I’ll be in my trailer… watching trailers: No hay pelicula! It is… an illusion.

Join us every week for a trip into the weird and wonderful world of trailers. Whether it’s the first teaser for the latest instalment in your favourite franchise, an obscure preview for a strange indie darling, whether it’s good, bad, ugly or just plain weird – your favourite pop culture baristas are there to tell you what they think.

This year, we lost some of the greats – such as Gene Hackman, who starred in so many memorable films. One of the lesser known but equally deserving Hackman movies is the 1975 neo-noir Night Moves – a film all the more notable for how long it keeps its thriller plot on the back-burner, lulling its protagonist as much as its audience into a false sense of safety. Check out Matt’s thoughts on Night Moves here.

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A Damn Fine Cup of Culture Podcast #93: Lost Summer – David Lynch

This month’s podcast kicks off our summer series for 2025: the Lost Summer is all about what we’ve lost – directors, actors, films – and what this means to us. We’re starting with one that is very close to our heart at A Damn Fine Cup of Culture: in January, David Lynch died at the age of 78, so we’re taking this opportunity to talk about some of the films of his that meant the most to us. Join Alan, Sam and Matt as they talk about neo-noir mystery Blue Velvet (1986), much-reviled prequel Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (1992) and L.A. nightmare Mulholland Drive (2001). How did we discover Lynch’s work and these films in particular? What do they mean to us, and why? How do they fit into Lynch’s oeuvre? And what is the legacy that Lynch has left behind?

For more podcasts on David Lynch and Twin Peaks in particular, check out these classic episodes:

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I’ll be in my trailer… watching trailers: Fix your hearts or die

Somehow, losing David Lynch hits harder, not only because of his art, which is often beautiful and disturbing in equal measure, but also because of who Lynch seems to have been: a kind, strange, generous soul, as an artist and as a human being. As anyone looking at our front page and at the name of our site will be able to tell: Lynch had an impact on us, and his absence will be felt.

We’ll dedicate most of this week’s trailer post to the weird, frightening, wonderful worlds of David Lynch, but first, let’s have a look at what we did this week.

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Twin Peaks: A Postscript

We’ve already talked about Twin Peaks – The Return for an hour on our recent podcast – but, if anything, the process of thinking and talking about the series has generated more thoughts. While watching The Return, I greatly enjoyed it, but I’ve come to realise that I’m finding it quite difficult to reconcile it with the original series. At the same time, my idea of what Twin Peaks is (or was) is a highly selective one: when I think of “that Twin Peaks feeling”, as I put it on the podcast, I think of BOB and the Little Man dancing in the Red Room; I think of Leland Palmer crying and dancing and crying again, I think of the Giant going, “It is happening again.” I think of nightmares, which The Return offered in spades – but its nightmares feel very different.

Twin Peaks

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