They had nothing to lose at this point - show got cancelled, the core mystery was solved and the viewers stopped caring about it. That's why the subsequent movie and third season went off the rails into full-on Lynch territory - with the Laura mystery done, they couldn't really focus on the more conventional storytelling style from before. That's executive meddling for ya!
It's very simple. After Dune, he never gave up final cut rights, from that point on, he always took smaller payment as director in exchange for his right to edit his movies the way he wanted. That's why his legacy is so strong. It was always uncompromising.
This is genuinely one of the scariest moments of any piece of media I've ever seen. It's such a dark introduction when you and Cooper both seem to realize at the same time that he has quite literally walked into Hell.
I love this whole scene so much because it brings the series back full force. Season 2 for the most part was lighthearted and full of filler, but once Cooper enters the lodge and Truman witnesses this otherworldly sight of Cooper disappearing into thin air, the entire tone shifts. Suddenly, we're reminded of the very core in which this show thrives: the unknown. We try to make sense of it, we try to draw parallels and string our theories... but really, we're just as lost as Sheriff Truman. Then the moment the MFAP comes out dancing to the saxophone, we fasten our safety belts in the backseat as we let the ethereal take the wheel. Our strengths of logic, rationality and reasoning are no longer effective here. As much as we try to convince ourselves that the dream is lucid, this "reality" strong-arms us, the viewer, into staying asleep and relinquishing any form of control we thought we had. As for the rest? We would be stuck in limbo for 25+ years.
I was so fortunate to see one of Jimmy's final concerts in a small Hollywood supper club soon after this aired. I've never wept at a concert before. He was that haunting with his little jazz trio, and the doctors would only allow him to sing for barely an hour. I'll never forget it.
Frankly one of my favorite scenes in the series; something about this being sung as Dale FINALLY gets to the place that's been haunting is dreams just really struck a chord with me.
Oh, for SURE. It was immediately apparent that he had made the biggest mistake of his life :( stupid as hell, obviously Andy is the only one pure enough to make it through the lodge XD
totes jokin But could he FIRE WALK without pain and fear? The thing about Cooper’s Firewalk was that he still had fear and pain. It’s a rough walk, but one you must be careful to walk, least you burn yourself in The Black Lodge.
@@historicwine1283 (in my understanding of it all) Dale was confronted by his own shadowself (his doppleganger) with fear in him. We see him trying to flee from his doppleganger, but he is sadly cought in the end. Hawk describes it when he explains the lodges and the dweller on the threshold. Hawk said that when your spirit is on the path to perfection towards the white lodge, you must first pass through the black lodge, and that you will be confronted by your own shadowself (aka. the dweller). He also explains that if you confront this shadowself with imperfect courage, it would utterly annihilate your soul. It is interesting to think about, because Coopers soul is (seemingly) not lost. He is however, trapped in there for perhaps an infinite amount of time (the concept of time seems to work different in there). My personal theroy of Twin Peaks is that it is all also reapeating itself in an infinite loop, but i still have not read Mark Frost's The Final Dossier, so perhaps that would change my mind. But to awnser your question: simply, Cooper had imperfect courage when he ran from his shadowself - this was perhaps his biggest mistake or failure.
I'm still amazed that this series originally aired on a major network, where the menu was so often merely run of the mill, disposable fare. What a wondrous, strange journey this was.
First saw this in middle school. Cannot describe the way it blew my mind and inspired me. No matter how rough the latter half of season 2 is, this is such an amazing moment it’s all worth it
Totally agree!! If it hadn't been for Twin Peaks, we probably wouldn't have ever known about him. Such a haunting and haunted song and scene. *chef's kiss Perfect
The part from 1:34 to 2:00 when the spotlight fades out and there's just an aggressive, erratic dark strobe is terrifying. You expect them to hop closer or another being to pop up from one flash to the next but it's just them, staring at you.
I was utterly transfixed in a way I have never experienced hitherto or after while watching this, unless counting Part 8 of The Return, so I totally hear you - Really nice comment here. I know you may never see this, given that your comment is a year old here, but figured I'd compliment your succinct, fascinating admission.
fantastic scene -- historic episode - jimmy scott's voice is so unique - strobe lights used very effectively - esp for a show in the early 90s - thanks for posting
I adore this. You get so caught up in the performance, this tense yet familiar song, and then, suddenly, you are thrown back outside to the entrance of the black lodge. It’s the perfect television episode tease!
