Lost in the Movies: podcast
Showing posts with label podcast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label podcast. Show all posts

August 2025 Patreon round-up including Advanced Script for Journey Through Twin Peaks narration & Twin Peaks Conversations podcast


Americana is the theme on Patreon this month as I continued, for the top patron tier, a conversation with David Lynch's American Dreamscape author Mike Miley begun in a public YouTube video (the whole discussion is gathered in a separate cross-post, so I don't have much more to say about it here) and also offered all patrons a script for my narration of an upcoming Journey Through Twin Peaks chapter titled "American Shadows". An experiment in a more wide-ranging essay style, I haven't yet decided exactly what the visual approach will be (or if it will fit in with the other chapters at all), but it allowed me to explore some ideas which have been percolating from a marathon re-viewing of the series as well as recent reading - not just Mike's book but The Shape of Things to Come by Greil Marcus - and many real-world reflections of Twin Peaks' darker side. The end of this piece transitions into a description of the future chapters which will constitute the concluding phase of my Journey videos, and whose scripts I also plan to share on Patreon in upcoming months. Stay tuned!

What are the August rewards?

TWIN PEAKS CONVERSATIONS bonus podcast premieres tonight w/ David Lynch's American Dreamscape author Mike Miley (YouTube & extended PATREON)


Early this year when I stumbled across a YouTube trailer for an upcoming book titled David Lynch's American Dreamscape, full of clips that exhibited Lynch's keen eye for postwar American iconography and landscapes, I was intrigued. I already had my own plans to tackle Lynchian Americana in a Journey Through Twin Peaks video essay (which I will begin exploring in depth behind the scenes this month, having already outlined my ideas for this chapter), so this seemed right up my alley - and as soon as I discovered more about the book being promoted, the project felt even more resonant. Mike Miley, a New Orleans teacher who has previously analyzed game shows, developed this book from an initial series of essays comparing individual Lynch works to various novels and musical movements; intrigued by the ways this film director linked up with other forms of media, he subtitled the resultant study Music, Literature, Cinema. I'm always keen on drawing connections and Mike's efforts are some of the more imaginative I've encountered: Eraserhead and Fire Walk With Me with Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper and Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar; Blue Velvet with Maurice Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are; Mulholland Drive with The Day of the Locust and other Nathaniel West fiction; the third season of Twin Peaks, particularly Part 8, with Cormac McCarthy's The Crossing; Wild at Heart with the rise of rock 'n' roll as theorized by Greil Marcus; all of Twin Peaks with the teen tragedy ballad; Lost Highway with cover songs; The Straight Story with The Anthology of American Folk Music and Bob Dylan's The Basement Tapes; and Inland Empire with mixtapes. Drawing together the three threads, a coda parallels Lynch with David Foster Wallace and Lana Del Rey.

I had a great time juxtaposing images of these different works for the intro to the (otherwise mostly audio-only) video that resulted. It turns out that there are often visual as well as thematic rhymes between the works - or at least between their promotional materials, or the related images I found online to illustrate an idea. You can scroll down for screenshots of these as well as links to Mike's, my, and other's work which we ended up discussing alongside David Lynch's American Dreamscape. The first, public part of our discussion takes a broad view of Mike and his analysis: his first acquaintance with Lynch's filmography, his development of this project, and what he sees as its purpose. In the longer back section for the $5/month tier on Patreon, we dive into each of these sections in turn - with particular emphasis on those involving Fire Walk With Me - and I pose particular questions that occurred to me while reading. I was a great conversation and a fascinating book.

PART 1 on YouTube premieres at 8pm EST


Listen to...
(also premieres at 8pm EST)


July 2025 Patreon round-up: EXCLUSIVE - Films in Focus podcast #10: Anora


Although it won the Palme d'Or at Cannes over a year ago, Anora is currently the most recent piece of media I've covered; its orthographic neighbor Andor, which concluded in May, will take its place once I'm finally able to transcribe a lengthy guest discussion on that Disney streaming series. Despite Anora's contemporaneity, the film may actually take place pre-Covid (perhaps even immediately pre-Covid), one of many fascinating aspects to this socioeconomic portrait, sweeping and satirical romance, and tragicomic experiment in narrative perspective. Anora is set in the Russian enclaves of Brooklyn where it documents the rising hope and fallen promise of Ani (Mikey Madison) - not Anora, despite her given name and the film's ironic title. She's a stripper whose quickie customer Vanya (Mark Eydelshteyn) becomes more long-term, more enamored, and eventually married to her (to the horror of his far-away, mega-wealthy parents, who attempt to aggressively intervene after the fact - via a comic trio of local enforcers). Having previously covered Sean Baker's similarly grungy-yet-wistful The Florida Project, I'm intrigued by the continuity of theme and vision; both works are caught between the enchanting illusion of the fairy tale and the vulgar vigor of the everyday. Anora's similarities to the handful of other films which won both the Palme d'Or and the Oscar for Best Picture, its vivid cinematography which revels in the texture of Tungsten film, the onscreen crosscurrents of an unsuspected and less glamorous attraction rising while the prospects for another relationship collapse, and the generational undertones of this whole tale and its timing...all these subjects, and much more, are discussed in one of my longest reviews for this podcast. Elsewhere on Patreon, I've begun conducting polls for Films in Focus topics a couple months before the episode in question (rather than a few weeks, as was the case), and I also shared an advance work-in-progress with all tiers.

