Tag Archives: True Detective

‘Fargo,’ ‘True Detective’ Bring TV Back

What took you so long?

After mid-series slumps by the two best dramas on television, Fargo and True Detective are back.

That’s not to say back and better than ever. Fargo’s second season and Detective’s first weren’t just good; they were industry highlights. Commercial films don’t reach the bar freshman Detective and sophomore Fargo set. So asking the same of later seasons is an impossibility.

Not that both shows don’t make Herculean efforts — and nearly manage — to recreate the magic. Fargo wrapped its fifth season this week with a watch-it-twice finale. Jon Hamm, who played a suave seducer in Mad Men, makes a chilling killer in Fargo. He hasn’t been this good in 15 years.

Like Fargo Season 2, this installment is well aware of its time (2019) and its political backdrop (Trumpism). Hamm is a MAGA-brewed sheriff who calls on all “patriots” to get ready for a confrontation with law enforcement (sound familiar?). When the monied protagonist demands to circumvent local authorities and go federal, she snaps “Get me the orange idiot.”

There are no idiots in Detective, now in its fourth year. Unlike Fargo, whose first season was a barn-burner, Detective has had but one good season, the first.

Until now. Detective’s premise is an intriguing one: A group of Alaskan geologists disappear, only to resurface murdered and frozen in a block of ice. Was it a serial killer? A cop? A raging environmentalist?

The question and premise might be enough to propel a solid season. But the real wind in its sails is Jodie Foster, who plays the lead investigator.

Foster may be the only actress with the gravitas for the role. She won an Oscar last century playing a cop in Silence of the Lambs, and her transformation from eager recruit then to embittered supervisor now makes for a slipper-fit. This iteration of Detective may suffer from a bit of wokism, but when Foster clenches her jaw, you’re looking at a cop too old for this shit.

Fargo is already wrapped, and Detective has just a couple months before it’s gone. So the reprieve will be brief.

But, save for Succession and Jury Duty, the TV landscape was a steaming bowl of suck in 2023. Here’s to true stories turning tides.

The Subtle Beauty of True Detective’s Dud Finale

 

HBO’s finale to True Detective hasn’t seen this much controversy since the end of  The Sopranos, which is fitting, because both ended on anticlimactic notes. Throughout its eight-year run, The Sopranos suggested that death was sudden blackness, an unexpected and unexplained exit from existence. To prove the point, Sopranos capped its own fans, ending the series in such sudden darkness viewers thought their TVs had shorted.

Similarly, the third season of True Detective telegraphed how the whodunnit would end, though that hasn’t stopped Reddit and YouTube pundits from becoming engulfed in anger over the unspectacular conclusion. The real twist to the crime series may be yet to come: whether HBO decides to renew the up-and-down show.

Despite its labyrinthian setup and hint of a vast conspiracy finally explained, Detective ended on the simplest of notes. After two months worth of shows and three and a half decades worth of investigation, Now Am Found revealed that the fates of the Purcell children was barely nefarious: Will died accidentally and Julie ran away and remained alive and happy.

The conclusion sent much of the True Detective fanbase into conniptions; some took to the net minutes after the finale, asking, in essence, WTF? They lamented that the ending didn’t feature a Woody Harrelson or Matthew McConaughey cameo from Season 1.  They blasted it for wrapping loose ends too quickly (halfway through the episode), too cheerily for a dark series, and too bizarrely with a final scene of Wayne Hayes back in the jungles of Vietnam.

     But that may have been creators Nic Pizzolatto’s point all along, one he hinted at in Episode 2, Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye. In that episode,  the show referenced the Franklin child prostitution allegations, a reference that sent conspiracy fans and the character Elisa Montgomery, a documentary true-crime filmmaker, scrambling to solve a vast conspiracy.Image result for franklin child prostitution ring allegations
     The Franklin case was a true incident that began in June 1988 in Omaha, Nebraska, when authorities looked into allegations that prominent citizens of Nebraska, as well as high-level U.S. politicians, were involved in a child prostitution ring. Alleged abuse victims were interviewed, who claimed that children in foster care were flown to the East Coast to be sexually abused at “bad parties.” The case attracted significant public and political interest until late 1990, when separate state and federal grand juries concluded that the allegations were unfounded and the ring was a “carefully crafted hoax.”The Franklin Cover-Up
     Still, the conspiracy remains. And even the book that it inspired, The Franklin Cover-up: Child Abuse, Satanism, and Murder in Nebraska, became reference fodder for fans seeking clues to the show.Related image
     Which may explain why the True Detective finale disappointed so many. From the JFK assassination to the 9/11 attacks to fictional crime dramas, it’s tough to accept that profound misfortune can result from commonplace events or simple bad luck. It’s easier (and more cinematic) to discover a massive conspiracy behind massive devastation.Image result for jfk conspiracy
     And that was True Detective‘s point in the half-hour wrap up, as characters tried to reconcile the deaths and decimated relationships borne of a simple, tragic, traffic accident. Viewers learned that Isabel Hoyt, the wife of produce magnate Edward Hoyt, lost her daughter in a car crash. Devastated, she grew attached to Julie Purcell, became obsessed, and, after going off her meds, abducted her. With the help of groundskeeper Junius Watts and several nuns, Julie eventually escaped to go on to live a normal life.  Not the crescendo viewers expected.Image result for true detective julie and will purcell
     Even the characters admitted disappointment at the anticlimactic ending. As Wayne and wife Amelia meet at a bar to discuss what went wrong in their relationship, Wayne admits, “There’s always been this big secret between us,” he says. “It’s all tied up in a dead boy and a missing girl.” They agree that a date night won’t fix their problems, but Wayne tells her to go write her next book and they will move on together. “Let’s put this thing down,” says Wayne. “It’s not ours.”Image result for wayne and amelia true detective
     Even the final scene was a red herring in a series chock full of them (for what is a conspiracy theory but the pursuit of inconsequential evidence?). Wayne is back in the jungle of Vietnam because he suffers from Alzheimer’s, a common disease that robs its victims of associating place and time.Image result for wayne vietnam ghosts true detective
     It’s unclear whether HBO will be more swayed by ratings or reactions in determining the fate of another installment of True Detective, whose second season was lambasted by fans and critics alike. Regardless, Pizzolatto succeeded in making the point he began raising in 2014 when the show premiered: Time, indeed, is a flat circle.Image result for pedophilia circle true detective