This show was just too good for network TV. I give ABC credit for even giving it a chance. But I've also gotta credit them with ruining the second season as well. Thank God Showtime gave Lynch and Frost total creative control for The Return.
@@ASMR-em3zx Agreed, I felt absolutely disgusting watching season 3. It has none of the charm and poetic feeling that that first two seasons had and it's just vulgar and obnoxious to watch.
@@maurice5402 Throughout the vast majority of season 3, I felt convinced that it was just David Lynch literally 'punking' the Twin Peaks audience, deliberately turning the show into a farce. 'Dougie Jones' felt like a intentional joke on all Twin Peaks fans who had waited so long for, and were eagerly anticipating the continued storyline of the show's protagonist, Agent Dale Cooper. The latter of which ended up only being a 'bit-part' character, making very brief cameos, in lieu of this spoof 'tulpa' Dougie clown. Who was made into little more than a one-joke caricature for the entire season. No one can convince me otherwise that season 3 was not Lynch's own private practical joke upon the audience. Which only some people 'get' and so don't appreciate it, while others are still "living inside a dream".
@@ASMR-em3zx I kindly disagree, as I loved season 3. I didn't expect Lynch to use a 1990 mold to design a new season. One of the reasons why the original run was so epic it's that it broke down tv narration standards. Lynch took everyone by surprise in season 3, he did not pander to fans, he did what he wanted and to me it was fulfilling. Episode 8 still remains a masterpiece.
when the MFAP appeared, it felt like the moment in a computer game when you finally confront the ultimate master boss..... after so many hours of watching and wondering, here he is finally! this is it! this is the real thing! this is where it ends.
Absolutely. This is what everything has been leading to. It's also immediately horrifying: Until now, Cooper has always proceeded by decoding the meanings of his dreams with reference to states of affairs in the real, waking world (e.g. the dancing of the MFAP in the dream represented Leland's dancing in the real world, Laura's arms bending back in the dream represented her hands being tied behind her back in the real world, etc). Finally, he's approaching what he expects will be the final answer to all of these questions, only to discover that the real truth is the things in his dreams (which he's been trying to decode as "symbols" standing for more familiar things in the real world) were themselves literally things in the real world: Reality, he discovers, is just as bewildering as the dream. Reality is, itself, just a collection of representations and symbols, whose ultimate meanings will be eternally subject to interpretation and ambiguity.
That last episode will always be my favorite because my god it is perfect and really climaxes the whole creepiness mood & atmosphere that was build up for 2 seasons. Television has never been that good again after that. This song and that scene just make me feel all dreamy and i LOVE the effect it has.
Это-мой самый любимый сериал, звонок в беспечное молодое прошлое:ведь, все молодые ребята с девчонками из сериала, мои сверстники. Спасибо всем, кто соприкасался с созданием фильма и музыки к нему, кто сделал благодарным зрителям такой замечательный подарок 32 года назад!
I must say, I always been fascinated,and scared about this scene but it's hard to explain why. Until a night few month ago, I was like many other time, watching the whole show again. And its universe was stuck on my mind one more time. One night I was sleepin, and I was standing right where Cooper was. Enable to move, been watched strangely by the dwarf, strobe light on my face, the scene seems to have take hours, even if the song is less than 2min long, and I was wondering if time expand itself in the lodge. I wake up pouring sweat, thirsty, completely dazed. Despite the horror of this dream it was the most intense I ever did
I saw it yesterday, for the first time again in 7 years and it gave menthe shivers, oh boy, this must be one of the best scenes ever to be made on television. 😳
The strobing lights - alternating between light (white : day : good) and dark (black : night : evil) symbolize the same thing as the white and black zig-zag patterns ... the balance between good and evil i.e. "polarity"
Yes indeed. And it could also allude to the fact that many say spirits and entities like that often cause electrical disturbances. Like lights turning on an off, radio distorting etc.
