I really need to get around to watching Justified.
It's really fun, and the dialogue is playfully awesome. You need to give it a chance beyond the first few episodes though which fall into the standard procedural TV trap.
I really need to get around to watching Justified.
Legit laughed out loud.
heh yep what Frog-fu posted. There are a lot of legitimate complaints to be made about TV criticism--that far too many reviews are still mostly recapping, that they focus only on theme and character and not form/style--but that he thinks TV reviewers only review the pilot only shows he has no idea what he's talking about. the entire conundrum right now is based around the fact that critics are tackling every episode and have to find things to say about each one individually and as part of a whole.
It's really fun, and the dialogue is playfully awesome. You need to give it a chance beyond the first few episodes though which fall into the standard procedural TV trap.
Man, I know Quentin has weird taste, but jesus christ he watched the entirety of The Newsroom 3 times? That's just masochistic.
YESBeasts of No Nation is receiving early rave reviews.
Pizzolatto right now:
Yeah, man, so pumped. Considering the city in which I live, it'll probably get a release here. I really want to see it in a theater.YES
In fukunaga we trust
Beasts of No Nation is receiving early rave reviews.
Pizzolatto right now:
Here you go.where? I wanna read them!
The director said it always part of the plan for him to leave after his episodes starring Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson wrapped in 2014. The whole pitch was that in a true anthology, we want to sit it on a shelf, and every season we have a new feature director and make this wonderful miniseries, Fukunaga said, explaining that they shopped the conceit to Showtime and Netflix along with HBO. I was going to be the first one. And Id be there to shepherd as much as I could the following seasons. My departure was always planned.
The series second season, which was widely panned by critics, used a rotating panel of directors under the watch of the shows executive producer and creator Nic Pizzolatto. Fukunaga is listed as an executive producer too, but he explained that he didnt have much involvement in the season.
I really wasnt involved, he said. My involvement in the second season was as much or as little as they needed me. It turns out they didnt need me.
Fukunaga says he hasnt spoken to Pizzolatto since they saw each other at the Golden Globes in January, but hes aware of the demanding director character who seems to be caricaturing him in season two. I have friends on the crew who told me about it. Whats there to make of it? Fukunaga says with a laugh, declining to elaborate further.
Most definitely.He still got paid, though.
He still got paid, though.
Hey, I got a lot of laughs out of it.At least someone got something out of season two.
And season two looks awful. Just the trailer all these handsome actors trying to not be handsome and walking around looking like the weight of the world is on their shoulders. Its so serious, and theyre so tortured, trying to look miserable with their mustaches and grungy clothes.
Completed S2 the other night and I thought it was good but not great.
Like a solid 8/10 though obviously nowhere near as fantastic as S1. I loved Harrelson and McConaughey, never expecting their characters to be topped off in this season.
A particular highlight was the shootout at the end of ep4, holy crap was that shit intense.
Also special shout out to Vince Vaughn who seemed to grow into his role as time went on, and had the best character arc of the season.
You don't truly realize how differently other minds work until you come across someone who thinks S2 of True Detective was genuinely good.
You don't truly realize how differently other minds work until you come across someone who thinks S2 of True Detective was genuinely good.
It gets better.After sort of defending S2 early on, I still haven't watched the last 3 episodes lol. Just got so bored with it.
It's a bummer because S1 is one of the best things I've seen on TV in years. Hope Pizzaman can rebound somehow for next season.
Actually, the awful characterization and character development were the biggest issues.The problem with Season 2 just boils down to the story and how inefficiently they told it. The ending was good enough but not so much the journey there.
"The heat is in TV," David Cronenberg said at the Reykjavik International Film Festival where he received a Lifetime Achievement Award (via Indiewire). "Last year I was approached to direct the first episode of the second season of 'True Detective,' I considered it but I thought that the script was bad, so I didnt do it. In TV, the director is just a traffic cop, but on the other hand it is work and theres a lot of it.
Good call
Most of my friends who watched it out of the week to week bubble, ended up really enjoying it. Maybe it works better on a bingen maybe it's because they were outside the bubble? Not sure.
It's just a shame that McAdams and Farrell did such a great job on such a terrible show. They can't wipe that shitstain off their resumes.
I'm surprised they still haven't made a decision about this.HBO is keeping Nic Pizzolatto in the fold with a third consecutive overall deal that would keep the True Detective creator at the pay cable network through 2018. The pact would cover possible new installments of the thriller drama franchise as well as new projects.
More than three months after the second season of True Detective ended its run to mixed reaction, there had been chatter about HBO looking to do a third cycle of the show but there has been no formal decision one way or another. Back in July, HBO Programming president Michael Lombardo made it lear that the call whether to go on or not would be Pizzolatto’s. “If he wants to do another season, I said the door is open, we’d like to do another season of it,” he said. At that time, Lombardo spoke very highly of Pizzolatto, something he also echoed today in his comments on the writer’s new HBO deal.
“I am thrilled to continue our relationship with Nic, as he is one of the most exceptionally talented writers and producers working today,” Lombardo said. “I look forward to seeing where his unique creative vision will take us next.”
While critics’ reaction has been all over the map, in viewership, Season 2 of True Detective, which starred Colin Farrell, Vince Vaughn, Rachel McAdams and Taylor Kitsch, was in line with the breakout first season toplined by Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson. True Detective remains HBO’s second most watched show behind blockbuster Game of Thrones, with cumulative viewers averaging 11 million across Season 2, on par with season one’s 12 million.
“A number of new projects are being considered, as well as future incarnations of the drama series True Detective,” HBO said in a release.
This does not mean a renewal of the anthology drama. We’re told there is no season 3 concept being discussed at this time. Given the currently date and the production’s length of time spent casting marquee names to headline season 2, it’s seeming increasingly unlikely another edition will premiere in 2016. But it hints the network is interested in continuing the series in some form, however.
I'm glad to hear it.
With strong creative voices like Pizzolatto HBO will remain unstoppable in the drama space. Television doesn't get much better than season 2 of True Detective.
I'm glad to hear it.
With strong creative voices like Pizzolatto HBO will remain unstoppable in the drama space. Television doesn't get much better than season 2 of True Detective.
I'm glad to hear it.
With strong creative voices like Pizzolatto HBO will remain unstoppable in the drama space. Television doesn't get much better than season 2 of True Detective.
Give him the majority of 2016 to write and a writer's room and Season 3 will be just fine.
I'm surprised HBO isn't trying to put a fire under some asses for Season 3. Maybe they're being cautious since a repeat of this season would probably make the brand worthless