There is a feeling that it can only be understood, and cannot be said.
The first person in the movie who gives the most this feeling is David Lynch.
The talented director made a TV series "Twin Peaks" more than 20 years ago, redefining what is called a divine drama.

It's a god you can't understand, and even the director won't tell you the ending. But there is a wonderful feeling that pulls you out of yourself.
Now that Twin Peaks is back, whether you've seen the previous one or not, it's going to be the best American drama to savor this year.
Today, Bad Always invited friends & deep Lynch Poisoner God to conduct a deep analysis for this reboot god work.
What should I do if the new drama starts to watch the clouds in the fog?
After brushing this article, watching the new season of "Twin Peaks" is the correct unlocking posture.
Text/Six Pulses
All encounters in the world are reunions after a long absence.
Through the darkness of future past, the magician longs to see.
One chants out between two worlds: fire walk with me.
For example, "Twin Peaks" has ushered in a new season more than twenty years later. Laura Palmer's last promise, "We'll see you in twenty-five years," was finally about to be fulfilled.
It's finally here
When the first season of "Twin Peaks" aired in 1990, when Laura Palmer's body, which was hailed as the most beautiful body in film history, was presented on television, the audience knew for the first time that American dramas could still be filmed like this.
Created by directors David Lynch and Mark Foster, Twin Peaks featured two seasons, including two navigation episodes, for a total of thirty episodes.
The 1992 film Twin Peaks: Walking with Fire is a prequel to Twin Peaks.
Twin Peaks mixes elements such as serial murder, incest, schizophrenia, mysticism, heterogeneous dimensions, and semiotics with the structure of detective films, combined with David Lynch's bizarre and eerie video style, and finally becomes a gorgeous and beautiful and trap-filled labyrinth.
Before returning to Twin Peaks, it's highly recommended to familiarize yourself with the characters you'll have to know in Twin Peaks. Although David Lynch said that it is no problem not to watch the third season directly without watching the previous "Twin Peaks", the god who has already chewed the first two episodes of the new season can only describe the feelings he has seen in the clouds.
What will happen in Twin Peaks 25 years from now that will make you dream back in the middle of the night, we can look for clues from 25 years ago.
Regression
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Laura Palmer / Medey Ferguson (Shirley Lee)
The first two seasons of Twin Peaks and the movie Twin Peaks: Walking with Fire revolve around the murder of Laura Palmer.
At the beginning of the episode, Laura is dead, and we don't see Laura living in reality after that: her figure only appears in the videotape, in the fragmented memories of others, and in the strange dreams of Agent Cooper. (The prequel film "Twin Peaks: Walking with Fire" is from Laura's perspective, showing her state before she was born)
Laura's death has sent the seemingly peaceful Twin Peaks into a state of madness, and the "Homecoming Queen" is far from being as pure and simple as it seems, her nightmarish experience has corroded and twisted her heart, and Laura even prefers to die than to live.
Shirley Lee's performance impressed David Lynch, and Lynch also added the role of Herdy, a cousin who looks the same as Laura. The black-haired Maidy has a kind heart and sunshine, and her death scene also contributes another shocking horror scene to "Twin Peaks".
In 2014, director David Lynch and screenwriter Mark Frost tweeted at the same time that "the kind of gum you like will be popular again", officially announcing that the third season of "Twin Peaks" is about to return. Despite the twists and turns in between, the series finally began airing on May 21, 26 years later, and the new season is set in Twin Peaks 25 years later.
Shirley Lee, who plays Laura, is sure to return to star in the 18 episodes of the new season, and how she will continue to live in Twin Peaks after she has died is also what David Lynch needs to answer for us.
Agent Dale Cooper (Kyle McLachlan)
Agent Cooper is the male protagonist of the Twin Peaks series and the most important role in Kyle McLachlan's career. Prior to that, Kyle worked with Lynch on Dune and Velvet, but after Twin Peaks, Cooper is best known for Bree's husband Orson in Desperate Housewives.
