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SAN DIEGO, CA - JULY 21: Actors Naomi Watts and Tim Roth speak onstage at Comic-Con International 2017 Twin Peaks: A Damn Good Panel at San Diego Convention Center on July 21, 2017 in San Diego, California. Kevin Winter/Getty Images/AFP == FOR NEWSPAPERS, INTERNET, TELCOS & TELEVISION USE ONLY == Image Credit: AFP

Judging by the Twin Peaks panel at Comic-Con, solving the mystery of David Lynch seemed more pressing than the mystery of where the show is going.

The 18-episode revival of the ‘90s show is currently airing on Showtime. It’s often inscrutable plot has vexed some and delighted others, but that it comes from the singular mind and vision of David Lynch has never been in question.

“I think it’s weird! Anyone else?” actor Matthew Lillard asked the 6,500-person Hall H audience Friday at the annual fan convention. “You guys saw Episode 8, right? That’s crazy.”

Lillard, a newcomer to the series, was joined by fellow “Twin Peaks” novices like Tim Roth and Naomi Watts, as well as a few originals like Kimmy Robertson, Dana Ashbrook, James Marshall, Everett McGill and, of course, Kyle MacLachlan.

Some fans in the audience dressed as Twin Peaks characters past and present — there was an Audrey Horne and a ‘90s Agent Dale Cooper who brought along a recorder and an act about talking to Diane, his secretary. The man dressed as the revival-inspired “Dougie Jones” wore an oversized green blazer and a tie on his head. Others sported Twin Peaks T-shirts adorned with Laura Palmer’s face.

Much like the first run of Twin Peaks, future plot points are closely guarded secrets. Not even MacLachlan has seen beyond what has aired and is watching it as it unfolds on Showtime.

Star struck

Lynch, who directed the 18-episodes of Twin Peaks: The Return, did not make the trek to San Diego, but still dominated the conversation, moderated by Lost co-creator and self-professed Twin Peaks super fan Damon Lindelof.

Watts, who starred in Lynch’s Mulholland Dr., said she still gets a little star struck around him.

“He’s so unique and living on another world,” Watts said. “You just want to join that world.”

MacLachlan, who said he doesn’t know if he’d have had a television and film career were it not for Lynch, went a bit further.

“He’s very accessible to all of us and he’s very available. And then there is a point at which he goes into a place that is purely David. This is him as the artist. At that point I become like a fan,” MacLachlan said. “He’s a like a pal, but when he goes there he’s an artist in a place that I can’t share with him.”