Part 18
- Episode aired Sep 3, 2017
- TV-MA
- 57m
IMDb RATING
8.7/10
4.8K
YOUR RATING
What is your name?What is your name?What is your name?
Grace Zabriskie
- Sarah Palmer
- (archive footage)
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe owner of the Palmer house says her name is Tremond. That's also the name of the old lady (and her grandson) from season 2. The same old lady used to call herself "Chalfont". In "FWWM", Harry Dean Stanton's character says that before the Chalfonts, another family named Chalfont lived in the trailer. This could be a hint that the unseen husband is possibly Pierre (Miss Tremond/Chalfonts grandson).
- GoofsWhen Cooper has the run-in with the cowboys in the diner, he picks up two guns, but when he places the guns in the french fry oil, he places three guns.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Ringer's 100 Best TV Episodes of the Century (2018)
- SoundtracksMy Prayer
Written by Georges Boulanger and Jimmy Kennedy
Performed by The Platters
Published by Skidmore Music Co.
Courtesy of The Island Def Jam Music Group
Under license from Universal Music Enterprises
Featured review
you will be disappointed...
...and at first I was too, but then I was left saddened. And not sad because there was no good resolution, but sad because the resolution (if you can even call it that) we got felt so somber in tone to me. I didn't really have any predictions in mind for the series finale, but I was expecting a more cheery ending, or at least one not as bleak and straight faced as this. But, I really liked it, as a matter of fact I love it! Lynch has balls to do this kinda stuff, to make this huge franchise and finish it off with a bang (episodes 16 and 17) followed by an inevitable and melancholic silence. Sometime around I'll really need to rewatch all of Twin Peaks so I can not only fall in love once again with it's iconic characters, unique experimental visuals, and engaging plot lines, but also so I can try to even make a slight dent into the egg that holds whatever meaning this weird, discomforting final part may contain. Perhaps it should be taken at face value, perhaps it should be analyzed for hours upon hours. Off the top of my head, something certainly seems a little fishy about this final episode, and that's not necessarily a bad thing. This is just me talking out of my ass, but I think that this isn't the last episode, and I don't mean that Lynch or anyone else involved will make another series or film or something, I mean that I think we have already seen the final episode and we didn't even know it. This may very well be the first episode, and the year that it really is, Agent Cooper, may be long before the Palmers even moved into town. Perhaps it really is the final episode and in fact it take place in the darkest future, or in another dimension.
You know what, I actually wanna happily applaud Lynch for is stunningly difficult-to- process closer to what may very well be his masterpiece, because it leaves me with so much food for thought, and when Lynch passes it will be a sad day, but it will also be a day in which I will further recognize his triumphant achievements as a filmmaker and artist, because we will all still be debating and discussing what the Hell the meanings of all of his films are, especially this one. This one massive, mysterious, funny, disturbing, awkward, beautiful, complicated, romantic, ingenious, scary, philosophical, spiritual, divisive, and gripping magnum opus known as Twin Peaks has caused so much joy and pain to me and many others across the globe, and now it's still worth countless rewatches and revisitings. Twin Peaks may very well be a genuine friend of mine, someone I have learned so much about over time, someone I've grown to love, and someone who I'll still be talking and thinking of for years to come. And, you know what, I congratulate its lack of conclusion, even if the two other people I was watching this with were left in anger, shock, disappointment, and confusion, so much so that they believed here must have been another episode coming...but there isn't. So much so that they swore, but not really aggressively, but because that's the only thing their bewildered mind could concoct. And I don't blame them. I really don't.
You know what, I actually wanna happily applaud Lynch for is stunningly difficult-to- process closer to what may very well be his masterpiece, because it leaves me with so much food for thought, and when Lynch passes it will be a sad day, but it will also be a day in which I will further recognize his triumphant achievements as a filmmaker and artist, because we will all still be debating and discussing what the Hell the meanings of all of his films are, especially this one. This one massive, mysterious, funny, disturbing, awkward, beautiful, complicated, romantic, ingenious, scary, philosophical, spiritual, divisive, and gripping magnum opus known as Twin Peaks has caused so much joy and pain to me and many others across the globe, and now it's still worth countless rewatches and revisitings. Twin Peaks may very well be a genuine friend of mine, someone I have learned so much about over time, someone I've grown to love, and someone who I'll still be talking and thinking of for years to come. And, you know what, I congratulate its lack of conclusion, even if the two other people I was watching this with were left in anger, shock, disappointment, and confusion, so much so that they believed here must have been another episode coming...but there isn't. So much so that they swore, but not really aggressively, but because that's the only thing their bewildered mind could concoct. And I don't blame them. I really don't.
helpful•10922
- framptonhollis
- Sep 3, 2017
Details
- Runtime57 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content