How does Rustin Cohle fit into the great, acclaimed work you've been doing for the last couple of years?
Oh yeah. Russtiiiinnn Cohhhhlllle. Ha ha! You know, I've been able to find such clearly identifiable characters, whether it's Mark Hanna in Wolf of Wall Street or Ron Woodruff in Dallas Buyers Club. Look at Dallas in Magic Mike and Joe in Killer Joe these are characters with such clear obsessions. I've said this before, but that's what I've been choosing: Somebody who I could get drunk on their obsessions. Characters that live on the fringe they're all a little bit on the outskirts of civilization. I find a certain ownership and freedom in that.
How's True Detective spinning out for you? Does it feel different than it felt when you were shooting it?
No, I'm very impressed with it. What did I know going in? I loved the writing. I read the first two episodes, and I said, "If you guys will let me be Cohle, I'm in." I was like, "Jeez, I can't wait to hear what comes out of this fucking guy's mouth on the page." Plus I was a fan of [True Detective director] Cary Fukunaga's Sin Nombre. And the fact that we'd be shooting film boy, that really shows.
Maybe even more than in Dallas Buyers Club, your body language and your cadences feel so transformed from the very deliberate, sober Cohle of 1995 to the shattered Cohle of 2012 and this wild, undercover narcotics officer that Cohle plays, who goes by the name "Crash."
I remember making some choices about how to play 1995 Cohle to really underplay it and keep things boiling underneath. And I remember at about week five or six, getting a little anxious. "Wooh, do I need to do more? Do I need to do something different? Is this gonna be boring?" But I was like, "Trust the 2012 Cohle. Trust that "Crash" is coming and allow there to be a dynamic in there, McConaughey." Looking at the work now, I'm glad I didn't try to give Cohle more colors in '95.
How much Cohle is there in showrunner/creator Nic Pizzolatto, or vice versa?
Well
I don't know. Nic's not Cohle but Nic sure as hell knows Cohle, probably the best out of all the characters. There's also parts of me in there, I think. What I love about Cohle is everything he says is true. Like it or not. He can't suffer fools, and to get through everyday life, you have to suffer fools. Cohle can't do that. No illusions. Absolutely not.