OT: True Detective finale discussion, links

Submitted by 03 Blue 07 on

SPOILERS AHEAD

So, I know that the board has discussed this great series before. What did people think about last night's finale? I thought it was pretty great. From the absolute evil creepiness that was the Childress property to its inhabitants...goodness, I think I'm going to have nightmares about Erroll and his half-sisterladyfriend for awhile. Just pure evil incarnate. 

And the best part, of course, was the evolution of the relationship between Marty and Rust Cohle. It was great to see the self-awareness in Marty at the end, when he breaks down and cries, and to see Rust go from someone who believes in nothing to a man who finally starts to see the glass as half-full, in his own way. Really a great ending. 

Some interesting links to reviews below; the video from HBO explaining the finale is excellent. What did everyone think about the finale and how the series arc concluded?

HBO video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cE2n-nwiqDs

Grantland: http://grantland.com/hollywood-prospectus/the-true-detective-season-1-a… and http://grantland.com/hollywood-prospectus/true-detective-finale-all-we-…

Vulture/NY Magazine: http://www.vulture.com/2014/03/true-detective-recap-season-1-finale-for…

Alan Sepinwall with the creator, Nick Pizzolatto:  http://www.hitfix.com/whats-alan-watching/true-detective-creator-nic-pi…

Sepinwall's review: http://www.hitfix.com/whats-alan-watching/season-finale-review-true-det…

AV Club: http://www.avclub.com/tvclub/true-detective-form-and-void-201999

Music: http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/say-goodbye-to-true-detective-with-all-the-music-from-the-series-20140310

03 Blue 07

March 10th, 2014 at 3:22 PM ^

Yeah, me too. I love that they were vindicated. And that it went to the press. I also may have jumped off my couch and said "Fuck YES Rust!" when he hit Erroll with the head shot. It was a great end to their bromance, also. The great thing about this series is that it was and is really like an 8 hour movie. That's why, to me, when done well, there is more that can be done on television than in a typical movie film. The actors and director have more time to tell the story. 

Also, how about the beautiful cinematography of the series? Incredible. 

DetroitBlue

March 10th, 2014 at 3:22 PM ^

I wish they would've resolved who put Dora Lange's body on display like that. It doesn't seem like something Erroll would've done, because his M.O. seems to be burying the victims on his property. And if not him, who and why?

dtones520

March 10th, 2014 at 9:53 PM ^

Huh? His property was covered with satanic artwork and sculptures. He had a man tied to a bed with his mouth sewn shut. He had caves, or whatever you'd call that fortress, filled with more satanic symbols, mummified bodies and other cryptic things...but he wasn't capable of putting bodies on display like that? Also, to whomever said Reggie Ledoux, who displayed the 2012 body?

MgoBlueprint

March 10th, 2014 at 3:31 PM ^

Like everyone else, I thought it was a great show. I like how the killer/ ring leader was resolved in the penultimate episode, and the finale was used to hem things up. Rust and Marty were a great odd couple.

westwardwolverine

March 10th, 2014 at 3:33 PM ^

Generally, it seems that the finale of a great series goes one of two ways: Tie up loose ends or swing for the fences. 

I thought True Detective adhered more toward the former. The finale was fine, there were some great scenes, it didn't take away from anything that came before it...but it didn't really elevate the show the way it could have had any one of (or a combination of) the numerous theories laid out online and amongst friends come to pass. I feel like Breaking Bad chose this route as well. I thought there was potential for something exceptional and all we really got was Rust and Marty getting their man, though the way it went down was extremely creepy, entertaining and thrilling. 

 

readyourguard

March 10th, 2014 at 3:37 PM ^

Midway through the series I started researching the in-depth relationship to the King in Yellow, the subtle clues throughout each episode, and the deeper meaning of the dialogue.  After last night, I realized this was just a good police drama with 2 good actors.  I think it's gotten WAY overblown.

 

readyourguard

March 10th, 2014 at 4:22 PM ^

I think the writer/director lead people down a lot of dead end alleys which added to the mystique.  For instance:

  • Rust also walked up to Marty's house with yellow flowers in his had.
  • The little devil figurine in the bedroom of Marty's second affair.
  • The guard named Childress who seemed to address the dude in prison prior to the guy slitting his wrists.

 

gmoney41

March 10th, 2014 at 3:41 PM ^

I enjoyed this show a lot.  The writing and direction were incredibly good, and MM might just win an Emmy for his performance.  If you guys like dark police shows, give Hannibal a try, it is  also a fantastic show, and the fact that it is on network and getting away with some of the stuff it's getting away with is mind-blowing.

the_benjy_vortex

March 10th, 2014 at 3:51 PM ^

Fantastic finale and overall series.   Best part, Alexandra Daddario's rack in episode 2.  Hubba hubba.

