He talks with Laura, Laura is toying with him saying ' come on Bobby, you know you love me ' or whatever ( they are at their highschool ) Bobby finally smiles and says ' you know I love you '
Then he walks away playfully, backwards... but he keeps doing that for a bizarrely extended amount of time...
... yes Agent Cooper makes reference to the dream in the series... does he mention this in the movie also? I started watching the TV series. I am on season 1 episode 3. Maybe after watching it, the scene I described will make sense.
Agent Cooper makes reference to the dream in the series... does he mention this in the movie also?
Indeed he did.
I compiled a list (which may or may not be complete) of the times when dreams (as an activity) were mentioned in the Twin Peaks saga, as well as when the commonplace use of the word is used, and started a thread awhile back:
Not that I create threads for popularity, but my threads typically sink faster than a blue box full of pearls in Pearl Lake, which indicates that not many would entertain the idea. I suppose.
Anyway, I've also raised the question on another thread (which imdb has deemed necessary to delete for some reason) that Cooper may be dead and what we are seeing is Cooper in a bardo state.
Do I really believe either of these possibilities? Well, not conclusively. But the point right now is that either possibility would certainly explain bizarre scenes such as the students twirling around the school yard as if they could hear the funky music playing and were responding to it.
There's always music in the air.
I don't find Bobby's behavior in and of itself that strange. Dude could be pretty weird sometimes.
Kinda like everyone else residing in Twin Peaks.
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I appreciate your good work. I worry for you though... I mean, I think you need to find out what Lynch was thinking, what he was goin for. You could just be making all this up in your own mind, which I guess is OK, but it's not necessarily the 'truth', ya dig?
Laura is becoming a magician like her father. She's casting spells. Remember the scene when Leland arrives in Ben's office and Ben and Jerry start dancing. They using,,,,,, MAGIC to manipulate the people around them. The spell Laura casts on Bobbie spreads to others in the school. I't also a metaphor for everyone in the school being high. Leland is the magician from the poem and if things had turned out differently Laura would have been a magician as well.
She has a kind of psychiatric cabaret. Very good. There was something about Suez.