Twin Peaks: The Missing Pieces is a 2014 compilation of deleted and extended scenes from Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me, a 1992 psychological horror film directed by David Lynch and written by Lynch and Robert Engels. The scenes were not included in the early home video releases of Fire Walk with Me and remained under lock and key for over twenty years, although their content was generally known to the public via the Fire Walk with Me script.
When filming Fire Walk with Me, Lynch shot up to five hours of material but cut the film to two hours and fourteen minutes for its theatrical release, explaining that he wanted to focus the film on the story of Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee). The deleted scenes principally concerned the FBI's investigation into the murder of Teresa Banks (Pamela Gidley), who shared a killer with Laura, and everyday interactions with characters from seasons one and two of the Twin Peaks television series (1990–91). The Missing Pieces restores characters who were entirely cut from Fire Walk with Me, such as Josie Packard (Joan Chen), Ed Hurley (Everett McGill), and Nadine Hurley (Wendy Robie), and adds material to characters whose participation was reduced in the final edit.
Although The Missing Pieces is loosely structured as a feature-length film and has a feature-length runtime, it is not a standalone story and omits expository and storyline material from Fire Walk with Me, meaning that familiarity with the original film is essential to understanding The Missing Pieces. It has generally been released as a special feature to home video releases of Fire Walk with Me, such as CBS Home Entertainment's Twin Peaks: The Entire Mystery and Twin Peaks: From Z to A and The Criterion Collection's Fire Walk with Me re-release.
FBI Agents Sam Stanley and Chester Desmond question the owner of Hap's Diner about the recently murdered Teresa Banks, his former employee. The local sheriff unsuccessfully fights Desmond to stop him from moving Teresa's body to Portland for further analysis.
Special Agent Dale Cooper chitchats with his unseen secretary Diane. After Desmond disappears, Cooper debriefs Stanley.
In Argentina, Agent Phillip Jeffries abruptly vanishes. Several years later, he materializes in Gordon Cole's Philadelphia office and tells Cole, Cooper, and Albert Rosenfield about his vision of the spirit world.
In Twin Peaks, cocaine-dealing high schoolers Bobby Briggs and Mike Nelson lament that they owe Leo Johnson $5,000 and are running low on product. Leo abuses his wife Shelly.
Laura Palmer is horrified to find pages ripped out of her secret diary. She borrows her mother Sarah's car on the pretext that she forgot to bring her books home. Sarah discovers the ruse and tells Laura that she does not need to lie to her.
At dinner, Leland Palmer eagerly anticipates a delegation of Norwegians, who are planning a major real estate deal with Leland's boss Benjamin Horne.[a] Leland teaches Laura and Sarah to introduce themselves in Norwegian. Laura and Sarah roar with laughter at Leland's antics.
Laura, who moonlights as a prostitute, sneaks out to exchange sex for drugs with a trucker. Teresa Banks, another prostitute, wonders why her client Leland backed out of a prearranged foursome. After deducing that Leland is Laura's father, she tries to blackmail him.[b]
At the Double R Diner, Laura picks up the day's Meals on Wheels shipments, but backs out.[c]
After Laura expresses gloomy thoughts to Donna Hayward, Doc Hayward gives Laura a comforting message.[d] Laura cheers up, but becomes icy after Leland asks her to come home. Donna's parents realize that something is wrong between Laura and Leland.
At home, Laura hears BOB's voice from the ceiling fan above the stairs. BOB begins to possess her; a demonic smile creeps across her face. Laura comes to when Sarah interrupts her. Terrified, Sarah repeats that "it's happening again", implying that Leland went through a similar experience.
Laura, Donna, Jacques Renault, and their clients recklessly drive across the Canadian border to Jacques' nightclub.[e]
Bobby, who just killed a man,[f] asks Laura to hide $10,000 for him. Laura needles Bobby about the shooting, exacerbating his guilt. To Bobby's dismay, the victim was carrying baby laxative and not cocaine.
Laura's possessive psychiatrist, Dr. Lawrence Jacoby, demands to know why he has not heard from Laura recently. Laura disgustedly replies that she has recorded audiotapes for him.
On the night of her death, Laura has an awkward dinner with Sarah; Leland is working late. Laura visits Bobby and is welcomed by Major Briggs, who is reading an apocalyptic vision from the Book of Revelation to his wife Betty.[g] After returning home, Laura sneaks out.[h] Leland sees her, but lets her leave.[i]
As Leland kills Laura, the Log Lady hears Laura's screams.
Pete Martell humorously defuses a complaint by customer Dell Mibbler, who says that Pete and Josie Packard's two-by-fours are not exactly two by four inches. After Dell rebuffs a straight answer, Pete argues that at Dell's bank a dollar is not worth what it used to be. Although the answer is absurd, Dell is satisfied.
Ed Hurley and Nadine Hurley stop by the Double R for coffee, but Nadine storms out after seeing Ed's ex-girlfriend (and secret lover) Norma Jennings working the counter. Ed returns to apologize to Norma, who is crying. Later, Ed and Norma spend a quiet evening together and talk about their situation.
