How did True Detective come across your desk?
[Creator] Nic Pizzolatto and I are at the same management company, Anonymous Content, so my manager sent me the project and said it was timely, and me and Nic met and talked about the movies we liked and things we have in common. It happened very quickly. I had gotten it, and then Alejandro González Iñárritu was on it for a very short time, and then he slipped out and it came right back to me.
The interview with Maggie isn't over though. I think we've pretty much exhausted the flashbacks too, but that's still on piece of the framing narrative which is hanging there. She hasn't given them anything at all yet, so there might be something else she has to say? I dunno.
True Detective spans 17 years; how did you demonstrate that passing of time in your character?
I just took off my wig.
That is taking place as he sits in his car outside his home, right before he's blindsided by a divorce, reinforcing his obliviousness and his culpability going into the scene. It helps keep the viewer reminded that it's Marty, not Maggie, who's to blame.You know what poor writing is? An extended exchange between Marty and Beth about how she wants him to "fuck her in the ass" while she poses in her underwear and the camera pans around her body. That adds nothing to the narrative nor does it tell us anything about the characters we didn't already know. It was just stupid.![]()
That is taking place as he sits in his car outside his home, right before he's blindsided by a divorce, reinforcing his obliviousness and his culpability going into the scene. It helps keep the viewer reminded that it's Marty, not Maggie, who's to blame.
Marty's scenes w/ his flings are inundated with sex. We don't see this same sort of hyper-male gaze elsewhere on the show, it's intentionally trying to get across Marty's mental state.
I disagree. Having that scene with marty parked outside presumably to come home to his family is fine. All marty has at this point is his home life which he has given in part of to beth in the guise of working late . Rust only has his work, we would have even less marty to show otherwise since he isnt backing rust on his most recent endeavors because he's a shitty detective and friend. The guy is content to ride his hero cop status and play it safe on his cases. When we do see marty he's getting remarks from rust like "you have somewhere to be? What? are you gonna go home and play with the kids?" Or a disheveled marty being called a human tampon by his superior. The implication is he's been sleeping around and everyone knows, Rust is doing all of the work. Marty beats the crap out of two young men for sleeping with his "varsity slut team captain" of a daughter. Then he goes and and starts an affair with a young woman who he knows was selling ass from a young age. I think the scene helps highlights the stark dichotomy of the two main characters, adds gratuitous eye candy for hbo(shes not even naked)and its kinda funny. In the end Ithink it just further shows how horrible a person marty is and given his remorseful state in the interrogation room maybe he'll seek redemption in some form to do right by his old partner or continue being an ass. I dont think its fair to dismiss that scene as poor writing. Dexter has poor writing. The scene in question is belaboring a point .You know what poor writing is? An extended exchange between Marty and Beth about how she wants him to "fuck her in the ass" while she poses in her underwear and the camera pans around her body. That adds nothing to the narrative nor does it tell us anything about the characters we didn't already know. It was just stupid.![]()
One of the most haunting images in the show came in episode three, when we first glimpsed Reginald Ledoux wearing a gas mask and underwear.
I can tell you where that came from. That was written very specifically, that he has that kind of gas mask on, and hes walking around with a jock strap and tattoos on. The jock strap and the tattoos, I couldnt think of anything more frightening than that coming at me through the woods. But the gas mask, I remember being inspired by those Bosch pictures and photographs of masks that plague doctors used to wear. Long needle noses. And some of those World War One gas masks. The point is that theyre very unearthly. It makes human beings look more insect like. Those pointy masks are just really, really freaky. So I wanted a gas mask the recalled the proboscis of a mosquito.
More via the link.Has HBO ordered a second season?
They want to do season 2. I just have to give them scripts and see if they like them! It would be great if we could use some of the same actors, like a reparatory company. It would be different characters, different setting. Thats part of the fun of the anthology.
Two reasons why I didn't like this scene:
1) We've already established that Marty is a dirtbag, that he cheats on his way, that he fucks up again. At this point, he's already banged Beth. We don't need "ANAL OMG" to sway Marty and lead to his downfall.
2) The scene isn't even from the perspective of Marty. He's talking to Beth on the phone, unable to see her. The camera is male-gazing just as much as Marty is supposed to be.
I'm against reusing actors unless they are playing the same character again.
I don't mind reusing some of the more peripheral actors again if it helps streamline the production. We're going to see a number of actors from previous HBO shows anyway, so I don't see why it's a big deal.I'm against reusing actors unless they are playing the same character again.
I don't mind reusing some of the more peripheral actors again if it helps streamline the production. We're going to see a number of actors from previous HBO shows anyway, so I don't see why it's a big deal.
BTW.....Timothy Olyphant/John Hawkes as detectives, pls. McShane as the criminal.
