
Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992)
Año de lanzamiento: 1992
Nación: France, United States
Alternative Title: Twin Peaks: Os Últimos Dias de Laura Palmer, Twin Peaks - Der Film, Twin Peaks: Laura Palmers sidste dage, Twin Peaks: fuego camina conmigo, Twin Peaks - tuli kulje kanssani
Director: David Lynch
Writer: David Lynch, Robert Engels
Producción & Género
Productor: Producer: Gregg Fienberg
Co-Producer: Johanna Ray, John Wentworth
Executive Producer: David Lynch, Mark Frost
Compañías: CiBy 2000, CiBy Picutres
Género: Avant-Garde, Cult, Drama, Horror, Mystery, Thriller
Budget: 10.000.000
Premios & Similares
Premios:
Similar:
Palabras clave
Palabras clave: 1990s, brutality, criterion, demonic, detective, disturbed teenager, double life, drug addiction, drugs, fbi, fbi agent, high school, incest, investigation, murder, mysterious events, orgy, prequel, prostitution, psychotronic, rural area, secret, serial killer, sexual abuse, small town, supernatural, surreal, violence, washington state
Historia
In the rural town of Twin Peaks, Washington, high school student Laura Palmer leads a double life: she's revered as a homecoming queen by day but secretly engages in drug addiction and prostitution at night. Meanwhile, in the nearby town of Deer Meadow, FBI Agent Desmond goes missing while investigating the murder of a teenage girl. When Agent Dale Cooper has a vision that another life will be claimed by the same killer, he becomes determined to solve both cases. The film follows Laura's harrowing final days leading up to her eventual murder.
Resumen
Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me is a surreal psychological horror film directed by David Lynch and released in 1992. Serving as both a prequel and sequel to Lynch's iconic TV series 'Twin Peaks,' the movie focuses on the final days of Laura Palmer, played by Sheryl Lee, who also portrayed the character in the original series. The film is renowned for its disturbing realism, achieved partly through Lee's powerful performance. Despite initially receiving mixed reviews, it has since been reevaluated and is now considered a crucial component of the Twin Peaks mythology.