The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 16, 1990 - Page 9 Twin Peaks reaches pinnacle of TV by Jen Bilik People magazine awarded it an A+, The New York Times put it on the front page of their arts section and the Village Voice devoted a cover story to "Rad TV." There hasn't been this much hoopla since J.R. was shot, but this time people are actually hailing Twin Peaks as quality TV. Is this an oxymoron, or have filmmaker David Lynch and partner Mark Frost actually suc- ceeded in breaking the boundaries of convention? Last Sunday, the two-hour Twin Peaks pilot aired after a year of clan- destine bargains, near-cancellation and insider speculation. Although Twin Peaks went into production in early 1989, ABC's equivocation re- garding its actual debut produced al- most as much mystery as the show itself. The very fact that Lynch, known for his independent produc- tions and less-than-savory eye for the bizarre, had agreed to do TV was enough to start people talking. It seemed an incongruous marriage, to combine the vision of Eraserhead and Blue Velvet with the medium that weekly offers trendsetters like Alf and Geraldo. But it works. Not only the pub- licity, but the show itself. Lynch, who claims to watch very little TV himself (except for a brief period from 1966-1969 when he was hooked on the daytime soaps), has combined the standard whodunnit drama with the implausible passion of Another World, and maintains a surprising integrity with his own style. Lynch also confesses to hav- ing watched Perry Mason as a kid, so it's easy to speculate on the roots for his venture into television. Twin Peaks (for those of you in the dark) starts off, as normal mys- teries do, with a murder. Laura Palmer, homecoming queen and soc extraordinaire, is found dead on a beach in the quiet little town of Twin Peaks. As in Blue Velvet, Lynch has placed this story in a small Northwestern American town that seems frightfully uneventful un- til one scratches the surface. Lynch maintains his artistic assertion that normalcy itself is suspect, and be- neath the surface of every warm community lies the vice of the big city. Lynch would go to a family party and film Aunt Trudy and Cousin Joe locked in embrace behind the back shed. He belies his obses- sion with the mundane with his evil glee in seeking the worst from the simplest of folk. After finding Laura dead, the in- vestigation is underway and the small town of 51,201 has fallen out Masters of the pen Writers Rubin and Pike work with plot, humor by Jay Pinka A little laughter is your one-way ticket out of the an- nals of misery that have been a trend in literature of the 19th and 20th centuries - that is, according to writers Gay Rubin and Larry Pike. Rubin, who is completing a degree in the M.F.A writing program at the University, will read from her work-in-progress, Cornucopia, tonight. Rubin snapped up the idea for this short novel, "a love story about a really terrific guy," from "a vegetable man who told me how he met his wife." "I extrapolate a lot from my experience," says Ru- bin. "My work is about the relationships people have with children, parents... about illusion and disillu- sion... society's expectations and rewards as opposed to the individual's inner rewards." Even though the vegetable man hailed her narrative curiousity from her very own kitchen, Rubin is any- thing but the sterotypical introverted "closet writer." The writer is a dynamic member of the literary com- munity. For many years she published Michigan Hot Apples, an anthology of both famous and unknown Michigan writers. Rubin's work has appeared in the Wayne State University feminist journal, Moving Out. A member and past president of Detroit Women Writers, she developed the Cranbrook Writer's Confer- ence, and recently taught creative writing at the Uni- versity. She milks her variety of experiences into a progression of events that make readers appreciate the resurrection of plot, the foundation of narrative. Rubin's writing has changed, of course, although she has "always gravitated toward fiction... for a while I wrote stories that were almost poems... now I'm re- ally concentrating on storyline," Larry Pike, professor at Macomb County Commu- nity College and ex-writer for the Gargoyle, will show us some tricks with which he weaves the color of humor into narrative when he reads from The Knit- ting Room this evening. Pike who graduated with a B.A in English from the University in 1954, went on to be the second student to graduate with an M.F.A in poetry from Wayne State. His appearances in the Michigan Poetry An- thology and this year's Passages North only hint at his success at communication. But like Rubin, although he can't say why, Pike is presently finding solace in fiction writing. Pike, who wrote Now That Good Jack Arm- strong's Gone (1981), and Hideout Matinees (1982), will soon be the proud father of a third, Pierced By Sound. Sound like a spiritual revelation? If laughter heals the soul, then to swim through the storylines of Pike might be a cure-all for the miasma of intellectu- alism. A fan of E. B. White, Nathaniel West and William Faulkner, Pike finds that "their comic senses have reinforced my own." Pike delivers two kinds of pizza: "The humor that makes you choke on your laughter, and the humor that makes you feel rich as you smile.... I like to be able to do both." "I think there's a comic spirit in writing that we're going to see more of in America," says Pike, "There's going to be more of the second variety." GAY RUBIN and LARRY PIKE will be reading tonight at 8:30 p.m. at Guild House.802 Monroe. of its Eden. Sheriff Harry S. Truman (Michael Ontkean) starts the investi- gation, but after a second girl creeps, bloodied and bludgeoned, across the state line, the FBI is called in the form of Special Agent Dale Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan, a Lynch veteran of Blue Velvet and Dune). Agent Cooper seems like a dog in a danc- ing school with his tendency