Magnum P.I.

March 10th, 2014 at 3:54 PM ^

I thought it was terrible and a major disappointment given the expectations set by the first few episodes. Way too much unresolved, way too many missed opportunities (e.g., tying Marty's family into the denouement), and no clear point. In the end, I look at this show as great directing, very good acting, and mediocre writing.

MGoBender

March 10th, 2014 at 4:29 PM ^

Terrible?  Come now.

And no point?  The point was the journey.  It was spelled out as explicitly as possible.  You can't beat all the evil, as Marty says.  But their efforts made some impact.  It was the story of two men redeeming themselves and breakign out of self-destruction and, in the end, becoming friends.  That's one point right that.

Magnum P.I.

March 10th, 2014 at 5:45 PM ^

If I wanted to watch a story about two men redeeming themselves, beating evil (but not all evil! DUN-DUN-DUUUUN), and becoming friends, I'd watch Lethal Weapon, Bad Boys, 48 Hours, Another 48 Hours, or any of the other hundreds of Buddy Cop movies with the same take home. 

I just thought True Detective was breaking new ground and was disappointed that all we got was killing the bad guy, heroic survival, and maybe there really is some meaning to life.

GratefulBlue

March 10th, 2014 at 5:03 PM ^

I felt like there was a major shift (and dropoff) from the tone and grandness of the early episodes to the last two, and the finale really felt boring and conventional to me. The dangling air fresheners and the man strapped to the bed seemed like blatant knockoffs of the film Seven, and the buddy-buddy neatness of Marty and Rust coming together in the end as better men just felt like a betrayal of their earlier characters. I loved the series, but really felt let down by the finale.  

BloomingtonBlue

March 10th, 2014 at 4:01 PM ^

But it's too hard to begin and end a story in 8 episodes. I think 10 could have told a better story, everything was so rushed at the end.

Magnum P.I.

March 10th, 2014 at 5:53 PM ^

Maybe, but I think they wasted a ton of screen time that could've been used more economically toward plot development. The whole interrogation of the sherrif at the beginning of this episode was worthless, for example. And I can't even remember what happened in Episode 7. It was bad writing, in my opinion.

It's really really hard to finish a story strong. The same rushed feeling happend in the last two episodes of Breaking Bad, and they had six years to pace the plot arc. 

Callahan

March 10th, 2014 at 4:07 PM ^

If you feel Marty's family being involved in some way with the Yellow King was needed, I recommend you try the Lethal Weapon movies. 

 

[Oops, was intended for Magnum P.I.]

Magnum P.I.

March 10th, 2014 at 6:03 PM ^

That's funny because I wrote my response above to MGoBender before reading this. 

Marty's family being involved would've been an interesting way to reinforce the theme there's more than one way to harm women and children, more than one form of evil, sometimes borne of our own neglect and self-absorption. 

Just something. As is, I don't really know what the show was about that hasn't been rehashed by every cop movie.

My favorite part of the show was the acting during the triangulated storytelling of the first half of the season and some of the directorial flairs, like the robbery on the stash house in episode three. 

allintime23

March 10th, 2014 at 4:19 PM ^

So basically this show became born on the Fourth of July at the end? Just joking. I was slightly disappointed in the ending though. Rust should have met his death and found his happiness.

MGoBender

March 10th, 2014 at 4:26 PM ^

But didn't he find his happiness?  He says at the end that the "light is starting to win."  He and Marty survive, taking down their little bit of evil while each being personally redeemed.  Each going from a life of lonliness and self-destruction to what seems to be a new life where they are actually friends and, dare we say, optimistic about the future and their PI firm (not explicitly stated, but that's the obvious next step).

guthrie

March 10th, 2014 at 6:03 PM ^

Personal take from an admitted pessimist is that Rust did not find his happiness.  He's a prisoner who was finally released only to have the warden slam the gate shut when he was one step away from getting out and then being thrown back in his cell.

I can see where he would possibly have some hope at this point, realizing that when he does finally die there will be happiness waiting for him.  But I don't think he's happy in any way.  Hell, that's the only time all season he cried, if I remember correctly.  So maybe he can look forward to some peace when he dies.  But as Marty pointed out, maybe there's nothing that can kill Rust Cohle.

tenerson

March 10th, 2014 at 4:23 PM ^

It was mostly like I expected. I expected nothing that elevated the series and essentially what I got was that. This show was weird for me. It wasn't excited. It didn't leave me waiting a week to see what happened next. What it was was probably some of the most intense TV I have ever watched. There were some hangers but not like Breaking Bad or Prison Break or other shows like that. It was just great TV in general. 

