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IMDbPro

Twin Peaks: Os Últimos Dias de Laura Palmer

Título original: Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me
  • 1992
  • 16
  • 2 h 14 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,3/10
113 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
2.054
372
Sheryl Lee in Twin Peaks: Os Últimos Dias de Laura Palmer (1992)
Home Video Trailer from New Line Home Entertainment
Reproduzir trailer1:47
2 vídeos
99+ fotos
Psychological DramaPsychological HorrorPsychological ThrillerSupernatural HorrorSuspense MysteryTeen DramaTeen HorrorTragedyDramaHorror

Um jovem agente do FBI desaparece enquanto investiga um assassinato a quilômetros de Twin Peaks que pode estar relacionado ao futuro assassinato de Laura Palmer.Um jovem agente do FBI desaparece enquanto investiga um assassinato a quilômetros de Twin Peaks que pode estar relacionado ao futuro assassinato de Laura Palmer.Um jovem agente do FBI desaparece enquanto investiga um assassinato a quilômetros de Twin Peaks que pode estar relacionado ao futuro assassinato de Laura Palmer.

  • Direção
    • David Lynch
  • Roteiristas
    • David Lynch
    • Robert Engels
    • Mark Frost
  • Artistas
    • Sheryl Lee
    • Ray Wise
    • Mädchen Amick
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,3/10
    113 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    2.054
    372
    • Direção
      • David Lynch
    • Roteiristas
      • David Lynch
      • Robert Engels
      • Mark Frost
    • Artistas
      • Sheryl Lee
      • Ray Wise
      • Mädchen Amick
    • 344Avaliações de usuários
    • 137Avaliações da crítica
    • 45Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 4 vitórias e 7 indicações no total

    Vídeos2

    Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me
    Trailer 1:47
    Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me
    Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me: They've All Gone Away
    Clip 2:00
    Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me: They've All Gone Away
    Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me: They've All Gone Away
    Clip 2:00
    Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me: They've All Gone Away

    Fotos234

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    Elenco principal82

    Editar
    Sheryl Lee
    Sheryl Lee
    • Laura Palmer
    Ray Wise
    Ray Wise
    • Leland Palmer
    Mädchen Amick
    Mädchen Amick
    • Shelly Johnson
    Dana Ashbrook
    Dana Ashbrook
    • Bobby Briggs
    Phoebe Augustine
    Phoebe Augustine
    • Ronette Pulaski
    David Bowie
    David Bowie
    • Phillip Jeffries
    Eric DaRe
    Eric DaRe
    • Leo Johnson
    Miguel Ferrer
    Miguel Ferrer
    • Albert Rosenfeld
    Pamela Gidley
    Pamela Gidley
    • Teresa Banks
    Heather Graham
    Heather Graham
    • Annie Blackburn
    Chris Isaak
    Chris Isaak
    • Special Agent Chester Desmond
    Moira Kelly
    Moira Kelly
    • Donna Hayward
    Peggy Lipton
    Peggy Lipton
    • Norma Jennings
    David Lynch
    David Lynch
    • Gordon Cole
    James Marshall
    James Marshall
    • James Hurley
    Jürgen Prochnow
    Jürgen Prochnow
    • Woodsman
    • (as Jurgen Prochnow)
    Harry Dean Stanton
    Harry Dean Stanton
    • Carl Rodd
    Kiefer Sutherland
    Kiefer Sutherland
    • Sam Stanley
    • Direção
      • David Lynch
    • Roteiristas
      • David Lynch
      • Robert Engels
      • Mark Frost
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários344

    7,3113.3K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    pooch-8

    Highly underrated film by brilliant visionary Lynch

    Since the first line of TP:FWWM is "Get me Agent Chester Desmond in Fargo, North Dakota," some might argue that I am biased in my praise for one of Lynch's most underrated motion pictures. The truth is, my life has never been the same since the fateful midnight in high school when I experienced Eraserhead for the first time. TP:FWWM was savaged by most critics, who are unlikely ever to laud the unconventional Lynch again (unless he makes another film that connects like Blue Velvet). Few other filmmakers have had the ability to depict so tangibly the intangibility of our dreams and the worlds contained therein. Couple this with Lynch's corner on the "uncanny" market, and you have TP:FWWM, a film impossible to confuse with any other. My only complaint concerns the absence of Ben and Audrey Horne, who were such interesting and engaging characters on the television series.
    8TheLittleSongbird

