Tag: true-detective

  • ‘Star Wars,’ ‘True Detective’ Mashup Is the Best Thing You’ll See Today

    How does one cure their “True Detective” blues? By mashing the HBO series with “Star Wars,” obviously.

    In honor of the recent (and underwhelming) Season 2 finale, Star Wars Minute made a “Star Wars” video in the style of Season 1’s opening titles and it’s kinda awesome.

    The video kicks off with a washed-out shot of the Death Star trench run, as names of cast members like Harrison Ford and Carrie Fisher appear. Soon, several fan-favorites appear, including a shot of the Millennium Falcon and a title card for the incomparable Liam Neeson.

    Everyone from C3PO to effing Lobot (!) make an appearance. Clearly, the light the Force is winning.

    This should tie you over until “The Force Awakens” hits theaters on December 18.

  • ‘True Detective’ Season 2 Finale Ratings Down Double Digits From Season 1

    True Detective“True Detective” season 2 didn’t just suffer in critical acclaim in comparison to season 1; its ratings were also down.

    Sunday’s season 2 finale drew 2.73 million viewers, a 22 percent drop from the season 1 finale. The only good news is that ratings rose for the finale 25 percent from the series-low Aug. 2 episode.

    Season 1 of the HBO drama was applauded by critics for its beautiful visuals, a stunning single-take action scene, and the performances by Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson. But season 2 took shots from the start — for “sketchily written” characters, clunky dialogue, “no sense of place,” and “disorganized” plotting.

    Still, HBO is on board for season 3, if creator Nic Pizzolatto is game to write another season. Let the #TrueDetectiveSeason3 hashtag game commence!


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  • Twitter Eviscerates the ‘True Detective’ Season 2 Finale

    “True Detective” Season 2 just got hate-watched into the ground. The 1.5-hour finale aired last night, and Twitter was ready with knives. Maybe expectations were too high after Season 1, but from the first episode, fans were confused, disappointed, confused, depressed, still confused, and bored. When the series ended, there was still mass confusion and disappointment.

    To be fair, there are some TD2 defenders out there — fans who claim to have liked the plot, characters, tone and finale resolution, with some arguing that the haters were just too dumb to follow along or forgot that Season 1 was also pretentious and incomprehensible. But some of defenders just seem to want to pride themselves on swimming against the stream, while some of the critics just seem to want to pride themselves on coming up with clever insults.

    Either way, the result was an onslaught of (sometimes hilarious) opinions during the finale’s airing. #TrueDetectiveSeason2 was trending through the final episode, and here are some of the less-than-loving tweets it faced:


    Yikes. Here, at least, is one satisfied viewer:


    That’s probably the best it’s going to get — for now. This show may make perfect sense when binge-watched from start to finish or with the benefits of time and low expectations. Maybe it’ll even end up a cult classic. What did you think of TD2, and do you hope they try again with Season 3?

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  • Best of Late Night TV: Obama Calls Trump With Advice, Meryl Streep’s Guitar Lesson, ‘Flinch’ Game

    If you’re like us and value your sleep, you probably nodded off into your Ambien dreamland before the party started on post-prime time TV. Don’t worry; we’ve got you covered. Here’s the best of what happened last night on late night.

    Since Gawker leaked Donald Trump’s phone number, “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” did a bit where President Obama called Trump with debate advice. Cue Jimmy’s impressive impression of The Donald and his constant interruptions and number dumping: Trump: “I don’t understand, why would you want to help me become president?” Obama: “Uh, because it’d be hilarious? Look, I’ve been president for eight years, I’m ready for some entertainment. I just want to grab some popcorn, sit back, and watch this whole sh-tshow go down.” Haha. Watch the whole video for their “Cheerleader” duet. Please say it’s true that Trump’s debate will indeed be auto-tuned. Meryl Streep was on “The Tonight Show” to promote her new movie “Ricki and the Flash.” She didn’t get to say too much because Jimmy dominated the conversation with his gushing, but she told Jimmy she used to think she looked fat and had a weird nose in old films. She was tough on herself, like many women can be. Looking back, she thinks “my god, what was my problem?” In the second video, talking about the movie, she said Neil Young gave her her first guitar lesson, and she described what it was like to play a failed rock star.

