Who was the "husband" behind the door of the Palmer house the current owner asked for all the names? Sarah? Leland?
maybe it was the little kid, the magician
"Do you see creamed corn in this house?"
Yes, I did! When Sarah was watching the Boxing there was a plate on the table.
My view of what happened was that the dimension we have seen failed so Cooper and Diane travelled to another dimension (no idea what the sex scene was all about though) to try and get Laura to the house and fix things there. Laura screaming at the end was the dimensions lining up.
Welcome to the genius of Lynch! The things that didn't appear to resolved either where indirectly and unobviously resolved, or intentionally wherent becaud they had another purpose all together . . .
It was kind of great. I was left feeling an equivalency between the woman at the door and Bill Hasting's wife. She wasn't really real? Also yes, Coop suddenly seemed lost. He was looking for Judy.
I was curious about the woman's husband. Was there someone there? If so, who?
My interpretation is that the names Tremond and Chalfont suddenly rang a bell in Cooper's head.
I thought he may have asked what year it was because he remembered Mrs. Tremond, who had the same last name as the woman who owned the house, but was quite old back in 1989. She's the elderly woman who had the magic grandson -- and hated creamed corn.
He may have also remembered the name Chalfont from the trailer park when he asked Carl about the abandoned lot where the owl ring was found.
Coop didn't meet "Mrs. Tremond and her grandson" - Donna brought Coop there to meet them, and a woman answers whose name is Tremond, but her mother died 3 years ago, and she doesn't have any children. "the Tremonds" showed up for Donna to lead her to Harold.
"Chalfonts"/"Tremonds" are "one and the same." Coop was drawn to look at the space where their trailer was, it was where Chet Desmond found the ring.
Creamed corn in TP represents garmonbozia.
I understand what cream corn means. And just because Cooper did not physically meet Mrs. Tremond, doesn't mean that he didn't know she was an older lady.
I think the names were just swirling around in his head.
Just before she screams there's a voice which sounds like it could be Leland shouting "Lauraaaaa". I didn't notice it the first time, just watched the ending again for a refresh.
What I heard right before Laura's scream at the end were the same noises that Sarah Palmer was making previously before she bashed Laura's photo with a broken bottle, which looks to be how Laura was first zapped out of Coop's hand in the woods. My impression was that Sarah might be the embodiment of JUDY, because what else would have the power to control Laura interdimensionally like that? And only a legendary evil entity would want to, especially if Laura is "the one".
If Sarah is Judy, or hosts Judy (which I am not contesting I do think it's plausible)
Then why has Dales sole purpose become returning Laura to her home? It seems in one way her return is to restore peace/make right. On the other hand it also suggests her return is to establish a battle between good and evil. Laura/Judy?
Which is it? Does the end mean Judy won the battle? If so this syncs up nicely with S2 finale.
What is it that Dale seems to notice on the pavement/curbside before asking Laura/Carrie what year it was?
It seemed like he was feeling around like he did before they went through the 430 mark - like there was some kind of energy. It didn't seem questionable to me at the time - he felt something and then had a thought about time right before ...... the chillzz
He also makes that same gesture as he's leaving the Red Room and entering Glastonbury Grove.
Yeah, this is what I thought as well. Could he have "moved the curtain" and moved from the Twin Peaks where he had brought "Carrie" to the real Twin Peaks, and that's when he seems freaked and asks what year it is and Laura realizes who she is?
There wasn't the usual electricity sound during the Lynch/Frost production logo at the end.
Don't know if it means anything. The silence afterwards fits better with the ending in my opinion.
I like this one
What I was thinking was that when Cooper took Laura out of the FWWM/Original TV Show timeline by stopping her from going with Leo, Jaques and Ronnette he did stop her from being killed how she was originally killed, which may mean she didn't put the owl ring on her finger in the train car - which means her soul wasn't transported to the Black Lodge. I think Laura either died by the hand of Bob, but later in time (not when she originally died), didn't put the owl ring on... and that's why when we see a repeat of Cooper in the Black Lodge Laura isn't there (aka the zoom in on her chair in the red room being empty). Then I'm thinking her soul (which was created to fight evil or the mother/judy) was reincarnated into this new timeline as Carrie. She hears Sarah Palmer calling her actual name and I think that's when all her Laura memories came flooding back and that's why she started screaming. Maybe both timelines converged? That also explains why Sarah Palmer was going apesh*t on Laura's picture - I'm pretty sure she's possessed by the mother of evil/judy and since Cooper couldn't save Laura physically, but saved her soul from being trapped in the Black Lodge, now Laura is out and about to fulfill her destiny presented to her by the Fireman in episode 8 (when he creates her and sends her to Earth when Bob is created). I mean, if I was the mother/judy I'd be pretty pissed that I didn't have my mortal enemy trapped anymore.
What I was thinking was that when Cooper took Laura out of the FWWM/Original TV Show timeline by stopping her from going with Leo, Jaques and Ronnette he did stop her from being killed how she was originally killed, which may mean she didn't put the owl ring on her finger in the train car - which means her soul wasn't transported to the Black Lodge. I think Laura either died by the hand of Bob, but later in time (not when she originally died), didn't put the owl ring on... and that's why when we see a repeat of Cooper in the Black Lodge Laura isn't there (aka the zoom in on her chair in the red room being empty). Then I'm thinking her soul (which was created to fight evil or the mother/judy) was reincarnated into this new timeline as Carrie. She hears Sarah Palmer calling her actual name and I think that's when all her Laura memories came flooding back and that's why she started screaming. Maybe both timelines converged? That also explains why Sarah Palmer was going apesh*t on Laura's picture - I'm pretty sure she's possessed by the mother of evil/judy and since Cooper couldn't save Laura physically, but saved her soul from being trapped in the Black Lodge, now Laura is out and about to fulfill her destiny presented to her by the Fireman in episode 8 (when he creates her and sends her to Earth when Bob is created). I mean, if I was the mother/judy I'd be pretty pissed that I didn't have my mortal enemy trapped anymore.
My thinking is kind of the same.