After Laura was killed, FBI agent Cooper went to Twin Peaks alone to handle the case, almost single-handedly finding out the truth and culprit. Kyle, who was in his early 30s at the time, was at the peak of his life's appearance, and his childish face and Cooper's wisdom, kindness, bravery, pity and sensitivity were intertwined into complex contradictions.
But Cooper is not an "anti-hero" character, and his realism lies in the fact that he is not indestructible.
His kindness is unquestionable, so Cooper's suspected blackening at the end of the second season can be so shocking that it even leads to a lot of scolding.
For viewers, the transformation of good people into bad may be more difficult to accept than the sin of good people.
Judging from the exposed materials, Agent Cooper played by Kyle McLachlan is still the core role in the new season, and twenty-five years of time have left a mark on his face, and whether he has been living in Twin Peaks for twenty-five years, whether his relationship with Annie has finally blossomed, whether his heart has been invaded or even occupied by "evil spirits", and what new challenges he will encounter in Twin Peaks, we can't wait to understand.
Lealand Palmer (Ray Wise)
Reelan Palmer is Laura Palmer's father and her real killer. Combined with the plot of the prequel film Twin Peaks: Walking with Fire, Relain has been sexually abusing Laura since she was young. This terrible experience is the direct cause of Laura's unspeakable nightmare, which leads to the distortion of Laura's heart. Laura can only write down her own torture in a secret diary -
The real author of the diary is David Lynch's daughter, Jennifer Lynch, who was 21 years old at the time, and some of the dreams in the diary are also dreamed of by Jennifer Lynch.
Everyone wants to know "who killed Laura Palmer," and even U.S. President George H.W. Bush and former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev can't wait to know the answer, which is the most powerful narrative motivation for the first and second seasons of Twin Peaks.
Until the real murderer is officially revealed, only David Lynch and Mark Frost know the real answer.
In order to avoid the wind leaking out early, the scene of Medy (Shirley Lee) being killed was filmed in two versions, one of which was the murderer of Ben Horn (Richard Bemel) and the other version of the murderer was the real murderer Lilan Palmer.
Allegedly, a deliberate leaked script also implied that both Ben Horn and Eddie Hurley were murderers.
Ray Wise is heartbroken to learn that his character, Lealand Palmer, is the killer, because in reality he himself has just given birth to a daughter with his wife. But either way, Ray Wise uses his supernatural acting skills to show the audience the creepy exterior and dark heart of a serial killer.
Whether Ray Wise mentions whether Bob is really a mysterious evil person who is not ready to invade his mind, as he confessed before his death, or Bob is just another personality that he splits off, or the embodiment of the dark side of his heart, we can't finally decide, and this is the cleverness of Ray Wise's performance, and it is the mystery of the whole story setting.
In the new season, Ray Wise's scene also runs through eighteen episodes, And Reeland, like his daughter Laura, has died in the story, and how they will "come back to life" is what we want to know the most.
Sheriff Harry Truman (played by Michael Angern)
Truman is a native of Twin Peaks, the central character of the "Bookhouse Boys", who knows the town's people well, but he has also said that he knows very little about the darkness deep in the woods. As Agent Cooper investigates the case, Truman consciously allows himself to be a Watsonian character.
Truman's tough personality and open mind seem to indicate that there are also good people among those who hold power. Truman's entangled love affair with Josie Packard (Chen Chong) puts him in danger and allows the audience to feel the inner ripples beneath his calm exterior.
In 25 years, Truman will be starred by actor Robert Foster, and there will be two episodes in total.
Truman in the original play had planned to find Foster to play, but in the end due to scheduling problems, it could not be realized, and twenty-five years later, Robert Foster was finally going to appear in Twin Peaks.
Robert Foster
Audrey Horn (played by Sherlyn Finn)
David Lynch's films are never short of beauty, and even Laura Palmer's dead body is the most beautiful in history. The beauty in Twin Peaks is dizzying, and Audrey Horn, played by Sherlyn Finn, is undoubtedly one of the most dazzling.