What is the exclusive July reward?

May 2025 Patreon round-up: EXCLUSIVE - Films in Focus podcast #9: Eve's Bayou


Suggested to me by a patron who very much emphasized its Twin Peaks connections, Kasi Lemmons' 1997 debut feature Eve's Bayou yields more discussion of that aspect than most of my other podcast episodes (aside from the designated Twin Peaks Cinema series). My coverage includes a non-spoiler and spoiler section so I won't get too much into the details here, but the way this film deals with memory and perspective, family ties and hidden secrets, passionate betrayal and murderous revenge, makes for an interesting companion with my favorite series. In fact, there are aspects I didn't even dig into - for example, both taking place in a tightknit community and playing with psychic premonitions - which only speaks to the power of their overlap. The story of an affluent family in rural Louisiana, Eve's Bayou is told through the eyes of ten-year-old Eve (Jurnee Smollett), who idolizes her charismatic father Dr. Louis Batiste (Samuel L. Jackson) but is troubled to discover he is cheating on her mother. From there, her world begins to unravel even as the great joys and quiet pleasures of her everyday life are on full display in Lemmons' evocative direction. Drawing particularly on the analysis of a video essay which I discovered just before recording, I was struck by the subtle ways the film (with the help of some deleted scenes) hints at a truth beneath its various points of view, even as it allows them to remain in tension. Meanwhile, the film's mournful sense of its characters' mortality (including an aunt, played by Debbi Morgan, who grieves three deceased partners and worries about taking on another) is echoed by the theme of an advance work-in-progress* I shared with all tiers this month. *Update 6/2: The issue with the advance has been fixed and the link has been updated.

What is the exclusive May reward?

March 2025 Patreon round-up: EXCLUSIVE - Films in Focus podcast #8: Penda's Fen


Continuing the provincial theme of the last three episodes of the podcast (albeit without the urban component featured alongside the rural in Safe, Trenque Lauquen, and Evil Does Not Exist), Penda's Fen settles with both comfort and disquiet into the village of Pinvin where its teenage protagonist Stephen (Spencer Banks) comes of age. Introduced as an almost comically hidebound reactionary, Stephen slowly opens up to both the world around him and the world within. This film - or, depending how you classify it, play, series episode, or TV movie - engages in a vast array of topics and approaches, including religion, politics, sci-fi, horror, fantasy, musical appreciation, English history, sexual awakening, and adoptive identity. At times I was thrilled by its ambition, at others frustrated by the range of its focus. Discussing the film allowed me to touch on the Jesus biopic Son of Man, the pastoral reverie of The Wind in the Willows, the historical mythologization of pagan King Penda, the subversive nature of the Protestant-to-Catholic Oxford Movement, and the contrast of twentieth century British social conservatism's indifference to an instinctive reactionary strain vs. twenty-first century America's capacity to groom and empower adolescent traditionalism. In addition to this rich topic for the top tier, all patrons were presented with an advance coda to my Twin Peaks character series through versions including (and excluding) the not-yet-previewed top ten. As for Penda's Fen, if you want to hear my thoughts on one of director Alan Clarke's last projects, check out my podcast on his experimental portrait of the Troubles, Elephant.

What is the exclusive March reward?

January 2025 Patreon round-up: EXCLUSIVE - Films in Focus podcast #7: Evil Does Not Exist + TWIN PEAKS Character Series advance & David Lynch tribute


Patrons selected a quiet but intense Japanese film to kick off 2025. Evil Does Not Exist, Ryûsuke Hamaguchi's follow-up to the widely acclaimed Drive My Car, began production as something akin to a music video. As the work developed, Hamaguchi became captivated with telling the story of reserved small town residents threatened by a "glamping" resort site project. The film's ending is its most noteworthy and controversial aspect; as such, it naturally assumes a lot of the focus in my Films in Focus episode. But there are other fascinating elements at play too, including the personal struggles of the talent agents hired by a corporation to deceive the townspeople. As described by Matthew Smith, the patron who recommended this film, Evil Does Not Exist "shifts at times between a meditative look at living and working within nature, a process film about zoning disputes, a workplace hangout movie, and something less explicable than mythic." I found the experience at times frustrating but always fascinating, and it made for a great discussion. Meanwhile, I took the advances of my TWIN PEAKS Character Series all the way to the edge of the top ten.

