Totenkindly
@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
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It was rather hard to miss, the camera zoomed on it.
I'm excited, so excited for the finale tonight. Please Nic, don't let us down!
Any time, any day for #metoo!It's always nice when a series pushes through and sticks the landing.
I'm probably picking this over Oscar watching, so...
Hated it, loved it, hated it, loved it. I feel conflicted, sort of deflated, sort of happy, sort of disappointed, sort of glad. Think I hate Nic Pizzolatto, think I'm impressed by him. So much mind wanking, spitting red herrings like a random bread crumb trail, then shoving the finale to the side of the path since the story isn't about the case, it's about a never ending story where timelines don't matter. Hays was reborn in the last Vietnam scene. He went from the dangerous jungle/war to the safety of a shelter, like the 2015 timeline where he left confusion/chaos/danger and entered the shelter of friends and family.
Dorff was outstanding in the bar scene, especially at the end where he bonded with the stray dog, two strays comforting each other.
One possible plot hole. The teen who stole Will's bike. They didn't really explain that aspect, except to flash the scene when Will came back to try to save his sister from being kidnapped. Guess the teen saw Will and stole his bike, before Will raced back to try to save Julie. But they mentioned that they were playing hide and go seek and Will wouldn't have taken his bike to do this, so this does appear to be a plot hole unless I missed something.
I don't like Amelia. Way too self-centered.
As for his police drama, Pizzolatto told IndieWire he’s moved on from his initial idea for a follow-up.
“I had this idea, and to me, I think it’s a really strong idea, and it would be something I’ve never seen on television before,†Pizzolatto said, referencing a “crazy†idea he mentioned to Esquire after Season 3 wrapped. “But since then, I’ve had another idea that I’ve talked about with an actor, and that, to me, would be the most exciting thing we could do with ‘True Detective.'â€
Pizzolatto said he still wants to do something with the original idea — “it might be a different show, maybe a movie†— but he’s focusing on this new plan he “really, really wants to do for Season 4.†He did not provide any additional details or the name of the actor he spoke to, and even expressed a bit of pessimism over getting this version of Season 4 off the ground.
...“The show was presented to me in the way we pitched it around town — as an independent film made into television,” said Fukunaga. “The writer and director are a team. Over the course of the project, Nic kept positioning himself as if he was my boss and I was like, ‘But you’re not my boss. We’re partners. We collaborate.’ By the time they got to postproduction, people like [former HBO programming president] Michael Lombardo were giving Nic more power. It was disheartening because it didn’t feel like the partnership was fair.”
“...Nic is a really good writer, but I do think he needs to be edited down. It becomes too much about the writing and not enough about the momentum of the story. My struggle with him was to take some of these long dialogue scenes and put some air into them. We differed on tone and taste.”