Audrey is the only daughter of the giant ben Horne in Twin Peaks, and she is only 18 years old in the play, and her eyebrows are full of style and beauty. Seemingly mean, she still has kindness and innocence in her heart. In order to investigate the truth of Laura's death, she even went undercover in a brothel and nearly died as a result.
Audrey's overflowing love for Cooper is very sincere, and when the series aired that year, the call for CP was quite high. However, for Audrey's confession, Cooper eventually rejected him on the grounds that she was too young.
Cooper's character, Kyle McLachlan, refused to allow the two characters to develop an emotional line on the grounds that he didn't think Cooper's sense of morality would allow him to associate with a teenage girl. The writers had to reset the emotional line in the second season, "imposing" a partner for the two of them, which also made the already low ratings in the second half of the second season even worse.
According to inside information, the reason why Kyle McLachlan is reluctant to play a couple with Sherlin Finn in the play is because his then girlfriend Laura Flynn Ball (donna's actor) is at odds with Sherlyn Finn, she does not want her boyfriend to "fall in love" with Finn, and under pressure, Kyle can only reject the previous setting.
Shirley Finn has only one episode in the new season, but she is still featured in Entertainment Weekly with Kyle, Lynch, Shirley Lee, and others. On the cover photo, Audrey and Kyle behave intimately, which seems to indicate that the relationship between the two of them has also been sublimated.
Shirley Johnson (played by Meichen Amick)
Shirley, a double R restaurant waitress played by MeiChen Amik, is not the central character in the original series, but her beauty is truly unforgettable, and it is said that this role is specially created for her by the story.
The beauty of Mechan Amik made director David Lynch want to kiss it
In the original Twin Peaks, Shirley dropped out of high school and married truck driver Leo Johnson. After marriage, Leo gradually exposed his tyrannical nature, often at home Blizzard, and the helpless Shirley also fell in love with Bobby, who was still in high school.
From Shirley's look, it was not difficult to see who the man she loved was
Shirley's relationship with Bobby initially requires constant vigilance for Leo's presence, and the brutal Leo tries to put them to death again and again. Shirley and Bobby escaped, and Shirley, who was originally timid and afraid, became more and more courageous in this experience.
Shirley, Bobby and Norma will all return
In the new season's Cass table, Meichen Amik ranked first, and her role will continue to be complete for 18 episodes. Judging by the material, Shirley is still a waitress at the restaurant, and Bobby, who is still with her, does not seem to have become a gold person. I don't know how the fate of the new season of the mandarin duck, who once worried about money, will develop.
Bobby Bridges (Dana Ashbrook)
Bobby is Laura's boyfriend in high school, but laura asks her to sell drugs in high school to satisfy her addiction. After Laura's death, he was the first object of suspicion, but Laura's death was also a relief to him.
Bobby has an impulsive personality, does things without considering the consequences, and takes a ride with her husband, Shirley, and the relationship between the two is stronger because of Leo's repeated destruction. Bobby is a bit like an embroidered pillow, but he also saves Shirley's life in many crucial moments. Eager to succeed, he always seems to be a little bit worse than the climate.
Like Shirley, Bobby's scene lasts 18 episodes. He still wears a leather jacket in middle age, which means that he has not seemed to have any side with the so-called business successes of the past twenty-five years.
James Hurley (James Marshall)
James Hurley is Laura's secret boyfriend. He had seen her the night Laura died and was at one point suspected of being the killer. He and his uncle Eddie are members of the Bookhouse Boys.
James may be one of the most unpleasant characters in the original series, a humble, silent high school teenager who always rides a black motorcycle around. But from Laura and Donna to Laura's cousin, Maidy, and the young woman who appears in the second season, they all fall in love with him, which is very puzzling.
James Hurley doesn't have much of a scene in the new season. In the released stills, middle-aged James appeared in the BangBang bar, and it is not known what the man standing next to him has to do with him.
