"Who killed Laura Palmer?" It's a simple, seemingly straightforward question that kicked off one of the most ...
The ABC show was a surprise cultural and ratings phenomenon when it aired in 1990, and it changed television forever ...
ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content/Getty Images And BOB ... a new Twin Peaks for them that the creators were essentially left to spend this blank check however they wanted.
When they debuted nearly three decades apart, "Twin Peaks" and "Twin Peaks ... means would be antithetical to the work itself. Lynch wanted to challenge you — to entice you, to repel you ...
Those same mysterious Pacific Northwest woods would eventually inspire Twin Peaks ... Bob Iger made Lynch reveal in the premiere who had killed Palmer, a mystery the director had wanted to ...
There are certain artists who are so visionary, so daring in their originality, whose work casts such a primal and enduring spell that it literally becomes hard to imagine the world without them.
The auditorium was packed, and to say that the movie lived up to that poster would be an understatement ... Then came the dread-drenched soap opera of “Twin Peaks” (kicking off in 1990).
The director began making movies in the 1960s, when he was an art student who wanted to see his paintings ... depiction of evil this side of Twin Peaks‘ Bob, known only as the mystery man.
In the early 1990s, the mystery of who killed Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee) in Twin Peaks was inescapable, and everyone wanted to know who did it — including political figures who led some of the ...
One of the most iconic examples of this is the cherry pie in “Twin Peaks,” David Lynch’s seminal cult classic from the early '90s. At first glance, cherry pie and the eerie, dreamlike world ...