And sadly, I had to pay tribute to David Lynch on the event of his passing away - something I did for the first time on Patreon (publicly, not just for patrons).

What are the January rewards?

The David Lynch Experience • group discussion w/ the Obnoxious and Anonymous podcast (& guests Joe Anthony, Ted Arn, Max Evry, Joey Pedras & Mandy Singleton)

(photo by Bonnie Schiffman)

Today would have been David Lynch's 79th birthday - the perfect time to share this tribute I recorded with fellow fans on Thursday night. After the sad news on January 16, I felt the need to talk to others - to articulate in common what we couldn't individually. Thankfully, Cameron Cloutier of Obnoxious and Anonymous, the channel that first hosted me over a decade ago, was able to oblige. He gathered several regulars and previous guests in addition to myself: collector Joe Anthony, festival aficionado Ted Arn, online commentators Joey Pedras and Mandy Singleton, and author Max Every (whose oral history of Dune I'd coincidentally discovered on a bookshelf a week ago). The last guest joined halfway through and brought with him lots of interesting anecdotes and questions about Lynch's most controversial film and its place in his larger body of work. Though we started off in a somber mood by the end of two hours we were all smiling, laughing, and leaning forward in our seats - buoyed by the memories and gratitude for these exciting years sharing the planet with David Lynch's dreams.


Rest in Peace David Lynch, 1946 - 2025


"Dust is dancing in the space...
A dog and bird are far away...
The sun comes up and down each day...
The river flows out to the sea..."

To write this tribute feels both alarmingly strange and sadly routine. We all knew David Lynch would pass away sooner or later and that there was a decent chance it would be sooner given news of his worsening health and restriction to his house (which he was forced to leave last week as L.A. was consumed by massive wildfires, likely contributing to his passing). Still, this came as a surprise if not a shock. My primary response was a weary sense of deflation. Occasions like this are expected to produce grand, soaring tributes but I did not have the urge to dive right in to the flurry of energy and activity that always accompanies the death of an iconic figure. No doubt in the days, weeks, and months to come, many who had not engaged with Lynch's work for a while or who may be coming to it for the first time will be encouraged to enter his kingdom. For those of us who've remained immersed in this world for a decade or more, it feels less like the beginning of a journey than an end. As Lynch was not a fan of closure, to reach this point feels almost like a form of blasphemy - as I noted on Twitter earlier today (I also briefly commented on Lynch's passing in a public post on Patreon).

It is hard to articulate a life in a moment. In a tribute on Bluesky, Mark Frost wrote of his Twin Peaks collaborator, "Words will come later. Only feelings at the moment." I've often thought about what this day would be like when it came, but somehow even with the warning signs this comes too soon to feel like a finale. And yet it is final. So much that was slowly swimming into focus is now fully clarified. Twin Peaks: The Return, or whatever you want to call it, was indeed Lynch's swan song - the grand, ambitious, experimental summation of a long career. Those of us who held out hope that he had more to say weren't wrong, but fate conspired to keep those dreams from coming to fruition. The Covid-disrupted Netflix project Wisteria/Unrecorded Night will remain, sadly, unrecorded forever. Carrie Page's scream outside the Palmer house will remain the final cry of Twin Peaks; whatever was "calling" to him about that ending, as Lynch described in a 2018 question and answer session (saying "the signal has a lot of disturbances"), now cannot ever be received - at least not by us. My draft of the narration for an upcoming video - about the quiet winding-down years after the Showtime series - now reads to me as if it was inevitably leading to this point. The sense that an era was ending was already palpable before Lynch himself was gone.

I'm not used to thinking about David Lynch this way, entirely in the past tense. I suppose none of us are. The bulk of my work on him was created in a long span of almost eleven years from the growing, almost unconscious hype surrounding his return to Twin Peaks to the mountain peak of The Return itself to the long period of anticipation and speculation about what, if anything, he'd do next. Thinking about this work as something that is over still doesn't sit quite right with me. Even back in 2008, when I was first getting into Twin Peaks Lynch had not yet officially "retired" from feature filmmaking - if he ever really would (and yes, another thing his passing solidifies is the absolute symmetry of his feature-length decalogue of theatrical releases). Though that early engagement unfolded long after the show had passed out of pop culture, it was starting to build popularity with a new generation - the Gold Box DVD set had just been released and the streaming deal on Netflix was not far off. Always in my long journey there was the thrill of exciting incompletion, either conceptual (exploring what he'd already left us) or, much of the time, literal. When I viewed and reviewed his entire body of work in the spring of 2014, even before more Twin Peaks had been announced, this filmography still felt like something that was alive and ongoing: a boundless horizon.

