I
picked the opening series of True Detective back up
again this week, for the first time since it aired back in
2014. It shouldn’t be a surprise how much I enjoyed it, as
a modern walk through the Southern Gothic genre. I feel I haven’t immersed myself enough in the brooding landscape
of Southern Gothic – I think the last cultural artefact I swallowed that bore any resemblance was the fairly dumb but fairly brilliant True Blood from years
ago, a show about Louisiana vampires that was a truckload of spooky Halloween fun. True Detective isn’t that.
It draws its Gothic magic from its quintessential location, in
the chillingly flat, spacious swampland of Louisiana. There’s a lot
to praise about it – the directing, the acting, the ‘themes’,
unsubtle as they are – but as with all the best pieces of art, the
show’s power is in its palpable atmosphere, which True
Detective gets exactly right.
No
new ground is broken in the show’s plot, of a
chalk-and-cheese cop duo hunting a serial killer. Like the
resemblance of a child to its parents, you can recognise here the
features of Silence of the Lambs and Se7en, mixed with a little Texas
Chain Saw Massacre, but its more obvious, or perhaps open, influences
are strangely literary. I didn’t know about The King
in Yellow before this show aired, like most people, it
seems, as the book had a resurgence in its wake, and if nothing else
I can thank this series for bringing that book back to the world’s
attention. The relation the show has to the 1895 collection of weird
stories is arguably superficial, taking namesakes and elements; the
‘Yellow King’, a mysterious place called Carcosa, the appearance
of the Yellow Sign. But by giving this series a heavily-telegraphed
relation to the book, it can be understood that the show’s priority
isn’t character, themes, or mystery, strong as they may well be,
but in its embrace of the sensation of weird.
There’s
nothing to suggest that any of what happens in True
Detective’s story has any supernatural influence, but
nonetheless the show seems to exist in some disquieting unreality,
talking of devil worship, symbols, totems, the afterlife. The
character Rust even hallucinates regularly, supposedly due to a
history of drug use, though he refers to them at least once as
‘visions’, and this allows for a few moments of surrealism, when
nature falls apart. The crimes themselves are baroque and ceremonial,
with certain atrocities wearing the bizarre paganism of The
Wicker Man. All these nods or allusions to something
metaphysical, these unseen forces and hidden layers, are what give
the show its unsettling personality. Though the subject, miserable as
it may be, is a grounded one, it still feels throughout as
though the rational world might abandon the viewer completely, and so
there is always a sense that something beyond the comprehensible
evils of criminality lurks beneath the soil or at the
bottom of the bayous.
The
show’s philosophical wanderings also caught much attention, being
lacquered with a pessimistic attitude where very little respect is
given to any perspective that isn’t aimed squarely towards the
abyss. I can see why Rust Cohle can be a hero to many, openly
shitting in the proverbial breakfasts of Jesus worshippers, and I can
also see how he could be irritating to many others, espousing
well-rehearsed dialogue about the nature of existence at a moment’s
notice, acting as the show’s thematic mouthpiece. Nietzsche is
predictably mentioned by name, redrawn once again as a proponent of nihilistic fatalism. I actually haven’t any
hostility towards these famous ‘time is a flat circle’
moments, but I do feel as if they’re better
digested when they’re taken less as thought-provoking standards to
march under, and more as additional support to the aforementioned
queasy atmosphere. At the heart of True
Detective is a lightless and
frightening world. As well as being a world of local sex offenders,
or of an organised establishments of sex offenders, or of possible
folkloric demon-monsters, Rust’s diatribes expand this terror to
the entirety of the universe. They add to the show’s nature in much
the same ethos of philosophical horror, with creator Pizzolatto
citing Thomas Ligotti’s The Conspiracy Against the Human
Race as another of his influences. Just as Ligotti’s
ultra-negative philosophy is the centrepiece, not just the
inspiration, of his horror writing, I believe that True
Detective weaponises an openly atheistic, pessimistic,
antinatal worldview to add to its menacing flavour, one that is
given a glimmer of Hollywood optimism as the series bows out.
Watching
it again, I got the sense of Rust Cohle as a bit of a Mary Sue. Not
only outstandingly talented at basically everything, he also sees the
world with total clarity, penetrating through all of mankind’s
deceits with total, accurate certainty. I picked up a
Holmes-and-Watson vibe to him and Marty’s relationship – Rust as
the brilliant mastermind and Marty, with his flaws and his family, as
the vessel of humanity to be the audience’s ambassador. It
could be argued that Marty’s warm heart counteracts Rust’s cold
one (Hart and Cohl, I’ve literally just got it), but in actuality
there’s certainly a one-sidedness to their partnership, even if
Woody Harrelson, showing as fine an acting spirit as McConaughey or
Monaghan, keeps his character magnetic throughout his innumerable bad
decisions. I thought about this as a problem as I watched it again,
with Rust’s gravelly voice stealing the show as he took the lead in
practically every plot point. By the end, at least, I did
come to appreciate that what bound these differing characters
together was their fealty to justice, and that Marty does,
eventually, put aside everything to join Rust in the pursuit of
something he knows is right. So despite Rust being written as
superior to Marty in a myriad of ways, it is in this, their moral
sense, that the two of them are equals.
True
Detective couldn’t keep up its momentum, which was
probably an inevitability. I didn’t care for the second series and
as of yet have not seen the third, which swam under my radar with
minimal fanfare, seeming to speak of the trauma that the
response to the second series left on its creators. The decision to
make the series an anthology, swapping setting and characters every
season, made sense to me, but the problem I found with the second
series is that they lost the first series’s two shining assets: its
haunting mood and its dynamic central characters. The
characters in series two were empty and dull, and the setting was
completely dry of atmosphere. It’s a bit of a shame, as like I said
the real draw of the show for me was its ominous weirdness,
palpitating beneath its removable parts. Then again,
the first series is so tightly constructed, with its excellent
back-and-forth structure that couldn’t simply be reused,
that any continuation might always have been doomed to
fail. I might get to watching the third series, as one of the
positives of an anthology series is it can always change for better
or worse, but either way this opening series has proven
itself as a short, strong and supremely effective work of television.
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