So magical! Really craving for such intense moments in the new season, which is great as it is, but waiting for the soul and jazz to come back and more of the red waiting room and it's nightmare version
Мой любимий ТВИН ПИКС! Куп заходит в че''рний вигвам за Уиндомом ерлом чтоб спасти Енни! Шедевр и фантазия Линча превосходни, так виглядит потусторонний Мир У Линча и Фроста.👍👍👍👍👍🍩🍩
Me: For humans who don't understand or can't comprehend goes on endless search to attempt to comprehend and understand usually become obsessed thus obsession for what can't be understood kills. For humans who understands but can't comprehend how to eat the information but can't digest are driven to insanity understanding what they eat but not digesting where it comes from thus becoming paranoid reinforcing insanity knowing what they eat but inept to digest while able to comprehend what they eat. Quote from a wolf with a wolf picture/profile
Why does the Lodge really seem like a place man has no right entering, to me? Wtf, I am a grown ass man but fictional places like the Black Lodge and Carcosa actually kind of freak me out a bit :L. The lodge was so well designed - disorienting, very dangerous and completely unpredictable. Every time Coop went behind those curtains I was chewing scrap metal. Bravo. Carcosa is perfectly designed to me for the same reasons. I feel like if “magic” was real in our world, it would appear as the lodge, or as Carcosa.. both mean death, surely
totes jokin I would argue that Lodge and its inhabitants are Lovecraftian in nature - meaning that people don't really see these entities as they are, but their minds make up these visions just to cope with the sheer scale of madness happening around them. That's probably not how Lynch wanted it to be understood though
I just went and bought FWWM out of the blue the other day. I always heard it was garbage, but I enjoyed it. Lots of scenes with topless Laura Palmer, even one of not-annoying Donna. I give it four stars due to lack of David Bowie and Agent Cooper.
I got idea man You take me for a walk Under the sycamore trees The dark trees that blow, baby In the dark trees that blow And I'll see you And you'll see me And I'll see you in the branches that blow In the breeze I'll see you in the trees I'll see you in the trees Under the sycamore trees And I'll see you And you'll see me And I'll see you in the branches that blow In the breeze I'll see you in the trees I'll see you in the trees Under the sycamore trees
It's almost like a funeral mixed with a welcoming party.
That's just a brilliant comment.
Yep!!!!!
"we live inside a dream and when we wake up we realize who we truly are, its a glorious day" -DL
All dressed up and nowhere to go
So, my birthday? 😔
The. Greatest. Scene. In. The. History. Of. Television.
That’s a bold statement.. AH HELL, I AGREE!
Well. Let's. All. Talk. Like. This. !
@Brendan Milburn breaking bad and Hannibal were shit.
nothing comes close to me
@@johnathanking9885 bullshit
one of the most amazing and haunting scenes ever seen in a tv show RIP Jimmy Scott
Henbot the* most amazing
Absolutely
How David Lynch got away with going full art-house to end Twin Peaks I’ll never know. Glad he got that at least after it was ripped away from him.
The way I look at it the studio had no choice, it was either this or nothing. Lynch is bratty like that his way or that old lost highway.
They had nothing to lose at this point - show got cancelled, the core mystery was solved and the viewers stopped caring about it. That's why the subsequent movie and third season went off the rails into full-on Lynch territory - with the Laura mystery done, they couldn't really focus on the more conventional storytelling style from before. That's executive meddling for ya!
@@PeremProzore Trust is so important in collaborative projects. Without it everything breaks down.
It's very simple. After Dune, he never gave up final cut rights, from that point on, he always took smaller payment as director in exchange for his right to edit his movies the way he wanted. That's why his legacy is so strong. It was always uncompromising.
@@PeremProzore I like the way it all turned out regardless.
This is, excuse me, a damn fine cup of television.
No really, I cryed over this video, this shit is too much for me lmao.
@@PanSangex Don’t worry, we all did :)
☕👍
David Lynch has some amazing taste in music.
The Man with No Name He wrote this song.
I know, David Lynch is way more talented than people give him credit for.
people give lynch credit, just not enough people, this scene is so powerful\
i totally agree with u!
Jack Clare : He is THE director
The scariest part of this scene is how The Arm slowly moves his gaze from Jimmy Scot to Dale Cooper in the flashing strobe.