    Jerrod Carmichael was also on “The Tonight Show” to talk about his new HBO special. He also gushed over Meryl Streep and said her career is so strong it could even survive a face tattoo. Test that theory, Meryl!
    Matt LeBlanc, William H. Macy, and Don Cheadle were on “The Late Late Show with James Corden,” and it was magical. They played a game called “Flinch,” putting someone behind a glass barrier while others threw stuff at them, and it was their job not to flinch. Classic.The three actors all share a love of riding motorcycles. You have to love Don Cheadle’s explanation of how he got his ride. James proposed the four of them start a “mean” motorcycle gang and they were down for it. “Fantastic Four” star Miles Teller was on “Late Night with Seth Meyers” to talk about the movie. Miles admitted he was not a comic book fan before being in F4, but it was his dad’s favorite comic book.
    Seth got into the game act with a fun quiz called “Fortune Cookie or True Detective Quote?” playing off the ridiculous dialogue in the HBO show. They really nailed the tone.
    Conan drank some Truth Serum and “couldn’t lie” after that point. So Andy Richter asked him a series of questions. What did he really do over the break? The Food Network and Mike’s Hard Lemonade are involved. “If someone made a movie about your genitals, what would it be called?” “Ant Man.”
    Ice-T and Coco were both on “Conan” and she’s 5.5 months pregnant with a baby girl, but still barely showing. She said her boobs somehow got even bigger and she has to lift them up. Conan said he and Andy are always there for her.
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  • What’s New on TV, Netflix, Digital, and DVD/Blu-ray This Week: August 3 – 9

    At a loss for what to watch this week? From new DVDs and Blu-rays, to what’s streaming on Netflix, we’ve got you covered.

    New Video on Demand, Rental Streaming, and Digital Only

    “The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies”
    The final chapter of Bilbo Baggins’ “Hobbit” adventure is airing August 8 on HBO as part of its Saturday Night Movies. It’ll be on HBO Now, the network’s standalone streaming service, on the same day. So if you don’t already have HBO as part of your cable package but want to watch the TV shows (“Game of Thrones,” “True Detective,” etc.) and movies, you can just order HBO Now to stream the content.

    “Difficult People”
    Julie Klausner and Billy Eichner star in this new Hulu Original series, which premieres August 5. Julie and Billy play more annoying and less successful versions of themselves — aspiring comics living, working and struggling in NYC as all of their friends move on to success and love. Amy Poehler is one of the producers and you can expect tons of great comedy guest stars (including Seth Meyers as a prostitute).

    Check out the series trailer:

    “Chocolate City”
    If you liked “Magic Mike,” you might want to visit “Chocolate City,” which also follows the world of exotic male dancers and is out on DVD and Digital HD on August 4. Women go wild at the arrival of a young, new dancer named Michael (Robert Ri’chard) — a college student struggling to help his mother (Vivica A. Fox) make ends meet. When his part time job doesn’t pay the bills, he finds success at the nightclub dancing as “Sexy Chocolate.” As the money starts rolling in, Michael must deal with the unexpected pressure of being the new favorite flavor while hiding his “job” from his mother and girlfriend. The DVD also includes a blooper reel.

    New on DVD and Blu-ray

    “Insurgent”
    The second movie in the “Divergent” series — starring Shailene Woodley, Theo James and Kate Winslet — is coming home August 4, including more than four hours of bonus material: audio commentary with producers Doug Wick and Lucy Fisher; “Insurgent Unlocked: The Ultimate Behind-the-Scenes Access” feature-length documentary; and five featurettes: “Diverging: Adapting Insurgent to the Screen,” “From Divergent to Insurgent,” “The Others: Cast and Characters,” “The Train Fight Unlocked,” and “The Peter Hayes Story.”

