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discs are in very good condition; outer paper box is worn
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Twin Peaks: The Complete Series (The Definitive Gold Box Edition)

4.5 out of 5 stars 2,008 ratings
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Oct. 30 2007
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Product Description

The Definitive Gold Box Edition of the series that became one of television's most acclaimed events finally arrives - with all 29 episodes plus both the original and European versions of the pilot.

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Season 1
Twin Peaks devotees, who have kept the mystery alive on myriad Web sites, will jump at the chance to return to the spooky town that might just be the anti-Mayberry. Rarely syndicated, the Twin Peaks television series has lost none of its quirky and queasy power to get under your skin and haunt your dreams. So brew up a pot of some "damn fine coffee," dig into some cherry pie, and lose yourself in David Lynch and Mark Frost's murder mystery and soap opera, which unfolds, in one character's words, "like a beautiful dream and terrible nightmare all at once." Twin Peaks was a pop culture phenomenon for one season at least, until the increasingly bizarre twists and maddening teases so confounded audiences that they lost interest in just who killed Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee). This series was a career peak for most of its eclectic ensemble cast, including Kyle MacLachlan as straight-arrow FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper, Michael Ontkean as local Sheriff Harry S. Truman, Sherilyn Fenn as bad girl Audrey Horne, Peggy Lipton as waitress Norma Jennings, and Catherine Coulson as the Log Lady. Alumni enjoying current success include Lara Flynn Boyle ("The Practice"), as good girl Donna Hayward, and Miguel Ferrer ("Crossing Jordan"), hilarious as forensics expert Albert Rosenfield (who has absolutely no "social niceties").--Donald Liebenson

Season 2
"Don't search for all the answers at once," says a giant appearing to FBI Agent Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan) in a vision. "A path is formed by laying one stone at a time." In
Twin Peaks, that's easier said than done. Over the course of two seasons, that path went nowhere and everywhere. "Bureau guidelines, deductive technique, Tibetan method, and luck" don't cut it here. It also takes a little magic, which is what makes David Lynch and Mark Frost's bracingly original serial drama one of TV's ultimate trips, and still the stuff that fever dreams are made of. With the DVD release of season 2, die-hard Peakers can rekindle their obsession with this macabre, maddening, sinister, and surreal series set in the rural Pacific Northwest community whose bucolic surroundings hide "things dark and heinous." (If you're new to Twin Peaks, best to get the lay of the land by watching the brilliant feature-length pilot and the instant-cult-classic first season, which capture Twin at its peak.) Three main mysteries drive season 2. First, there's the still (!) unresolved murder of Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee). Then, there's the question of who shot Cooper in the season 1 cliffhanger. And finally, ultimately: What about Bob? With its dream logic, bizarre behavior, and nightmare imagery, much of what transpires goes right by you. Some subplots (Sherilyn Fenn's sexpot Audrey held captive at the bordello, One-Eyed Jacks) are easier to latch on to than others (amnesiac Nadine believes she's an 18-year-old high schooler) And, yes, that's a pre-X-Files David Duchovny as Dennis/Denice, a transsexual DEA agent.

In Twin Peaks' second season, the truth is out there, but we are entering A Few Good Men territory. When Laura's killer is at last revealed in episode 16, no doubt many will not be able to handle the truth. The teases, red herrings, and out-and-out gonzo looniness will try the patience of viewers with a more conventional bent. But, as Cooper observes at one point, "All in all, [it's] a very interesting experience," with enough doppelgangers, allusions, pop-culture references, and in-jokes to keep bloggers buzzing. If, for example, you get any pleasure from recognizing Hank Worden, who played Mose in The Searchers, as "the world's most decrepit room service waiter," then Twin Peaks may just make you feel right at home. --Donald Liebenson

