True Detective
True Detective is an American anthology crime drama television series created by Nic Pizzolatto. The series, broadcast by the premium cable network HBO in the United States, premiered on January 12, 2014. Each season of the series is structured as a self-contained narrative, employing new cast ensembles, and following various sets of characters and settings.
For other uses, see True Detective (disambiguation).True Detective
True Detective: Night Country (season 4)
- Nic Pizzolatto (s. 1–3)
- Issa López (s. 4–5)
- Nic Pizzolatto (s. 1–3)
- Issa López (s. 4–5)
- Nic Pizzolatto (s. 1–3)
- Various (s. 2–)
- Issa López (s. 4)
- Cary Joji Fukunaga (s. 1)
- Various (s. 2–3)
- Issa López (s. 4)
- "Far from Any Road" by The Handsome Family (s. 1)
- "Nevermind" by Leonard Cohen (s. 2)
- "Death Letter" by Cassandra Wilson (s. 3)
- "Bury a Friend" by Billie Eilish (s. 4)
- T Bone Burnett (s. 1–3)
- Vince Pope (s. 4)
United States
English
4
30 (list of episodes)
- Nic Pizzolatto
- Cary Joji Fukunaga
- Scott Stephens (s. 1–3)
- Matthew McConaughey
- Woody Harrelson
- Steve Golin (s. 1–3)
- Richard Brown (s. 1–3)
- Daniel Sackheim (s. 3)
- Jeremy Saulnier (s. 3)
- Bard Dorros (s. 3)
- Chris Mundy (s. 4)
- Barry Jenkins (s. 4)
- Adele Romanski (s. 4)
- Mark Ceryan (s. 4)
- Alan Page Arriaga (s. 4)
- Jodie Foster (s. 4)
- Mari-Jo Winkler-Ioffreda (s. 4)
- Issa López (s. 4–5)
- Carol Cuddy (s. 1)
- Aida Rodgers (s. 2)
- Peter Feldman (s. 3)
- Sam Breckman (s. 4)
- Princess Daazhraii Johnson (s. 4)
- Cathy Tagnak Rexford (s. 4)
- Layla Blackman (s. 4)
- Louisiana (s. 1)
- California (s. 2)
- Arkansas (s. 3)
- Iceland (s. 4)
- Adam Arkapaw (s. 1)
- Nigel Bluck (s. 2–3)
- Germain McMicking (s. 3)
- Florian Hoffmeister (s. 4)
- Alex Hall (s. 1–2)
- Affonso Gonçalves (s. 1)
- Meg Ritcher (s. 1)
- Chris Fiegler (s. 2)
- Byron Smith (s. 2)
- Leo Trombetta (s. 3)
- Matt Chessé (s. 4)
54–87 minutes
- Parliament of Owls
- Passenger
- Anonymous Content
- Neon Black
- Lee Caplin / Picture Entertainment (s. 1–3)
- Peligrosa (s. 4)
- HBO Entertainment
January 12, 2014
present
The first season aired in 2014, starring Matthew McConaughey, Woody Harrelson, Michelle Monaghan, Michael Potts, and Tory Kittles. It takes place in Louisiana and follows a pair of Louisiana State Police detectives, and their pursuit of a serial killer with occult links over a 17-year period.
The second season aired in 2015, starring Colin Farrell, Rachel McAdams, Taylor Kitsch, Kelly Reilly, and Vince Vaughn. It is set in California, and focuses on three detectives from three cooperating police jurisdictions and a criminal-turned-businessman as they investigate a series of crimes they believe are linked to the murder of a corrupt politician.[2][3]
The third season aired in 2019, starring Mahershala Ali, Carmen Ejogo, Stephen Dorff, Scoot McNairy, and Ray Fisher. It takes place in the Ozarks over three time periods as a pair of Arkansas State Police detectives investigate a macabre crime involving two missing children.
The fourth season aired in 2024, titled True Detective: Night Country and starring Jodie Foster and Kali Reis. It takes place in Alaska and follows the investigation into the sudden disappearance of a team of eight men from a research station. Issa López serves as writer and director, marking Pizzolatto's first time as neither writer nor showrunner.[4]
The first season received widespread acclaim and earned high ratings for HBO. It received numerous awards, chiefly for its acting, cinematography, writing, and direction. Reception to the second season was more divided, although the show maintained high viewership. The third season received positive reviews, but saw a drop in viewership. Night Country earned the highest viewership ratings for the series,[5] and received positive reviews from critics.