I'll have to get used to this more enclosed Lynchverse, and figure out how to remind myself that time was never what bound it anyway so it remains open-ended. That more cosmic understanding, however facilitated by Lynch's work and (more sparingly) his words, does not come naturally me to right now. I was prepared but not ready.

Here is what I wrote on Twitter within an hour or so of learning that David Lynch had passed away:

I think others will have new things to say directly pertaining to David Lynch. I feel, aside from some things I'm still working on, that I mostly already said my part while he was alive. I do have a few reflections on what his life, work, and death mean to me personally though.
I am a bit surprised, but not shocked, at his passing. We seemed to be on this trajectory with recent news but I thought, and hoped (if what he wanted was to continue living and working) that his health was more chronic than failing.
Now that it's come, there's a feeling of...deflation I didn't quite expect. The Return, it's now clear if it wasn't already, was as grand a swan song as an artist could hope for. Yet there was always a feeling of "maybe more...?" for the past 8 years.
In one sense, his career went out with a bang. For those of who followed very closely though, and maybe also who felt - for a variety of reasons - a longing to continue in the Peaks world especially after Part 18's scream, this era which has now ended was more like a long fade.
For Lynch himself, who most of us don't know despite his personality very much being part of the intermedia world he created, it seems from the outside like this process went about as ok as such things - never easy - can go.
He remained creatively engaged even as his contact with the outside world diminished. He lived the art life to the end.
What I feel less sure of is where this leaves the rest of us. So much of my engagement with Lynch's work has been defined by anticipation of what was to come. Not speculation so much (good luck to anyone who played that game) but belief that mysteries would continue to unfold.
Coincidentally, I was moving forward with a number of long-term projects right about now including a video which was to end with a montage of those who'd passed since The Return. I guess I know how that one will end now. Indeed, I guess that is the strongest sense I'm left with right now.
We all know how it will, and did, end. That feels wrong somehow when it comes to David Lynch.
I am also recording and publishing these reflections as a bonus on the Lost in Twin Peaks podcast:



Goodbye, David. You will be missed.



TWIN PEAKS CONVERSATIONS bonus podcast on Mulholland Drive premieres tonight w/ Devious Dreams author John Thorne (YouTube & extended PATREON)


For John Thorne, Mulholland Drive has not only been a vital experience in its own right but also -forgive the expression - a key to David Lynch's other work, particularly Twin Peaks. Many of John's theories and interpretations of Peaks borrow from a structure Lynch most notably deployed to tie two worlds together: the characters and stories conceived for an ABC TV pilot (the first two-thirds of Mulholland Drive, with some subtle but significant changes) and the more time-constrained but also thematically and stylistically grander possibilities of a theatrically-released feature film (sealed by the final third of Mulholland Drive, shot a year and a half after the other material). Not only does Mulholland inform John's notions of dreaming and identity shifts in Peaks, it also feeds his fascination with process - the outside conditions that, well, condition Lynch's creative responses. We began to dwell on this subject in our previous discussion (itself following Twin Peaks Conversations episodes in 2021 and 2022). Since then, John wrote and published the absorbing and deeply compelling Devious Dreams: Reimagining David Lynch's Twin Peaks (which includes history of the production, analysis of the pilot and film, and original interviews with the central cast). Naturally, we had to schedule a reunion to focus on this new book.

The resulting episode premieres exactly twelve hours from this announcement and runs nearly four hours in total, with about an hour and a half public on YouTube and the remaining two and half hours for the $5/month tier on Patreon. We explore many rabbit holes, including what a Mulholland Drive series might have looked like (and how that phenomenon would compare to Twin Peaks), what was in the closed ending Lynch shot for the pilot even before expanding it into a film, the significance of the man behind Winkie's Diner, how John's exposure to a version of the pilot before the 2001 Mulholland Drive premiere shaped his perspective, and the way that the film's release (nearly a decade into Wrapped in Plastic's run) changed John's work on the magazine. And that's just in the first part of the conversation!

