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The origin of the word garmonbozia is unclear it's probably a nonsense word although it sounds a bit like garbanzo, otherwise known as the chick pea. In Fire Walk with Me, the creamed corn is called garmonbozia, which is defined as pain and sorrow, and which Killer BOB, MIKE, and other evil entities need to survive. The old woman’s creepy grandson (played by Lynch’s look-alike son, a miniature doppelganger if you ever saw one) is holding the corn, which promptly disappears again. When Donna brings a Meals on Wheels delivery to an elderly lady, the lady says, “Do you see creamed corn on that plate? … I requested no creamed corn.” When she asks again if Donna sees creamed corn, the corn has disappeared. “What really is creamed corn? Is it a symbol for something else?” We're guessing yes. “Where does creamed corn figure into the workings of the universe?” asks the Log Lady. Moments before Maddy arrives, we see the opening credits of the show within a show, Invitation of Love, which stars "Selena Swift" as a set of twins, Emerald and Jade. Laura also has an actual double: her cousin Maddy Ferguson, played by the same actress. Laura Palmer is her own doppelganger, living a double life of the squeaky clean homecoming queen and a drug-addicted prostitute. When possessed by Killer BOB, Leland and Cooper become, in a way, their own evil twins. Borrowed from German, the word doppelganger refers to the apparition of a living person, an evil twin, a regular twin, or a monster that takes the form of someone it's killed. Twin Peaks is an apt name for a place full of doubles. (A suicide bag, by the way, is what's used in assisted suicide.)īOB’s death bag is not to be confused with the smiling bag the Giant tells Cooper about, which refers to a body bag hanging on the hospital wall in the shape of a smile. BOB could simply be speaking metaphorically, or he could be referring to a body bag. with my death bag!”Īs with many things David Lynch, a death bag sounds pretty scary, although it’s not clear what it is. “Mike, can you hear me?” says Killer BOB. The group is named for their meeting place, the Bookhouse-a bar that’s full of books. Members include the town sheriff and deputy, as well as Cooper as an honorary member. The Bookhouse Boys are a do-good secret society. BOB and MIKE have the same names as teenage partners-in-crime Bobby and Mike, although the connection seems to go no further than that. BOB has an ex-partner named MIKE, also known as the One-Armed Man. BOBīOB, also known as Killer BOB, is an evil spirit that possesses people and turns them into homicidal maniacs. While the term isn’t used in the television show, it appears in the movie prequel, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me: “Not only has Agent Chester Desmond disappeared,” Cooper says to “Diane," “but this is one of Cole's Blue Rose cases.” Blue Rose cases may be so named because they, like blue roses, are odd and unnatural. BLUE ROSE CASEīlue Rose cases are strange and unsolved, sort of like the X-files. While that may or may not happen, the 25th anniversary of Twin Peaks’ premiere is upon us, so why not pour yourself a cup of coffee and revisit these 10 damn fine terms? 1. “I’ll see you again in 25 years,” Laura Palmer tells Agent Dale Cooper in the last episode of David Lynch’s surreal series.












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