A fifth season, with López returning as the showrunner, is in development.
Production[edit]
Development[edit]
Before developing True Detective, Nic Pizzolatto worked as a literature professor for the University of Chicago, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and DePauw University.[6] He also delved into fiction writing, having developed a fascination for it as a graduate student at the University of Arkansas. His first published work was the short story collection Between Here and the Yellow Sea, released in 2006.[6] The author published his debut novel, Galveston, four years later and around the same time began preparing to branch out into the television industry (earlier attempts were never realized due to lack of capital).[7]
Intended to be Galveston's follow-up, Pizzolatto felt True Detective was more suited to film.[6][8] Pizzolatto shopped the novel to two TV executives, and, once he secured a deal in May 2010, drafted six screenplays, including the pilot episode ("The Long Bright Dark") script, which ran 90 pages.[6][7] He devoted another script for the series shortly after his departure from The Killing's writing staff in 2011, thanks to the support of Anonymous Content.[6] The final copy, amounting to 500 pages, was written without the aid of writing staff.[9][10] By this time, Pizzolatto secured a development deal with HBO,[6] and by April 2012, the network commissioned True Detective on an order of eight episodes.[11] Set up as an anthology series, each season will feature a different cast of characters and self-contained narratives in various time periods and locations.[12]
When preparing season 4, subtitled Night Country, director and writer Issa López chose to create a "dark mirror" of the first season: "Where True Detective is male and it's sweaty, Night Country is cold and it's dark and it's female."[13]
In February 2024, following the fourth-season finale, HBO renewed the series for a fifth season with López returning in her roles.[14]
Filming[edit]
The initial location for principal photography of True Detective's first season was Arkansas, but Pizzolatto later opted to film in Louisiana, which was cheaper due to its generous film-tax incentive program.[9][15] Production lasted 100 consecutive days,[16] and each episode was shot on 35mm film.[17] The crew filmed exterior shots of various constructed sets, including a remote sugarcane field outside of Erath,[18] in addition to real life locations such as Fort Macomb, a nineteenth-century fort located outside of New Orleans.[19]
California was selected as the setting for True Detective's sophomore season. Producers were urged to avoid filming in Los Angeles and, instead, focus on the more obscure regions of the state to "capture a certain psycho-sphere ambiance".[20] Production began in November 2014.[21]
The third season was filmed at various locations throughout Northwest Arkansas, including Fayetteville, Bentonville, Lincoln, Rogers and Springdale.[22] Filming began in February 2018 and was wrapped in August of the same year.[23]
Opening sequence[edit]
Led by creative director Patrick Clair, True Detective's title sequences were developed by a collaborative team consisting of three motion-design studios: Santa Monica-based Elastic, Antibody and Breeder, both based in Australia.[24][25][26] For the first season, Clair and his team took a variety of photos of the Louisiana scenery, which became the sequence's backbone.[25] They superimposed these images onto low poly meshes, thanks to the use of various animation and special effects techniques. This was a meticulous process for production, since they wanted to avoid creating a digitized look for the sequence.[26] Once its final cut took form, the team polished it by employing optical glitching and motion distortion technique.[25] True Detective's season one opening theme is "Far from Any Road", an alternative country song originally composed by The Handsome Family for their 2003 album Singing Bones.[26] The Sydney Morning Herald included season one's opening sequence in their list of the "Ten of the Best" title sequences on television.[27]
Clair took a similar approach to creating the title sequence for True Detective's second season. Production used material from a number of photographers, including aerial shots captured by David Maisel.[24] However, unlike season one, season two's title sequence incorporates deep, vivid gold and red color, thereby presenting "that more complicated view of California".[24] Leonard Cohen's "Nevermind" is the season two opening theme, which is a song from Cohen's 2014 album Popular Problems.[28] The theme song's lyrics change with every episode, incorporating different verses from Cohen's song.[29][30]