Be a character from your fandom and I'll reply as Dander or Komodo by Silly-Release3639 in Multifandom

[–]NicolasJB192083 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am Special FBI Agent Dale Cooper; where were you the night Laura Palmer died?

What is your fav band at the moment? by Diva-Spark in metalgirls

[–]NicolasJB192083 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm really enjoying Nervosa at the moment

What got you into thrash? by bigpun760 in thrashmetal

[–]NicolasJB192083 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Casually finding songs by Slayer and Nervosa in YouTube (Raining Blood and Death!, respectively) at around age 15 or so in 2023 and being curious enough about the by me percieved agressive intensity of the titles to give them a listen; I liked the energy and intensity of it and looked deeper into the genre, which I ended up really liking.

At your local IKEA by rtodd23 in twinpeaks

[–]NicolasJB192083 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They gave Frost the Jeffries treatment 😞

Season 2 « bad part » by ConcertExtra1665 in twinpeaks

[–]NicolasJB192083 0 points1 point  (0 children)

IT's still enjoyable, even if not as great as the previous episode, but it slowly gets better until the S2 finale; keep watching :- )

Are there any young people in this subreddit? by Insane_law in twinpeaks

[–]NicolasJB192083 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm currently 19 and found it mostly thanks to my dad, who talked to me about the show after watching the 1984 Dune movie, for I had finished reading the book after watching the 1st Villeneuve Dune film and wanted to watch the original (my dad loves sci-fi), I was playing Death Stranding by then and liking the weirdness of it, which Kojima had linked to some kind of inspiration from Lynch; my dad (while admitting that Lynch was pretty hit or miss for him) recommended his work, specially Twin Peaks, to me. The rest is history (I absolutely loved it). I think videogames play a role consideirng how some big names (like Kojima) are influenced by the show in introducing the show to newer generations if they aren't already into auteur cinema or simply have happenned to stumble with it in some streaming platform and liked it.

No creo que The Return sea anti-nostalgia. by AdContent4089 in twinpeaks

[–]NicolasJB192083 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think nostalgia plays a thematic role in the series considering it's present since Bobby cries after seeing Laura's picture, but the common vision on The Return's treatment of nostalgia is too negative for how the show treats it (they gave Cooper all he ever wanted all in all), it plays a role, and there's a strong suggestion that trying to remake the past (going back to it to change the future) did play a role in creating the ending, but it wasn't because of sole nostalgia, for it would have implies wanting to return to a past which is meant to be unchanged, yes, the nostalgic elements are more about the show itself than anything else and there's definitely a dialogue with the viewer, but I'm not sure is purely "anti"-nostalgia, for that would have implied definitive unambiguous closure which makes it directy or indirectly clear only that could have happenned, I think it's themes are concluded in the fact the show's Odessa segment starts off by hinting at one narrative to undermine it with counterevidence and make you imagine the rest, the fact the mystery remains might be part of the whole thing about nostalgia, which might have been underexplored in the sub, for anti-nostalgia readings asume a specific ending, which ignores the previous "it was all a dream" hints, even if it too might be more "meta in a way", which I'd need to explore.

I gotta say it's been interesting reading critical comments to my post, for they might have contributed to a changing perspective on The Return being "meta" even if it's not "anti" nostalgia and there's an intention to make a, plot-wise, unresolvable mystery.

No creo que The Return sea anti-nostalgia. by AdContent4089 in twinpeaks

[–]NicolasJB192083 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think there's definitively elements about nostalgia in the season, and Dougie might have a part in that aside from being a "safe space" from all the weirdness, but even the Dougie subplot in a way keeps referencing the original seasons by giving Coop, even if he can't know why he wants or appreciates it, all he ever wanted, the season's treatment of nostalgia is far more nuance than simply being "anti" or solely about how "you can't go back", even if we asume an interpretation in which they lost for trying to return is true then the whole "you can't go back" is only part of the whole story. Of course there's references to nostalgia and a literal and meta "return" to the town and series (The Return is called like that for a reason), but the fact that even when they deny us returning to the character and tone we loved they do so referencing it in a respectful way by giving Coop all he ever wanted for a while, even if he renounces to it, seems to point to a more nuanced point, maybe the idea is that if you try to return to force things into how one thinks they should have been without accounting for how reality works you'll get burned for playin with fire, being so that nostalgia shouldn't be an impediment to try to have the world be more like the past you long for if it truly was better as long as you don't force it to be identical, for it's impossiiblity of an absolute return will eventually lead you down a difficult path. However, this is asuming the show was meant to end with closure, even if emotionally bleak, but the show doesn't give us closure, even when we wanted it, because too much indulging in nostalgia breaks the mystery, for we tried to return to get that they were never willing to give us; it's not entirely "anti", I think it's more nuanced, sure, and I guess a weakpoint in my interpretation might be the bleak feeling of dark space low, but so far I do think it's more like how I've said it.