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Across the border at One-Eyed Jack's casino/bagnio, Cooper (Kyle Maclachlan) pretends to be Leo's (Eric Da Re) financier, and manages to gain Jacques Renault's (Walter Olkewicz) trust to hear his confession about sleeping with Laura on the night of her death – and, although the fat croupier claims he wasn't involved in her actual murder, it's confirmed that Leo and Ronette Pulaski were present. Cooper hands Jacques $5,000 to make a fake drug-run back into the US, where he's captured by Sheriff Truman's (Michael Ontkean) men and shot dead while resisting arrest by Deputy Andy (Harry Goaz).
In town, Leo is still planning to burn down the Packard saw mill for Benjamin Horne (Richard Beymer), and decides to kill two birds with one stone by kidnapping his unfaithful girlfriend Shelly (Mädchen Amick) and tying her up inside the mill an hour before his detonation goes off. Catherine Martell (Piper Laurie) is still trying to find her fake accounts ledger with husband Pete (Jack Nance), only to receive a phone call telling her it's at the mill – where she arrives to discover Shelly just as the fire starts. In two-minds about how to proceed, Catherine nevertheless releases Shelly and they both become trapped inside the burning building.
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The overarching feeling you're left with in revisiting Twin Peaks' first season is how wide of the mark public perception is of the show, nearly 20 years later. This was far from the maddening tangle of bizarre characters and semi-incomprehensible surrealism that David Lynch's presence suggests. Sure, there were moments of that (primarily the Red Room dream sequence that is continually clipped for Twin Peaks retrospectives), but a good 90% of these seven episodes are a denseley- plotted and intelligent murder mystery, with a side-order of quirkiness to prevent it becoming a multi-part Murder, She Wrote.
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As tradition would have it, the season ends on a very soap-like cliffhanger, with Cooper shot three times in the torso by a man in black who came to his hotel room door. Was it the man who bludgeoned Jacoby at Easter Park, or Leland Palmer on some kind of crazed mission? Perhaps it's someone else entirely, like Laura's oft-mentioned "mystery man"? Anyway, while Coop's survival is never really in question, it's a good climax because it makes it clear we now have a villain taking a proactive role in what has, up until now, been a story all about piecing together the past.
Notes from the Black Lodge:
- This episode was Emmy-nominated for Best Sound Editing and Best Actress (Piper Laurie). The season as a whole was nominated for a Soap Opera Digest Award for Best Hero (Michael Ontkean), Best Heroine (Lara Flynn Boyle), Best Actor (Kyle MacLachlan), Best Supporting Actor (Everett McGill), Best Supporting Actress (Mädchen Amick and Piper Laurie), Best Villain (Richard Beymer), Best Villainess (Piper Laurie), Best Prime Time Soap, and Best Storyline ("Who Killed Laura Palmer?") The season also received Emmy noms for Best Title Theme, Best Drama Series and Best Sound Editing. It won the Television Critics Association Award for Program Of The Year.
- So, Hank murdered Andrew Packard for Josie (Joan Chen), so she could inherit the mill, then went to jail to cover his tracks and is now back for his $90,000 fee. It's quite amusing that Josie, who started out as the sympathetic victim of Catherine and Ben's machinations, has now been exposed as arguably a more sinister character.
written & directed by: Mark Frost starring: Kyle MacLachlan (Special Agent Dale Cooper), Michael Ontkean (Sheriff Harry S. Truman), Mädchen Amick (Shelly Johnson), Dana Ashbrook (Bobby Briggs), Richard Beymer (Benjamin Horne), Lara Flynn Boyle (Donna Hayward), Sherilyn Fenn (Audrey Horne), Warren Frost (Doc Hayward), Peggy Lipton (Norma Jennings), James Marshall (James Hurley), Everett McGill (Ed Hurley), Jack Nance (Pete Martell), Ray Wise (Leland Palmer), Joan Chen (Jocelyn "Josie" Packard), Piper Laurie (Catherine Martell), Eric Da Re (Leo Johnson), Harry Goaz (Deputy Andy Brennan), Michael Horse (Deputy "Hawk" Hill), Sheryl Lee (Madeleine Ferguson), Russ Tamblyn (Dr. Lawrence Jacoby), Chris Mulkey (Hank Jennings), Walter Olkewicz (Jacques Renault), Victoria Catlin (" Blackie" O'Reilly), Wendy Robie (Nadine Hurley), Kimmy Robertson (Lucy Moran), Charles Hoyes (Decker), Brian Straub (Einar Thorson), Lance Davis ("Chet"), Rick Giolito ("Montana") & Peter Michael Goetz ("Jared") / original airdate: 24 May 1990