It's terrifying.
This is genuinely one of the scariest moments of any piece of media I've ever seen. It's such a dark introduction when you and Cooper both seem to realize at the same time that he has quite literally walked into Hell.
It’s more purgatory than hell
I love this whole scene so much because it brings the series back full force. Season 2 for the most part was lighthearted and full of filler, but once Cooper enters the lodge and Truman witnesses this otherworldly sight of Cooper disappearing into thin air, the entire tone shifts. Suddenly, we're reminded of the very core in which this show thrives: the unknown. We try to make sense of it, we try to draw parallels and string our theories... but really, we're just as lost as Sheriff Truman.
Then the moment the MFAP comes out dancing to the saxophone, we fasten our safety belts in the backseat as we let the ethereal take the wheel. Our strengths of logic, rationality and reasoning are no longer effective here. As much as we try to convince ourselves that the dream is lucid, this "reality" strong-arms us, the viewer, into staying asleep and relinquishing any form of control we thought we had.
As for the rest? We would be stuck in limbo for 25+ years.
You LEFT out the Significance of the COLONEL showing up with his GRAVITAS.
Beautifully summed up
Not quite stuck in limbo. We had fwwm
Maybe we are the white lodge 🤔
I was so fortunate to see one of Jimmy's final concerts in a small Hollywood supper club soon after this aired. I've never wept at a concert before. He was that haunting with his little jazz trio, and the doctors would only allow him to sing for barely an hour. I'll never forget it.
I would have killed to be there, but I'm glad to see it through your eyes. Thanks :)
This song is one I always come back to. The series was so dark but unpredictable. I can’t say I liked the second twin peaks. What the hell was that.
My dude Cooper is talking throughout the WHOLE series. Then, boom. He's not saying a thing and is just o__o
You know it's serious.
And that's how he continues into season 3, and remains for much of it.
Frankly one of my favorite scenes in the series; something about this being sung as Dale FINALLY gets to the place that's been haunting is dreams just really struck a chord with me.
Oh, for SURE. It was immediately apparent that he had made the biggest mistake of his life :( stupid as hell, obviously Andy is the only one pure enough to make it through the lodge XD
totes jokin But could he FIRE WALK without pain and fear? The thing about Cooper’s Firewalk was that he still had fear and pain. It’s a rough walk, but one you must be careful to walk, least you burn yourself in The Black Lodge.
@@totesjokin5354 What was his mistake?
@@historicwine1283 (in my understanding of it all) Dale was confronted by his own shadowself (his doppleganger) with fear in him. We see him trying to flee from his doppleganger, but he is sadly cought in the end.
Hawk describes it when he explains the lodges and the dweller on the threshold. Hawk said that when your spirit is on the path to perfection towards the white lodge, you must first pass through the black lodge, and that you will be confronted by your own shadowself (aka. the dweller). He also explains that if you confront this shadowself with imperfect courage, it would utterly annihilate your soul.
It is interesting to think about, because Coopers soul is (seemingly) not lost. He is however, trapped in there for perhaps an infinite amount of time (the concept of time seems to work different in there). My personal theroy of Twin Peaks is that it is all also reapeating itself in an infinite loop, but i still have not read Mark Frost's The Final Dossier, so perhaps that would change my mind.
But to awnser your question: simply, Cooper had imperfect courage when he ran from his shadowself - this was perhaps his biggest mistake or failure.
This scene is just unbelievable. I get a pit in my stomach every time I hear this song start. Cooper is realizing exactly what he’s just gotten into
There will never be a show like this ever again
I'm still amazed that this series originally aired on a major network, where the menu was so often merely run of the mill, disposable fare. What a wondrous, strange journey this was.
I love Cooper's expression from about 1:30 on. He's seen some shit, but he ain't never seen no shit like this.
And he never leaves the lodge again
According to some interpretations. Hopefully we get a Season 4 and that turns out to not be what happened.
No Way Nope, there won't be any 4th season. Dale is no more, along with Laura.
Season 4, a movie, a miniseries, or some kind of continuation beyond the book that's coming out. I'd be fine with any of that.
@M Berg Are you saying Cooper deserved it?