    David Lynch's most underrated film

    Not Lynch at his best(that would be Blue Velvet, though personal favourite is The Elephant Man), it is a very good film and should please fans of the TV series, even if darker in tone and lacking the show's humour. Lynch's films may be strange, unconventional and not always easy to understand for some, but all of them are visually striking, dynamically scored and with great performances, atmosphere and direction as well as working amazingly as mood pieces and being among the most unique films in existence- the only film of his that I didn't care for was Dune, was mixed on Inland Empire too but that still had a lot of the above components.

    Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me may not be as good as the TV series but did not deserve the negative reception it got at the time. The few flaws it has has nothing to do with being darker and lacking the show's humour, they are not even flaws. David Bowie did stick out like a sore thumb and to me was embarrassingly bad(though a lot of it was to do with how his character was written) but the film's biggest flaw was that you could tell that it was originally written as a much longer film, with so much truncated there were parts where things felt under-explained and incomplete, a longer length would have helped(personal opinion of course and not one other people will share).

    Coming onto however what was good about Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, the film does everything else right. As said before, Lynch's films are always visually great, and to say that Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me looks great visually is not enough. The film in fact has wonderfully moody cinematography and lovingly designed sets, while the surreal imagery looks so mesmerising that regardless of whether the story confuses you you cannot possibly look away. Lynch's direction as ever is impeccable, his style unmistakable and the haunting soundtrack draws you in effortlessly. The story won't be everyone's cup of tea, I did find myself completely engrossed and found it along with Sophie Scholl: The Final Days one of the most powerful films personally seen in a while. Sure, it did feel under-explained and incomplete in parts but it never bored me and like every other Lynch film as a mood piece it's amazing. Parts were incredibly intense and shocking(the most intense parts making for one of the most disturbing films there is) but others were genuinely emotional as well. Regarding individual scenes in a film where one hypnotic scene follows another, the strobe-lit disco degradation stuck out in particular.

    Apart from Bowie, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me is very well-acted, Sheryl Lee is superb and at times heart-breaking as an easy-to-root-for character while Ray Wise is just terrifying as one of the scariest father figures on film. Harry Dean Stanton, Kiefer Sutherland and Kyle MacLauchlan are on fun form too. In conclusion, a very under-appreciated film and undeservedly so. 8/10 Bethany Cox
    8lostintwinpeaks

    The last 7 dark days of the Homecoming Queen's Life...

    Bob, Agent Cooper, Laura Palmer, Teresa Banks, The Man From Another Place, etc...

    Welcome back to David Lynch's offbeat town of TWIN PEAKS.

    Much darker than the TV series, this film was in part meant to answer many previously unanswered questions, but if anything - in typical Lynch fashion - it tangles things even further, and confuses matters all round.

    Lynch apparently shot more than 5 hours of the feature, and as much of these deleted/extended/alternative scenes are still missing, the movie we're left with feels rather bare and rushed.

    The performances are excellent, and the movie is visually stunning, and as usual the plot - while confusing - is intense and riveting.

    But alas it could have been so so so much more.... (sighs)
    10mstomaso

    Severely under-rated prequel to one of the best TV series ever

    By the time this film was released, critics and TV audiences had already decided its decidedly mediocre box-office fate. The usual network attitude toward anything which demands thought and interpretation assured the cancellation of the series in its second season, and Lynch's departure from the show's director's chair to begin this film project all but sealed the fate of the show. Unfortunately, this same fate determined both the critical and public approach to the film project.

