That's what we're doing.
The most storied franchise in the history of cinema.
Tune in next week for Lost Highway.
Yes.
Right?
That's right.
That's his next film.
Yes.
Next week, Lost Highway, David Lowery returning to the show.
Great app. An episode recorded four years ago.
But good app. Yeah. We have some bold predictions about Joe Biden's presidential campaign
that will certainly pan out in that episode.
I'm joking. It's just recorded a long time ago.
We probably don't remember anything we say.
Yeah. And as always. I need dumplings. I just need to leave this lodge.