
Twin peaks season 4 cooper series#
But with all of that being said - I absolutely don’t expect any real resolution on any of those points, certainly not if Twin Peaks is truly well and finished, but even if the series somehow miraculously returns for a fourth season.

I would love to know more about the New York City billionaire. I would love to know what happened to Audrey. I would love to return to a sea of surreal soundscapes, to rock out at the Roadhouse for another riveting performance (I’ve watched the Eddie Vedder scene at least 10 times since it first aired), I would love to know what year this is. I would love more spectacular MacLachlan performances. The more I ruminate on where Twin Peaks landed, the more at peace I am with Lynch’s direction for the show, if not outright comfortable. 'Twin Peaks' Star Kyle MacLachlan on Divisive Finale: "Good Art Asks Questions" It brought me back to the same lesson I learned from the final season of Lost, easily my favorite show of all time (that’s not named Survivor): It really is about the journey, not the destination. What was the point of all that heartache, all of those mesmerizing mysteries, if it was all coming to a boil in a final hour that truly nobody could have even come close to predicting? And then maybe 11 hours later, as I was preparing for my interview with Kyle MacLachlan, struggling to come up with questions for the erstwhile Cooper(s), the voice of Gordon Cole (Lynch) started ringing in my ears: “They will turnip eventually.” I could not stop laughing for five minutes straight. In the immediate aftermath of the finale, I was so utterly crushed by the ending, that I actually felt like the last 18 hours spent in Lynch Land were an utter waste of time. C says earlier in the series? “I don’t need … I want.” That’s how I’m feeling right now about a fourth season of Twin Peaks. Wigler: I think you hit the nail on the head for me, and actually, isn’t it close to what Mr. What about you, Josh? While there’s certainly more story that could be told, would it be something you’d be excited to actually watch? Twin Peaks: The Return was an incredible ride to go on over 18 episodes and was so true to the original series in ways I don’t think anyone could have expected. That said, I more than need another season.

There are so many questions we need answered, so many characters to explore more, and I’m still dying to know who the anonymous New York City billionaire is.

For that reason, I honestly think a fourth season is needed. We waited 25 years to see what happened, only to be faced with another very strange cliffhanger. In that way, I was disappointed in how it all came to a close. The finale is open for all kinds of interpretation and left viewers hanging.

Hayner: It’s a question I’ve been wrestling with, actually. Now, we’re faced with the very likely possibility that we will never see another episode of this series ever again, and the harsh truth that Cooper and Laura will be stuck in their strange new world for the rest of time.Ĭhris E.
Twin peaks season 4 cooper free#
At least in that case, Cooper was able to break free from the Black Lodge, if only for the vast majority of Twin Peaks: The Return. It’s a stunning cliffhanger, somehow even more twisted than the way Twin Peaks ended decades ago, which also concluded with Cooper’s fate hanging in the balance. The series ended on an impossibly brutal note, with main characters Dale Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan) and Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee), or at least versions of these characters, locked in an alternate version of Twin Peaks that has no apparent memory of either person. That’s the question Twin Peaks fans are facing now in the aftermath of the final two episodes of The Return, the 18-part Showtime revival from co-creators David Lynch and Mark Frost. It happened again - but will it happen again, again?
