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roomtone posted:If this was Twin Peaks, it would've been the best part. It's an original story that was purchased to be run under the True Detective banner. If you believe the promotional interviews given by the writer/director, she was still drafting and made some adjustments to make it thematically consistent with the first season, but I would rather that didn't happen and the studio just mandated that there be some ambiguous visual connections. It is the first time since the first season that every episode is written and directed by one person, and here the writer and director are the same person.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 00:52 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 10:20 |
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“World building” had absolutely ruined fiction
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 01:03 |
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Lol really wasn't expecting the opening scene of a True Detective season to be a bunch of bad looking CGI deer
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 01:23 |
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Henchman of Santa posted:You guys keep bringing up past seasons as if anyone involved is present here. It's just a brand. I mean, that sucks rear end.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 01:38 |
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The_Rob posted:I mean, that sucks rear end. It's dumb, but I just mean this should be regarded in context as just the latest HBO prestige murder mystery miniseries rather than part of True Detective, because Nic Pizzolatto is True Detective, for better or for worse.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 01:50 |
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Henchman of Santa posted:It's dumb, but I just mean this should be regarded in context as just the latest HBO prestige murder mystery miniseries rather than part of True Detective, because Nic Pizzolatto is True Detective, for better or for worse. But with it having the True Detective name I think it’s totally fair to judge it on previous True Detectives.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 01:53 |
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Danger posted:How was it disgraced lol? uhh by being disparaged heavily for like 8 years due to a hilarious season 2 that still gets quoted as examples of funny overwriting by anti-nuking what was pretty nuclear hype from s1 which was pretty much peak to is that show still on?
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 02:11 |
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S2 is really good though.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 02:15 |
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Season one is extremely good and the other two seasons are perfectly serviceable. Pizzolatto had one detective show masterpiece in him, and that’s more than most people. Maybe his Blade script will be his next masterpiece.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 02:18 |
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Season 1 is probably my favorite season of television though I will admit I’ve never rewatched it. Season 2 was meh as hell and I’m kind of surprised to see people really liked it but good for them! Season 3 was pretty solid but it was mostly on the back of the first 2 episodes and then Ali carrying the show. I really liked this episode. Even the first 10 minutes, get as weird as you want TD!
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 02:51 |
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Pretty sure sometime after season 2 he admitted that he only did it because of HBO exec pressure for more True Detective. So while season 1 was made after years of effort season 2 just got kind of thrown together. I'm assuming HBO wants to turn True Detective into like a creator forward crime anthology. This season just has to deal with the fallout of the transition.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 02:52 |
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Season 2 was bad but in a comically entertaining kind of way. I hardly remember anything about Season 3 though, boring as poo poo. Will Season 4 be a masterpiece like Season 1? After episode 1, I can confidently say no. Will it be better than seasons 2 and 3? Probably.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 03:59 |
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Gresh posted:Season 2 was bad but in a comically entertaining kind of way. I hardly remember anything about Season 3 though, boring as poo poo. Will Season 4 be a masterpiece like Season 1? After episode 1, I can confidently say no. Will it be better than seasons 2 and 3? Probably. Season 2 is good
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 04:01 |
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Season 3 was kinda boring and season 2 was bad but in an entertaining way
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 04:06 |
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the eyes wide shut episode from season 2 is really good
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 04:35 |
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I throw in a good word for season 2 whenever I can, I really liked it. I'm curious how I'd feel after a rewatch
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 04:44 |
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ASSS pen still makes me chuckle
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 05:48 |
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It's possible to explain why the first season is so fine. It's not beyond words. But it's a little bit difficult to do without resorting to vague claims like 'the acting' or 'the cinematography'. It is The sum of its parts but those parts aren't easy to recall and name. And you can totally expect that a season of True Detective should live up to previous seasons, like Fargo should live up to its previous seasons even if they adapted a non-Fargo story and changed the team. And with SE01 and to some degree SE03 there's a lot to live up to. "Our shows been here a long, long time" basically. So far I can't say it is lives up, but it feels like a TD show regardless of what it was originally conceived of being. Minus, like I said, that head scratching opening and the mid-budget horror movie elements re: lights flickering, everybody having trauma they flash back to, stopping into other worlds within the first episode. Bright Bart fucked around with this message at 07:38 on Jan 17, 2024 |
