True Detective (TV)

All non-Nolan related film, tv, and streaming discussions.
User avatar
Posts: 43129
Joined: May 2010
IWatchFilmsNotMovies wrote:Woody Harrelson? Sold.
:facepalm:

Posts: 55632
Joined: May 2010
Woody and Monaghan? Sold. :judge:

User avatar
Posts: 3757
Joined: January 2013
Location: Missouri
Really can't go wrong with an HBO drama. Writer of The Killing has me interested, I enjoyed that show.

User avatar
Posts: 6272
Joined: December 2010
Location: Space Truckin'
Over the last one and a half months, there have been a lot of casting announcements for this show.

1]
Image

Michelle Monaghan - as Harrelson's wife.

2]
Image

Elizabeth Reaser - as McConaughey's girlfriend.

3]
Image

Alexandra Daddario - as a court journalist.

4]
Image

Lili Simmons - as a prostitute.

5]
Image

Kevin Dunn - as Harrelson's and McConaughey's boss.

6]
Image

Jay O. Sanders - as a televangelist.

7]
Image

Brad Carter - as the ex of one of the victims.

8]
Image

Michael Potts - as a detective.

9]
Image

Tory Kittles - as Potts' partner.

-------------------------

This is shaping up to be a great cast! :twothumbsup:
Image

User avatar
Posts: 9004
Joined: March 2011


nice little tease, love the atmospheric tone. I think this is going to be superb, especially with such a badass cast.

User avatar
Posts: 6272
Joined: December 2010
Location: Space Truckin'
Yeah, this looks great! :thumbup:

Interview with Cary Fukunaga:
So, has “True Detective” just wrapped? Tell us about the tone you were going for, more “heightened realism” than noir, I believe?

It very easily could have gone noir, I just didn’t want to do that, especially with a title like “True Detective”—it sounds so pulpy. [Grimaces] Not my choice.

And what was your choice?

Not that! But the material is probably the best material I’ve read in a long time and is the reason I did it. Nic Pizzolatto is the writer and we’ve the same management company and I read the script, really liked it, we got together and then I got Matthew [McConaughey] and Woody [Harrelson] to join the cast and then we sold it to HBO.

I only had two episodes to start off with in terms of envisioning it, but what I saw was a stark bland American landscape, and two really strong male voices which I haven’t done yet, and that for me was kinda the drive, to get into the psychology of two men—one more of a philosopher and the other a non-critical-thinking man, and just to play with that world and observe. It’s heightened reality in the sense that it’s not like docu-reality, it’s not hand-held, not immediate, the camera is very smooth and usually just locked off and you’re just watching guys talk and argue and deal with points in their life.

It’s actually pretty formal, I think in its construction, that actually became pretty difficult because you’re shooting so much, and when you’re shooting formalism it has to be so well constructed, otherwise it all falls apart. We started having to move a little faster and it was real mental acrobatics trying to cover a scene and cover them nicely without sacrificing the filmmaking… But in terms of genre and tone it was heightened also because of the way Matthew and Woody act, so everything else has to fall into that.

I imagine McConaughey is playing the more philosophical of the two?

Right, and Woody is the more… instinctive? Or just less in touch with who he is.

How did you adapt your shooting style to TV?

The hardest part was making sure that we didn’t leave anything behind. You have 8 hours of story sitting in your head, and moving pieces around so that when we get to here, will this be clear enough? Do I need to heighten this moment or stretch this one? Thankfully I had a whole team I could discuss things with, especially Matthew, who was a pretty incredible collaborator, a leader in his own way. Someone I could definitely depend on, he knew his character inside and out, and because there are a lot of changes his character has to go through, the mental mapping was the biggest challenge.

How you’ve shot it is kind of a new model. We usually hear about “TV being a writer's medium” but you’re heavily involved in the entire season?

I always ask, how did David Lynch do “Twin Peaks”? Did they do it episodically, did they take breaks? [Nic Pizzolatto] the writer had never done anything before, he’s written a couple of episodes of “The Killing” and that’s it. So as a foray into actual production this was his first one. Showrunners like David Milch, David Simon, those guys who have a long history of creating things and much more of control of the craft and what they’re doing and the directors they bring on. [There’s like a] HBO stock of directors, who are amazing directors that actually have a different kinda symbiotic relationship there.

I’ve never done television before so I was like, [mock outrage] “What do you mean, the writer is the boss?” So even for HBO the question was “How do we handle this?” We made it work, I think, but, especially not shooting episodically, it was definitely new ground worked out. There’s a reason TV works the way it does, and has for the last 60 years.

So you didn't revolutionize the medium in one go?

[laughs] Well, we did it, but I don’t know if it’s going to continue as a pattern to follow. I don’t think so, it’s very difficult to do it that way. I think TV works very well based on a timeline that things have to get done in, and I understand [now] why it works that way.

Is there a possibility of a second season, and would you be involved?

Yeah, I don’t think HBO would have done it, if not for the possibility of a second season, but I’m not part of it. I’ll continue as an executive producer, but I don’t want to continue in the daily showrunner kinda way—it’s too much. When you shoot episodically you stop and you prep the next episode, but we didn't have scripts for the last 2 episodes when we started and we didn’t have schedules or anything, we knew basically when we would have it finished by, but that was it.

So there’s 300-and-something locations in the film and hundreds of speaking roles. Each location has to be vetted multiple times, then you need to bring department heads there to tech scout it. So we were basically shooting and prepping at the same time the last two months of the shoot which meant we had full shooting days—12 to 14 hours—plus four more at lunch or during shooting, scouting with the crew or doing castings or doing something related to the post-production that was happening at the same time… editing during weekends…

I was lucky I had a really great team, a tireless AD, tireless department heads. Actually not tireless, everyone was exhausted, but people had great endurance. Still, I don’t think anyone got to end and was like, "I can’t wait to start the next one!” I think everyone was proud of the work we did and the show is going to be great but it definitely took its toll on everyone involved. It’s an impossible amount. We just finished [shooting] on Saturday morning. Then we have 6 months of post. I think it comes out somewhere between January and March 2014.

How has it been, working with HBO?

They’re really great, they’re pretty hands off—I’m still waiting for that hands-on experience. Focus and HBO have been really… well, what’s nice between both those places is basically you just have conversations and usually we just all agree, it’s question about how to apply [any changes].
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/ ... eaderPanel

User avatar
Posts: 43129
Joined: May 2010

User avatar
Forum Pro
Law
Posts: 17034
Joined: July 2010
Location: Moonlight Motel
Saw this before Boardwalk tonight..

Wow is all I can say..

User avatar
Posts: 20369
Joined: June 2010
Allstar wrote:

oh boy... looks amazing.
Fixed.

User avatar
Posts: 1682
Joined: November 2012
IWatchFilmsNotMovies wrote:
Allstar wrote:

oh boy... looks amazing.
Fixed.
So when does this start again?

Post Reply