PART 1 on YouTube premieres at 8pm EST


Listen to...
(also premieres at 8pm EST)

November 2024 Patreon round-up: EXCLUSIVE - Films in Focus podcast #6: Trenque Lauquen + TWIN PEAKS Character Series advance


In the docket since January, the film Trenque Lauquen was finally chosen by patrons as the subject for my Films in Focus podcast in November for the $5/month tier. A fusion of historical romance, whimsical sci-fi, missing person mystery, and contemplative landscape cinema, this four-hour, twelve-chapter 2022 work from the Argentine director Laura Citarella (and the collaborative collective she's a part of, El Pompero Cine) tells the many stories of botanist Laura (Laura Paredes), who disappears without explanation in the sleepy provincial town of Trenque Lauquen. Two men who were romantically involved with her, Ezequiel "Chico" (Ezequiel Pierro) and Rafa (Rafael Spregelburd), search for her across the countryside. Eventually we learn about the two personal investigations she was absorbed in: the first a series of romantic letters exchanged via books between a school official and a wealthy landowner, and the second a creature/person/alligator (?) discovered on the banks of the town pond and cared for by Dr. Elisa Esperanza (Elisa Carricajo), whose lifestyle Laura becomes slowly absorbed into. A body found on the edge of a body of water? A mysterious woman named Laura whom many love but no one quite understands? A community which, depending on who observes it, seems like a small town, rural outpost, or small city? Obviously Twin Peaks is a major reference point here. Additionally, the film is also a portrait of older millennials entering middle age without having quite settled on their identity or purpose in life and maybe even an inadvertent prediction of the cinematic and cultural erasure unleashed by the chaotic near-future president Javier Milei. There is much to discuss and I had a great time diving in...

What are the November rewards?

TWIN PEAKS CONVERSATIONS bonus podcast w/ John Thorne: the "lost episode" (YouTube & extended PATREON)


In the spring of 2023, as I was wrapping up my regular monthly Twin Peaks Conversations schedule, I recorded a "bonus" that I planned to use later, maybe as the last episode in this podcast, with my most recurring guest: John Thorne, publisher of Wrapped in Plastic in the nineties and zeroes and later a blogger, podcaster, editor of a new Twin Peaks magazine, and eventually author of several books. In our previous Twin Peaks Conversations we first touched base on Halloween 2021 (coincidentally, three years to the day before this latest episode) as he was writing a new book about Twin Peaks' third season and then we spoke again after he published that book as Ominous Whoosh in 2022. This discussion was supposed to be something of an epilogue in that trilogy, reflecting on the passage of years since Twin Peaks: The Return in light of a David Lynch retrospective John attended in Dallas. And while the two-part episode (a half hour on YouTube, another hour-plus for the $5/month tier on Patreon) does serve that purpose, it was also unknowingly a gateway into a whole new project for John. In the year and a half since we recorded this chat, he's written and published a book on Mulholland Drive called Devious Dreams, and Lynch's 2001 film is already a focus in the Patreon part of this episode, hinting at the book to come. This past winter, I thought I'd lost this whole recording but fortunately I was able to restore it months ago and now I can present this "lost episode" not just as a worthwhile piece in its own right but also a teaser for the next Twin Peaks Conversations episode, scheduled for December, in which John and I will discuss the book Devious Dreams in great detail.

PART 1 on YouTube


Listen to...


Like my December conversation with Rob King and my April/May conversation with Cameron Cloutier and Josh Eisenstadt, this is a bonus episode of the Twin Peaks Conversations podcast, which ended its monthly run halfway through 2023. Bonuses will continue at least as long as I'm working on the three big Twin Peaks projects (Journey Through Twin Peaks videos, the written character series, and the second season of the Lost in Twin Peaks podcast) over the next few years.



Prior to our Twin Peaks Conversations episodes, I spoke to John over three print interviews in 2014 (about Wrapped in Plastic, The Missing Pieces, and the announcement of The Return), again when he published his 2016 book, and then over four Patreon podcasts in 2019 (first, second, third, and fourth).

Listen to his podcast In Our House Now

Check out back issues of his more recent magazine The Blue Rose




Gadgets and Symbols in Twin Peaks (and our lives) • group discussion on objects & much more w/ the "Twin Peaks Grammar" Artists Love Twin Peaks podcast (+ guests Colin, Alison Ivy, Heather Jones, Tommy Jones, Steven Miller & Josh Minton)


Sometimes Anthony, the host of the "Twin Peaks Grammar" YouTube channel, provides an ornate, intense structure for our discussions and sometimes he takes a looser approach to see what bubbles up. This conversation heads in the latter direction - providing some visual reminders of various objects through three seasons and a film but letting the conversation flow where we want to go: not just toward analysis of tokens like the Owl Cave ring but also the process of tracking down props, the ways in which the show's iconography brings fans together, theories of who dreams this narrative, and how this may or may not relate to Carl Jung. Following quickly on the heels of the last group chat just a few weeks ago, this recording includes several of the same participants - Alison, Tommy, myself - along with some new or returning guests. Twin Peaks Blog author and location/prop hunter extraordinaire Steven offers insight into the real-life objects of the show and Dreamer's Diary podcast host Tommy is joined by his wife and co-host Heather. Colin returns to rep the Creamed Corn and the Universe podcast, where I've had several exchanges with him alongside appearances on this channel and my own podcast; likewise Josh and I have spoken across a couple different podcasts. Like last time, I joined late but on this occasion I stuck around until the end for some more deep dives down various rabbit holes with both Anthony and Tommy. (At which point I reference my montage integrating Kyle MacLachlan and Laura Dern in Blue Velvet and The Return, as well as the film/book A Dangerous Method - here's my review of that one.)


