国产三级大片在线观看-国产三级电影-国产三级电影经典在线看-国产三级电影久久久-国产三级电影免费-国产三级电影免费观看

Set as Homepage - Add to Favorites

【web xem phim sex online】Looking for Twin Peaks

Source:Feature Flash Editor:explore Time:2025-07-03 03:55:21
Bethany Jean Clement ,web xem phim sex online May 24, 2017

Looking for Twin Peaks

Navigating David Lynch's fictional landscapes Twede's Cafe, where the special is a damn fine replica of a cup of coffee. / Bethany Jean Clement
Word Factory W
o
r
d

F
a
c
t
o
r
y

It is a curious thing to try to go to a fictional place. David Lynch’s 1990 series Twin Peaksexploded expectations about television—its darkness, deadpan humor, and sheer oddity was a dramatic shift from the standard small-screen fare of the time. The setting was a small town in the Pacific Northwest where a continually overcast sky and foreboding woods put the lie to any notions of life being sunny. Twin Peaks itself was played, in part, by locations about thirty miles east of Seattle, in the real towns of North Bend, Snoqualmie, and Fall City.

People loved it with the strange love of the fanatic; they wanted to see Twin Peaks for themselves. After the original series aired, the pilgrims flocked to witness its sites, touring North Bend and its surroundings, whispering about owls and other totems of the show.

Now the series has returned twenty-six years later, with much of the original cast and Lynch again at the helm, for a new eighteen-episode season, which premiered Sunday on Showtime. With Twin Peaksnow twinning itself, fans are already returning to the scenes of the crimes, reinvigorating a dormant mini–tourism industry serving a peculiar version of Lynch’s signature brand of nostalgia.

At 3 p.m. one recent day, the rain that’s falling in North Bend seems inevitable. The main drag has one stoplight and still feels, as special agent Dale Cooper would say, like “a town where a yellow light still means slow down, not speed up.” A familiar, cinematic mist drifts over the firred hillsides and the crags of Mount Si, looming nearby. Then there’s the familiar, glowing sign of Twin Peaks’ Double R Diner—except that it reads “Twede’s Cafe,” the real, present-day name of the place.

Inside, stage-right of the horseshoe-shaped counter, a man is shooting stills of a Twede’s/Twin Peakssouvenir T-shirt, displayed for sale on a headless torso. Then he shoots video, swooping along the red-upholstered silver swivel stools of the diner counter. His on-camera colleague waits, swiping at her phone, her eyelashes improbable; they’re filming a segment on the show for a Seattle station, she says, clearly bored out of her mind. A half-dozen tables are occupied, and all the parties, save one, take photos—many photos. They all order what Dale Cooper ordered: a cup of coffee and a piece of cherry pie.

It feels rude, like a denial of the intrinsic value of a classic place like this: black-and-white-tile floors, lace-curtained windows, real people serving real food in a real small town. No one would come here from afar—no matter how quaint a slice of retro Americana it might be—without the place’s odd stardom. And, odder still, with Twin Peaks’ resurrection, Twede’s is more the Double R than it’s been in a long time, maybe more its doppelganger than it is itself. A source on the Seattle crew says the place was found in a state of wrong-period disarray, so they restored it to the neo-1950s order of Lynch’s mythical world. Examined closely, the wood-veneer paneling looks fresh, as does a frieze of a generic mountain scene suitable for the flannel lining of an old sleeping bag. The jukebox is missing, however; the faint soundtrack is staticky contemporary country, interrupted by long stretches of commercials. Along with the beheaded souvenir T-shirt, a Tweety bird plush toy (for “Twede’s”), hanging dustily from the acoustic-tile ceiling, and an oversized plastic gumball machine by the front door puncture the illusion. A couple at one table has a laptop open to a Japanese website.

The cherry pie is just all right, the crust sandy rather than flaky, the goo of the filling a bit on the gelatinous side. It looks like a train wreck, but, the server reassures, “It’s warm, that’s why it fell apart. It’s very, very fresh.” The coffee—served in a mug reading “TWEDE’S CAFE / HOME OF TWIN PEAKS / Cherry Pie and ‘A Damn Fine Cup of Coffee’”—is abysmally watery, turning a greyish-tan with the addition of two little plastic containers of half-and-half. Have they been getting many people visiting because of the show? “A lot,” the server says flatly. “But it’s good!” he adds, sounding strained.