I love this scene. I wish I could see this episode in a theater. It’s so beautiful and haunting.
This was one of the finest series finales, toss up between this and Dark. Laura's screams are just haunting and heartbreaking.
hell yeah Twin Peaks and Dark are my favourite shows
I love how you mention Dark. When I first watched that show I immediately thought of Twin Peaks
I am obsessed with this song
legitimately sad that i can never come up with something so original and memorable.
This music and young Kyle Maclachlan are so incredibly beautiful.
The moment this plays you know you are not prepared for anything coming up, horror perfected.
That gum you like is going to come back in style.
First saw this in middle school. Cannot describe the way it blew my mind and inspired me. No matter how rough the latter half of season 2 is, this is such an amazing moment it’s all worth it
The genius of Jimmy Scott!! Absolutely Marvelous!
Totally agree!! If it hadn't been for Twin Peaks, we probably wouldn't have ever known about him. Such a haunting and haunted song and scene.
*chef's kiss Perfect
The part from 1:34 to 2:00 when the spotlight fades out and there's just an aggressive, erratic dark strobe is terrifying. You expect them to hop closer or another being to pop up from one flash to the next but it's just them, staring at you.
this is so beautiful
I was shaking when I watched it for the first time
I still am
I was utterly transfixed in a way I have never experienced hitherto or after while watching this, unless counting Part 8 of The Return, so I totally hear you - Really nice comment here. I know you may never see this, given that your comment is a year old here, but figured I'd compliment your succinct, fascinating admission.
and did you come back for more in 2020?
The scariest, strangest and the most unique show ever. David Lynch is a genius and the third season is the best of the 2010's years
Well said, Twin Peaks 3 was definitely an odd one, but a great one.
fantastic scene -- historic episode - jimmy scott's voice is so unique - strobe lights used very effectively - esp for a show in the early 90s - thanks for posting
The two fucking coolest minutes in ALL OF TELEVISION HISTORY.
The most haunting song in a show filled with so many such songs.
WOWBOBWOW
This sequence is just pure magic.
Occult Fan wow lynch wow
MOMBOBMOM
This song brings out my GARMONBOZIA
WASH YOUR HANDS!
Going to a place television has never been before or since. Eerie and beautiful and beyond mesmerizing.
Season 3 went further
One of the finest hours in television history
Cry every time I watch this.
This song means every heartbreaking thing.
Yes it does. Yes it does.
I adore this. You get so caught up in the performance, this tense yet familiar song, and then, suddenly, you are thrown back outside to the entrance of the black lodge. It’s the perfect television episode tease!
This show was just too good for network TV. I give ABC credit for even giving it a chance. But I've also gotta credit them with ruining the second season as well. Thank God Showtime gave Lynch and Frost total creative control for The Return.
The third season was the worst Twin Peaks yet.
@@ASMR-em3zx Agreed, I felt absolutely disgusting watching season 3. It has none of the charm and poetic feeling that that first two seasons had and it's just vulgar and obnoxious to watch.
Damn, I’m sorry to both of y’all that you didn’t get to enjoy it as much as the rest of us.
@@maurice5402 Throughout the vast majority of season 3, I felt convinced that it was just David Lynch literally 'punking' the Twin Peaks audience, deliberately turning the show into a farce.
'Dougie Jones' felt like a intentional joke on all Twin Peaks fans who had waited so long for, and were eagerly anticipating the continued storyline of the show's protagonist, Agent Dale Cooper.
The latter of which ended up only being a 'bit-part' character, making very brief cameos, in lieu of this spoof 'tulpa' Dougie clown. Who was made into little more than a one-joke caricature for the entire season.
No one can convince me otherwise that season 3 was not Lynch's own private practical joke upon the audience. Which only some people 'get' and so don't appreciate it, while others are still "living inside a dream".
@@ASMR-em3zx I kindly disagree, as I loved season 3. I didn't expect Lynch to use a 1990 mold to design a new season. One of the reasons why the original run was so epic it's that it broke down tv narration standards. Lynch took everyone by surprise in season 3, he did not pander to fans, he did what he wanted and to me it was fulfilling. Episode 8 still remains a masterpiece.
when the MFAP appeared, it felt like the moment in a computer game when you finally confront the ultimate master boss..... after so many hours of watching and wondering, here he is finally! this is it! this is the real thing! this is where it ends.
