Ah, yeah, not much to say at all about the nature of the cult at this point beyond the fact that it "might" exist. I doubt that they'll spend too much time going into specifics though. Most likely it just continues as a framing device much in the way the case has throughout the season.
I think that at this point it's pretty obvious that there is a cult or some organization of some kind. As to it's purpose? Couldn't even begin to guess.
I think the "cult" kidnaps people and sacrifices them to their "god" under the leadership of a "priest" the "yellow king". I don't think it has anything specificly to do with molesting kids, and part of the problem is we've only seen two victims, both adult females. However, when Rust asks what happened to some kid in episode 1 or 2, the detectives show him the picture of the modern day murder - this seems to suggest that the cult members do in fact groom the victims from a young age.
Granted, I could be completely misremembering shit and talking out of my ass right now.
I'm thinking it's going to be exactly like that and I'm looking forward to watching them all in one sitting in a few weeks. It's going to be glorious.
Should be here somewhereAnyone know the name of the song at the end of the episode?
But what of the two kids they found at the house, one apparently dead already a day old, and the other catatonic? I assume they were molested, but even if not... where did they fit into the equation? They just happened to stumble onto an unrelated crime, or were these victims related to the cult somehow?
I think that at this point it's pretty obvious that there is a cult or some organization of some kind. As to it's purpose? Couldn't even begin to guess.
I think the "cult" kidnaps people and sacrifices them to their "god" under the leadership of a "priest" the "yellow king". I don't think it has anything specificly to do with molesting kids, and part of the problem is we've only seen two victims, both adult females. However, when Rust asks what happened to some kid in episode 1 or 2, the detectives show him the picture of the modern day murder - this seems to suggest that the cult members do in fact groom the victims from a young age.
Granted, I could be completely misremembering shit and talking out of my ass right now.
I think it's Revernd Tuttle, the guy that owns the school. He is the guy that shook Rusts hand in the first episode. He has a high up connection to the police as he's the mayors brother I think.
Seems like someone at the top is covering for him. Rust is just obsessed and following each murder case as a civilian. Probably gets fired when he presses against Tuttle and the establishment.
Along the shore the cloud waves break,
The twin suns sink behind the lake,
The shadows lengthen
In Carcosa.
Strange is the night where black stars rise,
And strange moons circle through the skies,
But stranger still is
Lost Carcosa.
Songs that the Hyades shall sing,
Where flap the tatters of the King,
Must die unheard in
Dim Carcosa.
Song of my soul, my voice is dead,
Die thou, unsung, as tears unshed
Shall dry and die in
Lost Carcosa.
By the way, that vision of reality that Rust describes could be the writer Pizzolatto being sneaky describing how he created the narrative we're experiencing. After all, one way to create what he's apparently made is to visualize the entirety of space and time for these characters (three spatial dimensions, plus time) and then look at it from the outside. As someone outside looking in, he can see (paraphrasing here) the lives of individual things passing through all the space they'll ever occupy.
Are we inside or outside that reality? After all, we're seeing things linearly (what he wants us to see) but also nonlinearly (because the things he's showing us are out of order).
Are we seeing the flattened circle? Or inside it?
True Detective's so good it's making you question reality.
There's an excellent post over at io9 about it: Link. I daresay it's better than the Think Progress one.The Yellow King or King in Yellow is supposed to be a fictional play within a book by the same name right?
When I was looking it up I was reading about how the first act of the play is normal and captivating while the second half drives the audience into madness. I feel like there are a couple parallels here.
From that article earlier:The show though does seem particularly obsessed by philosophy; everybody has a view of the world, and they're always sharing it. I'd be surprised if we don't find out what the yellow king thinks he's doing this all for.
Why The King in Yellow? I think it's obvious, and I'll go out on a limb and say the season will continue with detectives Cohle and Hart edging closer to the abyss of what Lovecraft termed "cosmic fear," which he defined as:
In a revealing interview with the The Wall Street Journal, Pizzolatto discusses his love of existential horror and its most prominent authors, from Chambers and Lovecraft to modern masters of the weird Laird Barron and Thomas Ligotti:A certain atmosphere of breathless and unexplainable dread of outer, unknown forces . . . a hint, expressed with a seriousness and portentousness becoming its subject, of that most terrible conception of the human braina malign and particular suspension or defeat of those fixed laws of Nature which are our only safeguard against the assaults of chaos and the daemons of unplumbed space.
Their fictional visions of cosmic despair were articulating the same things as certain nihilist and pessimist philosophers, but with more poetry and art and vision . . . It's important for us to confront the potential of the true abyss. . . .
Brilliant. Fucking brilliant.Thanks.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srU5osUsn6I
Also, that Inside the Episode video with Pizzolato brought up an excellent point.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D7eTYUD0S7E#t=180
He knew exactly why they were bringing him in, which is why he wanted to drink during the interrogation. Brilliant.
Brilliant. Fucking brilliant.
He knew exactly why they were bringing him in, which is why he wanted to drink during the interrogation. Brilliant.
Rust's been on the case since 2002 for sure. Makes me Hope Marty is actually in on it and helping him.
Thanks for this. Always good to find some new authors to check out.In a revealing interview with the The Wall Street Journal, Pizzolatto discusses his love of existential horror and its most prominent authors, from Chambers and Lovecraft to modern masters of the weird Laird Barron and Thomas Ligotti
Brilliant. Fucking brilliant.
Been thinking about these conspiracy theories of the police being in on the murders. Makes me think of Cohle/Hart's boss. (1) That guy always seemed very dismissive of Cohle, (2) and seemed to be in a hurry to hand the case off to that task force. (3) Not to mention he seemed kind of relieved after they killed Reggie. Not sure if this is just normal behavior or if he's also possibly in on it.
I wore that same Pink Floyd shirt in high school. Perfect for that era. Whoever picked that out should be promoted hah.
I guess once Rust found out that the real killer was still out there he went way off the reservation and has spent the last ten years off the grid investigating it on his own. Whenever we see his storage unit it will be everything he has dug up over the years.
I guess once Rust found out that the real killer was still out there he went way off the reservation and has spent the last ten years off the grid investigating it on his own. Whenever we see his storage unit it will be everything he has dug up over the years.