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Twin Peaks
TV Series

Twin Peaks

1990Crime, Drama, Mystery • 3 Seasons

Woke Score
2.1
out of 10

Series Overview

The body of a young girl (Laura Palmer) is washed up on a beach near the small Washington state town of Twin Peaks. FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper is called in to investigate her strange demise only to uncover a web of mystery that ultimately leads him deep into the heart of the surrounding woodland and his very own soul.

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Season-by-Season Breakdown

Season 1

1.2/10

It turns out Twin Peaks is not like other towns, and soon FBI Agent Cooper becomes enmeshed with its quirky and mysterious residents.

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Season 2

2/10

The town's dark side and secrets become more prominent in Agent Cooper's investigation into who killed Laura Palmer. As the unbelievable details reveal themselves, he risks everything to learn the truth, including his own soul.

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The Return

3/10

Twenty-five years later, the story continues...

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Overall Series Review

Twin Peaks presents an enduring portrait of American life as a battlefield between profound spiritual forces. Across its three seasons, the series remains anchored in the contrast between the surface-level charm of a small town and the hidden corruption that lurks beneath. Rather than focusing on contemporary social grievances or political labels, the narrative prioritizes a timeless, metaphysical conflict where individual choices carry immense weight. The progression of the series reveals a consistent commitment to moral absolutes. In the early seasons, the story celebrates the hero’s quest to uphold justice and community against encroaching rot. Even as the show evolves into the surreal, dreamlike experimentation of its later return, it maintains a focus on the struggle for balance and redemption. Characters are defined by their personal actions, their secrets, and their inherent goodness or malice, rather than their demographic identities. Ultimately, the series functions as an exercise in existential mystery. It values artistic vision and the development of its own complex mythology over modern social trends. Through its journey, Twin Peaks captures a deep, nostalgic longing for a more traditional world, constantly asking whether the light can prevail against the darkness. It remains a work of high art that trusts the audience to navigate its moral landscape without the need for modern lectures.

Categorical Breakdown

Identity Politics1.7/10

Oikophobia1.7/10

Feminism2/10

LGBTQ+3/10

Anti-Theism1.7/10

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