any fans of "twin peaks" the series?

There has been lots of chatter about a revival about Twin Peaks. I love this series. I have mixed feelings about a new series but I thought the show was amazing. I am not a person who usually likes to re watch shows and movies but I never tire of Twin Peaks. I love me some Agent Cooper.

oh noooo, I think the original series is too good, I hope they don't try to remake this unless it's david lunch again directing this
 
oh noooo, I think the original series is too good, I hope they don't try to remake this unless it's david lunch again directing this


I'd be skeptical even if it were David Lynch directing it. The first season of Twin Peaks was excellent and quirky. By the second season, it had lost a lot of its appeal. It seemed like once the mystery of Laura's murder is solved, David Lynch had no clue what to do with the series.

The show did spawn some memorable quotes though. Anything the Log Lady said was pure gold. :biggrin:
 
:sad:
Catherine Coulson, Log Lady on ‘Twin Peaks,’ Dies at 71

Catherine E. Coulson, who played the Log Lady on David Lynch’s “Twin Peaks” TV series and was set to return to the new Showtime version, died Monday morning of cancer. She was 71.

“We are all deeply sad, she meant so much to so many,” said her agent, Mary Dangerfield, who confirmed her death.
Coulson, who also worked as a camera assistant, reprised the Log Lady role in the feature “Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me” and more recently, she appeared on an episode of “Portlandia” and in the film “Redwood Highway.”

Lynch said in a statement, “Today I lost one of my dearest friends, Catherine Coulson. Catherine was solid gold. She was always there for her friends — she was filled with love for all people — for her family — for her work. She was a tireless worker. She had a great sense of humor — she loved to laugh and make people laugh. She was a spiritual person — a longtime TM meditator. She was the Log Lady.”

Coulson worked with Lynch as assistant director on his 1977 debut feature “Eraserhead,” where they began discussing the idea of a woman who carried around a log. She described her Margaret Lanterman character as the “only normal person on the show,” but qualified that she’s “had some trauma and bonded with this Ponderosa pine.” The ABC show ran for two seasons in 1990 and 1991.

She also appeared in Lynch’s 1974 short film “The Amputee” as a woman with both legs amputated.

When she appeared at a Philadelphia event last December, she was asked if Lynch had any suggestions for her character in the new “Twin Peaks. “He suggested I talk about sustainable forestry,” she told the Wall St. Journal at the time.

Coulson worked as first or second assistant camera on “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan,” “Modern Romance,” “Youngblood” and “Night on Earth.”
After moving back to her birthplace of Ashland, Ore., she appeared in numerous plays for the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, including “August, Osage County,” “Much Ado About Nothing,” “Hamlet” and “Chicago.” Elsewhere she appeared in “Major Barbara,” “The Elephant Man” and “The Threepenny Opera.”
Coulson was married to “Eraserhead” and “Twin Peaks” star Jack Nance before marrying Marc Sirinsky, with whom she had a daughter.
http://variety.com/2015/tv/news/catherine-coulson-log-lady-twin-peaks-dies-dead-1201604367/