what is this?
He's just saying that re-watching either show he wouldn't have put together that ginger was the same guy from boardwalk empire.
what is this?
Looks nothing like TravoltaI thought it was supposed to be the angel Michael.
I agree with this, thats why I think it would be easier digested if fundamentally disconnected from the narrative. And lets make no bones about it, easier to digest is better filmmaking. At least in discussions about things like this.
I'm not mistaking the man then for the man now. The esoteric monologues fit in and I couldn't imagine the show without them. But its a really messy thing to do and even when handled perfectly it can easily be the first thing tip someones "illegitimacy" alarm. Especially since I view their primary purpose as tonal window dressing rather than a true eye into Rust's soul. We don't ever get that amount of detail from Marty.
The monologues are the most TVSHOW thing about True Detective. They are so frequent and go on for so long there is no discernible meaning to the specifics. Their importance is in the general texture and feel of them, which is why I think the show would be better if they were disconnected from the overall narrative.
It's a shot from Boardwalk Empire. Joseph Sikora (Ginger) has roles on both shows.what is this?
They probably should be shooting for mood pieces like those you may or may not see in high level cinema. It'd be a helluva a lot better than MM looking drunk and forlorn. To write pages full of big ideas expressing an incredibly specific (and utterly common) state of being like that and not back them up with the visual craft is what makes this just another TVSHOW.
Marty is a helluva lot more complex than rust so far, going from they've showed us. Rust is a shell of a character compared to Marty.IAlso Marty is just not that complicated when you get down to it.
Marty is a helluva lot more complex than rust so far, going from they've showed us. Rust is a shell of a character compared to Marty.
I've come to the conclusion this is where a bulk of the complaints against Rust's rants stem from. They feel theyre being preached too.They're an expression of the character within their time and their situation, not necessarily a propaganda of belief.
Oh, you're saying my critiques of the show stem from feeling insecure about it's universal acceptance?
Gotcha.
Marty is a helluva lot more complex than rust so far, going from they've showed us. Rust is a shell of a character compared to Marty.
I've come to the conclusion this is where a bulk of the complaints against Rust's rants stem from. They feel they're being preached too.
I disagree with that assessment, but yeah. Some of my favorite parts of the show have been the back and forths between Marty and Rust
I've come to the conclusion this is where a bulk of the complaints against Rust's rants stem from. They feel theyre being preached too.
I disagree with that assessment, but yeah. Some of my favorite parts of the show have been the back and forths between Marty and Rust
that line was goldenYeah, I can understand how it gets tiring when he's talking to the detectives about it, because there is not necessarily the contrast Marty provides.
Must be tough. Living with someone spouting insane shit in your ear all day long.
I did ask you to elaborate as to how you'd do things differently but you haven't really delivered on that front beyond an implied criticism of the medium itself.
I'm not even sure Marty would agree (“I'm just an ordinary dude with a big-ass dick') but still I wasn't aware that the characters were in competition.
I also see the Yellow King/Blackmail thread as being related to the lie Marty and Rust told. They were hunting the Yellow King and were given a story that in Marty's case saved their reputation and gave a sense of peace.Wilde claims to operate a national conspiracy which saves people's reputations from scandal and then subsequently blackmails them into subservience.
I'm relatively new to GAF so I'm not sure if this is the place for this considering what people seem to be talking about, but nobody I know is watching this and I needed somewhere to put my thoughts.
The King in Yellow, the work of literature that the show's writer references, includes a story called 'The Repairer of Reputations', which contains the eponymous and badly disfigured character Mr Wilde. Wilde claims to operate a national conspiracy which saves people's reputations from scandal and then subsequently blackmails them into subservience.
In the last episode, Marty says he has joined a group called the 'Promise Keepers', who are a group of Christian men that hold conferences (primarily in the southern United States) to reinforce the promises they've made to their wives with the purpose of keeping men from cheating on their wives. Although not related to any particular denomination, the group is ostensibly a simple, non-profit Christian organization but has been criticized for using religion as a means to politically re-assert men as the superior sex and encourages the Madonna / Whore view of female sexuality.
In the second episode we learn that a Sheriff is corrupt and protecting the 'bunny ranch' brothel that Doris stayed at before she was murdered. We also learn that the Sheriff in charge when Marie Fontanot went missing had the surname of Childress, a name which also appears in the most recent episode as one of the security guards who escorted the accused who committed suicide. It's also worthwhile noting that Reginald LeDeux can be translated to mean 'Second King'.
Although I haven't tied these points together, it's just stuff I noticed while watching the show. I think the women are being ritualistically murdered to give twisted penance for the reputations of the men who solicited them for sex.
don't need to elaborate how I would do things differently. Thats not a prerequisite to offering a critique. Nor is it a prerequisite to valuing a participants opinion in this discussion. My criticism was beyond explicit.
They probably should be shooting for mood pieces like those you may or may not see in high level cinema. It'd be a helluva a lot better than MM looking drunk and forlorn. To write pages full of big ideas expressing an incredibly specific (and utterly common) state of being like that and not back them up with the visual craft is what makes this just another TVSHOW
That line "I'm just an ordinary dude with a big-ass dick" is exactly what I'm referring to in terms of character complexity. The outgoing alpha-maleness of a character who literally broke down in tears at the sight of his partner borrowing a lawn mower has WAY more going on than his brooding partner who've we've only been told things about.
I dare say its you who has been viewing our exchange over the last hour as a competition.
So I was watching a bit of the first episode of TD and really liked it. Does it keep getting better or does it stay consistent?
That's definitely good to hear! Looks like I got some catching up to do.So far the first three episodes are extremely consistent, and then after that it gets better and better in different ways. One of the more refreshing shows in the genre.
