It looks like we’ve reached the end of the road in the Red Room. Mark Frost, co-creator of “Twin Peaks,” has finally confirmed what many of us suspected after the death of David Lynch in January: there will almost certainly be no Season 4.
For a brief moment earlier this year, there was a sliver of hope. Frost, understandably shaken by the loss of his creative partner, said he needed time to reflect before making any decisions about the show’s future. That time has now passed — and so has any real possibility of returning to Twin Peaks.
Speaking to Empire (via ComicBook.com), Frost put the final nail in the lodge-shaped coffin: “We had talked a little bit about where a fourth season might go, but with David having left us, it’s hard to imagine doing anything beyond this. It certainly feels like it closed the circle.”
And just like that, the circle is complete.
Frost offered some insight into the collaborative energy that made 2017’s ‘The Return’ such a landmark — an 18-episode swan song that may now serve as the ultimate ending to one of TV’s most important works.
“Initially, David and I were in two minds about how to end The Return. I felt that Cooper going back and rescuing Laura, then having the mystery of her death disappear, might be an extraordinary way to bring us back to ground zero,” Frost recalled. “But David said, ‘He has to pay a price for what he’s tried to do.’”
That “price” — the existential collapse Cooper experiences in the finale, and the chilling scream from Sheryl Lee — now reads as not just a closing chapter, but the final page. “This is the moment when the full horror comes back to this poor soul,” Frost said. “It’s the price Laura Palmer pays for Cooper’s attempted good deed. That was the end of this story.”
And maybe that’s the only way Twin Peaks could ever really end: not with answers, but with echoes.