There was a poitn in the show where I thought we would find out Rust was somehow involved. I never expected before last night but last night I had a feeling that could happen, though it didn't and I'm glad it didn't. 

Also, McConaughey is going to sweep TV and movie awards this year. What a year. I watch DBC this weekend as well and what a great job by him. 

Zoltanrules

March 10th, 2014 at 5:03 PM ^

Episode 8 wasn't the best of the series but it was satisfactory enough. Things were tied together a little too quickly for my liking but I do like happy endings so the "light winning" was nice. Can not wait for next season. I was thinking Detroit would be a great setting for a series like this. Rural Louisiana was great. Funny story: I went to the Chris Webber time out Final Four in NOLA. 4 heavyweight programs sold out every hotel in metro NOLA (for the first two games). My buddies and me wound up driving west of NOLA several miles to find a place. It was really scary with real poverty and chemical plants all over the bayou. To this day they give me grief for not getting reservations and having to stay in weird vodoo land. At least we didn't see any guy riding around on a lawn mower...

Erik_in_Dayton

March 10th, 2014 at 5:13 PM ^

I wish we'd learned more about the Yellow King/Carcosa mythology in the end, though.  I don't mind Rust and Marty not catching every member of the cult, but we were given too many reasons to wonder about the nature of the cult/mythology to then be told as little about them as we were.  That's not to say that I wanted a real monster at the end, but I did want to know more about what the Tuttles and Childresses believed.  I also think Audrey's behavior was a bit too much of a red herring.  She wasn't just a troubled kid - she was a troubled kid who acted out the exact manner of Marie Fontenot's death (or was it "just" sexual abuse?) with her dolls.  I feel a little toyed with there.

Much of acting, much of the writing, and the cinematograpy were outstanding.  I'm not sure I've ever seen a show that created such a vivid sense of place.  The music was exceptionally well-chosen as well.  The biggest compliment to the show I can pay is to say that I felt totally immersed in its story and place and wanted to spend some more time there searching for answers. 

Kinda Blue

March 10th, 2014 at 5:30 PM ^

Personally, I thought one of the more itneresting features of the finale was MM's breakdown at the end, when he was discussing his near death experience.

This was a character as steeped in nihilism as I can remember on television.  References to death being the end, with no promise of afterlife and a stark opposition to religion and its promises of an afterlife or salvation.  Even in the last episode, he refers to people as "sencient meat"--to which WH responds, "What's scented meat?".

Then, during his near-death experience, he feels a connected to his late daughter and father and emerges from that experience with the conclusion that in the battle between light and dark--that light is winning (since there was only dark in the beginning).

Whether one believes in afterlife, etc., does not matter to me.  But, I thought that change represented a dramatic shift in the character forged by his experience in the case.  Either way, I thought it pretty interesting from a character development standpoint.

NoMoPincherBug

March 10th, 2014 at 5:58 PM ^

For all of the issues mentioned below...IMO the finale was a big let down from what it could have been.  The first 6 episodes were amazing...the last 2 felt like they were thrown toghether.  The last 12 minutes of the last episode was basically filler.

JayMo4

March 10th, 2014 at 8:56 PM ^

After reading a couple very elaborate theories online about how the season might end, having things end as simply as they did was almost a twist in its own right.  Although I wasn't blown away by the conclusion, it was pretty good.  The series was interesting to me in that it took so much care to avoid certain cliches, but couldn't seem to avoid a couple of them.  I am extremely thankful that the show never went supernatural on us.

I thought this was one of the better shows I've seen in a while; there were plenty of things I could nitpick out of it that I didn't like, but none big enough to turn me off.  The best thing about it was Cohle and MM's acting of that role.  I'm actually pleased that he seemed to find a bit of a light at the end of the tunnel by the end of the episode.  I know a lot of people thought he should have died and finally found his peace, as it were.  But that would have been such an obvious choice.  The show was dark enough already, given the subject matter - children being raped, abused, killed - that I felt like having a hint of positivity in the end was welcome.

Maizenblueball

March 10th, 2014 at 11:29 PM ^

...and I thought it was great.  Better than I expected.  Very suspenseful, creepy, and in a way, kind of moving.  Cool to see the relationship between Marty and Rust Cohle.  Those two are great together on screen...both are very good actors, and are sneaky funny.