Ok, I just searched the forums using the keywords "twin peaks" for threads about the tv series and found nothing.... Just so I don't get hanged or anything...
Anyways....
I've been watching season one of this fantastic tv series lately. One thing that I came to think of, and this is kind of far-fetched, is the name of that character, Ronette Pulaski. As most of you people surely know, the director Roman Polanski risks being arrested if he returns to USA because of him being convicted of statutory rape of a 13-year old girl.
In "Twin Peaks" Ronette Pulaski is a high school girl that escapes after having been raped and tortured. I just got this idea that the name Ronette Pulaski, which obviously is similar to the name of the director, was some kind of deliberate reference.
Has anyone else been geeky enough to notice this?
Anyways....
I've been watching season one of this fantastic tv series lately. One thing that I came to think of, and this is kind of far-fetched, is the name of that character, Ronette Pulaski. As most of you people surely know, the director Roman Polanski risks being arrested if he returns to USA because of him being convicted of statutory rape of a 13-year old girl.
In "Twin Peaks" Ronette Pulaski is a high school girl that escapes after having been raped and tortured. I just got this idea that the name Ronette Pulaski, which obviously is similar to the name of the director, was some kind of deliberate reference.
Has anyone else been geeky enough to notice this?
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The novelist does not long to see the lion eat grass. He realizes that one and the same God created the wolf and the lamb, then smiled, "seeing that his work was good".
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They had temporarily escaped the factories, the warehouses, the slaughterhouses, the car washes - they'd be back in captivity the next day but now they were out - they were wild with freedom. They weren't thinking about the slavery of poverty. Or the slavery of welfare and food stamps. The rest of us would be all right until the poor learned how to make atom bombs in their basements.
The novelist does not long to see the lion eat grass. He realizes that one and the same God created the wolf and the lamb, then smiled, "seeing that his work was good".
--------
They had temporarily escaped the factories, the warehouses, the slaughterhouses, the car washes - they'd be back in captivity the next day but now they were out - they were wild with freedom. They weren't thinking about the slavery of poverty. Or the slavery of welfare and food stamps. The rest of us would be all right until the poor learned how to make atom bombs in their basements.