Peripheral, sure......but it would rub me the wrong way if MM and WH were back as the lead detectives, for example.
But bringing back someone like Daddario? Sure.
- EW: 'True Detective' creator Nic Pizzolatto on Carcosa, hideous men, and the season 1 endgame *some spoilers, read at your own risk and tag discussion accordingly*More via the link.
Peripheral, sure......but it would rub me the wrong way if MM and WH were back as the lead detectives, for example.
But bringing back someone like Daddario? Sure.
You have to actively hedge against Maggie getting Skylar'd. There's a real danger in having members of the audience turn on her because they don't understand just how desperate she is when she uses Rust. Reinforcing why she's making these decisions (and doing so in a way that's incredibly uncomfortable for the audience re: Beth's status/relationship to Marty) helps hedge against that.Two reasons why I didn't like this scene:
1) We've already established that Marty is a dirtbag, that he cheats on his way, that he fucks up again. At this point, he's already banged Beth. We don't need "ANAL OMG" to sway Marty and lead to his downfall.
2) The scene isn't even from the perspective of Marty. He's talking to Beth on the phone, unable to see her. The camera is male-gazing just as much as Marty is supposed to be.
You don't think there's any relation to the recurring theme of "flat circle" that this girl who was working at a bunny ranch and "changed" her life thanks to Marty is now effectively doing the same thing she was in the first place? She supposedly turned things around, yet here she is as a young woman staring at herself in the mirror while goading on a man she knows is married.
- EW: 'True Detective' creator Nic Pizzolatto on Carcosa, hideous men, and the season 1 endgame *some spoilers, read at your own risk and tag discussion accordingly*More via the link.
The King In Yellow is in there because its a story about a story, one that drives people to madness. Everything in True Detective is composed of questionable narratives, inner and outer, from Cohles view that identity is just a story we tell ourselves, to the stories about manhood that Hart tells about himself, to the not always truthful story they tell the detectives investigating them. So it made sense to me, at least to allude to an external narrative that that is supposed to create insanity, or as I prefer, deranged enlightenment
- EW: 'True Detective' creator Nic Pizzolatto on Carcosa, hideous men, and the season 1 endgame *some spoilers, read at your own risk and tag discussion accordingly*More via the link.
" If you look at the series so far, what seems supernatural actually has real-world causes, like Cohle’s hallucinations, or even the nature of the crime. It has occult portents, but there is nothing supernatural about it."
Fukunaga-"The original cut of it was 90 minutes, and it was a good 90 minutes that didn’t feel fat, so cutting it down was really hard."
On the plus side, it should make for a great dvd/blu-ray set if they include a lot of the extra footage.Also, after reading a lot of these interviews with Pizzolatto and Fukunaga, it is really disappointing how they had to really edit things down for time. I think in that most recent Daily Beast article with Fukunaga, he said episode 5 had about 90 minutes worth of content they needed to trim down to under 60. FUCK![]()
On the plus side, it should make for a great dvd/blu-ray set if they include a lot of the extra footage.
Hmm. Somehow I doubt HBO would want "definitive" versions to appear on disc only. They make their money off of subscriptions, not disc sales.On the plus side, it should make for a great dvd/blu-ray set if they include a lot of the extra footage.
You cannot race the Cornballer.Nic Pizzolatto just tweeted out this new (I believe)interview:
http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/02/27/true-detective-nic-pizzolatto-season-1/
You cannot race the Cornballer.
I'm the Marty to his Yellow King.
Is this being renewed for a second season?
Pretty good stuff.
You know what's the worst thing? I expect episode 7 to end with a bang making the wait for episode 8 much, much worse than for episode 7
There are a bunch of links at the top of the page.I need to read through the thread. But I'm really interested in this discussion around the women in this show being poorly written. Is there an article/essay about this, or is just mostly fans having the discussion?
The most likely situation is that there are a bunch of deleted scenes included on the dvd. Usually they don't go to the trouble of re-editing something, but stranger things have happened.Hmm. Somehow I doubt HBO would want "definitive" versions to appear on disc only. They make their money off of subscriptions, not disc sales.
Have extended/definitive versions of their shows appeared on disc releases in the past?
Maybe they could re-air an 'encore' version of the show in a few months with re-cut episodes?
Its own thing. Trying to recapture S1 would be foolish.Do you guys want them to continue the format of interrogations in the "present" day and flashbacks to the reality of the past? Is that part of the format of the show now? Or should season 2 just totally be its own unique thing?
Do you guys want them to continue the format of interrogations in the "present" day and flashbacks to the reality of the past?
Chris Cooper and John Hawkes for Season 2 pls
Do you guys want them to continue the format of interrogations in the "present" day and flashbacks to the reality of the past? Is that part of the format of the show now? Or should season 2 just totally be its own unique thing?