# ? Jan 17, 2024 07:35 |
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I mainly remember Season 2 being announced as being about 'Secret Occult History of the U.S. Transportation System' which was apparently dropped during development.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 11:47 |
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Season 2 was doomed the moment Vince Vaughn was cast.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 12:56 |
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When I heard that season 2 was going to be about the transportation system I figured a good theme would be the hidden depths and societies of the subway tunnels and poo poo like that. Especially if you wanted to do more cosmic horror, there are many good venues there - I just thought what we got was spectacularly boring. I don't really even remember much about it outside of Colin Farrell's faildad antics.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 13:44 |
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One of the things that season 1 did that was probably correct was make the supernatural stuff not real at the end, and it even basically had Marty break the case in the end, because while Rust could see connections in everything, Marty could see what was right in front of him. It wouldn't shock me if they chose to make the supernatural stuff real in this season, to try to differentiate it.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 15:03 |
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Panzeh posted:One of the things that season 1 did that was probably correct was make the supernatural stuff not real at the end, and it even basically had Marty break the case in the end, because while Rust could see connections in everything, Marty could see what was right in front of him. It wouldn't shock me if they chose to make the supernatural stuff real in this season, to try to differentiate it. I don’t think the supernatural stuff wasn’t real. I think the supernatural was just a guiding force that emanated through the entire series. There’s a dark force that’s always there. It just doesn’t give them answers. The ending also is bittersweet because they didn’t really change anything. The real criminals are still in power and doing what they always did. They just caught some patsy.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 15:25 |
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https://twitter.com/lingounbound/status/1747495867513544882?s=61&t=N2RxjCcZEoNL3LJNhAQ0dg
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 17:35 |
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The_Rob posted:I don’t think the supernatural stuff wasn’t real. I think the supernatural was just a guiding force that emanated through the entire series. There’s a dark force that’s always there. It just doesn’t give them answers. The ending also is bittersweet because they didn’t really change anything. The real criminals are still in power and doing what they always did. They just caught some patsy. I don’t know that there’s anything at stake in the distinction, but when Cohle sees that thing in the ritual pit, it seemed to me like a version of the spiral symbol, and not like a hallucination inspired by the spiral, but like something that could have inspired the spiral in its more complex version of the same basic shape. Then at the end Cohle interprets it as a galaxy, which it clearly isn’t. That seems ambiguous enough to wonder about. For me, though, the show’s interesting because it’s cosmic horror basically without anything otherworldly—it’s just sublime terror at the insignificance of humanity and the indifference of the universe to human action in a purely naturalistic way. Those final shots of all the show’s locations at the end are terrifying to me not because they suggest the perspective of some malicious presence but because they show us the indifference of the universe to the events of the series. Also I hate that dumb guys have fallen in love with Cohle’s pessimism, as the show is very careful to show him as being about as pathetic and wrong about things as Hart. That exchange with the “let’s make the car a place for silent contemplation, ok?” is about showing what a weirdo Cohle is and how he’s embarrassed about how he can’t function or be normal for five minutes. He only works as part of a duo.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 17:55 |
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Henchman of Santa posted:https://twitter.com/lingounbound/status/1747495867513544882?s=61&t=N2RxjCcZEoNL3LJNhAQ0dg All we hear is Tokyo gaga Tokyo googoo Tokyo gaga All we hear is Tokyo gaga Tokyo blah blah
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 17:58 |
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Henchman of Santa posted:https://twitter.com/lingounbound/status/1747495867513544882?s=61&t=N2RxjCcZEoNL3LJNhAQ0dg Weirdly this makes complete sense. This must be how Han Solo feels when he's listening to Chewbacca.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 18:03 |
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What’s that, Chewey? Lydia Lunch’s father? Oh, a girl can’t do it as good as a boy. Ok pal.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 18:07 |
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Panzeh posted:One of the things that season 1 did that was probably correct was make the supernatural stuff not real at the end It was real enough to get a girls murdered and a community to cover it up/egg it on. One of the theses Harrelson and McConaughey especially articulated but didn't come out and say was that the line between real life and imaginary monsters is blurry and thin, and that evil exists and it has a hold out there that can be thought of in supernatural terms regardless of if it has an existence apart from humans or not. Who cares if it's slenderman or a creepy janitor that's butchering girls in the forest? Who cares if it's the witch from Hansel & Gretel keeping children locked up v. a psychotic meth cook? If anything the latter is worse. I can see Martin and Rustin taking the witch away in handcuffs once they shot her out of the air and got over the WTF factor.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 18:12 |
