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- <text id=90TT0883>
- <link 90TT2626>
- <link 90TT1316>
- <title>
- Apr. 09, 1990: Like Nothing On Earth
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 09, 1990 America's Changing Colors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIDEO, Page 96
- Like Nothing On Earth
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>David Lynch's Twin Peaks may be the most original show on TV
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin--Reported by Denise Worrell/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> The body of a high school girl, wrapped in plastic, washes
- up on the lakeshore near a small town in the Pacific Northwest.
- An FBI agent teams up with the local sheriff to investigate.
- The victim, they discover, has been leading a secret life. So,
- it seems, is nearly everyone else in town.
- </p>
- <p> In outline, ABC's heralded new series Twin Peaks sounds like
- an amalgam of familiar TV genres. A touch of true-crime
- docudrama, a dash of Columbo, a jot of Knots Landing. But in
- the darkly idiosyncratic world of director David Lynch, terms
- like murder mystery and soap opera don't begin to tell the
- tale. Twin Peaks, which debuts Sunday as a two-hour movie, is
- like nothing you've seen in prime time--or on God's earth.
- It may be the most hauntingly original work ever done for
- American TV.
- </p>
- <p> It is also something of a miracle. Imagine: one of the
- world's most perversely offbeat movie directors persuades ABC
- to let him try a prime-time series. He shoots a pilot with
- virtually no interference. The network bigwigs look at the
- result, realize that it will probably befuddle many viewers,
- then decide to air it anyway. The programmers even consider--horrors!--showing the two-hour pilot without commercials.
- (Cooler heads prevail; the show will have ads, though fewer than
- usual.) It's enough to restore one's faith in television.
- </p>
- <p> The surpassing strangeness of Twin Peaks is not easy to
- pinpoint. Despite a few grisly touches, the show has little to
- offend in terms of sex or violence. Its distinctiveness is
- almost purely a matter of style. The pace is slow and hypnotic,
- the atmosphere suffused with creepy foreboding, the emotions
- eerily heightened. The news of Laura Palmer's murder inspires
- spasms of grief in everyone from the girl's mother to the
- crew-cut school principal, who bursts into tears after
- announcing her death over the p.a. system. In other hands, this
- might be melodramatic; in Lynch's, it has the scalding intensity
- of a nightmare.
- </p>
- <p> Then there are the Lynchian touches of off-kilter characters
- and sideshow weirdness. A woman with an eyepatch has an
- obsession with drapes. Visitors to a bank vault find a stuffed
- deer head lying on the table. "It fell down," notes a bank
- officer blandly. The boyish FBI agent (Kyle MacLachlan)
- dictates every detail of his day into a cassette recorder and
- gets misty-eyed over Douglas firs and snowshoe rabbits. "Know
- why I'm whittling?" he says to the sheriff at one point.
- "Because that's what you do in a town where a yellow light
- still means slow down, not speed up."
- </p>
- <p> Twin Peaks spins out a whodunit that may or may not be
- solved by the end of the show's seven-week run. (For a European
- video version of the pilot, Lynch shot an alternate ending that
- seems to solve the crime. In it, the actors walk and speak
- their lines backward, and the film is reversed.) But the
- two-hour movie, which spans the 24-hour period after discovery
- of the body, stands superbly on its own. More than a dozen
- characters are introduced--all of them connected, each
- dwelling in a private world--from the widowed owner of the
- town sawmill (Joan Chen) to the dead girl's hopped-up boyfriend
- (Dana Ashbrook) to the serene sheriff (Michael Ontkean), whose
- name, for no particular reason, is Harry S. Truman.
- </p>
- <p> Whether Twin Peaks will work as a continuing series remains
- to be seen. The second episode (co-written by Lynch but
- directed by Duwayne Dunham) shifts into more conventional gear
- as the murder investigation begins to unfold. At worst, Twin
- Peaks could turn into an aesthete's version of "Who Shot J.R.?"
- At best, it will be mesmerizing.
- </p>
- <p> Few filmmakers would seem less likely candidates for TV than
- Lynch. His first feature, Eraserhead, was a dreamlike horror
- story about a couple taking care of a monstrous mutant baby.