    “Far From the Madding Crowd”
    Carey Mulligan stars as Bathsheba Everdene in this sweeping adaptation of Thomas Hardy’s classic novel, following an independent woman with three very different suitors: a sheep farmer (Matthias Schoenaerts); a soldier (Tom Sturridge); and a rich older bachelor (Michael Sheen). The Blu-ray comes with deleted scenes; an extended ending; the theatrical trailer, and the featurettes “Bathsheba Everdene;” “The Suitors;” “Adapting Far From the Madding Crowd;” “The Look of Far From the Madding Crowd;” “Gabriel Oak;” “William Boldwood;” “Sergeant Troy;” “The Locations of Far From the Madding Crowd;” and “Thomas Vinterberg.’

    “True Story”
    Jonah Hill plays a disgraced New York Times reporter who learns that an accused killer, played by James Franco, has been impersonating him, leading to a chilling game of cat-and-mouse. The Blu-ray has a ton of special features, including an alternate ending, deleted scenes, “Mike Finkel Featurette,” “Who is Christian Longo?” “The Truth Behind True Story,” “The Making of True Story,” and audio commentary by director Rupert Goold.

    “Blackbird”
    In this inspiring drama, a 17-year-old singer (Julian Walker) struggles with his sexuality and the treatment of others while coming of age in a small Southern Baptist community. Since his father (Isaiah Washington) left, Randy takes care of his emotionally disturbed mother (Mo’Nique), and he’s the kind of friend all of his classmates can depend on. As strong as he seems on the outside, Randy is hiding a secret denial of his true self. It’s not until he opens himself up to love that he discovers that becoming a man means accepting who you really are.

    New on Netflix

    “The Hurt Locker”
    Kathryn Bigelow won Best Director — first woman to do so! — for helming this harrowing 2008 war drama starring Oscar nominee Jeremy Renner. It came to Netflix on August 1, so go be reminded why it also won Best Picture.

    “Dear Frankie”
    This funny, touching 2004 drama follows a young boy named Frankie (Jack McElhone) who doesn’t know his father because his mother, Lizzie (Emily Mortimer), ran away from the abuser when Frankie was just a baby. Instead of telling Frankie the truth, she spins an elaborate lie, and even writes letters for Frankie posing as his father. But things take an unexpected turn and she ends up having to invent a fake father. Enter Gerard Butler, the ideal fake husband/father.

    “Bride & Prejudice”
    Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice” gets the Bollywood treatment in this charming 2004 romantic comedy/musical. Don’t miss this one. Here’s one of the dance scenes (you may recognize a few of the faces):

    TV Worth Watching

    “America’s Next Top Model” (Wednesday at 8 p.m. on The CW)
    Yes, this show is still on — and it’s still completely insane! Cycle 22 starts August 5 with more guy and girl models, more ridiculous photo shoots and — surely — more bizarre advice from Tyra Banks on how to be “flawsome” just as you are (or at least as you are after one of her makeovers). Watch the drama play out starting August 5.

    “Project Runway” (Thursday at 9 p.m. on Lifetime)
    That national treasure, Tim Gunn, is back with more advice for aspiring (but for some reason already arrogant) designers in Season 14 of the fashion favorite. Who will be the first designer to break down after a withering critique from Nina Garcia? It would be us if we were there, but instead we’ll just watch and empathize from home.

    “True Detective” (Sunday at 9 p.m. on HBO)
    “True Detective” Season 2 has its defenders but way more detractors. Oh well. It can still end strong. It could also end weak, and we’ll see which way it goes when Episode 8, “Omega Station,” airs on August 9.

