Analyses (thématiques et stylistiques) d'oeuvres (littéraires ou cinématographiques) relevant des mauvais genres (SF, fantastique, polar, etc.)| weirdaholic.blogspot.com
Analyses (thématiques et stylistiques) d'oeuvres (littéraires ou cinématographiques) relevant des mauvais genres (SF, fantastique, polar, etc.)| weirdaholic.blogspot.com
Analyses (thématiques et stylistiques) d'oeuvres (littéraires ou cinématographiques) relevant des mauvais genres (SF, fantastique, polar, etc.)| weirdaholic.blogspot.com
For the actual location, see red room. ―Hawk[src] The Black Lodge was a mythological place referenced in the stories of the Nez Perce tribe of northeastern Washington. It was the name used to refer to a particular extra-dimensional location visited by FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper during his 1989 visit to Twin Peaks, which bore the appearance of an endless, red-curtained series of rooms and hallways. The Black Lodge and its opposing counterpart, the White Lodge, originated in ancient legend...| Twin Peaks Wiki
―BOB, spoken through Leland Palmer[src] BOB[2][5] was an inhabiting spirit seemingly created by the experiment who resided in the mythical Black Lodge. He spent most of his time on Earth possessing human beings, committing horrific acts to harvest pain and sorrow (known as "garmonbozia") from those around him. While inhabiting a human, BOB's true form, that of a long-haired vagrant, could only be seen by the gifted and the damned. After spending years as Mike's familiar, the two parted ways...| Twin Peaks Wiki
Charles Perrault| fr.wikisource.org
Une plongée déstabilisante dans un monde peuplé de monstres, de Monuments et d'Elfes à travers une expérience subjective plurielle entre "fou majestueux, amoureux transi, menteur ironique" entre autr…| Mediapart
Analyses (thématiques et stylistiques) d'oeuvres (littéraires ou cinématographiques) relevant des mauvais genres (SF, fantastique, polar, etc.)| weirdaholic.blogspot.com