I'm relatively new to GAF so I'm not sure if this is the place for this considering what people seem to be talking about, but nobody I know is watching this and I needed somewhere to put my thoughts.
The King in Yellow, the work of literature that the show's writer references, includes a story called 'The Repairer of Reputations', which contains the eponymous and badly disfigured character Mr Wilde. Wilde claims to operate a national conspiracy which saves people's reputations from scandal and then subsequently blackmails them into subservience.
In the last episode, Marty says he has joined a group called the 'Promise Keepers', who are a group of Christian men that hold conferences (primarily in the southern United States) to reinforce the promises they've made to their wives with the purpose of keeping men from cheating on their wives. Although not related to any particular denomination, the group is ostensibly a simple, non-profit Christian organization but has been criticized for using religion as a means to politically re-assert men as the superior sex and encourages the Madonna / Whore view of female sexuality.
In the second episode we learn that a Sheriff is corrupt and protecting the 'bunny ranch' brothel that Doris stayed at before she was murdered. We also learn that the Sheriff in charge when Marie Fontanot went missing had the surname of Childress, a name which also appears in the most recent episode as one of the security guards who escorted the accused who committed suicide. It's also worthwhile noting that Reginald LeDeux can be translated to mean 'Second King'.
Although I haven't tied these points together, it's just stuff I noticed while watching the show. I think the women are being ritualistically murdered to give twisted penance for the reputations of the men who solicited them for sex.
EdTV!http://variety.com/2014/tv/news/dark-character-draws-mcconaughey-to-hbos-noir-miniseries-1201105443/
McConaughey recommended Harrelson to this role, I didn't know they were friends.
http://variety.com/2014/tv/news/dark-character-draws-mcconaughey-to-hbos-noir-miniseries-1201105443/
McConaughey recommended Harrelson to this role, I didn't know they were friends.
Any of those good?They've done several films together. Even played brothers.
Any of those good?
Any of those good?
EdTV!
EdTV!
Yes! Just don't go in expecting to see Hart and Cohle :lol
EdTV!
I'm relatively new to GAF so I'm not sure if this is the place for this considering what people seem to be talking about, but nobody I know is watching this and I needed somewhere to put my thoughts.
The King in Yellow, the work of literature that the show's writer references, includes a story called 'The Repairer of Reputations', which contains the eponymous and badly disfigured character Mr Wilde. Wilde claims to operate a national conspiracy which saves people's reputations from scandal and then subsequently blackmails them into subservience.
In the last episode, Marty says he has joined a group called the 'Promise Keepers', who are a group of Christian men that hold conferences (primarily in the southern United States) to reinforce the promises they've made to their wives with the purpose of keeping men from cheating on their wives. Although not related to any particular denomination, the group is ostensibly a simple, non-profit Christian organization but has been criticized for using religion as a means to politically re-assert men as the superior sex and encourages the Madonna / Whore view of female sexuality.
In the second episode we learn that a Sheriff is corrupt and protecting the 'bunny ranch' brothel that Doris stayed at before she was murdered. We also learn that the Sheriff in charge when Marie Fontanot went missing had the surname of Childress, a name which also appears in the most recent episode as one of the security guards who escorted the accused who committed suicide. It's also worthwhile noting that Reginald LeDeux can be translated to mean 'Second King'.
Although I haven't tied these points together, it's just stuff I noticed while watching the show. I think the women are being ritualistically murdered to give twisted penance for the reputations of the men who solicited them for sex.
MM mowed Woody's lawn in that one
They probably should be shooting for mood pieces like those you may or may not see in high level cinema. It'd be a helluva a lot better than MM looking drunk and forlorn. To write pages full of big ideas expressing an incredibly specific (and utterly common) state of being like that and not back them up with the visual craft is what makes this just another TVSHOW.
Anyone else entertained the idea of a Wicker Man style ending for Rust?
Bees?
Which state do you guys want/think Season 2 would take place in?
I thought it was rumored to be California. Sounds a bit boring, but it's a pretty big state and I'm sure there are interesting and underused areas in it if it's true.
Which state do you guys want/think Season 2 would take place in?
Yes! Just don't go in expecting to see Hart and Cohle :lol
I'm relatively new to GAF so I'm not sure if this is the place for this considering what people seem to be talking about, but nobody I know is watching this and I needed somewhere to put my thoughts.
The King in Yellow, the work of literature that the show's writer references, includes a story called 'The Repairer of Reputations', which contains the eponymous and badly disfigured character Mr Wilde. Wilde claims to operate a national conspiracy which saves people's reputations from scandal and then subsequently blackmails them into subservience.
In the last episode, Marty says he has joined a group called the 'Promise Keepers', who are a group of Christian men that hold conferences (primarily in the southern United States) to reinforce the promises they've made to their wives with the purpose of keeping men from cheating on their wives. Although not related to any particular denomination, the group is ostensibly a simple, non-profit Christian organization but has been criticized for using religion as a means to politically re-assert men as the superior sex and encourages the Madonna / Whore view of female sexuality.
In the second episode we learn that a Sheriff is corrupt and protecting the 'bunny ranch' brothel that Doris stayed at before she was murdered. We also learn that the Sheriff in charge when Marie Fontanot went missing had the surname of Childress, a name which also appears in the most recent episode as one of the security guards who escorted the accused who committed suicide. It's also worthwhile noting that Reginald LeDeux can be translated to mean 'Second King'.
Although I haven't tied these points together, it's just stuff I noticed while watching the show. I think the women are being ritualistically murdered to give twisted penance for the reputations of the men who solicited them for sex.
LA can be an incredible location. You just need to have a director like Michael Mann with an eye to make it pop.