Big Eddie (Everett McGill) & Nadine (Wendy Robbie) & Norma (Paige Lipton)
Eddie and Nadine
Big Eddie's love triangle with Nadine and Norma runs through the first two seasons of Twin Peaks. Eddie and Norma were originally a campus couple, but due to fate, they married the person who was not the most loved, and after marriage, the two began an extramarital affair.
Eddie's wife, Nadine, was also their high school classmate and was upgraded from spare tire to main room. After accidentally injuring Nadine's eyes, the guilty Eddie is even more unable to file for divorce. After the neurotic Natine wakes up by suicide, she suddenly crosses over into a lively and bold female high school student, contracting the laughter of the second season.
Norma
Norma is the landlady of double R restaurants, with a good face and a gentle personality, but the biggest regret in life is the so-to-be. Her extramarital affair with Eddie is about to come to fruition, but she has to face the neurotic Nadine who woke up from the crossing again.
Eddie and Nadine have 18 episodes, while Norma has only one episode. The iconic owl in the series is on Nadine's side, a love triangle that has lasted for more than twenty years, and it is not true love that laughs to the end.
Ben Horn (Richard Bemel) & Jerry Horn (David Patrick Kelly)
Twin Peaks mega-rich Ben Horn and Jerry Horn are Audrey Horn's father and uncle, respectively, who run the Great Northern Hotel built on a waterfall and are also the owners of the underground casino and brothel "One-Eyed Jack". Ben Horn is by nature, and Donna is also his undisclosed biological daughter.
Because Laura wrote in her secret diary: to let the world know the true face of Ben Horn, Ben was almost wrongfully accused of Killing Laura. After that, he converted to evil and did charity.
Younger brother Jerry Horn is a pit brother who does not learn and has no skills in the play, and what he does not do, what he eats is not enough.
Behind the scenes of Richard Bemel for the final episode of The Twin Peaks season two
Richard Bemel, who plays Ben Horn, is best known for his 60s musical "The West Side Story," and the role in Twin Peaks was also played by him. However, after this play, Bemel's acting career has not appeared more representative than this play.
Richard Bemel is also a painter and sculptor, and in 2007 he published a set of behind-the-scenes photos for the final episode of the second season of Twin Peaks, which gave him a glimpse of his unique photographic talent (he took all the black-and-white photographs that appear in this article).
The Horn Brotherhood will appear in the first episode of the new season of Twin Peaks, and I wonder what is going on at their Great Northern Hotel.
FBI forensic doctor Albert (Miguel Fur) & Agent Gordon Cole (David Lynch)
Miguel Fohr, who played forensic surgeon Albert (left), died of an illness on foot this year
Forensic Surgeon Albert's appearance is quite the aura of the Man in Black, he speaks quickly, looks inhumane, always self-righteous, and disgusts others. But it turned out that he was just acting a little weird. After uttering the phrase, "The best way to fight crime is love," he and Sheriff Chuman became old iron.
David Lynch's own cameo as Agent Gordon Cole is also a very interesting character. His job was similar to that of a liaison, but because of hearing problems, he had to wear a hearing aid all the time and spoke very loudly. These features also make Cole look cheerful and direct, and his praise for Shirley Johnson's beauty also happens to be the OS in the audience's heart.
Judging from the stills, this pair of FBI world living treasures will appear together in the new season this time, and the scene will be embarrassing to funny
Unfortunately, Miguel Fohr, who played Albert, died of cancer in January at the age of 61, and "Twin Peaks" became his last work before his death.
Agent Denis (played by David Duchouni)
In the second season of Twin Peaks, then-unknown David Duchonny played a transvestite agent, Denis.
Such a transgender character was absolutely rare on the screen in the 90s, but the characters in the play did not find this unacceptable, and the attitude was naturally avant-garde.
Look at the stills and you know that he will return with a more beautiful look.
