At 11:30 AM on February 24th, FBI Agent Dale Cooper entered the town of Twin Peaks…
Bi-weekly, we will be screening episodes of season 2 from the iconic series created by the visionary minds of David Lynch and Mark Frost at the ByTowne Cinema.
S2.E1 – May the Giant Be with You
A wounded Agent Cooper has a vision of a giant who gives him several clues about the murder of Laura Palmer. Shelly and Pete recover from the mill fire, but Josie and Catherine are missing.
S2.E2 – Aoma
Albert determines that neither Leo nor Jacques killed Laura, but he is unable to find any leads into who shot Cooper. Cooper says they must find the third man, who he believes to be Bob, the gray-haired man.
S2.E3 – The Man Behind the Glass
Ronette is attacked in her hospital bed by an unseen person. Jean Renault, brother of Jacques and Bernard, plans to blackmail Ben Horne for the release of Audrey. Donna meets with Harold Smith, a shut-in who had befriended Laura.
S2.E4 – Laura’s Secret Diary
Leland confesses to killing Jacques Renault. Andy wants to take a new sperm count test. Rumor spreads that a food critic is coming to Twin Peaks. Jean asks Ben to set a trap for Cooper in exchange for Audrey’s life.
S2.E5 – The Orchid’s Curse
Cooper remembers the message under his bed. Shelly and Bobby begin Leo’s home care. Sternwood hears pretrial motions and declares Leo not fit for trial. Nadine comes home, still thinking she’s in high school.
S2.E6 – Demons
James saves the girls from a tormented Harold. Cooper brings Audrey home. Bobby and Shelly learn that their insurance plans have backfired. Donna tries to convince Truman that Harold Smith has Laura’s secret diary.
S2.E7 – Lonely Souls
Cooper and the One-Armed Man inspect guests at the Great Northern. Hawk finds Harold Smith dead – with a mysterious suicide note and the diary torn to shreds. Leo speaks to Bobby about “new shoes.”
S2.E8 – Drive with a Dead Girl
Donna and James wonder why Maddy left so suddenly. Norma’s mother arrives with the news that she’s married a new man, Ernie Niles. Cooper tells Leland they arrested Ben Horne for Laura’s murder.
S2.E9 – Arbirary Law
Albert returns to examine Maddy. Cooper asks for 24 hours to finish his case. James and Donna reaffirm their love. Andy accidentally leads Donna and Cooper back to Mrs. Tremond’s house.
S2.E10 – Dispute Between Brothers
Leland is laid to rest and Sarah Palmer tries to accept all that has happened to her family. Dr. Jacoby returns from Hawaii. Cooper prepares to leave Twin Peaks. Mayor Milford objects to his brother’s engagement to a younger woman.
S2.E11 – Masked Ball
Mrs. Briggs talks about her husband’s disappearance into the woods. Nadine is put on the wrestling team, where she falls for Mike Nelson. James is hired by the mysterious, wealthy Evelyn Marsh. Dick takes on an orphan, Little Nicky.
S2.E13 – Checkmate
Major Briggs has no memory of the place he was taken, but now has an odd tattoo on his neck. Andy and Dick break into Little Nicky’s files. Mike and Nadine begin an affair. Evelyn asks James to kill her husband.
S2.E14 – Double Play
Windom Earle has taken his first victim in the deadly chess game. Audrey tells Bobby they have to save Ben from his civil war fantasy. Leo awakes and attacks Shelly, but Bobby is able to fend him off.
S2.E15 – Slaves and Masters
The police look for James in the Marsh murder. Bobby and Shelly tell Truman that Leo escaped; and Bobby reveals that he saw Hank shoot Leo the night the mill burned. Albert returns to Twin Peaks with information on Windom Earle.
S2.E19 – Variations on Relations
Cooper and company find the mysterious petroglyph. Windom Earle befriends a rock ‘n’ roll youth, and tells him tales of places called the White and Black Lodge. Pete helps Catherine open the first puzzle box.
S2.E21 – Miss Twin Peaks
Windom Earle sets his sights on the Miss Twin Peaks contest. Lucy chooses a father for her baby. Leo is punished when he frees Major Briggs. Cooper unlocks the key to entering the Black Lodge. Annie and Dale make a commitment.

David Lynch was one of the most singular and uncompromising artists in modern cinema. Across film, television, music, and painting, he created worlds that felt instantly recognizable yet utterly unlike anything else, places where beauty and dread coexisted, where dreams bled into waking life, and where emotion mattered more than explanation. Lynch trusted audiences to feel their way through his work, inviting them into experiences that were hypnotic, unsettling, deeply funny, and profoundly human.
From Eraserhead to Blue Velvet, Mulholland Drive to Twin Peaks, David Lynch’s influence extends far beyond his filmography. He reshaped how stories could be told on screen, empowered generations of artists to take creative risks, and reminded audiences that not everything needs to be understood to be felt. His work continues to resonate because it invites curiosity, patience, and wonder—qualities that remain as vital now as ever.
Remembering David Lynch means returning to his worlds, listening closely, and embracing the strange, beautiful mysteries he so generously shared.

The impact of Twin Peaks on television and popular culture can not be overstated. At a time when network television was often predictable, the series revealed that audiences craved ambiguity, long-form storytelling, and bold artistic risks. It ushered in the era of auteur-driven television, laying the groundwork for countless creators and series that followed.
More than three decades later, Twin Peaks stands as a beacon for filmmakers, showrunners, musicians, and artists. The show's refusal to provide easy answers keeps it alive in dynamic conversation and interpretation.
Twin Peaks endures not because it simplifies itself, but because it invites viewers back, time and again, into its strange, beautiful, and unforgettable dream.
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Wednesday, January 10, 7:00 p.m.
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