- Blue Velvet, his bizarre 1986 black comedy, started with a
- severed ear and descended into sadomasochistic horror. Trained
- as a painter, Lynch has written song lyrics and directed a
- performance piece, Industrial Symphony No. 1, featuring a
- midget sawing wood and dozens of baby dolls lowered from the
- ceiling.
- </p>
- <p> At 44, Lynch has a Boy Scout's cherubic face and nice
- manners. His conversation is filled with wholesome jargon like
- "thrilling" and "cool." But eccentricities lurk just beneath
- the surface. He always keeps his shirt collar buttoned to the
- top because "I have this thing about my neck. It's just an
- eerie kind of feeling about my collarbone." For seven years he
- drank milkshakes every day at a Bob's Big Boy in Los Angeles.
- "I'd have coffee, sometimes six cups, along with the shake, and
- I'd have sugar in my coffee," he says. "By then I would be
- pretty jazzed up, and I'd start writing down ideas. Many, many
- things came out of Bob's."
- </p>
- <p> Lynch, who has been divorced twice and is now involved with
- actress Isabella Rossellini, was born in Missoula, Mont. His
- father, a research scientist for the Department of Agriculture,
- moved the family several times around the Pacific Northwest
- before settling in Washington, D.C. Lynch found high school
- "worthless" but put up with it, then went to art school in
- Boston. After a brief sojourn in Austria, he moved to
- Philadelphia to study at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
- Arts.
- </p>
- <p> "Philadelphia, more than any filmmaker, influenced me," says
- Lynch. "It's the sickest, most corrupt, decaying, fear-ridden
- city imaginable. I was very poor and living in bad areas. I
- felt like I was constantly in danger. But it was so fantastic
- at the same time." He lived across the street from the city
- morgue, where he was fascinated by the empty body bags hung on
- pegs. "The bags had a big zipper, and they'd open the zipper
- and shoot water into the bags with big hoses. With the zipper
- open and the bags sagging on the pegs, it looked like these big
- smiles. I called them the smiling bags of death."
- </p>
- <p> He tried filmmaking as an extension of his painting. Lynch's
- first work was a "film sculpture," a one-minute animated loop
- in which six people get sick over and over while their heads
- catch on fire. A painter who saw it commissioned Lynch to make
- another animated film. Lynch bought a camera and spent two
- months shooting before he realized the camera was broken. "It
- was one long piece of blurred film," he says. "But it was the
- weirdest thing; I wasn't one bit depressed."
- </p>
- <p> Lynch moved to Los Angeles in 1970 and spent five years
- making Eraserhead. The film became a cult hit and led to his
- first mainstream film, The Elephant Man. Lynch's next proj ect,
- the big-budget sci-fi movie Dune, was a critical and commercial
- disaster, but Blue Velvet brought him widespread critical
- acclaim. A couple of aborted projects later (including a script
- for Steve Martin called One Saliva Bubble), Lynch is finishing
- a new film, Wild at Heart, starring Nicolas Cage and Laura
- Dern.
- </p>
- <p> Lynch and his partner, former Hill Street Blues writer Mark
- Frost, developed Twin Peaks by drawing a map of the fictional
- town. "We knew where everything was, and it helped us decide
- what mood each place had, and what could happen there," says
- Lynch. "Then the characters just introduced themselves to us
- and walked into the story." The pilot was written in only nine
- days and shot in 23. Lynch was apprehensive about the
- restrictions of TV but found the experience satisfying. "I
- didn't feel we compromised, and I felt good."
- </p>
- <p> Will TV audiences feel just as good about the mutant soap
- opera he has concocted? Frost hopes the series will reach "a
- coalition of people who may have been fans of Hill Street, St.
- Elsewhere and Moonlighting, along with people who enjoyed the
- nighttime soaps." ABC Entertainment chief Robert Iger admits
- the show will be a hard sell (especially in the time slot
- opposite Cheers on Thursday nights). Says he: "A lot of people
- have said Twin Peaks is the critic's dream. But is it the
- viewer's nightmare? I would hope that the answer is that it
- isn't."
- </p>
- <p> Lynch seems confident that viewers will catch on. "These
- shows should cast a spell," he says. "It's sort of a nutty
- thing, but I feel a lot of enjoyment watching the show. It
- pulls me into this other world that I don't know about." Well,
- if he doesn't know about it, what are we outsiders to do?
- Nothing but sit back and succumb to the spell.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-