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
Heartbreaking --
Cooper crossed over, and as he told Diane -- everything may be different. The Diane he found was not Diane, the Laura he found could not be Laura, and the optimistic can-do Agent Cooper that we were (OK, I certainly was) so happy to see re- emerge was lost in the wreckage of his dreams.
I have never been as fascinated by the tortuous dark wraiths of Lynch as by his skewed portrayal of 'normal' American life, and that was certainly true of the finale episodes. To see Sheryl Lee and Sherilyn Finn today, after seeing so much of their entrancing characters in the inital TP was ... what? Riveting, certainly, and sad, and puzzling -- they have aged, and so have I, and so has everyone who was so fascinated by the original series. Incredibly brave of both these women to go all in for these portrayals. The overarching theme of life as a lonely highway was chilling & lovely.
As for Lynch -- all criticisms are valid, but his work is beyond regular TV criteria. The Showtime placement was genius --he got to make what he wanted, w/no commercial interruption, and no time limits -- and we were free to watch or not. He stands apart, and thank God he has given us so much to puzzle over, and argue about, and remember. So -- do we live in a dream?
I have never been as fascinated by the tortuous dark wraiths of Lynch as by his skewed portrayal of 'normal' American life, and that was certainly true of the finale episodes. To see Sheryl Lee and Sherilyn Finn today, after seeing so much of their entrancing characters in the inital TP was ... what? Riveting, certainly, and sad, and puzzling -- they have aged, and so have I, and so has everyone who was so fascinated by the original series. Incredibly brave of both these women to go all in for these portrayals. The overarching theme of life as a lonely highway was chilling & lovely.
As for Lynch -- all criticisms are valid, but his work is beyond regular TV criteria. The Showtime placement was genius --he got to make what he wanted, w/no commercial interruption, and no time limits -- and we were free to watch or not. He stands apart, and thank God he has given us so much to puzzle over, and argue about, and remember. So -- do we live in a dream?
helpful•9013
- brooklynjm
- Sep 5, 2017
Details
- Runtime57 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD
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