EverythingShiny
Member
Time is a flat circle. :/
Yep. Thought it was interesting how Rust brought that up several times in this episode, too. Ledoux's words really did a number on him.
Time is a flat circle. :/
She's an essential part of their history. It also shows how they've changed as people (or remained the same) through how they each relate to her several years later.True. Talking about atonement, what's bugging me is why Maggi is still a key cog in the cast? She's the detective's wife. I've never seen a detective's wife play as key a role as in this mystery. She was one of the three being interviewed. And now she's back.
The author is a literary man, and as such I cannot explain it using any literary theories. Maybe, he likes the character? That's happend before in the literary world.
It would be funny if she helps solve the missing part in this whole thing. Two loose emotional men with the most stable character on the show solving it in one grand finale.
Time is a flat circle. :/
So in 2010 something must have happened to Rust. Something he's not sharing yet, but it pushed him to return to the state, break the law, find compelling evidence, and continue this crazy investigation he dropped 8 years before that. It's not going to be a "OMG WTF" plot twist either, because the story has always been about the characters and how they related to the world and others around them. So I think him having to confront his own mortality and wanting to make the best use of his time before he goes, fits with all the other themes too.
Yeah, he initially said something like "my memory's foggy" I think, then proceeded to spit out a lot of neatly tied up details over their meetings.The way I saw it, for a random missing persons case 20 years gone, his response seemed awfully well rehearsed. Like a lie he's used to telling to neatly shut questions away. Which is extra odd because he didn't bring any of it up back in '95 when he was part of the squad and that was actually a part of the overall investigation.
Rewatching it now, the video was some creepy ass shit. The way the kid was crying, them holding her down...and then they leave it up to your imagination. Ugh.
True. Talking about atonement, what's bugging me is why Maggi is still a key cog in the cast? She's the detective's wife. I've never seen a detective's wife play as key a role as in this mystery. She was one of the three being interviewed. And now she's back.
The author is a literary man, and as such I cannot explain it using any literary theories. Maybe, he likes the character? That's happend before in the literary world.
It would be funny if she helps solve the missing part in this whole thing. Two loose emotional men with the most stable character on the show solving it in one grand finale.
Sorry everyone, no more Rustin Cohle goodness after next week.
McConaughey not doing a second season of True Detective
Seems like the story will be tied up next week. I always expected it, but nothing concrete has come forward about Season 2 so some were saying it was always a possibility MM might return in some form.
I liked this one quote from the article
So then what about Dora Lang, was that the cult or Tuttles or whatever you would call it acting in conjunction with Errol or was he doing that on his own, I mean the hooker that Rust spoke to talked about seeing a man with scars.
So it would appear that Errol is the one doing the actual killing but there are others involved in whatever sick ritual they've (the Tuttles) come up with?
So then what about Dora Lang, was that the cult or Tuttles or whatever you would call it acting in conjunction with Errol or was he doing that on his own, I mean the hooker that Rust spoke to talked about seeing a man with scars.
So it would appear that Errol is the one doing the actual killing but there are others involved in whatever sick ritual they've (the Tuttles) come up with?
The new episode of Black Sails got a B+ rating from A/V Club while True Detective got a C........
Yeah, different reviewer, opinions and all that jazz but it just struck me as being ridiculous enough to be funny.
The gulf in quality between these two shows are so large you could fit an infinity of Carcosas in that M-brane space.
The new episode of Black Sails got a B+ rating from A/V Club while True Detective got a C........
Yeah, different reviewer, opinions and all that jazz but it just struck me as being ridiculous enough to be funny.
The gulf in quality between these two shows are so large you could fit an infinity of Carcosas in that M-brane space.
Agreed. Felt like they had to hit us over the head with it in the event that some people still didn't figure it out.I gotta say, I'm not a fan of that "My family's been here a long, long time" line at the end of the episode, accompanied by the "creepy" score, and that camerawork. I'm not against corny stuff like that in other series', but it felt beneath this show. I think a close up on Lawnmower Man to show the scars without dialogue as he goes back to mowing would've gotten the message across minus the cheese.
I didn't really have big issues with the rest of the episode. I really liked the scenes in the storage unit actually, exposition and all. It was a little slower than normal and a tad uneventful, but it was setup for the finale. That ending though....ehhh
I like when it's used more subtly. When the sheriff mentions Childress and Marty repeats the name, there's a barely audible creepy 'cue' sound that replaces the silence. Helps you see the light bulb going off in Marty's head at that moment (he was present when Rust was looking into Childress years before).I gotta say, I'm not a fan of that "My family's been here a long, long time" line at the end of the episode, accompanied by the "creepy" score, and that camerawork. I'm not against corny stuff like that in other series, but it felt beneath this show. I think a close up on Lawnmower Man to show the scars without dialogue as he goes back to mowing would've gotten the message across minus the cheese.