    TP:FWWM is a prequel to the two-season Twin Peaks saga, and (sort of) answers the question 'how and why did Laura Palmer die?'. Fans of the show mostly knew the answers before they saw this film, but to see Laura's life so vividly realized, and to see the TV characters cast into such a different, more harsh, surreal and disturbing light, really invigorates the entire TP phenomenon. FWWM actually inspired me to watch the entire series again (and as of 2004, I am in the process of watching it again). Fans of the series who found themselves disappointed by the final few episodes of the series because they felt it became too bizarre, are likely to find this film more gripping, though they will probably end up as unsatisfied as they were at the onset. Those who found the second season thrillingly experimental are likely to be surprised by the subtlety of and dramatic quality of this film. Those, like me, who approach the film with few tangible expectations might just find themselves, compelled, disturbed, and very entertained.

    The performances are generally very good, but not entirely even. Some TV cast-members, given the vastly expanded possibilities of cinema, really showed their range and depth. Sheryl Lee, MacLachlan, Dana Ashbrook, and Ray Wise were especially impressive. The cinematography is less powerful than the usual Lynchian vision (see Eraserhead, Lost Highway for extreme examples), and is more in keeping with the TV show's straightforward, but moody, photographic approach. The overall production values are, in fact, comparable to those of Mulholland Drive - also originally planned by Lynch as a TV show. Though more subtle than many of Lynch's more extravagant works, TP:FWWM is very successfully manipulative and powerful.

    I ardently appreciate Lynch, considering him one of cinema and performance's greatest contemporary artists. And I am unashamed to state that I believe this to be among his finest works. Many of Lynch's fans love to write interpretations of Lynch himself, as if all of his films are in some way connected beyond the obvious fact that he directed (and more often than not scripted) them. I do not disagree with this approach, but, in my opinion, any such universalizing comments more or less miss the point. Lynch is one of many director's who view film as an art form, not as a craft, nor as a vehicle for specific messages and stories. As Lynch has stated, repeatedly, his films involve a dream-like reality and often attempt to invoke a dream or nightmare state in viewers. Unlike most, however, Lynch succeeds in the purity of his art. His films demand interpretation, engagement and, what's more, demand a different and unique interpretation by most who view them.

    If you are looking for something which can be universally interpreted from TP:FWWM as part of this imagined set of Lynchian themes, I am not the reviewer to give it, look elsewhere. I have too much respect for Lynch's artistry to subject him to my own interpretive explanations.

    If you are looking for a simple story which will clear up the insanity of Twin Peaks, don't bother with FWWM.

    If you are looking, open-mindedly, for an intense, disturbing, and well constructed cinematic experience which creates more questions than it answers, and retains elements of mystery in a fatalistically driven plot environment, you've come to the right place.
    8symbioticpsychotic

    !kcoR s'teL

    There's no doubt about it, Twin Peaks changed the living, breathing face and body of television, the soul and minds of those who watched it, and the attitudes of film and television makers everywhere, who watched what was intended to be a 2 hour Tele-movie become a phenomenon. A phenomenon that dissected the way television was made and shown to its very core, and reassembled it in a fashion that no one had ever witnessed, or dreamed of. A phenomenon that would sweep the world… Not since JR was shot in Dallas had the entire worldwide viewing public stopped to ask itself a question, for one brief, shining, crystallized moment, in 1990… Who Killed Laura Palmer? And so, with David Lynch's Fire Walk With Me, the question is not Who? But rather, Why? This film precedes the TV show, these are the last 7 days of Laura Palmer, and after watching this film, it is pretty apparent why Laura wanted to die, she lived in a world out of her grasp and control, she was desperately fighting what she was becoming, but realized that the forces that were pulling her down, were too strong for her to fight against… I knew someone like that once, and to be quite honest, it has changed the way I look at Laura Palmer. The first time I watched this film was in 1992 when it came out on VHS, I was 16 or 17 and I hated it. It wasn't Twin Peaks. It was horrible and violent and had none of the cuteness and quirkiness and lovable characters of the TV show, and I never watched it again. Watching it almost 15 years on, as an adult, I understand why I hated it so much when I was a kid. As a 16-17 year male, I had absolutely no concept or understanding of what it would be like to be Laura Palmer, completely unable to relate to her, and therefore completely unable to understand or sympathize. Completely unable to understand what it would mean to live in a world where everyone is in love with you, and how that would only make you hate yourself more, when you hate yourself so much already.

