Author’s Note: For the record I was planning to begin a rewatch
and reviewing Twin Peaks at some point this year, mainly because it is the 35th
anniversary of the debut of the original series. However with the news of the
passing of the iconic David Lynch I now have an added motivation to write about
a series that holds a very special place in my heart to this today.
There will no doubt be countless
tributes to Lynch in the days and weeks to come, but I suspect the majority
will deal with his movies first. This piece will pay tribute to the influence his
vision for Twin Peaks has had on television for the last thirty five years,
which is incredibly wide- ranging for such a brief series. I suspect the
tributes will start pouring in from quite a few of the talents I mention. As a
viewer and a critic I think there are far more and I will try to reference them
here.
As someone
named David I’m always struck by just how many showrunners and creative force
in the era of Peak TV share that first name. We are all familiar with Messrs.
Chase, Simon and Milch whose creation of HBO’s holy trinity of The Sopranos,
The Wire and Deadwood helped usher in the era of the Golden Age. David
Mills doesn’t have the recognition these three do but he worked very closely
with Simon and Milch on shows such as Homicide and NYPD Blue and
worked with Simon on Treme before he died at the premature age of 47. He was
also the writer of the miniseries The Corner which served as a bridge
between much of those shows. And of course David E. Kelley has been dazzling
viewers for nearly four decades, mostly in legal dramas but also in the world
of limited series to the point I don’t know when he has time to sleep.
In a way David
Lynch’s creative output pales in comparison. He only created one show for which
he only wrote a handful of episodes (he was busy making movies during that period)
and then wrote a sequel to it nearly twenty-five years later. That show only
ran two seasons and just about thirty episodes before it was cancelled. But no
one would dare call Twin Peaks ‘just one show’. Its influence can be
felt on television to this very day and will no doubt go on even after the
original series is long forgotten (which I seriously doubt will ever happen.)
I was only
eleven when Twin Peaks arrived on ABC in the spring of 1990 but even
someone who wasn’t paying attention to television at all would have been hard
pressed to say that they hadn’t heard of Twin Peaks back then. I didn’t
even watch the original series when it was first on the air but I sure as hell
knew that everyone was asking the question: “Who Killed Laura Palmer?” I didn’t
know that Lynch himself was never intended to answer that question which might
explain why the bubble for this phenomena started to dissolve so quickly.
The world wasn’t
ready for Twin Peaks in 1990. I’m still not sure its ready now. Even after so many years of television with
mythologies and mysteries and serialized drama, there’s a still part of the
audience that wants everything to be tidied up in a bow by the end of the
series. By the time Lynch created Twin
Peaks in 1990 anyone who had seen his movies knew that he was not the kind
of filmmaker who believed in making coherent stories with a beginning, middle
and end. I suspect that so much of the frustration that so many viewers would
have about the endings of so many series from The Sopranos to Lost to
Mad Men would make him bursting with pride at their commitment. I suspect
he might admire Chase for ending The Sopranos with a cut to black by
saying that he stole his original ending for the series. One suspects he might
be irked at how so many mythology series built where people like Damon Lindelof
and Joss Whedon engaged with the audience and promised them answers. “No!” he’d probably shout. “Never explain anything! You
have to leave your audience completely baffled!”
So much of
television that followed bears a Lynchian stamp. The clearest starting point is
The X-Files not only because of David Duchovny’s link to both shows but because
it begins with mysterious happenings in a forest. Indeed so much of the
brilliance of those Monster-of-the-Week episodes shows Mulder and Scully
wandering through dimly lit areas and vast stretches of ‘the most beautiful
tress I’ve ever seen” (Amazing how much
Florida could look like Vancouver.) Joss Whedon acknowledged how great an
influence Twin Peaks was on Buffy and we can’t forget that the show was
set in a mysterious small town called Sunnydale which had so much darkness even
when you didn’t know it was set on the mouth of hell. (Lynch would have
approved of the women being the strong characters.) Lost is almost
directly an ancestor text of Twin Peaks and was more stylistically
similar to it, particularly when it came to its stirring musical score which
was more melodic that Angelo Bandeminiti’s themes but no less dark. And it’s
clear that Damon Lindelof took as much of Twin Peaks into The
Leftovers which starts out with two percent of the population being raptured
and gets weirder from there. During much of the series Kevin Garvey can
distinguish whether he is in reality or a dream world and so many of the
episodes in the final season involve a surreal aspect; at one point one of the
characters boards a boat to Australia and actually thinks that God is on board.
(That’s the kind of conversation I can imagine happening on Twin Peaks.)
The most
recent series to embrace this kind of mystery and lunacy combined, in my
opinion, is Yellowjackets which has a surrealism to it that I think out
Lynches even Lynch. I wonder if Lynch saw the season 2 episode where, among
other things, Christina Ricci’s character has a dance sequence with the human
version of her parrot played by John Cameron Mitchell. “That’s the craziest
thing I ever saw!” he’d saw. “Bravo!”
But it is not
merely the genre TV series that bares Lynch’s imprint. So many of the dream
sequences in The Sopranos, from ‘Funhouse’ to ‘The Test Dream’ clearly
show a Lynchian feel to them Six Feet Under starts with a character
being killed when the hearse he’s driving is hit by a bus while the undertaker
is using the dash lighter to light a smoke. I suspect if Lynch could have
gotten away with Laura Palmer talking to Cooper in real life he would have done
so; in that sense Alan Ball clearly outdid him.