On the DVDs
Twin Peaks lived in its own bizarre, dark, amazing, fantasy world, fresh from the mind of creator David Lynch. The extra features on this Gold Box edition (which includes both seasons and the long-awaited pilot) intend to draw you into the milieu surrounding the world of the story, and offer you a glimpse into the gestation and making of the show, while gently poking fun at itself. To quote Lynch at the beginning of A Slice of David Lynch, "This is the strangest damn thing." He's referring to the act of sitting on a set in Los Angeles, drinking coffee and eating cherry pie with cast members Madchen Amick, Kyle MacLachlan, and personal assistant John Wentworth years after the show ended. But he may as well have also been referring to the show itself, and to the enormous popular phenomenon it accidentally became. As can be inferred from the title, A Slice of Lynch is a glimpse inside the creative mind of Lynch through his interactions with his old stars and assistant, and watching this, you can't help but understand that Lynch operates on a different plain from normal humanity, and his artistic process, while often befuddling, yields incredibly original results to a degree that almost boggles the mind; happy accidents seem to stem from almost every artistic decision he makes. The strength of this feature is that it makes it clear that the world of Twin Peaks really existed, it just happened to live in the minds of David Lynch and co-writer Mark Frost. Twin Peaks Festival is almost an afterthought, it doesn't fit with the rest of the features in depth or insight, but curious fans will get a kick out of seeing what happens when the most rabid, hardcore Twin Peaks gather in the Northwest--on the sights of many of the show's scenes--for a fan festival that beats the heck out of any Star Trek convention. Secrets from Another Place: Creating Twin Peaks offers a meaty, four-part look into how the show came about, the filming of both seasons, and the creation of the music by composer Angelo Badalamenti and singer Julee Cruise. Black Lodge Archive features six different items ranging from the "Falling" music video to bumpers and galleries that don't do much to offer insight into the show, but they offer an unexpected, added bonus: watching Agent Cooper hawk Georgia Coffee in ads that aired only in Japan. They are quite possibly more hilarious and bizarre than anything in the show itself. The features do a great job of reminding an old audience, and explaining to a new one, why the show had such a devoted following. To quote one actress from the show: "It was unique, it came at a time when television was boring... there was nothing else like it on television." --Daniel Vancini

Product details

  • Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ 1.33:1
  • Is discontinued by manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 3.73 x 14.38 x 19 cm; 725.75 g
  • Manufacturer reference ‏ : ‎ 130904
  • Director ‏ : ‎ Caleb Deschanel, David Lynch, Diane Keaton, Duwayne Dunham, Graeme Clifford
  • Media Format ‏ : ‎ NTSC, Box set, Color, Dubbed, Subtitled, Dolby, AC-3, Full Screen
  • Run time ‏ : ‎ 21 hours and 40 minutes
  • Release date ‏ : ‎ Oct. 30 2007
  • Actors ‏ : ‎ Kyle MacLachlan, Michael Ontkean, Mädchen Amick, Dana Ashbrook, Richard Beymer
  • Dubbed: ‏ : ‎ Spanish, Portuguese
  • Subtitles: ‏ : ‎ English, Spanish, Portuguese
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English (Dolby Digital 2.0), English (Dolby Digital 5.1), Portuguese (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), Unqualified, Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)
  • Studio ‏ : ‎ Paramount Home Entertainment
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B000UX6THK
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 10
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 out of 5 stars 2,008 ratings

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
2,008 global ratings

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Top reviews from Canada

  • Reviewed in Canada on November 1, 2024
    Verified Purchase
    I love finding out who killed Laura Palmer! Acting is a little cheesy now, but overall the series is always good and you find things you missed from before!
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in Canada on January 8, 2015
    Verified Purchase
    I recently decided to re-marathon Twin Peaks for the 4th or 5th time over the years ... I've been a fan since it was first broadcast in the early 90s. Was in my early 30s then, and had seen nothing on TV like it. Still remember the delight of Cooper's dream in episode 3. A lot has happened on TV since the 90s, and Twin Peaks stands up pretty well, although I've always wished Lynch and Frost had given us more extra-dimensional weirdness and less soap opera parody. Now that a continuation of the series has been announced for 2016, I'm hoping for something really good - hopefully Lynch will have complete control and will really weird it up. But who will play Bob - the late Frank Silva, who played him so well, passed away some years ago. And I wonder if Lynch will get together with the excellent horror writer Laird Barron, who sets many of his stories in the Pacific Northwest (and also wears an eye patch!) Anyway, it's a great show, highly recommended.
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in Canada on January 2, 2008
    Verified Purchase
    Twin Peaks was only on the air a few years, and totals about thirty hours of television, but quality matters more than quantity, and this was a groundbreaking, original, surreal and surprising show, with a boatload of memorable characters and Kyle MacLachlan as coffee-loving agent Cooper, squeaky clean and smart, slowly exploring the darkness of Twin Peaks and the murder of Laura Palmer.

