Did you miss The Great Northern last episode? I sure did. Audrey and Ben's shared scene was simply not enough. But this episode makes up for it.
It's nighttime in the small town. Icelanders are dancing and singing on the third floor of The Great Northern Hotel. It's 3 a.m. A Federal Agent tosses and turns. He pulls out a small, black tape recorder and begins to speak..
Cooper has lost almost 100% of his ability to control his environment and is angered. He asks Diane to mail him some earplugs, overnight delivery, so he can sleep in peace. (But when is she going to receive the tape in the mail?) In the morning, the Icelanders are still full of vim and singing. Cooper is, as he tells Audrey, tired and a little on edge. He's all business and hardly has a chance to flirt with Audrey. Oh, but wait, what's this? "How old
are you, Audrey?" 18! SCORE. It's legal, Coop, have at it! "I'll see YOU later, Audrey," he softly says, and off he jaunts.
Michael "Jerry" Douglas is back! He brought the Icelanders with him, and he's IN LOVE. Her name is Heppa. She's a giant Snow Queen with a smile like a sunrise on an iceflow. You could go blind looking at her. And, most most
most importantly, she gave him a leg of lamb. Love! At its finest. Ben doesn't care, as long as he gets those Icelanders to invest. And a sure deal to have them invest is to take them up to...
You know where.
Ben's worst nightmare, a weeping Leland Palmer, staggers in, and Ben panics. The Icelanders must be prevented from seeing and, most especially, hearing Leland. Ben urges Leland to take time off, to take his wife somewhere,
anywhere! but Jesus Christ,
not at The Great Northern! Except Leland is afraid to. Why are you afraid, Leland? Why are you afraid.
The police continue their (warrantless?) search on Renault's appartment, and are joined by the doctor. I don't know why the doctor's there, but he's awesome, so I'll take it. It is determined that the blood on Leo's shirt is AB-, which is not Laura's type. The plot thickens.. Who could it be?! (It's Jacques Renault's.) Cooper finds a copy of Flesh World sticking to the ceiling, and I don't want to know how it got up there. With some fancy thinking, Cooper determines that Jacques is the creator of this heck of a page-turner, and
surely Leo is involved, too, because his truck is in a picture in the magazine. We all need hobbies.
Bobby and Shelly again. Shelly makes Bobby breakfast, and asks him what he'd do if Leo walked in. Bobby continues with his idle threats and pretends that he'll shoot him. Look at this pretending:
When Deputy Andy comes in to look for Leo, Bobby scurries away in fright, and Shelly plants a story about Leo being a bad guy. But Shelly, he already
is a bad guy. You don't need to make up a lie (about Leo and Jacquese arguing outside).
Ed sort of "breaks up" with Norma because Nadine is the craziest person in town. She is. I haven't talked about her yet. She is irrelevant to the main plot, however. The
whole thing is mostly irrelevant, but I thought I'd bring it up again, because Norma has that thing going on with her husband being let out of jail. You'll see more of why that's important later. But in the meantime, Hank is going to try to earn his way back into Norma's heart. We'll see how that works out for him.
Audrey goes off to her father's department store to check in for her first day and to figure out where she's going to be placed. The manager fondly remembers her from when she was a sweet little kid. He wants to put her in the wrapping department. This simply can't be. Laura didn't work in the wrapping department. We need perfume. But the manager thinks this is far too sensitive an area for a new girl.. Then Audrey is totally rad again. She walks behind his desk, ruffles him up a bit, and says that if he doesn't give her the job and keep quiet about it to her father, she'll rip her dress in half, scream, and you know the rest. Mr. Manager realizes that Audrey is quite a bit like her father...
Oh god. James and Donna again. Ok, let's just get through this.
We learn: James' dad is a musician who ran away and James' mother is an alcoholic and sort of prostitute. I assume this is because James is such a disappointment. MOVING ON. They meet up with Madeleine -let's call her Maddy- at the Double R Restaurant. James is a little over-eager to get her a Cherry Coke, which she never drinks. James and Donna think they know who killed Laura (they have no idea, come on) and ask Maddy to find a box in a hiding place in Laura's room. Maddy agrees.
Our favorite police force partake in Doughtnut Deast No. 4! Phew, I was getting worried there. Cooper spots inside a pantry a picture of a cabin with red drapes in the windows.. The drapes from his dream. He then enjoys Flesh World. A lot. A.
Lot.
He sees a picture of a woman, cut off before the face, who he is sure is Laura. He thinks this because in the background are
red drapes. The same as in the cabin, the same as in his dream. Ok, that's it! Time to find that there cabin!
Bobby's parents decide Bobby needs some counseling with Dr. Jacoby, and I agree. The kid has problems. Their idea is family counseling, though, and that's just silly, considering who Bobby is. Jacoby sees this right away and tells them to bugger off so he can get some
real work done. You know in movies when a person in authority who is trying to get in touch with the goshdarn kids these days decides to "break from the mold" and try to show that they know what it's like to be a teen or whatever? They usually start off with saying the line, "Let's just cut the crap" or something similar. That's what Jacoby says, and Bobby knows lameness will soon follow.
