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COFFEE AND TV

SFX

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July 2020

AS TWIN PEAKS MARKS ITS 30TH ANNIVERSARY, WRITER/PRODUCER HARLEY PEYTON LOOKS BACK AT WHAT MADE DAVID LYNCH AND MARK FROST’S SERIES SUCH AN INDUSTRY CHANGER

- TARA BENNETT

COFFEE AND TV

THIRTY YEARS AGO, TELEVISION was not prepared for how director David Lynch and writer Mark Frost would change it forever. On 8 April 1990, their new ABC network series Twin Peaks debuted in the US, and minds were cumulatively blown.

Ostensibly about the murder of homecoming queen Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee) in a tiny rural town in the state of Washington, Lynch and Frost’s drama would quickly prove that it was ahead of its time in every way.

The central murder mystery and the soapy lives of the residents were the accessible and intriguing entry points for most viewers. But hiding beneath those familiar tropes was the decidedly unfamiliar. Lynch’s moody, cinematic visuals looked like they were plucked from the cinema, light years beyond the uniform look of other comedies and dramas.

Then there was the off-kilter way everything was presented. From FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan)’s incessantly peculiar voice memos to a mysterious “Diane”, to all the emotionally heightened performances underscored by Angelo Badalamenti’s jazzy, noir music, Twin Peaks was weird, beguiling and sometimes frightening. There was nothing like it anywhere else on the television dial, which is why audiences initially gravitated to it in droves.

One of the writers helping Lynch and Frost craft the first season of the series was first-time television writer Harley Peyton. Coming off a big-screen hit with his screenplay adaptation of Less Than Zero (1987), Peyton found himself mingling with more and more of his writing peers. In early 1990, Peyton was invited by his friend, Mark Frost, to a screening of the pilot of Twin Peaks.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE SFX

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OBJECT Z

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STRANGE JOURNEY THE STORY OF ROCKY HORROR

“I loved every minute of it,” says Tim Curry of filming The Rocky Horror Picture Show in 1974. Barry Bostwick has another take: “I was wet and miserable most of the time.” The one thing they do agree on, however, is that the result was a milestone in cinema history.

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DON'T NEED NO EDUCATION

SUPER-POWERED IT'S SOPHOMORE YEAR FOR THE STUDENTS OF GEN VAND THE BOYS' UNIVERSE OVERSEER ERIC KRIPKE PROMISES SFX TENTACLED ANUSES, HIGHER STAKES AND A NEW DEAN DESTINED TO BREAK THE INTERNET

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GAME CHANGER

SFX HEADS TO VANCOUVER TO VISIT THE TRON: ARES GRID AND TALK ALL THINGS TRON WITH THE FILMMAKERS BEHIND THE LONG-AWAITED SEQUEL

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Circular Thinking

2 AUGUST 2002 In 1996, Independence Day made a global spectacle of alien invasion, unleashing widescreen violence on the world's famous landmarks. Six years later, M Night Shyamalan's Signs offered an altogether more focused take.

time to read

1 mins

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