In addition to that video, Anthony also posted this episode in audio form on the Artists Love Twin Peaks feed.


September 2024 Patreon round-up: EXCLUSIVE - Films in Focus podcast #5: Safe + Advanced Script for Journey Through Twin Peaks narration


In July, my $5/month tier patrons chose a podcast subject which echoed the previous episode in May: two Jonathan Glazer films back-to-back. Now the bimonthly poll has chosen to bookend that directorial double feature with another auteurist pair. Following March's selection of Todd Haynes' latest film May December, the September episode rolls back three decades for Haynes' second film Safe (also starring Julianne Moore as a fragile housewife, albeit a more sympathetic character in this case). The portrait of Southern Californian woman collapsing under the weight of environmental illness, struggling to forge her own identity only to be sucked into a manipulative self-help cult, the movie was marketed inaccurately as some kind of sci-fi thriller, has been characterized unusually but not inaccurately as a horror movie, and resonates even more strongly in an age grappling with the aftermath of Covid-19 and the uneasy anticipation of a chemically induced apocalypse. From its first half delivered in Kubrickian wide shots of modernist interiors to its second half absorbed in loneliness- and desperation-inducing western exteriors, Safe provides a fascinating challenge to viewers. How much of this ailment is in Carol White's surroundings, and how much is in her own head? Along with this question, I explore the nineties film's relationship to the eighties it depicts, the influence of Douglas Sirk's fifties melodramas, the correspondences and differences with Jeanne Dielman, and several connections to Lynch works (although, surprisingly in retrospect, I don't mention Lost Highway which was shot the year Safe came out and also depicts a character's disintegration in two very distinct halves, one involving a modernist L.A. home while the other features a breakdown in the desert).

Meanwhile I shared with all patrons the script for my narration of an upcoming Journey Through Twin Peaks chapter. Tomorrow I'll discuss my shifting approach to this project (something I hinted at back in July, in this Patreon update I forgot to include in that month's cross-post, though I've gone back to add it now). For now, from the $1/month tier up, you can read a draft covering the post-Return period in all of its melancholically hopeful and disappointed flavor.

What are the September rewards?

What happened in Room 315? • group discussion on the opening of Twin Peaks season 2 premiere w/ the "Twin Peaks Grammar" Artists Love Twin Peaks podcast (+ guests John Bernardy, Andrew Cook, Alison Ivy, Tommy Jones, Patrick Mahan & afterwards Brian Liddicoat)


The slow waiter, the giant (or fireman?), the missing ring, the owls who aren't what they seem...the first scene of Twin Peaks' second season in 1990 is full of mysteries and in this group discussion led by Anthony of the "Twin Peaks Grammar" YouTube channel, we dig into many of them. My time was limited, but I was able to join for an hour of the sprawling two and a half hour episode. The previous conversation, on the end of Part 18, followed a rigorous structure; this one by contrast is more freewheeling, dipping into the media personae of the actors onscreen, the question of whether this scene is a dream (and if so, whose?), and what relationship this slice of mythology bears to others in the larger Twin Peaks saga. This was my first time speaking with Dreamer's Diary podcast host Tommy, while Alison and Talking Backwards podcast host Patrick had participated in previous group chats (another guest, Brian, joined after I left). In addition to these collective discussions, I spoke to John about his podcast Blue Rose Task Force several years ago, and I've had many exchanges with Andrew. Together we wander and wonder in this Lynchian/Frostian terrain; to paraphrase the guiding spirit of this scene: where have we gone?