Except it doesn't. Because Jacoby doesn't give a shit about what Bobby thinks. He just wants to make Bobby cry. Annnnd he does. I think maybe he may have broken a few rules in the Psychiatrist's Handbook with his questions: "What happened the first time that you and Laura made love? Bobby, did you
cry? And then what did Laura do, did she laugh at you?" Props to you, Jacoby. Bobby heads straight to the chaise lounge that no psychiatrist
really has in his (or her!) office.
Bobby tells us about Laura's personality. It's sad. Look, this scene is really good. Jacoby leads the witness a lot, but it's all true. Laura had darkness in her, and other people made her sick. She would find people's weaknesses and exploit them. She wanted to corrupt people because she was corrupt. Laura's the reason Bobby's an asshole. Laura made Bobby sell drugs so she could have them. Bobby, I'm starting to be on your side.
Into the woods! The fellas, Truman, Cooper, Hawk, and the doctor, go to find the cabin. They find a cabin, but it's not Jacques'. It's the Log Lady's. Ok, time almost out: One thing that I
do not understand about this show is why Cooper doesn't get behind the Log Lady's ideas. Why are her quirks any less valid than his? He's just being disrespectful. Everyone else has lots of respect, why can't he trust them for once? Jesus. Get over it, Cooper.
Log Lady tells us again that the Log saw something. (She tells us also that her husband, a logging man, met the devil. Huh.) Cooper breaks down and asks the Log what it saw. It saw dark and laughing, and owls. There were two men and two girls, the owls were near, the darkness was pressing in on Laura. Then later, another man moves in, and there are screams of one woman in the distance. The owls then? Silent.
Conclusion: Girls = Laura and Ronette. Boys = Jacques and Leo possibly. Who is the the third man? It's quite possible that it's Orson Welles or Jack White, but maybe not.
The guys go off and find the cabin.
Cooper's Dream Comes True Again: Record player is on repeat. "And there's always music in the air."
They find Waldo the bird (pretty birds sing), a camera with film (a lead!), some twine, blood on the carpet, and some One-Eyed Jacks poker chips in a cuckoo clock. One of the chips has a.. chip in it, where once was the letter J. New evidence to examine!
There's a party at The Great Northern for the Icelanders. "Home on the Range" is sung in Icelandic. If only Bjork could've been there. But who
do we have on the scene? We have Ben and Jerry, (Heppa,) Catherine and Pete Martell, Josie in a room alone somewhere smoking a cigarette, Audrey, and oh no.. Leland. Catherine hits the sauce right off, purposefully spills some of her drink on Ben's shoes, and demands she see him. Audrey overhears and sneaks into her cubby hole to listen. Now, I know this is Catherine and Ben we're talking about, but I actually thought something interesting might happen. But no, Catherine just wants to know why Ben had a One-Eyed Jacks poker chip last episode, because she knows of the ladies up there, and is a bit jealous. Whatever. Except Audrey sees this, and hears a bit about the mill burning-downage, so at least something came of this scene.
Outside, Jerry is making a weird speech (We are all Icelanders!), but then Glenn Miller starts playing. You know what happens next. Ben doesn't know what to do with the weeping Leland on the dance floor, but sics Catherine on him. Catherine saves the day and starts dancing. The Icelanders join in. Everyone's happy! Except for Leland, and Audrey. Audrey cries, because she has a soul.
Cut to the Palmer Residence, Maddy has found the box in Laura's room, and in it is a tape. She calls Donna to let her know. Sarah Palmer starts crying somewhere in the background, so Maddy runs back to her room for cover.
Annnd back to The Great Northern. Ben sneaks off to the room Josie is in and we discover that
they have a plot of their own. Ben has been telling Josie what Catherine has been telling him, and Josie now has the hidden book. Ben tries to kiss her hand, but Josie squirms. She may have a sinister plot, but at least she's true to Truman. Ben and Josie are going to proceed with some plan tomorrow night, apparently.
The second to last scene we spend with Leo, Shelly, and.. Norma's husband Hank? Shelly paces nervously inside. Leo packs gasoline into his car outside. Hank.. punches Leo in the face. Leo used to work for Hank, before Hank got sent off to prison, and Hank isn't so happy that Leo is prospering so well by himself. Hank makes some threats and stalks off. Leo goes into his house to demand beer, and pushes Shelly to the ground. Shelly has had enough! She pulls out her gun, and Leo makes the mistake that all villains do in movies. He grins and says, "You haven't got the guts!"
I don't know, she looks fairly gutsy. She shoots! Leo cries like a baby, or a cat, or a baby cat, and runs out the door, into the night.
To close the episode, we go back to The Great Northern, where Cooper sees his door ajar. ! He pulls out his gun and goes inside the dark room. A light comes on, and there's something strange in Cooper's bed..
Oh my.