Starting Monday, March 3rd, Criminal Element is going to be running my series of episode-by-episode TWIN PEAKS "rewatches"--something of a misnomer since, in fact, I've never watched the show before.
Here's part of what I wrote for the kickoff announcement over at Criminal Element:
How have I managed to go this long without seeing a
series as heralded as TWIN PEAKS a show that pretty much defines the notion of
“cult television,” a show by one of the oft proclaimed geniuses of cinema?
Well, for one thing I was a kid when it first came out. When the pilot episode
was broadcast in April of 1990, I was fourteen years old and, in all honesty, that
year I was far more excited that The Flash had his own show.
Which, I admit, still doesn’t explain why I haven’t
caught up to the show in the subsequent twenty-four years. The answer to that
conundrum is that I’ve never been a huge David Lynch fan. Once I stopped
watching television shows about superheroes and turned my attention to cinema,
I went in pretty hard for the old stuff: noir, Westerns, sixties European art
cinema. By the time I got around to Lynch, my taste had formed in other
directions. That’s not to say that I don’t admire David Lynch. I like parts of
many of his films, and I love all of MULLHOLLAND DRIVE and THE STRAIGHT STORY
But that’s about as far as I’ve gone with him. Which makes me the perfect man
for this job. I come to TWIN PEAKS as someone who likes, but doesn’t love the
cinema of David Lynch. I come as an admirer, but not a true believer.
Over the years, I’ve gone out of my way to steer
clear of TWIN PEAKS—for fear of learning too much and spoiling the discovery of
the show itself. I could easily avail myself of the answers to its mysteries
with the click of a few buttons, but, then again, I could also ruin the end of
pretty much every novel ever written, if I wanted to do so. I’ve always
suspected that TWIN PEAKS might hold far more enjoyment in its mysteries than
in its questions. So come with me as I make my first trip to Twin Peaks, Washington.
Let’s see what there is to see.