Sheriff Truman and his deputies, Andy and Hawk, plan to catch a local drug dealer. Later, Andy, Truman, and Lucy chat at the sheriff's station.
In the Black Lodge, Dale Cooper speaks with the Man from Another Place.
While Annie Blackburn recovers from her ordeal with Windom Earle, a nurse steals her blue ring, which Laura, Teresa, and MIKE have also worn.
Doc Hayward and Sheriff Truman hear Cooper's doppelgänger injure himself. The doppelgänger lies on the floor to await them. Doc encourages the doppelgänger to get bed rest, but he protests that he has not yet brushed his teeth.
David Lynch originally shot more than five hours of footage for Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me, which he cut down to two hours and fourteen minutes.[1] He denied making the cuts for runtime reasons,[2] instead explaining that he wanted to focus the film on Laura Palmer, and that the deleted scenes "were too tangential to keep the main story progressing properly".[3] He remarked that "it might be good sometime to do a longer version with these other things in, because a lot of the characters that are missing in the finished movie had been filmed. They're part of the picture, they're just not necessary for the main story."[3]
Although the film's editor Mary Sweeney said that Lynch would "love" if the deleted scenes were released,[4] the unused footage was not released for over twenty years.[5] Lynch suggested that the distribution companies that owned the home video rights to Fire Walk with Me could not agree with him on a price to edit, mix, and color grade the remaining footage.[6][7]
The deleted scenes remained under lock and key, but the film's shooting script was publicly accessible.[8] The script gave fans a general sense of what Lynch cut from the final edit, including interactions between Agents Desmond, Stanley, and Cooper; a fight between Desmond and Deer Meadow Sheriff Cable; a lost and disoriented Agent Jeffries; a dinner where Leland Palmer entertains his family; conversations between Laura and BOB's disembodied voice; the revelation that the package of cocaine that Bobby Briggs steals from the deputy was actually baby laxative; and an extended version of the scene where Cooper's doppelgänger interacts with Sheriff Truman and Doc Hayward.[9]
During the twenty-two-year interval between Fire Walk with Me and The Missing Pieces, the deleted scenes became a frequent topic of discussion within the Twin Peaks fandom. Various commentators described them as the fandom's "Holy Grail".[10][11] At various points, fans campaigned for distributors to release the deleted scenes as a director's cut or as special features to a home video release.[5]
In 2012, Lynch and Mark Frost secretly began developing a third season of Twin Peaks,[12][13] which premiered in 2017.[14] In January 2015, they delivered a version of the season three script to Showtime (the cable TV arm of Paramount, which owned the rights to Twin Peaks through Aaron Spelling Productions).[15] While Lynch and Frost worked on the season three script, Lynch and Paramount's home video subsidiary CBS Home Entertainment agreed to release a box set combining the first two seasons of Twin Peaks with Fire Walk with Me. As part of the deal, Lynch produced The Missing Pieces as a special feature for the box set. Given the longstanding speculation about the deleted scenes, the never-before-seen material in The Missing Pieces was deemed the highlight of the re-release.[5][16][17]
While promoting the box set, Lynch commented that "it was great going back into the world [of Twin Peaks] ... and living with the people again".[18] The third season was still a secret at the time, but when asked about future Twin Peaks stories, Lynch teased that "you never say never".[18]
To commemorate the box set, Paramount organized a special screening of The Missing Pieces at the Vista Theatre in Los Angeles on July 16, 2014. Lynch delivered a cryptic introduction about the beauty of wood.[19][20] Three months later, Showtime announced the third season of Twin Peaks.[21]
Reviewers generally agreed that The Missing Pieces was not a standalone feature film, instead characterizing it as "a series of vignettes that capture stolen moments";[22] a "fragmented ... cluster of vignettes";[18] and a series of "dead ends, intriguing digressions, smart discards, and intriguing unused options".[5] One writer said that the film "seemingly presumes we'll be watching with full knowledge of already-seen events".[16]
Several reviewers noted that The Missing Pieces still adds to the Fire Walk with Me story, despite its fragmented nature. Jace Lacob (BuzzFeed) explained that the film eventually "coalesces into something" that "give[s] us a deeper portrait of Laura and those around her ... something alternately funny and heartbreaking, terrifying and uplifting".[22] He added that the deleted scenes further showcased Sheryl Lee's "incredibly nuanced and powerful performance ... giv[ing] television's most famous dead girl a profound sense of vulnerability".[22] Chuck Bowen (Slant Magazine) noted that The Missing Pieces specifically "underline[s] the town's willed obliviousness to Laura's misery".[23]
However, critics cautioned that The Missing Pieces did not resolve any of the mysteries left by the second season's cliffhanger ending. Jonathan Eburne (Los Angeles Review of Books) noted that while the 2014 box set was "terrific ... it remains steadfast in its refusal to [resolve lingering questions about its characters' fates or the series' "otherworldly cosmology"]".[24] Lacob agreed that the film did not "pull back the curtain on the larger mysteries of Twin Peaks".[22]
In the years since The Missing Pieces was released, several bootleg fan edits have attempted to splice the deleted scenes into Fire Walk with Me to create a coherent whole.[25][26][27]
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