So many of the
episodes of both Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul have a clear
influence of Twin Peaks in them when it comes to direction and many
times Vince Gilligan shows this by leading us down blind alleys with his
teaser. The commercial for Los Pollos Hermanos, complete with the copyright
symbol at one point, truly does make us feel the viewer is watching a real
commercial. And considering how much of Fargo has always been a mix of
the crime genre and the supernatural since at least season 2 (where UFOs seem
to be stalking every major death( it’s hard to say that this show doesn’t take
place in Lynch’s world. But interestingly I have found a huge amount of
influence of Lynch in so many comedy series in the past decade more than
anywhere else.
You could make
a sound argument that everything that’s happening in the world of Donald Glover’s
Atlanta is just having in a David Lynch world that is entirely populated
by African-Americans. And from the moment I saw Teddy Perkins I could never
trust anything I was seeing in any episode as reality. So much of Bill Hader’s
vision for Barry also has that same note of dark surrealism, starting
with the iconic ‘ronny/lilly episode and following that trend hard in
the much darker third and fourth seasons. Jim Carrey’s Kidding a
prematurely cancelled comedy, clearly took place in a surreal universe that while
real clearly had Lynchian tones in its filmmaking. At one point when Jeff is
under anesthesia, he begins to imagine he’s in the real life world of his kids
show and the man who receives part of his liver begins to feel more like he got
a personality transplant. And it’s impossible not to think of so much of the
style of The Good Place as being the kind of afterlife that Lynch might imagine
as well as visually stunning work as well. Janet is exactly the kind of benevolent
deity Lynch has throughout Twin Peaks.
And in a way
perhaps as a viewer I’ve been inoculated from so much of the controversy
involving so many of these TV shows plot lines and endings because of what I
was used from the world of David Lynch. I will grant you there are times I’ve
shared my frustration with that, particularly with The X-Files or Lost.
But maybe that’s because Lynch was never about explanations or coherence
but entirely about atmosphere and aura. A coherent storyline was never
something you got with a Lynch work and while I never truly liked it with the
majority of his films, Twin Peaks is the sole exception to the rule.
That’s why,
when the Return was announced in 2016, I looked forward to it with far more
anticipation then so many of the reboots that had come before and would come
since. I wasn’t sure what I was going to get with The Return but I had a
feeling that he wasn’t just going to give us a reunion series with as many of
the old cast members as he could get together. (That would have been difficult
in 2016; quite a few of the stars from that period were already dead and many
were ill and dying.) I’m kind of astonished when, after everything ended, in
August of 2017 so many fans of the original series were upset that not only did
The Return not answer any of the questions from the cliffhanger but
basically spent the entire series mostly away from Twin Peaks and while
Kyle MacLachlan was there, Dale Cooper wasn’t until the series was almost over.
To which I say
to those people: have you met David Lynch? He does not do warm and
sappy. He doesn’t wrap things up in a boy in his movies. Would it have been
nice to see so many of the old stars happier 25 years later? Yes, but that was
never going to be the kind of story David Lynch was interested in telling and
he wasn’t going to do so here.
Even with
that, my experience with The Return was one of astonishment. Lynch and
Mark Frost managed to create an entire series that was almost, but not entirely,
unlike the original. Sure a lot of the old faces were there and there were a
lot of connections to the original series but as far as Lynch was concerned he
had no intention of creating the feel of nostalgic familiarity the average
viewer turns into a reboot for and he gave us exactly that. And he did so with
a darkness that only cable could have provided and with a weirder mix that the
original series couldn’t have. And rather than give even the possibility of
closure, he went to an even darker and far less forgiving place with an even
more ambiguous ending than the original. In both the original and the Return he
had the opportunity to give closure that most series don’t. In neither case was
he willing to do so. There’s bravery in that I admire.
In 2024 Lynch
announced to the world that he had contracted emphysema and that because of the
risk of infection from Covid, he was no longer able to make movies. The Return
was therefore the final project of Lynch that was ever completed. In my
mind that is a fitting valedictory to a creative force that has had, by and
large, a more beneficial impact on the world of television then it ever did on
the world of film. Lynch was one of the great talents in cinema but he rarely
was given the freedom to create the world he wanted and far too often that
vision was deeply incoherent. But with Twin Peaks alone, both the
original and The Return was the kind of vision he wanted to realize fully
delivered.
A final anecdote
from myself: I spent a lot of time after the Return ended hoping that Lynch had
more to say about this world and would return to it. I spent a lot of time in
the last few years hoping he was working on another season or a film that told
it. When I learned the truth of Lynch’s condition and realized that he would
never make another work of art I was saddened. In that sense his passing did
little to shock me – he was already approaching 80 and he did have a disease
that was likely fatal. In that sense it’s perfect that his final vision for the
world ended on a cliffhanger that will never be explained. Maybe it wasn’t
intentional but its Lynchian to the end. Always leaving them wanting more and
leave the explanations to those in the cheap seats.
See you in the
White Lodge, Gordon. Maybe you can finally get your hearing aid fixed.