to di- gress from matters at hand, but he sees minutiae that others miss, and his instincts are ludicrously on-tar- get. As a character, Agent Cooper is probably the most likely evolution of the Lynch legacy, with his non sequiturs and anal-retentive quirks. He talks constantly into a mini-tape recorder to a mysterious "Diane," and it's anybody's guess whether or not she actually exists. He informs her not only of new evidence, but also of the fabulous cherry pie at the lo- cal diner. Lynch plays with the standard mystery/soap opera archetypes, en- grossing one scene in sappy music and tears and the next in red herring clues and cliffhangers. He brings slow pacing into television with a tendency to linger on characters a few beats beyond normal length, making the viewer feel like a voyeur. The music itself is a mix of somber theme melody and jazzy snap beats with a walking bass, indicating the mood of each scene. Lynch plays with our viewing habits here, too, by occasionally mismatching upbeat music with a scene of grieving, as if to challenge the viewer's ingrained tendency to be manipulated by mu- sic. As a mystery, the plotdefinitely holds up to scrutiny. By the end of the pilot, we are no closer to learn- ing who dunnit than we were at the start. Instead, the plot has thickened to indicate a slavery/pornography ring, cocaine - and possibly super- natural phenomena. Unlike Agatha Christie, Lynch drops countless clues and systematically contradicts their relevancy. He is able to include as many as 15 significant characters without watering down their ability to engage us. And it's in its charac- ters that Twin Peaks distinguishes itself from other television and cin- ema in the soap/mystery world. Lynch and Frost present a script replete with odd characters who break the spell of suspense with their pe- culiar quirks. In the pilot, a woman who always carries around a log is introduced simply as the Log Lady. The scenes with Sheriff Truman's secretary are perhaps the most comic of both episodes; she seems to come from the Carol Kane school of com- edy with her blend of ditz and id- iosyncracy. When the Sheriff re- ceives a phone call, she tells him she's transferring the call to another line: "The phone in the other room, by the chair, the black phone. You know, the phone by the lamp. The lamp we moved from the other room yesterday. Not the old lamp, but the new one." There's only one phone. She arranges donuts like a sumptu- ous spread, piled according to kind and arranged in a rainbow across a huge table. The Sheriff's photogra- pher cries at every crime scene, and in the hallway of the high school a kid smurfs across the background with no explanation. As the mystery continues to un- fold in the first regular episode, di- rected by editor Duwayne Dunham, it's partially evident that Lynch was not at the helm. The scenes are shorter, more like typical TV with its rapid cutting. The camera doesn't have nearly the same tendency to fetishize objects into enigmas, and conversations are snappier. Yet the script is just as good, and the quick- ened pace could be partly due to time constraints. By the end of the first episode, we actually have a couple of suspects. Everybody, even the good guys, is having clandestine, adulter- ous affairs with everybody else. All the characters are still unrealisticAlly beautiful (thank God for TV), and the town still seems mired sonie- where between the '50s. and rhi- crowave ovens. Seven episodes have already been made, and ABC will show them all, regardless of ratings (which have been at the top of the charts). ABC will then decide whether or not'to pick it up as a standard, weekly series. Even mostly minus the Lynch directing touch, if the next six shows are as good as the first two, this is something to watch. I can't see what they'd do after the mystery's been solved as far as a long-term series... commit more murders in Twin Peaks? Even Lynch's evil conception of the small town can't realistically go very far beyond this one incident. But for the meantime, Twin Peaks is a refresh- ing addition to the world of the couch potato. TWIN PEAKS will be shown 'on Channel 7 at 9 p.m. Thursdays for the next six weeks. FORUM Continued from page 8 campus. As the number of students in the department grew, the format changed to include only student works. In th%, beginning, public dis- cussion of the pieces took place after each Forum, but with further expan- sion of the program this too was discontinued. Graduates of the University of Michigan composition program often go on to become part of the mainstream of contemporary Ameri- can music. Many alumns who were represented in these forums have won some of the most prestigious awards in music composition, in- cluding three Pulitzer Prizes (Leslie Bassett, George Crumb and Roger Reynolds), numerous Guggenheim and American Academy in Rome Fellowships, Charles Ives Fellow- ships, as well as commissions by the major orchestras and chamber ensembles in the United States and Europe. The concert offers music for nearly every taste, from works for traditional ensembles (Roy Swan- son's String Quartet; Stacy Garrop's Babelon: Trio for Strings) to com- positions for percussion with other instruments (Glenn Palmer's Kik But and Deniz Ince's Violentella)to pieces with dance and narration (Black Art by William (Bill) C. Banfield). Also to be heard tonight are Matthew Iskra's Stalin's Last Symphony, Jacques Desjardins's En Noir en Blanc, Phosphenes by Erik Santos, Winter Songs by John Vis- concelos Costa, Sanctus by John Strang, Five Miniatures by Clint Bajakian, Eric Witt's Being and Mark Kilstofte's Missa L'Homme on the Range, with members of the OK Chorale. THE COMPOSERS' FORUM will be held in the School of Music Recital Hall tonight at 8 p.m. Ad- mission is free. You want it all. We've got Hylights Daily Sports r _ _ , .._ ... ... _. , _____________________________ - I 1 41 a $.,,IC ",,, ' y ,,i, F 'K4. 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