I didn't really have big issues with the rest of the episode. I really liked the scenes in the storage unit actually, exposition and all. It was a little slower than normal and a tad uneventful, but it was setup for the finale. That ending though....ehhh
I gotta say, I'm not a fan of that "My family's been here a long, long time" line at the end of the episode, accompanied by the "creepy" score, and that camerawork. I'm not against corny stuff like that in other series, but it felt beneath this show. I think a close up on Lawnmower Man to show the scars without dialogue as he goes back to mowing would've gotten the message across minus the cheese.
I like when it's used more subtly. When the sheriff mentions Childress and Marty repeats the name, there's a barely audible creepy 'cue' sound that replaces the silence. Helps you see the light bulb going off in Marty's head at that moment (he was present when Rust was looking into Childress years before).
It's a great show, but there are things like that in almost every episode. Que the stereotype police chiefs, or the old trope of cutting to some victim speaking for a super spooky revelation shot(they've done this at least twice now?). I don't think it's a ploy either, seems like the writer/director genuinely like it. The acting covers a lot of it up, I don't think a lot of people could get away with lines like, "I don't sleep, just dream".
This episode was a bit slower than 4 or 5 but really, it falls in line with the first 3. I think the expectations and anticipation of heading towards the end makes it feel like things should have been moving more quickly than they did. In and of itself, I think this was a solid episode
I gotta say, I'm not a fan of that "My family's been here a long, long time" line at the end of the episode, accompanied by the "creepy" score, and that camerawork. I'm not against corny stuff like that in other series, but it felt beneath this show. I think a close up on Lawnmower Man to show the scars without dialogue as he goes back to mowing would've gotten the message across minus the cheese.
I didn't really have big issues with the rest of the episode. I really liked the scenes in the storage unit actually, exposition and all. It was a little slower than normal and a tad uneventful, but it was setup for the finale. That ending though....ehhh
I thought Episode 7 had some great development, too. We really got to see where their past decisions have taken them and how they've adjusted (or not). There wasn't as much escalation as we expected, though, or intense scenes. Mostly them gathering bits of information and drawing a more complete picture as we head into the last episode.Except there was really awesome character development in those early episodes. This was probably the slowest episode this season, by my estimation anyway. We knew the band was getting back together, nothing crazy in the storage unit. Lasting impression from this episode was solidifying Maggie as an a-hole(that big stupid house and then showing up at the bar with some BS pretenses when all she wanted was to check out what Rust's been up to) and setting up the catalyst for the new investigation, that stupid sheriff... oh and we got another accomplice for a target. The governor's/Pale King's presence was missed.
I don't have an issue with certain cues in the music, but that one just rubbed me the wrong way. It felt like a scene from a different show, like The Following, or The Killing or something. Not good vibes.
If it's detective fiction tropes, I don't mind. Or even Rust's weird one liners and monologues (which I actually love), but, that last scene....Nah. Something was off about it.
I agree. I think it mainly has to do with the character just speaking to himself, feels like something out of a B-horror movie. My real complaint about this scene is that his scar was barely visible. Hell, without the music cue and the cheesy line from him I don't think a lot viewers would've picked up that he's the killer when they should've.
The episode was probably the weakest of the show in my opinion, was still good though. I don't really like how the exposition was executed, I just felt bombarded with information, most of which I already knew. Rust just telling Marty all the information in the storage unit as fast as he could felt like it went on far too long, and I think it could've been done better. I absolutely loved all the flashbacks to 2010 and forward, Marty and Rusts' mundane lives and Rust going in as a thief were awesome and really well shot little sequences.
I also think there's another reason Rust came back besides just feeling like he needed to solve the case or pay his debt. I mean it could be that, but I think there was some kind of direct revelation akin to how Marty quit being a cop after seeing the hot pocket baby.
hot pocket baby
Once we find out next week that there's crazy supernatural shit going on and lawnmowerman is really some evil demi-god, we'll all realize that last line was delivered perfectly.
1. who the fuck is the sheriff? i don't remember him at all
So I just had a thought of how the show could end. But probably not:
Marty/Rust will confront the people at the top, or one of them. Marty will discover that his daughter was involved in the abuses and once more kill someone, ruining the investigation.
Time is a flat circle.
Maybe too much like Se7en, though.
Also how Rust and Marty are actually hanging out in between detective work.
This means the show will end with both of them drinking beer, telling old war stories and being bros, right?
Right?
Sidenote: who is going to get the inevitable emmy nomination for best actor in a drama MM or Woody (or both)?
Different reviewers. End of story.The new episode of Black Sails got a B+ rating from A/V Club while True Detective got a C........
Yeah, different reviewer, opinions and all that jazz but it just struck me as being ridiculous enough to be funny.
The gulf in quality between these two shows are so large you could fit an infinity of Carcosas in that M-brane space.