The source of Evil in the cosmic struggle that was the David Lynch/Mark Frost series Twin Peaks : the Black Lodge was seemingly an extra-dimensional portal into the world of Nightmare and more-or-less the headquarters for the diabolical forces of the show. Its entrance moved from place to place and its internal size seemed to grow or shrink at will. Special Agent Dale Cooper's former partners and fellow FBI agents (like Wyndham Earl, or Phillip Jeffries (David Bowie) in the film, FWWM) seemed to stumble into the Black Lodge with alarming frequency, and were usually quite insane when they emerged. Essentially it was the lobby to Hell, and from its red-curtained, checkerboard floored hallways (...if you'd care to see it, check out http://perso.wanadoo.fr/prospero.milan/black_lodge) sprang the show's ultimate manifestation of Evil, BOB. The show's characters often dreamed themselves inside the antechambers of the Black Lodge, usually engaged in cryptic conversations (like "In my country, the birds sing a pretty song, and there's always music in the air.") which ultimately referred to events or places in the real world. However, the actual space itself could only be intentionally entered by a physical form, via a small circle of sycamore trees, called the Glastonbury Grove in Ghostwood Forest outside the town of Twin Peaks.

The show's final showdown (David Lynch is, afterall, a notorious dualist and his constructed universes about as fairytale Good vs. Evil as you're likely to find) takes place inside the Black Lodge, as 'Coop' attempts to rescue his sweet-heart Annie, the former nun(!), after she's been kidnapped by his ex-partner Wyndham Earl, and dragged to the Lodge at the behest of the evil demonic spirit, BOB, who has it out for Coop ever since, in the second season finale of the show, Cooper confined Bob and forced him to abandon his 'host' Leland Palmer, Laura Palmer's father, whom Bob had possessed. Under the sway of this demon, Leland had been compelled to tempt Laura into becoming a similar vehicle, but after she resisted, Leland was ultimately forced by the spirit to kill her (getting all this so far?). The real question (for the Peakies anyway): why couldn't Cooper beat BOB in this final showdown, why he buckled and ran when confronting his own doppelganger, and how he ended up a vessel for the demonic? He was the show's White Knight (the finale heavily borrowing from Arthurian legend), yet in the end, he didn't keep it together despite a Zen cool and hyper-caffinated thought processes.

Lynch, it must be said, tends to project a very deist worldview into almost everything he works on or writes. Angels and demons seem to exist, all manner of supernatural being stumble through our human reality. But as for a God, an ultimate higher Order, binding principle or law - that seems glaringly absent. Subsequently, there is an ever-receeding perception, an always tenuous grasp, to the way we understand our selves and our world. Always another layer to peel away, or another curtain to peek behind. The entire show was a rambling, operatic case study for this sensibility, with the investigation into the murders acting as the core of the argument. After all, despite all the time, analysis and deductive talent focused on the deaths, it is made fairly explicit that none of the "human" characters in the show ever grasp why people are being killed, who is really doing it, or to what ultimate end. The humane forces of order and good, law and rationality (all seemingly synomynous) presented in the show are ultimately relegated to cleaning up after a string of grisly killings, which they are powerless to stop. The real impact on the viewer derives not from the surreality of the situations or peoples (we all know the world can be strange), but rather the realism of the endgame he presents: ultimately, there is simply too much contingent, occluded or incomprehensibly complex for us as human beings to always make the right choices. Bleak, but fairly convincing, given the evidence.