    This is a really sad movie. It really puts you in to Laura Palmer's world, or what's left of it, briefly. Maybe too brief, but, you know, maybe I read too much in to films, or I get too close too them, but this film has changed Twin Peaks for me forever. And it's quite possible that it will do the same for you. Even though she was dead before the opening credits, I never realized until watching this film again that Laura was never freed, she was always in 'purgatory' if you will, always in the Red Room when we saw her, or seeing a flashback of her murder during the course of the TV show. Fire Walk With Me gives something to Laura Palmer that she had been denied on television.

    Release.

    For the most part, this film was not made for the fans, nor was it made for the money, Lynch made this film for Laura palmer. His love of her is what inspired him to breathe life into her character on the big screen, after taking it away on the small. This is his dance, first and final, with Laura Palmer. It is not ours to be involved with, it is ours only to watch the romance between character and director evolve and be burnt too soon. It is ours only to witness, not too understand or judge, not to ask or question.

    From the opening shot, a television with no reception, which is quickly obliterated by an Axe, it is quite clear that this ain't no TV show, and if the symbolism of the TV being smashed isn't enough to tell you that, then the opening scene will. This is the part of Twin Peaks that simply never would have made it to TV. The real Twin Peaks, if you will, the dark, tortured, seedy underbelly of a town with too few people, and too many secrets, the sort of place that exists almost everywhere in the world (with the exception of Cicely, Alaska).

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Grace Zabriskie said on Sheryl Lee's performance in the film: "She gave everything she had, she gave more than she could afford to give, and she spent years coming back".
    • Erros de gravação
      The cabin scene at the film's end differs vastly from its depiction in the series. In the film the cabin has no red drapes, there is no phonograph left playing, nor does the exterior of the cabin even appear to be the same. Also missing/omitted from the narrative of this sequence: - No Leo's bloody shirt. - Waldo never leaves the cage and does not draw blood. - No broken One Eyed Jack's casino chip or "Bite the big one, baby."
    • Citações

      Donna Hayward: Do you think that if you were falling in space... that you would slow down after a while, or go faster and faster?

      Laura Palmer: Faster and faster. And for a long time you wouldn't feel anything. And then you'd burst into fire. Forever... And the angel's wouldn't help you. Because they've all gone away.

    • Versões alternativas
      There is an unofficially released extended cut of the film titled 'Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me - The Extended Blue Rose Cut' which restores an hour of deleted footage formerly only found as bonus content on previous releases. This edition of the movie has a 196-minute runtime.
    • Conexões
      Edited into Laura Palmer (2002)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      She Would Die For Love
      Lyric by David Lynch

      Music by Angelo Badalamenti

      Publishing: Anlon Music Co./ASCAP, Bobkind Music/ASCAP

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    David Lynch's Movies Ranked by IMDb Rating

    David Lynch's Movies Ranked by IMDb Rating

    See how IMDb users rank the films of legendary director David Lynch.
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    Perguntas frequentes34

    • How long is Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • A NOTE REGARDING SPOILERS
    • Why did Lynch do a prequel?
    • Why not resolve the show's cliffhangers?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 14 de maio de 1993 (Brasil)
    • Países de origem
      • França
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Latim
    • Também conhecido como
      • Twin Peaks: Fuego camina conmigo
    • Locações de filme
      • 708 33rd St, Everett, Washington, EUA(Palmer residence)
    • Empresas de produção
      • New Line Cinema
      • CiBy 2000
      • Lynch/Frost Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 10.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 4.160.851
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 1.813.559
      • 30 de ago. de 1992
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 4.256.996
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      2 horas 14 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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