The Grey Giants (Carel Struycken) and the Dwarves in Red (Michael Struycken) As J. Anderson)
The actors who play the Grey Giant and the Red Dwarf are 2.13 meters tall and 1.09 meters tall, respectively, and they are the characters in Agent Cooper's dreams, but they leave the audience with no less shock than other characters.
The Grey Giants, like guardian angels, guide Cooper to the truth, while the Dwarves in Red use his strange dance to give Cooper hints. In the final episode of the second season, their strange way of speaking (speaking backwards and putting them straight) is also known as an unforgettable scene in the history of television.
Carel Struycken, who plays the Grey Giants, has made sure to return, saying in an interview that he only shot four scenes and had almost no lines, but his role is still important for the development of the plot.
Dr. Jekoby (Ruth Tanberlin)
Dr. Jackobi is the only psychiatrist in Twin Peaks, always wearing 3D glasses with red and blue lenses, loves all kinds of clothes with printed patterns, and is full of hippies. As Laura Palmer's psychiatrist, he may be the closest person to the truth of Laura's murder, but still failed to save her life.
Dr. Jackobi's scenes run through the new season, and his storyline is said to be incredible.
Lady Maroon (Catherine M.) E. Colson as )
In Twin Peaks, Lady Log is always holding a piece of log with no expression on her face, and that log seems to have seen many strange things happening deep in the woods, and When Lady Log is responsible for telling it.
Most of the time, The Log utters unrelated words, mysterious and unsolvable. In Twin Peaks: Walking with Fire, Lady Log says sympathetically to Laura in pain: When that flame burns, it's hard to put it out.
This time, what would the log say about what it had seen or heard?
Police Officer Andy (Harry Gauss) and Operator Lucy (Kim Robertson)
Andy's crying goes some way to relieving the audience of fear of seeing the murder scene
Andy and Lucy are the cutest of Twin Peaks' most adorable bunch of rivals, especially in the second season, when they formed a love triangle with the newly added character Dick.
Andy moved clumsily and spoke slowly, like a schoolboy who hadn't grown up yet. Faced with a brutal murder, Andy can't help but cry like a frightened child. Just as the so-called unintentional willows are lined up, some of Andy's inadvertent actions can sometimes point things in the right direction.
As a police operator, Lucy of the doll voice speaks in a rambling manner, but she is very logical in running things, and can always arrange the files and work in an orderly manner. Lucy's outfit is also the most 90s style in the original series.
In the new season, Andy's role is only one episode, and Lucy's role continues for eighteen episodes.
Sheriff Hawke (played by Michael House)
Hawke is an Indian officer in the Twin Peaks Police Station, and as a police officer Hawke is accurate in marksmanship, good at tracking, and always able to appear when others need it. The ancestry of the Indians also made him aware of the supernatural legend of the night gate and the sun gate, which directly increased the speed of the investigation of the case.
25 years later, Agent Hawke is old, can he still eat?
Philip Gerald/Mike (Al Strobel)
Twin Peaks has many scary characters to forget, and One-Armed Mike is definitely one of them. He travels the world as a shoe salesman in search of Bob, a mysterious man with whom he has partnered to take the lives of people. In order not to kill again, Mike even cut off his own left hand.
In Twin Peaks: Walking with Fire, Mike's encounter with Relain and Laura on the road also takes the thriller to the extreme. Mike was also the first to utter the most well-known poem in the Twin Peaks series:
"Through the darkness of future past, the magician longs to see. One chants out between two worlds: fire walk with me."
Now that Mike has returned, will bob the mysterious man be far away?
Sarah Palmer (Grace Zabriski)
Sarah is Laura's mother, and like her daughter, she is able to see Bob's presence at home. However, Rieland would use an anesthetic on her when she committed the crime, and sarah, who was unconscious, could only see a white horse standing helplessly in the house.
Sarah Palmer is deeply saddened by the death of her daughter, but after her husband, Rilan, is found to be the real culprit and commits suicide, Sarah does not seem to be too upset at his funeral, and even has to start a new life.