    Finally, the series is complete on DVD, the original movie pilot and all the episodes, along with the option of a log lady intro (another favourite character) and a bonus disc of deleted scenes, the documentary "A Slice of Lynch," the feature length "Secrets from Another Place," on the show, as well as the famous Saturday Night Live sketch with MacLachlan, music videos and more. There's even a selection of a dozen postcards from Twin Peaks included, though of course this is a clever way to get you to mail ads for this set all over the continent. I even like the way the discs are packaged, easily accessed because it's like flipping through a book.

    Peaks fans may want to check out Carnivale, the HBO series that also finds themes of good versus evil, and borrows the surreal tone of Twin Peaks.
    12 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in Canada on May 9, 2017
    Verified Purchase
    bought this dvd for a good price and found out it was for a different region and I thought I would never be able to watch it......however .I was able to change the region on my dvd player and watch it completely. I enjoyed it immensely. It was full of odd characters and humorous situations. Some of it was quite bizarre but I really enjoyed the series. I can see why it has a huge cult following. To bad it didn't continue for another year or so. I feel that I still want to know what happens to some of the characters.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in Canada on September 10, 2020
    Verified Purchase
    Decided to pick up the Twin Peaks Gold Box to see if I liked the show... and I did! I was stunned by the quality of the remaster they did for this DVD, looking at pictures of the blu-ray that used the same restored source, I was amazed they did such a good remaster in 2007. You can't go wrong at this price for this many episodes of wonderful, strange, and engaging TV. Highly recommended.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in Canada on November 27, 2023
    Verified Purchase
    thanks
  • Reviewed in Canada on May 14, 2020
    Verified Purchase
    Great to see the series again. The mood of the show, and the accompanying music, was different from anything on television at the time, and it still is a unique show in many respects. Was great to see the series again on these high quality DVD's.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in Canada on April 18, 2016
    Verified Purchase
    Obviously the series is amazingly kooky, eerie and creepy, but this set left me with a feeling of "meh". Few supplements, menus from the 2000s and the physical box itself is kind of flimsy, cardboard and generic plastic trays. Comes with a postcard, but no booklet or pictures inside. It's a relatively cheap price for the complete series but I was expecting a but more from the "Gold" set. Fortunately episodes include the option to watch with or without the log lady intros, which are a great addition to the series.