Back by the bathrooms, issues of the Twin Peaksfanzine “Wrapped in Plastic” hang on the walls, along with a set of Twin Peakstrading cards, wrapped in plastic. That’s, famously now, how prom queen Laura Palmer’s naked, dead body was found in the first episode of the original series, washed up on a beach, her face flecked with fool’s gold like a discarded angel. That beach, and the enormous log that guarded her body, keeping its own secrets, is nowhere near here—it’s at Kiana Lodge, way over on Washington’s Kitsap Peninsula. In Twede’s hallway, snapshots of scenes being filmed at Laura Palmer’s house, with the real-life neighbors gawping, are also on display—this, too, took place far from here, in the city of Everett.

Just a five-minute drive away, in the town of Snoqualmie, supplicants can still visit the big log of the opening credits, but it’s inside an iron fence and protected by a roof now, an additional insult to the tree’s majesty. The Roadhouse, a bit further, in Fall City, is unrecognizable, tidily painted green with cream trim; it serves “classic comfort foods” and has a party room for rent, a beer garden. Then there’s Lynch’s Great Northern Hotel, actually called the Salish Lodge and Spa. Don’t go in expecting the glossy knotty pine and stone fireplaces that formed the backdrop for Audrey Van Horne’s coquetry—interiors were shot elsewhere, and whatever old-school appeal the place once had has been obscured by a tragic remodel. Twin Peaks’ waterfall, which the Great Northern overlooks, is real: it is Snoqualmie Falls, and it is indeed majestic, if you can fight your way to the railing and ignore all the people taking selfies.

A hand-drawn map sold at Twede’s for $2 plus tax shows more nearby fictional locations that may be tracked down: Twin Peaks High, Ed’s Gas Farm, the jail. Lacking “a damn fine cup of coffee” in quotation marks, small towns across the United States have largely faded from view, at least as anything more than political allegories or fictional settings. In 1990, Lynch tapped into a deep longing for our imaginary past, a fetishized-fifties vision of America that’s still powerful today. But all the nostalgia in the world can’t save a place that never was. The beatification of the nowhere-town called “Twin Peaks” feels something like betrayal.

Twin Peaks, of course, only truly exists in the mind of David Lynch. It’s on the roads hereabouts that his mythos seems most plausible, with the least artifice. The imagery of the Pacific Northwest was his handmaiden: dripping woods, rusting trestles, ominous beauty. The winding, wet stretches are lined with the deep, dark Douglas firs that so impressed Coop; the moss is prodigious. The trees have no mind for their celebrity. Here, you can apprehend what Lynch loved, in his strange way, when he came to this part of the country, and why his fans have remained so hungry for it.

0.1445s , 10107.015625 kb

Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【web xem phim sex online】Looking for Twin Peaks,Feature Flash  

Sitemap

Top 主站蜘蛛池模板: 天堂国产一区二区三区四区不卡 | 色综合网站国产麻豆 | 国产精品呻吟一区二区三区 | 日韩视频一区 | 美女视频黄a视频全免费网站色窝 | 久久日本片精品AAAAA国产 | 欧美日韩国产精品中文 | 欧美黑人乱大交灬太大了视频 | 草色噜噜噜AV在线观看香蕉 | 国产精品主播在线高清不卡 | 玖玖国产精品视频 | 国产精品一区二区免费在线 | 欧美精品久久99人妻无码 | 久久se精品一区二区国产 | 国产午夜精品一区二区在线观看 | 日韩欧美一区二区中文字幕 | 亚洲欧美视频手机在线 | 日韩好片一区二区在线看 | 久久无码人妻热线精品 | 国产一区二区电影 | 亚洲九九夜夜 国产成人精品综合久久 | 麻豆人妻无码性色v专区 | 宅男噜噜噜一区二区 | 亚洲精品久久久久久久不卡四虎 | 黄色亚洲网站 | 99久久久无码一区二区三区 | 国产欧美在线手机观看 | 91网站网址最新 | 极品少妇粉嫩小泬啪啪AV | 日韩一区二区三区在线网页 | 日本不卡高清免费mv | 美女牲交视频一级毛片无遮挡 | 综合加勒比 | 乱色熟女综合一区二区三区国产人成亚洲综合无码aⅴ蜜桃 | 精品久久久久久中文字幕 | WWW久久久爱CNM | 欧美又黄又大又爽A片 | 精品欧美一区二区在线观看欧美熟 | 国产日韩免费av片 | 久久天天躁夜夜躁狠狠85麻豆 | www国产亚洲精品久久网站 |