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  • ‘True’ Romance? Co-Stars Rachel McAdams and Taylor Kitsch Are Reportedly Dating

    true detective, rachel mcadams, taylor kitschIt looks like love may be in the air for “True Detective” co-stars Rachel McAdams and Taylor Kitsch: According to a new report, the actors are dating.

    Us Weekly says that the duo, who star together in season two of the HBO drama, have been spending lots of time together lately — and that includes off-set, too. The magazine says that “multiple sources” confirm that the stars are dating, after being spotted out to dinner together last month.

    “It hasn’t been long,” a source told Us Weekly of the pair’s romance. “But it’s serious.” (Then again, a different source says, “I don’t know if it’s full-blown love yet, but they talk constantly.” Get your stories straight, anonymous tabloid sources!)

    According to the magazine, the actors — who are both Canadian — have been “friends for years,” but “grew closer on set” while shooting the gritty drama. This isn’t the first time that McAdams has been linked to a co-star: She famously dated everyone’s favorite internet meme, Ryan Gosling, after appearing with him in “The Notebook.”

    A rep for Kitsch didn’t return Us Weekly’s request for comment on the report. Stay tuned to see if these potential lovebirds are the real deal.

    [via: Us Weekly]

    Photo credit: Lacey Terrell/HBO

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  • Did ‘True Detective’ Pull a ‘Game of Thrones’ With Colin Farrell?

    UPDATE: He didn’t die! But he did piss himself. He just had a couple of cracked ribs from the buckshot. Do you think that was that a cop out (no pun intended)?

    *SPOILERS ahead from last night’s “True Detective” Season 2*

    Only two episodes of “True Detective” Season 2 have aired on HBO, and we’re still trying to figure out the characters’ names and motivations (beyond a lot of scowling). At this point, we’re still following them as Colin Farrell, Rachel McAdams, Vince Vaughn, and Taylor Kitsch. And after Episode 2, “Night Finds You,” maybe there’s no Colin Farrell anymore?

    Farrell plays Detective Ray Velcoro, opposite McAdams as Detective Ani Bezzerides, Kitsch as Officer Paul Woodrugh and Vaughn as criminal entrepreneur Frank Semyon. “Night Finds You” ended with Farrell’s Ray Velcoro shot multiple times by someone wearing a mask — a black bird mask. And it’s HBO. And a main character may or may not be dead. This is too close to “Game of Thrones” to ignore. Jon Snow just got stabbed by his fellow “crows” in the Season 5 finale and may or may not ever return. Farrell’s Ray Velcoro definitely got shot at close range, but did he die or not?

    Check it out:


    As Vanity Fair asked:

    Did that really happen? Did a man in a raven mask really sneak up on Colin Farrell and put a couple of bullets in his chest in front of a copy of Araki. Tokyo Lucky Hole while Bobby Bland’s “I Pity the Fool” played in the background? Oh yes, and we’ll have to wait until next week to see if our lead detective made it out of the episode alive. That’s the kind of high-stakes batshittery we had come to expect from True Detective Season 1.”

    This is one way to get people to tune in for Episode 3! The July 5 third episode, “Maybe Tomorrow,” has this synopsis from HBO: “Paul works the prostitute angle while Frank receives the first casualty in a secret war, and steps back into a world he’d left behind.”

    Casualty? So did they just pull a Ned Stark, or is this more of a Jon Snow in that maybe Ray is not SO dead that he won’t come back anyway? Fans have mentioned seeing leaked photos of Colin on set in a shootout that has yet to air, so we can still hope that a vest saved Ray’s life.

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  • The Meteoric Rise of the TV Anti-Heroine

    anti heroine tv The age of the TV anti-hero may be drawing to a close, but the TV anti-heroine is just getting started.