Top reviews from other countries

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  • mb
    5.0 out of 5 stars top
    Reviewed in Spain on April 14, 2023
    Verified Purchase
  • Emanuele
    5.0 out of 5 stars Twin Peaks come non l'avete mai visto
    Reviewed in Italy on January 9, 2014
    Verified Purchase
    Non voglio scrivere riguardo alla qualità dell'opera del maestro Lynch, indiscutibile, ma è doveroso segnalare che questo cofanetto, l'unico completo ad avere la lingua originale in italiano, è un oggetto da avere per chi ha sempre visto questo telefilm in una qualità non soddisfacente! In più ci sono molte cose inedite per il pubblico italiano come ad esempio l'introduzione della signora ceppo prima di ogni puntata e la possibiltà di visionare l'episodio pilota nella versione orignale e quella internazionale! Ci sono anche molte interviste e curiosità riguardanti il misterioso paese di Twin Peaks. Per chi ama la serie è un acquisto obbligato in attesa della sempre più vicina versione bluray!
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  • Aldo Mercado
    5.0 out of 5 stars Muy recomendable
    Reviewed in Mexico on October 1, 2017
    Verified Purchase
    Una de las más importantes series de culto en una muy buena presentación a muy buen precio, la recomiendo mucho
  • Goughy
    5.0 out of 5 stars It is happening again
    Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2013
    Verified Purchase
    I've never called myself a "Peaks Freak" but I suppose I meet some of the criteria to fit under this moniker, and after indulging in the Definitive Gold Box Edition I do so with a certain enthusiasm that I had forgotten I had for this show and its characters. The boyish wonderment while lost in the Twin Peaks universe was swept into a fire of obsession just like it did when I first watched the program in Junior High and later, in its totality, in college, a flush of nostalgia for a unique pocket of pop culture history driving me to compulsively daydream at work about the episodes I had watched the night before. Even at its worst, and it does get pretty bad, its still a special journey unlike any other television drama. After a monstrous six or seven episode lag occurring immediately after Laura Palmer's killer is revealed in the second season, the series gains a bit of its original footing back at the finish line, wrapping up with a sensationally weird, cliffhanger finale directed by the mastermind himself. Twin Peaks was always loosely satirizing the soap opera genre by utilizing its style, but it took itself seriously enough to permit its audience to invest emotionally into those conventions. The style was a comical device but it was also the theater in which the authentic drama was displayed. The decision to reveal Laura Palmer's killer (the show's MacGuffin) was pressed onto David Lynch and Mark Frost by the Network, insisting on it due to the audience demand. In retrospect this is arguably the biggest blunder in television history. Lynch claims he had never intended to reveal the identity of the killer. Bitter over compromising his vision Lynch stepped back from the show as did Frost, affiliated only on a production level as they took on new projects. The show really idles in its lack of direction from its co-creators. I mean it becomes obvious during these post-Laura episodes that the show has gone into a tailspin with absolutely no compass. It's only goal seems to be to indulge in quirkiness and in doing so the show gets close to becoming annoying. The storylines during this span of episodes are contrived, disingenuous, absurd and nearly unwatchable. You would have had to have been the holiest of Peaks Freak during the original broadcast to hang through this schlock and even on DVD it gets tough but because you know there is an endpoint you hang out a little longer, even if the show isn't taking itself seriously anymore because for some reason you do, or you want to, and so you force yourself into believing its still legit, or on some "next level" trip, or that any episode now it will all turn around. And then something wonderful happens. It almost pulls off such a feat. The show, near its final arch, begins to gain momentum with a boost of magic. A huge attraction to Twin Peaks was its metaphysical elements. While watching the last five episodes of season two I couldn't help but to think of LOST, another program which relied on supernatural twists which I was a huge fan of. The last time I had seen these season two Twin Peaks episodes LOST hadn't been created yet so I never thought of any borrowed aspects of the Twin Peaks universe existing in other shows but watching the episodes now I definitely see a connection. My awareness of the influence Twin Peaks had on LOST added a thrill to the last three episodes. The show was heading in a direction that could have been beautiful again if allowed a season three, but unfortunately, it was too late. too much damage had been done from the lag. But then again maybe Twin Peaks is Twin Peaks because the way it left. One of the reasons the end of the second season remains enduring is probably because we'll never know how it was to continue and so we are left to imagine it on our own.

    The Extras included in the box set are very complementary and insightful to the series. I felt I learned a lot about the show that I didn't know from watching the making of documentaries and seeing some of the cast at the time this was filmed was interesting as well.
  • Jason Darragh
    5.0 out of 5 stars And You Thought Lost Was Weird ?
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 23, 2014
    Verified Purchase
    I first watched Twin Peaks when it was originally broadcast back around 1991, I was still at school but always remembered it clearly. Probably the first American drama series I saw and considered to be an influence for many of the dramas that have been produced since.

    It had everything I enjoyed, strong, layered characters, excellent acting, great music, plots, sub plots and more well plots, to the point where at times I didn't always understand what was going on but it got people talking, created a buzz.

    It begins with the murder of local female, Laura Palmer. Agent Cooper an FBI agent arrives to take control, aided by the local sheriff Harry Truman. From that moment on, slowly the story unravels drawing you in. Plots begin to unfold, sub plots spring up and a deep, layered story evolves, everything really is not what it seems. There are an array of brilliant characters, well acted, some of the smaller stand outs are the "Log Lady", yes the log does talk, allegedly and "Bob" who is pivotal to the story.

    There is an air of supernatural, strange force, complete weirdness in and around Twin Peaks, the local woodland an area that locals speak of with trepidation. Sometimes characters will act out or scenes will play out in such a way I was left with a "what the" thought in my head, plain weird but brilliant all the same.

    The music is excellent, the theme tune is well known but there are other musical pieces that compliment scenes and the story very well. Its well commented that series two doesn't pan out as well as the first, some people say it lost its way, I can understand why, if anything it gets weirder. However all in all it is an enjoyable, stand out series, both of them that still stands out as one of the best ever.

    In addition to this I have purchased the Secret Diary of Laura Palmer (book) and also the prequel to this boxset, Fire Walk With Me (DVD), both flesh out the life of Laura Palmer and the events leading up to the first episode in this boxset, give you a great understanding of her life. But, watch this first.