Nerd ass
Thank you.
Thanks Un, very cool
The music definitely gives that impression.
Absolutely. This is what everything has been leading to. It's also immediately horrifying: Until now, Cooper has always proceeded by decoding the meanings of his dreams with reference to states of affairs in the real, waking world (e.g. the dancing of the MFAP in the dream represented Leland's dancing in the real world, Laura's arms bending back in the dream represented her hands being tied behind her back in the real world, etc). Finally, he's approaching what he expects will be the final answer to all of these questions, only to discover that the real truth is the things in his dreams (which he's been trying to decode as "symbols" standing for more familiar things in the real world) were themselves literally things in the real world: Reality, he discovers, is just as bewildering as the dream. Reality is, itself, just a collection of representations and symbols, whose ultimate meanings will be eternally subject to interpretation and ambiguity.
absolutely outstanding
One of the greatest scene in the whole show. Great Jimmy Scott and Cooper's confusion is great.
The look of fear on Coop's face!
He tried the Lodge with imperfect courage.
That last episode will always be my favorite because my god it is perfect and really climaxes the whole creepiness mood & atmosphere that was build up for 2 seasons. Television has never been that good again after that. This song and that scene just make me feel all dreamy and i LOVE the effect it has.
The instruments play in a way where you can tell this is the end. I love this part so much
Exactly !
Great way of putting it, I agree
One of the best scenes in TV history.
Descansa en paz Angelo. La atmósfera de esta serie y su grandeza es en parte gracias a tus composiciones.
This song fits this scene like no other beautiful and haunting.
This is a musical videoclip, a theatre performance, a museal installation, a cinematographic masteripiece, all togheter.
Это-мой самый любимый сериал, звонок в беспечное молодое прошлое:ведь, все молодые ребята с девчонками из сериала, мои сверстники. Спасибо всем, кто соприкасался с созданием фильма и музыки к нему, кто сделал благодарным зрителям такой замечательный подарок 32 года назад!
I must say, I always been fascinated,and scared about this scene but it's hard to explain why.
Until a night few month ago, I was like many other time, watching the whole show again.
And its universe was stuck on my mind one more time.
One night I was sleepin, and I was standing right where Cooper was. Enable to move, been watched strangely by the dwarf, strobe light on my face, the scene seems to have take hours, even if the song is less than 2min long, and I was wondering if time expand itself in the lodge.
I wake up pouring sweat, thirsty, completely dazed.
Despite the horror of this dream it was the most intense I ever did
IWow. I had a dream very simiasimilarlr to this,once. It didn't end well. He was just too cool. RIP Jimmy Scott. x
Very cool of the Black Lodge's management to book a jazz singer for only two customers. There's no way they came out on top.
Those entities have some really good taste on music
1:29 My face the entire time I was watching this for the first time. Absolutely mesmerized and disturbed at the same time.
Greatest scene from the original run, hands down.
pure cinema magic right there
Such a BASED twin peaks moment. Amazing!!!
Brings back memories, both wonderful and strange. A LOT of people have covered this song, too -- more than I ever thought, anyway.
It's like a Happy Birthday at a funeral.
This makes me so emotional
I am obsessed with this scene. Seriously the best scene in all of television. Absolutely beautiful. Everything about it is amazing.
One of the best, big difference.
This is playing at my funeral
I get the chills everytime
Goosebumps
I saw it yesterday, for the first time again in 7 years and it gave menthe shivers, oh boy, this must be one of the best scenes ever to be made on television. 😳
One of the best scenes and that song! Goosebumps!
One of the most haunting scenes in television history still
Took me a week to figure out he wasn't the one to proudly introduce the NIN at the roadhouse. Man, that would have been weird.
adawg37 +1
All too creepy when the MFAP turns towards the camera in the midst of all the strobe lights.
the light is strobing also in fire walk with me few minutes from the beginning but I don't remember where.
Michael Silve Lynch also has flickering lights in his films.
Buckle up, here we go.
