![]() We see Mike reciting the poem I still know by heart, then the grimy vile Bob. The second episode is coming to an end, and Agent Cooper settles down for the night. The very next week was when David Lynch indeed planted himself in my mind for what will likely be the rest of my life. I remember the chills on my skin in the final shot of the episode: the gloved hand in flashlight holding up the broken heart necklace Donna and James had just buried. And there was a constant menace just under the surface of this dream-like landscape. The hero of the show was unlike any I’d ever seen. The music was so strange and the people even more so. So I sat there and became lost in another world. One television in a time where tablets and the like were a distant dream. ![]() It was my mom who wanted to watch it so my presence there was simply default. I remember sitting on the living room floor as the ABC Sunday Night Movie started, the two-hour premiere of a new television show. These would come to be the two sides of David Lynch I would get to know: the staid hero and the dark evil beneath everything.Īpril 8th, 1990. What I remember most though is the nightmarish Duke Vladimir Harkonnen brilliantly played by Kenneth MacMillan. The blue-eyed Paul Atreides, savior of the desert planet Arrakis. That is where I first remember Kyle MacLachlan from. I had seen Dune, broadcast on a local channel, the extended television cut.
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