In addition to that video, Anthony is also posting this episode in audio form on the Artists Love Twin Peaks feed.


belated July 2024 Patreon round-up: EXCLUSIVE - Films in Focus podcast #4: Birth + TWIN PEAKS Character Series advance


Following my episode on The Zone of Interest a couple months ago, patrons chose Jonathan Glazer's earlier Birth as a follow-up. A film whose key moments unfold in close-ups, Birth is as intimate as Zone is distanced. The unusual storytelling mastery exhibited by Glazer in his later work (including Under the Skin, which I've also covered on a past podcast) hadn't quite taken hold yet in his second movie. The tale of a widow (Nicole Kidman) who's told by an intense ten-year-old (Cameron Bright) - a decade after her husband's death - that he is the reincarnation of her lost love, Birth struggles to strike a balance between its troubling premise and the more poetic, allegorical realm it often seeks to inhabit. The strongest moments in the narrative are those that subvert this abstraction with down-to-earth specificity, but I found it hard to get past the discomfort engendered by that central creative choice. This is the first time in a while that I've dug into a work that, by and large, didn't work for me (even as it completely held my interest), which makes for a fascinating as well as frustrating engagement. Given that its reputation really rebounded after a controversial premiere, I'm keen to hear what others think of Birth and its place in Glazer's body of work (including his debut Sexy Beast, which I've not yet seen). As Walker White - the patron who initially suggested this topic - put it in his comment following my coverage, "I agree that the potential for a really successful movie is in here, but it's muddled. Either way, kind of more fun to think about after than to watch. Funny, with Sexy Beast I feel it's the opposite: fun to watch but not as much to go back over later."

While the $5/month tier contemplated Birth's protagonist, who dances between pitiable and predatory, I shared another TWIN PEAKS Character Series entry with all tiers, covering someone who very much does the same. This is one of the richest figures in the whole series and I'd long anticipated applying the prism of my uniform approach to the unique slipperiness of the character's spirit.

What are the July rewards?

The Impossible Life of Robert Jacoby, 1927/31/40 - 1969/86? • discussion w/ Creamed Corn and the Universe podcast



Visit/download the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or other platforms

My past two appearances on Creamed Corn and the Universe, at host Colin's suggestion, have covered two of the most obscure characters in the Twin Peaks universe in very different ways and for very different reasons. Yet both provide a rich field for discussion. Following my episode on Ronette's angel - who is about the most purely "David Lynch" that a character can be - I'm back to talk about Robert Jacoby, a quintessential Mark Frost creation. Robert is equally fascinating and frustrating for me. Given by obsession with chronology I can't help but be driven crazy by the inconsistencies exhibited by Dr. Lawrence Jacoby's brother, a reporter for the Twin Peaks Gazette (later the Twin Peaks Post), as featured in The Secret History of Twin Peaks. Within single articles, indeed within single paragraphs, the character himself completely contradicts his age and the order of events in his own life. Is this just sloppiness on the author's part, or is there some larger thematic thread to draw here? Can both be true? As Colin and I talked, we found ourselves more and more enmeshed in a reading which tied the character to a larger theme of avoidance and deception (self- and otherwise). This conversation is a great example of discovering a thesis in the process of hashing out the details. I hope you have as much fun listening to this as I did recording it.

"The European Version": 'The Twin Peaks Pilot's Alternate Ending podcast for Wonders in the Dark (+ new archive images & 6-month check-in on project progress)



In its eighth year of celebrating unusual works which can be found for free online, the Allan Fish Online Film Festival is featuring a re-presented bonus from my Lost in Twin Peaks podcast, discussing the "European version" alternate closed ending of the pilot for which Bob, Mike, the Red Room, and some other mythological elements were first invented. Right now, you can read my introduction, watch the ending itself, and take part in any further discussion all on Wonders in the Dark (unfortunately the podcast player won't work on WordPress so I couldn't include it alongside the intro - you have to either listen to it embedded above or follow the links to other platforms like Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Pinecast).


This fifteen-minute survey of this material and its creation was originally featured in my coverage of S2E3 (i.e. "episode 2"), the episode in which this ending was re-cut as a dream sequence.

I've also done some maintenance on this site by tweaking a few images for my Archive, including the top one (another abstracted Agent Cooper portrait) as well as chapters 3, 15, and 16 to make them better pop and/or match the spirit of each chapter title. And finally, on Twitter I offered a subthread explaining why my progress on long-term projects can be simultaneously described as slow and promising.

May 2024 Patreon round-up: EXCLUSIVE - Films in Focus podcast #3: The Zone of Interest + TWIN PEAKS Character Series advance


