• Changing RCF's index page, please click on "Forums" to access the forums.

The Official True Detective Scene

Do Not Sell My Personal Information
I'm really enjoying the show top quality stuff.

Does everyone else assume they are being interviewed in the same room but at different times? i'm assuming they just made a directorial decision to shoot the scenes perpendicular to allow for variation.

I think we are supposed to assume the present day cops suspect MMC to have snapped and copycatting 'reginald'. I'm hoping it will go deeper and we will betaken in directions we cant anticipate.
 
I thought he was about to interject because he opened that file that he was probably not supposed to look at?

I'm wondering why it would be in the center of the table if he's not supposed to be looking at it...

I'm really enjoying the show top quality stuff.

Does everyone else assume they are being interviewed in the same room but at different times? i'm assuming they just made a directorial decision to shoot the scenes perpendicular to allow for variation.

I think we are supposed to assume the present day cops suspect MMC to have snapped and copycatting 'reginald'. I'm hoping it will go deeper and we will betaken in directions we cant anticipate.

I started looking into the same room thing, but they just don't look alike.. I can certainly see it, though.. According to imdb, Reggie Ledoux is only in 2 episodes...
 
I'm wondering why it would be in the center of the table if he's not supposed to be looking at it...



I started looking into the same room thing, but they just don't look alike.. I can certainly see it, though.. According to imdb, Reggie Ledoux is only in 2 episodes...

Well it seemed like maybe it was left there to tempt him. That's the impression I got. Because when the cops walked out you saw him kind of look at it with some angst. Like he really, really wanted to open it, but wasn't supposed to. Felt like maybe the older cop left it on purpose and the younger one wasn't in it. That was my initial impression of that whole thing though.
 
Back at it tomorrow - looks intense!

[video=youtube;zpfMjxlSuus]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zpfMjxlSuus#t=35[/video]
 
Back at it tomorrow - looks intense!

[video=youtube;zpfMjxlSuus]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zpfMjxlSuus#t=35[/video]

[video=youtube_share;aBaYVo89mmY]http://youtu.be/aBaYVo89mmY[/video]
 
Yeah so, that episode was fucking incredible.
 
Just caught up.

Holy effing effing eff....
 
Damn... Wow. The first 3 episodes were already amazing, but that just ratcheted it up to an all time great level. I'm still in awe of how good that episode was in all aspects.

edit: and we still haven't had the epic gunfight that Marty was talking about, right?
 
I want to know how the 'character' was able to do a bunch of drugs, knock out a gang while high, call himself to get himself to drive a getaway car for himself to hop into the back seat of. Still waiting.
 
Still blown away by that final shot.

And by the way, those final six seconds were actually one, real, continuous shot. They shot it seven times all the way through and the one we saw was unbroken with no cgi.

True Detective: How Did They Pull Off That Final Shot?

Four episodes into its run on HBO, "True Detective" is earning the kind of high praise usually saved for drama series with two or three seasons under their belts, thanks to its stunning visuals, pitch-black worldview and career-best performances from Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey. Cary Fukunaga helmed each installment of the eight-episode run, and his careful direction has been a key factor in "True Detective's" success, even if it's not as apparent as Harrelson's and McConaughey's acting.

But if you watched the fourth episode, "Who Goes There," tonight on HBO, by the end, it's likely you are very aware of just how good Cary Fukunaga is.

MILD SPOILERS FOR EPISODE 4 AHEAD

Before reaching the halfway point of the series, Fukunaga decided to end the episode with a six-minute oner, or long take, that follows Cohle into a heist inside a housing project, through a number of shootouts, outside to escape from swarming police, through another house, over a fence and finally into Hart's car. It's the kind of incredible shot that's worth watching again and again to catch every detail in it and further blurs the line between television and film.

To find out how he pulled off the complex sequence, I reached out to Fukunaga to see if he would walk me through the planning and execution of the best "True Detective" scene yet.

Off the bat, it's important to know that the oner is nothing new to Fukunaga. Having used the technique in both of his feature films, "Sin Nombre" and "Jane Eyre," Fukunaga signed onto "True Detective" knowing that he wanted to include a long take at some point, because he considers it a tenser kind of directing. "The best ones, you don't even realize that they're oners," Fukunaga said. "They're the most first-person experience you can get in a film."

Reading Nic Pizzolatto's script for "Who Goes There," Fukunaga knew almost immediately that the heist was the scene to make his oner. All he had to do was convince the entire crew that it wasn't impossible to pull off.

To cover as much ground as he wanted to in the sequence, Fukunaga needed to shoot in an actual housing project, and that was the first complication in planning the oner. It took weeks to even get permission to film on-location, but once he received it, Fukunaga went straight into mapping the shot and finding "the most interesting path, but also the most logical path" for Cohle to escape with Ginger. That interesting and logical path eventually takes Cohle and Ginger over a chain-link fence, a maneuver that proved to be the most complicated of the intricate sequence.

Watching just the fences portion of the oner back, the camera floats over the high barrier in a movement that almost looks effortless. Getting the shot, however, was anything but. Because the location was an actual housing project, the "True Detective" crew wasn't allowed to take down any portion of the fence, so they had to improvise. "At one point, we were going to build a ramp, and the operator was going to walk up it," Fukunaga said. "But that wasn't very safe." The solution ended up involving placing the Steadicam operator on an elevated jib, or a weighted crane, which carried him over the fence and back down to earth.

Once the camera movements were figured out, the production carefully choreographed everything that had to happen in front of the lens with the help of a stunt team led by Mark Norby, who personally worked with McConaughey to develop a fighting style for Cohle. The crew even built a replica of the stash house for the stunt team to practice in before the big shoot.

"We had ADs [assistant directors] all over the neighborhood because we had to release extras, crowd running background, police cars, stunt drivers. There were actual gun shots and stones being thrown through windows. There were a lot of things to put together," Fukunaga said. "Even the action, the stunt sequences were complicated. We're working on a television schedule. It isn't like a film where you can spend a lot of time working the stunts out with the actors. We only had a day and a half to get Matthew and everyone else on the same page."

All told, the sequence clocks in at around six minutes. Fukunaga and the crew ran through the whole thing seven times while the cameras were rolling. The director built in possible edit points if two takes had to be combined to make the perfect version of the shot, but anyone who is wondering should know that the sequence everyone saw in the episode is, in fact, a true single take and one of the great achievements of filmmaking for television.
 
"You are like the Michael Jordon of being an asshole."

LOL

Show is amazing.
 
This show puts The Walking Dead to shame.

I don't watch Walking Dead, but I'd hold-up on that statement... True Detective is 4 episodes into a serial murder plot that has yet to even uncover any motive. While I'm not a Walking Dead fan, they've had seasons full of plot that has captivated millions.

True Detective can get there, but they need to take these detectives out of an office first.
 
Walking dead is rubbish compared to the style and sophistication of this show. The one shot was the second best i've seen (after shaun of the dead) and the shooting of the diner scene where they pull focus through the glass was beautiful as well. Hope the story line pays off over the back 4 episodes.
 
"You are like the Michael Jordon of being an asshole."

LOL

Show is amazing.

I'm gonna remember that line forever. I was rolling when he said that entire phrase.
 

Rubber Rim Job Podcast Video

Episode 3-14: "Time for Playoff Vengeance on Mickey"

Rubber Rim Job Podcast Spotify

Episode 3:14: " Time for Playoff Vengeance on Mickey."
Top