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I can only think of 2 seasons of TV I never finished. TD season 2 and last season of dexter. Last season of dexter was me actively deciding it was too stupid and not continuing it. TD2 was me simply forgetting about the show and a couple of months later going "oh yeah, i was watching this"
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 18:43 |
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Bright Bart posted:It's possible to explain why the first season is so fine. It's not beyond words. But it's a little bit difficult to do without resorting to vague claims like 'the acting' or 'the cinematography'. It is The sum of its parts but those parts aren't easy to recall and name. I was entertained by S4E1 and I'm looking forward to the rest of the season, but I think this gets at the core of why everything after Season 1 will be inherently subpar in comparison. It's essentially impossible to define what exactly makes Season 1 distinctly "True Detective". You can list out all of the elements, but checking more of the boxes wouldn't make a new season feel more like "True Detective". If I took a stab at creating a new season, I'd think the most core aspect would be the theme of nihilistic detective working an extremely bleak case to ultimately find some measure of meaning to life, while incorporating some of the following:
In any case, it's interesting seeing the suits at HBO try to decipher what made the original such a phenomenon
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 18:47 |
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"The acting" and "the cinematography" aren't "vague words." Like, remember when Mexican tv did a shot for shot version of breaking bad in Spanish? And instead of being an all time great show it was comically bad and universally panned because the actors were much worse and the cinematography was crap? Matthew McConaughey can pull off quote:Transference of fear and self-loathing to an authoritarian vessel. It's catharsis. He absorbs their dread with his narrative. Because of this, he's effective at proportion to the amount of certainty he can project. Certain linguistic anthropologists think that religion is a language virus that rewrites pathways in the brain. Dulls critical thinking. Most other actors couldn't. Much like the oner scene in episode 4 or 5 makes that an all time great sequence, as opposed to a run of the mill heist.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 18:57 |
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joepinetree posted:
It also helps to have the reactions from W. Harrelson, who can make you laugh with no more than a tongue-jutting gurning scowl into the middle distance
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 19:12 |
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Gonz posted:*watches the season premiere* I listened to the official podcast episode about the creation of the season, and Issa Lopez actually cites both Dyatlov Pass and the Mary Celeste as inspirations for the season. I feel like the Flannan Isles lighthouse disappearance also has to be an inspiration.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 19:15 |
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I AM GRANDO posted:I don’t know that there’s anything at stake in the distinction, but when Cohle sees that thing in the ritual pit, it seemed to me like a version of the spiral symbol, and not like a hallucination inspired by the spiral, but like something that could have inspired the spiral in its more complex version of the same basic shape. Then at the end Cohle interprets it as a galaxy, which it clearly isn’t. That seems ambiguous enough to wonder about. Not sure I get this take on "the insignificance of humanity". The show depicted humanity as incredibly significant. An elite pedophile ring is something that has historically material basis and consequences even if unseen.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 19:58 |
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edit: oops messed up sorry.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 20:48 |
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Danger posted:Not sure I get this take on "the insignificance of humanity". The show depicted humanity as incredibly significant. An elite pedophile ring is something that has historically material basis and consequences even if unseen. I mean that the season raises the idea of a cosmic or deep-time perspective to which human existence is insignificant, communicated by shots of a landscape without human figures. This is the point of view Cohle articulates a bunch of times and rejects when he interprets his vision in the ceremonial chamber as a galaxy with points of light visible that let him feel his daughter’s presence and his father’s presence.
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# ? Jan 17, 2024 21:08 |
The_Rob posted:I don’t think the supernatural stuff wasn’t real. I think the supernatural was just a guiding force that emanated through the entire series. There’s a dark force that’s always there. It just doesn’t give them answers. The ending also is bittersweet because they didn’t really change anything. The real criminals are still in power and doing what they always did. They just caught some patsy. Panzeh posted:One of the things that season 1 did that was probably correct was make the supernatural stuff not real at the end, and it even basically had Marty break the case in the end, because while Rust could see connections in everything, Marty could see what was right in front of him. It wouldn't shock me if they chose to make the supernatural stuff real in this season, to try to differentiate it. Euphoriaphone posted:[...][*]A perp is captured in the end but the true criminal (the system) lives on[...]
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# ? Jan 18, 2024 01:19 |
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I don’t know what exactly is being told, but I do think it’s telling that not once has Rachel McAdams been mentioned in Season 2 chat.
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# ? Jan 18, 2024 02:08 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 10:20 |
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TheBizzness posted:I don’t know what exactly is being told, but I do think it’s telling that not once has Rachel McAdams been mentioned in Season 2 chat. Speak up now, don't be a coward.
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# ? Jan 18, 2024 02:17 |