The LEGO Movie 2: The Second Part
Green Book
Widows
The Walking Dead
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Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Critic Consensus: No consensus yet.
Five hours in, Mark Frost and David Lynch's sprawling supernatural drama still feels like it's still only just beginning.
With Episode 4, some equilibrium is regained, along with more plot movement from the first two episodes.
He gives us what we want on screen and off: Lynch and MacLachlan, together again, for Twin Peaks. But he also gives us what we need, immediately following their conversation.
In other words, the dreamlike pacing, which tends to consistently extend scenes far past the point of their usefulness or interest, is a way of drawing the viewer fully into this bizarre world, making the more surreal moments all that more of a shock...
Demands time and again, and all of an instant, that we alter what we think we know.
Weird tonal shifts aside, this is a solid episode that carves an interesting path for Cooper.
We even got a trippy appearance from Major Briggs (the late Don S. Davis), whose mention of "Blue Rose" was one of many notable ties back to the mythology Fire Walk With Me added so many aspects to.
It's fabulously unpredictable.
This is an altogether shiftier beast, haunting and beautiful when it wants to be; ugly and aggressively off-putting when it doesn't.
It's been surprising so far how emotionally affecting this new Twin Peaks is.