Current:Home > My'Night Country' is the best 'True Detective' season since the original -Profound Wealth Insights
'Night Country' is the best 'True Detective' season since the original
View
Date:2025-04-20 17:38:20
It's been so long since the previous edition of HBO's True Detective — and so much longer since its first and most famous installment in 2014 — that making connections between the original story and the series' new, six-episode fourth season, Night Country, may be stretching things.
Except that Issa López, the director and chief writer of this current season, intentionally evokes some of the elements that made that first story so gripping. Written and directed by and starring different people, this new edition also has a horrifying crime scene, a clash between two investigators with very different personalities and approaches, and a sprinkling of supernatural elements that may or may not be real.
The setting this time is a remote town in Alaska, where the entire crew of scientists at an Arctic research station has gone missing, leaving behind phones and uneaten sandwiches. At first, it seems like a matter for the local cops, who enter the abandoned research station to investigate. There's Peter Prior, a young officer played by Finn Bennett; his father Hank, a veteran local cop on the same force, played by John Hawkes; and Liz Danvers, the chief of police, played by Jodie Foster.
It becomes clear that this group of cops has its conflicts — but conflicts run all through this small town. There are the native Alaskans versus the polluting mine operators, but there also are mothers against daughters, sisters against sisters, husbands against wives, and so on. Maybe even the living versus the dead.
The primary conflict is between Foster's Chief Danvers and just about everyone. Most prominently, she has a fiery past with Det. Evangeline Navarro, who's interested in this new case — but who still has issues about a murder the two women, when they were partnered together, were unable to solve.
It's this new case, though, that brings Danvers and Navarro back together, working in a state of almost constant friction as the clues — and mysteries and bodies — start piling up. The two leads work well together, and are very impressive. Kali Reis, an indigenous champion boxer turned actor, plays Navarro; this role has her entering a whole new ring, and she's triumphant here, too.
Foster, who has several emotionally raw scenes as Danvers, carries the weight of this True Detective series impeccably, and confidently. As an actor, she's covered this kind of territory before, just as brilliantly, in The Silence of the Lambs. And she's no stranger to television, either. Her first TV acting job was on an episode of Mayberry, R.F.D in 1968.
True Detective: Night Country is the best entry in this anthology series since the original — and this time, as with the first time, it's the direction and the mood as well as the acting and writing. As director, López gets every drop of tension and horror out of her scripts: A few times, I actually gasped at what was happening.
And the Alaskan location scenes, filmed in Iceland, make for some of the most remote and desolate winter panoramas since Stanley Kubrick filmed The Shining. Also adding significantly to the mood is the music — including the theme that opens each episode, a superbly appropriate use of the Billie Eilish recording, "Bury A Friend." It's creepy, distinctive, and haunting — just like this new, 10th-anniversary edition of True Detective.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Gold bars and Sen. Bob Menendez's online searches take central role at bribery trial
- Spain vs. Italy highlights: Spain wins Euro 2024 showdown with own goal, score
- How to find your phone's expiration date and make it last as long as possible
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- New Mexico fires that evacuated 8,000 curbed by rain, but residents face flash floods
- Possible return of Limited Too sends internet into a frenzy: 'Please be for adults'
- Delaware lawmakers sign off on $6.1 billion operating budget for the fiscal year
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Lana Del Rey Fenway Park concert delayed 2 hours, fans evacuated
Ranking
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Judge rules that New York state prisons violate solitary confinement rules
- Nothing like a popsicle on a hot day. Just ask the leopards at the Tampa zoo
- Boeing Starliner’s return delayed again: How and when the astronauts will land
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Costco made a big change to its rotisserie chicken packaging. Shoppers hate it.
- 88-year-old Montana man who was getaway driver in bank robberies sentenced to 2 years in prison
- Ex-CEO of Nevada-based health care company Ontrak convicted of $12.5 million insider trading scheme
Recommendation
Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
Millions baking across the US as heat prolongs misery with little relief expected
Illuminate Your Look With Kim Kardashian's New Lip Glosses and Highlighters
Alaska serial killer who admitted to killing five people has died in an Indiana prison
'Most Whopper
New Mexico judge weighs whether to compel testimony from movie armorer in Alec Baldwin trial
Trump campaign says it raised $141 million in May, compared to $85 million for Biden
Border Patrol reports arrests are down 25% since Biden announced new asylum restrictions