"Through the darkness of future past
the magician longs to see
one chance out between two worlds
'Fire walk with me.'"
one chance out between two worlds
'Fire walk with me.'"
-- The One-Armed Man
[SPOILERS] Until now, Twin Peaks hasn't really been as off the wall as its reputation would have you expect. Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan) is definitely eccentric, some of the townsfolk are oddballs, and there's a pervasive strangeness in its auburn aesthetic and droning soundtrack, but it's generally more quirky than willfully bizarre. Maybe we've just become accustomed to peculiar TV since Twin Peaks first aired? However, "Zen, Or The Skill To Catch A Killer" is undoubtedly the moment when Twin Peaks embraced its famous surrealism, creating diehard fans with a taste for the fantastical, while possibly losing those less receptive to a murder-mystery with supernatural overtones...
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At the Horne residence, local millionaire Benjamin (Richard Beymer), his daughter Audrey (Sherilyn Fenn), his wife Sylvia (Jan D'Arcy), and retarded son Johnny (Robert Bauer) -- dressed as a native American Indian(!) -- are having dinner together. The meal is quickly interrupted by the return of Ben's younger brother Jerry (David Patrick Kelly), fresh back from France with delicious baguettes to share.
The bread exemplifies how incorrigible the Horne brothers are, as Ben becomes just as enthused by their taste as his sibling after just one bite. Or maybe they just have very similar tastes and a keen appreciation of the finer things? After Jerry is told about Laura Palmer's murder, the brothers decide to visit a riverside brothel over the Canadian border called "One Eyed Jacks", arriving at the club by speedboat to be entertained by alluring women in lingerie. Ben is obviously a regular patron of the club, judging from how he's treated by the One Eyed Jack's matriarch Blackie O'Reilly (Victoria Catlin). He may even be the owner?
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Elsewhere, Bobby (Laura's official boyfriend) and Mike (Gary Hershberger) go to the woods to pick up some cocaine in a deflated football, left by their dealer Leo (Shelly's violent trucker boyfriend whose jeans she discovered covered in blood); eye patch-wearing Nadine (Wendy Robie) finally manages to perfect her silent drape idea, when her husband Big Ed (Everett McGill) accidentally spills oil on the wooden runners; Josie Packard (Joan Chen) discovers two ledgers in a safe for the Saw Mill she inherited, one created to disguise the mill's income by her late-husband's sister Catherine Martell (Piper Laurie); and we're treated to the arrival of another outsider in forensic analyst Albert Rosenfield (Miguel Ferrer), brought in by Cooper to search Laura Palmer's body for clues...
Albert's the antithesis of calm Cooper, taking an instant and vocal dislike to the "backwater" town he finds himself dragged out to, and getting up Sheriff Truman's nose within seconds of meeting him. Cooper appears used to Albert's abrasive nature, apparently finding his Federal colleague an amusing oddity. He won't apologize for Albert's rudeness to Truman, but gives him a childish thumbs-up when the Sheriff successful chews the city slicker out over his bad attitude.
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But, it can wait till morning...
Notes from the Black Lodge:
- Love Audrey Horne, entering the diner and choosing one of the show's disquieting music tracks from the jukebox, again swaying to the music by herself, as if in a trance. It's also mentioned that she fancies Agent Cooper and has noted his love of coffee, but I'm pretty sure they haven't even shared a scene together yet! Am I wrong? Did she just like the look of him when he gave his speech to the town in the Pilot?
- David Lynch considers the Red Room sequence one of his finest pieces of work, having expropriated it from the European cut of the Pilot TVM. In case anyone's still unaware about this well-known trivia, the actors learned their lines backwards (phonetically) so that reversing the footage resulted in linear, vaguely coherent speech. A simple but exceedingly creepy effect.
- Question: who was the man in black, seen lurking behind a tree over Leo's shoulder in the forest? He was mentioned in Laura Palmer's audio-tape to Dr. Jacoby.
- Is Nadine's obsession with "silent curtains" inferring that she wants the ability to shut herself up from sight of everyone, indoors, without anyone noticing or even hearing her do it? A part of you can't help thinking the strangest members of Twin Peaks are those who have peeked behind the curtain of their small-town and consequently been blighted with mental problems (see also: the Log Lady?) And how did Nadine lose her eye?
Next stop: "Rest In Pain", where mourners attend Laura Palmer's funeral.
written by: Mark Frost & David Lynch directed by: David Lynch starring: Kyle MacLachlan (Agent Dale Cooper), Michael Ontkean (Sheriff Harry S. Truman), Ray Wise (Leland Palmer), Grace Zabriskie (Sarah Palmer), Mary Jo Deschanel (Eileen Hayward), Lara Flynn Boyle (Donna Hayward), Joan Chen (Josie Packard), Piper Laurie (Catherine Martell), Dana Ashbrook (Bobby Briggs), James Marshall (James Hurley), Shelly Johnson (Mädchen Amick), Russ Tamblyn (Dr. Lawrence Jacoby), Tommy Hill (Deputy Hawk), Pete Martell (Jack Nance), Major Garland Briggs (Don Davis), Everett McGill (Big Ed Hurley), Wendy Robie (Nadine Hurley), Richard Beymer (Benjamin Horne), Eric Da Re (Leo Johnson), Sheryl Lee (Laura Palmer), Robert Bauer (Johnny) & Michael J. Anderson (The Man From Another Place) / original airdate: 12 April 1990