    This week, as we welcome back Piper Chapman and her fellow prison inmates (with binge-viewers catching up with the third-season launch of Netflix’s “Orange Is the New Black” last Friday), and as we’re introduced to Ani Bezzerides — Rachel McAdams new morally ambiguous cop on Season 2 of HBO’s “True Detective,” debuting this Sunday — TV viewers are becoming fully invested in dramas whose female leads are every bit as complicated, fascinating, charismatic, dangerous, and messily human as the Don Drapers and Tony Sopranos of the recent past.

    The end of “Mad Men” last month seemed to mark the end of an era, and not just the 1960s as
    experienced by the ad gurus at Sterling Cooper. With the departures from our screens in recent years of Don Draper, Jax Teller (“Sons of Anarchy”), Raylan Givens (“Justified”), Rust Cohle (of the first season of “True Detective”) and Walter White (“Breaking Bad”), it seemed that TV programmers were closing the book on a certain kind of anti-hero, the kind who’d reigned supreme since “The Sopranos” kicked off the current so-called golden age of TV in 1999.

    The creative freedom offered by cable had finally matured into quality dramas as good as anything any other pop culture medium had produced. And all those early quality dramas — including “The Shield,” “Deadwood,” “The Wire,” and “Dexter” — seemed built around similar anti-heroes: macho guys who lived by their own code, who often did terrible things, but who were also heroic, if only because they lived in moral universes where everyone else was so much worse. They were men who were capable of great tenderness one moment and brutal violence the next. Critics could read into their complexity any number of things — critiques of American masculinity, allegories of American financial and military power, muckraking exposés of corruption in American institutions.

    But the most radical thing about these new anti-heroes, in TV terms, was that they didn’t waste time trying to be likable. They weren’t unambiguously good, and their good deeds didn’t necessarily redeem all the wrong they had done. They were often not handsome or sexy. They might be charismatic or even admirable at times, but viewers were never allowed to forget that they were being persuaded to care about men who often behaved monstrously.

    And for a long time, these anti-heroes were always men. Women protagonists didn’t have the luxury of being unlikable, unsexy, or unredeemable.

    That began to change about a decade ago with a wave of anti-heroine series, many of them on Showtime. Long before Walter White went from suburban parent to drug kingpin, Nancy Botwin pioneered that career path on “Weeds.” Showtime was soon full of similar anti-heroines, mothers and wives who were both competent and reckless, women who were often brazenly sexual and refused to apologize for being so, women who lived by their own rules, even if such behavior occasionally caused harm to themselves or people close to them, striving matriarchs who tried to build a better life for their husbands or children but who also jeopardized that better life with the chaos and drama they created through their own headstrong behavior. Women like Jackie Peyton on “Nurse Jackie,” Cathy Jamison on “The Big C,” Vanessa Ives on “Penny Dreadful,” Alison Bailey on “The Affair,” Virginia Johnson on “Masters of Sex,” and Carrie Mathison on “Homeland.”

    In the last few years, the anti-heroine has spread beyond Showtime to the rest of cable and even to the networks. HBO has comic anti-heroines: Selina Meyer on “Veep” and all four leads on “Girls.” (Not to mention a raft of anti-heroines on “Game of Thrones,” including Arya Stark, Brienne of Tarth, Margaery Tyrell, and Daenerys Targaryen.) FX has Elizabeth Jennings on “The Americans” and every character Jessica Lange has played on “American Horror Story.” (It also had Patty Hewes on “Damages.”) Tatiana Maslany plays several anti-heroines on BBC America’s “Orphan Black.” Fox has one of this year’s biggest breakout characters in Cookie Lyon of “Empire.” And ABC has the other with Annalise Keating on “How to Get Away With Murder” — joining a network roster that already included Olivia Pope on “Scandal,” Juliette Barnes on “Nashville,” and Emily Thorne on the recently-wrapped “Revenge.” And of course, there’s Netflix, with Piper and the rest of the “OITNB” convicts, along with Claire Underwood on “House of Cards” and both title characters in “Grace and Frankie.”