I hoped and suspected that The Zone of Interest would be the next film patrons picked for me to cover following its prominence at the Academy Awards in March, where it won much-deserved prizes for Best Sound and Best International Film, as well as the backlash to and praise for director Jonathan Glazer's acceptance speech drawn directly from the film's own themes. The title had appeared in an earlier poll, spurred by last year's podcast on Glazer's earlier Under the Skin; while I missed most of the press around it in 2023 I'd been anticipating this coverage for several months. Nonetheless, I wasn't really prepared for the power of this film, the purity of its aesthetic and especially the emotional devastation of its conclusion. Responding to a post about how the film "must most importantly be 'felt', rather than be 'understood'", I recently commented on Twitter that "The 'felt' and 'understood' were more intertwined than in most films I can think of. So much of its impact relies on what you know rather than see/hear yet it's so visceral. The power of the ending rests in an intellectual concept but [is] as emotional as any ending I've experienced." The Zone of Interest follows several months in the life of the Auschwitz commandant, told entirely on one side of the concentration camp wall - the side on which Rudolf Höss (Christian Friedel) and his wife Hedwig (Sandra Hüller) live in their tidy, well-manicured villa. This episode discusses the film's aggressive, intricate soundtrack, surveillance-style shooting strategy, and differences from the novel Glazer very loosely used as inspiration; I also explore the history of the real Höss, the prisoner-written song "Sunbeam" featured in the film, connections to other famous Nazi- or genocide-themed works like Schindler's List, The Act of Killing, and Dr. Strangelove, what marks the time period as both distinct and resonant, and much more, in one of my longest reviews of a single film.

In addition to that $5/tier feature, for all patrons I've advanced another TWIN PEAKS Character Series entry, in this case one of the most complicated, fascinating characters of the third season (and, in some ways, before that too).

What are the May rewards?

TWIN PEAKS CONVERSATIONS bonus podcast w/ Black Rose director Cameron Cloutier + Teresa With a T director Josh Eisenstadt (YouTube & extended PATREON)


Two years after his last guest appearance to promote the epic four-hour fan film Queen of Hearts, Cameron Cloutier is back on Twin Peaks Conversations with a new project that's just getting going (a fundraising campaign begins on May 14). Black Rose will combine a look behind the red curtains at One Eyed Jack's with a continuation of Annie Blackburn's story from the previous movie. We discuss this project and also spend time chatting with Cameron's collaborator Josh Eisenstadt who is considering a fan film of his own which would share sets, actors, and other resources with Cameron. Since Josh's concept is in flux at the time of this podcast, I didn't include any material about his specific movie*; instead, we discuss his history with Twin Peaks and its cast as a fan and friend - including his connection to Pamela Gidley who played Teresa Banks in Fire Walk With Me. Especially in the $5/month tier Patreon back half (actually nearly four times as long as the public YouTube portion) we dig into many different questions about the show, its creation, and its legacy, of which Josh has a wealth of knowledge. And Cameron sticks around after Josh has to go, talking Mulholland Drive, more details on his own upcoming production, and of course our favorite subject: will there be more Twin Peaks from David Lynch and/or Mark Frost?

PART 1 on YouTube


Listen to...


*Update 5/9

A week later, Josh ended up going forward with his project Teresa With a T, so I published the previously excised parts of our discussion on YouTube:



Like my December conversation with Rob King, this is a bonus episode of the Twin Peaks Conversations podcast, which ended its monthly run halfway through 2023. This won't be the last such episode.

Watch Queen of Hearts: A Twin Peaks Fan Film on the YouTube channel "Annie Blackburn"

Cameron's main YouTube channel is Obnoxious & Anonymous - subscribe for updates on the upcoming May 14 campaign for Black Rose & possibly Josh's film as well

You can follow Cameron on Bluesky & Twitter as Obnoxious & Anonymous or Queen of Hearts & Facebook in Twin Peaks Worldwide

The Four Placements of FIRE WALK WITH ME by Julius Kassendorf (The Solute)




Appreciating the Ending of Twin Peaks • group discussion w/ the "Twin Peaks Grammar" Artists Love Twin Peaks podcast (w/ guests Andrew Cook, Alison Ivy, Patrick Mahan, Courtenay Stallings & John Thorne)


Following up on his last group discussion three and a half months ago - in which four guests offered formal analysis of four David Lynch scenes - Anthony of the "Twin Peaks Grammar" YouTube channel has both narrowed our focus and expanded our range. I joined him as one of six guests this time, focusing on a single scene: the conclusion of Part 18 in The Return. I particularly honed in on sound, while others addressed other aspects of the filmmaking, and together we all explored the larger context of this passage (especially in comparison to Part 17's climax). This was my first time speaking with Talking Backwards podcast host Patrick, while Alison had participated in the previous group chat. I spoke to Courtenay about her book Laura's Ghost several years ago, and I've had many exchanges with John (before and after season three) and Andrew. Together we pondered what significance this scene has for both Cooper and Laura/Carrie, considered what Lynch and Mark Frost brought to its creation, remembered how we first encountered the visit to the Palmer (or rather Tremond) house in 2017 and wondered "...what year is this?"


In addition to that video, Anthony has also posted this episode in audio form on the Artists Love Twin Peaks feed.


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