In the released stills, Sarah Palmer has a haggard face, wondering what her life has been like for the past twenty-five years.
No return
Donna Hayward (Played by Laura Flynn Ball)
At present, a total of 39 original cast members have returned in the new season of "Twin Peaks", but this does not include Laura Flynn Ball, who plays Laura Palmer's best friend Donna Hayward, who directly refused the opportunity to perform for unknown reasons.
In the navigation episode of the first season of Twin Peaks, Donna looks at Laura's empty seat, and then quickly understands that Laura is dead, and sorrow comes from it, and begins to cry. Throughout the series, Donna is also the person who cares most about what she thinks before and after Laura's death, and even falls into danger several times. Her chance escape from Reelan Palmer/Bob is probably the best gift David Lynch could give a character.
Donna and Laura's secret boyfriend James Hurley came together because of Laura's death, and gradually drifted apart because of the death of Medy (Laura's cousin, who looks exactly like her), and the couple's separation is inevitably regrettable. The slightly hasty ending of the second season of "Twin Peaks" did not clearly explain the follow-up life of Donna and James.
Although the character of Donna will not appear in the play, as an important character in the original series, Lynch and the screenwriter may introduce Donna's life and current situation in other ways.
Josie Piked (played by Chen Chong)
The first character shot at the beginning of "Twin Peaks" is Chen Chong in the mirror.
She plays Josie, the widow of Sawmill owner Andrew, and a well-known local beauty. Josie's charm conquered many of the men in Twin Peaks, and she used her beauty as a bargaining chip to fight for a better life for herself, but Truman's love with her became a burden, leaving her to die in guilt and insecurity.
Chen Chong's role was originally prepared for Isabella Rossellini, and after Rossellini quit, David Lynch met Chen Chong through The Last Emperor and tailored the role for her. As the show's ratings declined, Chen Chong decided to quit the cast, and after she made this request, Josie was greeted by an inexplicable death.
Bob the Mysterious Man (played by Frank Silva)
The mysterious man Bob should be the character who best represents the horror level of "Twin Peaks", and the rumored birth of the mysterious man Bob is somewhat legendary.
Frank Silva, who plays Bob, was originally just a set designer on the crew, and David Lynch noticed Silva hiding in Laura's room and then filmed Silva hiding behind Laura's bed, but didn't figure out how to use it.
Next, when Laura's mother, Sarah Palmer," was filmed screaming, the mirror in the camera accidentally reflected Silva's face.
Lynch thus ended up creating Bob, the most frightening character in television history, no less terrifying than the corner tramp Lynch created in Mulholland Drive.
The figure in the mirror on the wall is Bob
The mysterious man Bob has long gray hair, a vicious face, and a pair of eyes that are eager for blood, like an illusion, and like an evil spirit. According to Reeland, Bob would look for parasitic bodies, feed on life, and then occupy the mind of the parasite, forcing the parasite to satisfy Bob's desires by killing. Bob also appears in the dreams of Laura, Sarah, Maddie, and Cooper, just as terrifying.
Frank Silva, who played Bob, died in 1995, but Lynch may choose other ways to get him back.
Whether Bob will appear is again directly related to key issues such as Agent Cooper's "blackening". In short, keep in mind that David Lynch won't let you not be intimidated by his work.
In addition to miguel Fore and Frank Sival, who played the FBI forensic doctor mentioned above, many actors who starred in "Twin Peaks" have passed away.
Hank Warden (1901-1992) as Elderly Waiter
Jack Nance (1943-1996) as Pete Martell
Jane Greer (1924-2001) as Vivian
Dan Ohridge (1919–2005) as Andrew Packard
Don S. Davis (1942–2008) as Major Gadbridges
Michael Parks (1940-2017) as Jean Renault
Warren Foster (1939–2017) as Dr. Hayward, the father of Twin Peaks creator Mark Foster
May their souls be with twin peaks forever.