    Why so many anti-heroines? Part of it seems a natural corrective to the testosterone-heavy anti-hero dramas. Part of it is the increase in women TV series auteurs, from Shonda Rhimes (“Scandal,” “HTGAWM”) to Lena Dunham (“Girls”) to Jenji Kohan (“Weeds,” “OITNB”). Part of it is that TV has always been friendly to women (at least, more so than film), to the extent that sponsors recognize who controls the household purse strings and are willing to support programming that appeals to women by showing strong female characters. Part of it is the caliber of actresses eager to do TV work, especially now that TV is as prestigious as movies and offers meatier roles for women (especially older women) than film does.

    Still, anti-heroines — and the actresses who play them — face some obstacles that their male counterparts don’t. TV still prefers women to be likable and have certain body types. It expects them to be sexy and sexual — but not too sexual. It’s okay with flamboyant, larger-than-life behavior and dialogue (which make for compelling drama, after all), but it would prefer to have women apologize for, or at least justify such behavior if it harms others. It expects anti-heroines to feel the occasional twinge of guilt for putting career ahead of family, sex ahead of love, themselves ahead of others. There’s a fascinating discussion over at the Hollywood Reporter among several anti-heroine actresses (and likely Emmy contenders), including Viola Davis (“HTGAWM”), Taraji P. Henson (“Empire”), Jessica Lange (“American Horror Story”), Lizzy Caplan (“Masters of Sex”), and Ruth Wilson (“The Affair”), where the stars talk about how far TV has come in permitting characters like theirs to flourish, and how treacherous the minefields are that they still have to navigate.

    Audiences, programmers, and sponsors who are used to female characters who are likable or sexy or both are only now learning to accept shows featuring anti-heroines who may be neither of those. It will be interesting to see how viewers respond to McAdams’ “True Detective” sleuth. But even if they reject her, there’ll be more anti-heroines on the way. Maybe we’ll get sick of them, or they’ll run their course, just as the male anti-heroes have. Right now, however, TV anti-heroines are in full flower. Love them, hate them, love to hate them, but enjoy them while they’re here.
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  • Best of Late Night TV: Colin Farrell’s Confession and Taylor Schilling’s Sex Accident


    If you’re like us and value your sleep, you probably nodded off into your Ambien dreamland before the party started on post-prime time TV. Don’t worry; we’ve got you covered. Here’s the best of what happened last night on late night.

    “True Detective’s” second season starts this Sunday on HBO, so obviously the cast is making the rounds on Late Night. You know what that means: The Tonight Show,” and Jimmy Fallon had them sit down for a game of True Confessions (basically Two Truths and a Lie, only a little different). What did we learn? For starters, Colin Farrell was a murder suspect. Oh….

    Calling all “Orange Is The New Black” fans! Late Night” to talk about getting injured during a sex scene. Apparently she got “very excited,” took her shirt off, and scratched her face. Gives a whole new meaning to the phrase “please practice safe sex.”

    Meanwhile, Jimmy Kimmel Live,” and proceeded to break out his massage skills. Don’t worry, he’s simply started a service where people can get massaged by their favorite celebs, no bigs.

    Over on “Conan,” Josh Hutcherson mused on how he went to Bonnaroo and easily avoided fans due to how…well… high they all were. Apparently, his devotees are an easily influenced bunch, bless their hearts.

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  • TV Detectives From Different Shows Who Should Totally Be Partners

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    What’s a TV detective without a partner who challenges them, makes them better professionally, brings new expertise to the table, and fulfills their lives in ways they never knew they needed? Whether it’s a wacky buddy cop dynamic or a tense match-up rife with complex conflict, the crime-solving duo has become one of the most entertaining TV genres around. We’ve come to know many small-screen sleuths over the years, and we have to say that most of them have been paired with near-perfect partners. But what if we switched things up a bit? Here are 9 pairs of TV detectives we would totally tune in to watch together, even though they hail from completely different series.