The featured image was taken from a video David Lynch filmed to promote a fundraiser for the David Lynch Foundation. when Twin Peaks was about to start its second season.
Parts of the Skype session are embedded below. “It took me four and a half years to write and film this season.” Whether there will be a 4th season of Twin Peaks is too early to say, he told the crowd, adding that if the series would continue, fans would have to be extremely patient. That’s why everything is up to you.” In other words, and as noticeably demonstrated by the Twin Peaks discussion forum, we are all detectives.
You can, for example, read a book that raises a series of questions, and you want to talk to the author, but he died a hundred years ago. Season 2 infamously ended on Evil Cooper escaping the Black Lodge, and 25 years later, Season 3. There are lots of things in life, and we wonder about them, and we have to come to our own conclusions. Wait, Twin Peaks Season 4 Might Actually Happen Twin Peaks has never really been about the endings. “What matters is what you believe happened,” he clarified. While taking several questions from the audience face-to-face, the director declined to reveal the fate of Audrey Horne, whose very last shot in Part 15 was both abrupt and confusing. The filmmaker has been eerily quiet since the release of the mammoth Twin. Agent Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan) shows the sheriff's department an uncommon deductive technique Benjamin and Jerry Horne (Richard Beymer, David Patrick Kelly) visit One-Eyed.
It marked the first public event where he would talk Twin Peaks since the perplexing finale on September 3rd. Watch: Twin Peaks co-creator David Lynch has shared some bad news for fans hoping he will release a new movie soon. One plot point from the second season of Twin Peaks that was never really resolved was the disappearance of Major Briggs. In support of his “Small Stories” photo exhibition currently on display at the Belgrade Culture Centre (Kulturni Centar Beograda) in Serbia, David Lynch participated in a public Skype session projected onto the cinema screen of KCB’s jam-packed theater.