The strobing lights - alternating between
light (white : day : good) and
dark (black : night : evil) symbolize the same thing as the white and black zig-zag patterns ... the balance between good and evil i.e. "polarity"
Yes indeed. And it could also allude to the fact that many say spirits and entities like that often cause electrical disturbances. Like lights turning on an off, radio distorting etc.
I still remember watching this on TV. I loved this episode. One of my all time favorite TV shows.
The best scene I’ve ever watched in TV
So magical!
Really craving for such intense moments in the new season, which is great as it is, but waiting for the soul and jazz to come back and more of the red waiting room and it's nightmare version
It's a beautiful, comforting and yet terrifying song
одно из любимейших видео
No idea why this masterpiece is not a part of the official soundtrack albums. It's insanely cool.
It was included in the Fire Walk With Me soundtrack.
Ugh I want to cry
Jimmy Scott man. awesome.
One of my favorite scenes
Some thing quite haunting about that tune even when I saw as a kid way back then lov it
I can’t believe this aired on network television.
Мой любимий ТВИН ПИКС! Куп заходит в че''рний вигвам за Уиндомом ерлом чтоб спасти Енни! Шедевр и фантазия Линча превосходни, так виглядит потусторонний Мир У Линча и Фроста.👍👍👍👍👍🍩🍩
Man From Another Place got some moves.
This music in this scene makes me so sad.
I love how cooper starts all calm and cool and ends up shitting himself
When you don't or partly understand what's going on, it fears you!
Me: For humans who don't understand or can't comprehend goes on endless search to attempt to comprehend and understand usually become obsessed thus obsession for what can't be understood kills. For humans who understands but can't comprehend how to eat the information but can't digest are driven to insanity understanding what they eat but not digesting where it comes from thus becoming paranoid reinforcing insanity knowing what they eat but inept to digest while able to comprehend what they eat. Quote from a wolf with a wolf picture/profile
Watched this scene for the first time (and ended s2) on they day when this happens in the series haha (march 26). Not creeped out in the lightest...
Dam i never forgot this scene it has been a long long time
I always thought Jimmy Scott played the mysterious 'Soul Singer'..
So enchanting, & ominous & looming..like the trees... 🌲
My goosebumps have goosebumps!
ВОТ ТАК ДЕСЕРТ !!!! )))
ОБОЖАЮ !!!! )))
"i'll see you in the trees"
Why does the Lodge really seem like a place man has no right entering, to me? Wtf, I am a grown ass man but fictional places like the Black Lodge and Carcosa actually kind of freak me out a bit :L. The lodge was so well designed - disorienting, very dangerous and completely unpredictable. Every time Coop went behind those curtains I was chewing scrap metal. Bravo. Carcosa is perfectly designed to me for the same reasons. I feel like if “magic” was real in our world, it would appear as the lodge, or as Carcosa.. both mean death, surely
totes jokin I would argue that Lodge and its inhabitants are Lovecraftian in nature - meaning that people don't really see these entities as they are, but their minds make up these visions just to cope with the sheer scale of madness happening around them. That's probably not how Lynch wanted it to be understood though
RIP Jimmy Scott
Même si j'ai pas tout compris à la fin de twin peaks la scène de la red roop est une des meilleures des séries
I myself would love 25 years of this.
So pumped for the new season! If only Fire Walk with Me was on Netflix
I just went and bought FWWM out of the blue the other day. I always heard it was garbage, but I enjoyed it. Lots of scenes with topless Laura Palmer, even one of not-annoying Donna. I give it four stars due to lack of David Bowie and Agent Cooper.
Did you see "The missing pieces"?
Джимми Скотт! Спасибо.
Fine- I’ll rewatch Twin Peaks…
it's so disturbingly beautiful 🥺❤️
Chills down my spine
I got idea man
You take me for a walk
Under the sycamore trees
The dark trees that blow, baby
In the dark trees that blow
And I'll see you
And you'll see me
And I'll see you in the branches that blow
In the breeze
I'll see you in the trees
I'll see you in the trees
Under the sycamore trees
And I'll see you
And you'll see me
And I'll see you in the branches that blow
In the breeze
I'll see you in the trees
I'll see you in the trees
Under the sycamore trees