True Detective (season 2)
The second season of True Detective, an American anthology crime drama television series created by Nic Pizzolatto, began airing on June 21, 2015, on the premium cable network HBO. With a principal cast of Colin Farrell, Rachel McAdams, Taylor Kitsch, Kelly Reilly, and Vince Vaughn, the season comprises eight episodes and concluded its initial airing on August 9, 2015.
The season's story takes place in California and follows the interweaving stories of officers from three cooperating police departments; when California Highway Patrol officer and war veteran Paul Woodrugh discovers the body of corrupt city manager Ben Caspere on the side of a highway, Vinci Police Department detective Raymond "Ray" Velcoro and Ventura County Sheriff's Office Criminal Investigation Division Sergeant Antigone "Ani" Bezzerides are called to assist in the following investigation. Career criminal Francis "Frank" Semyon attempts to legitimize his business with his wife Jordan by investing in a rail project overseen by Caspere, but loses his money when Caspere is killed, prompting him to start his own investigation.
Episodes
Cast
Main cast
- Colin Farrell as Detective Raymond "Ray" Velcoro, a mob-affiliated detective from the Vinci Police Department, struggling with his allegiance to his corrupt superiors and the mobster who owns him.
- Rachel McAdams as Detective Sergeant Antigone "Ani" Bezzerides, a Ventura County Sheriff's Office CID agent who struggles with personal issues within her family and habits such as gambling and drinking.
- Taylor Kitsch as Officer Paul Woodrugh, a California Highway Patrol officer and war veteran, who worked for a private military contractor implied to have involvement with war crimes.
- Kelly Reilly as Jordan Semyon, the wife of Frank Semyon, who must not only struggle with Frank's choices, but her own as well.
- Vince Vaughn as Francis "Frank" Semyon, a career criminal and entrepreneur, who is in jeopardy of losing his life's work after his partner's corpse is discovered on the side of a highway.
Recurring cast
- Ritchie Coster as Mayor Austin Chessani
- Christopher James Baker as Blake Churchman
- Afemo Omilami as Police Chief Holloway
- Michael Irby as Detective Elvis Ilinca
- Leven Rambin as Athena Bezzerides
- Abigail Spencer as Gena Brune
- Lolita Davidovich as Cynthia Woodrugh
- James Frain as Lieutenant Kevin Burris
- Riley Smith as Steve Mercer
- Adria Arjona as Emily
- Michael Hyatt as Katherine Davis
- Yara Martinez as Felicia
- Christian Campbell as Richard Brune
- Jon Lindstrom as Jacob McCandless
- Emily Rios as Betty Chessani
- Vinicius Machado as Tony Chessani
- Ronnie Gene Blevins as Stan
- Timothy V. Murphy as Osip Agranov
- C. S. Lee as Richard Geldof, the California Attorney General
- Chris Kerson as Nails
- Rick Springfield as Dr. Irving Pitlor
- Ashley Hinshaw as Lacey Lindel
- W. Earl Brown as Detective Teague Dixon
- David Morse as Eliot Bezzerides, Ani's estranged father
- Gabriel Luna as Miguel Gilb
- Fred Ward as Eddie Velcoro
Production
Casting
The success of True Detective, and its subsequent renewal, fueled casting rumors in the press. At one point, early media reports named Cate Blanchett, Josh Brolin, Joaquin Phoenix, Garrett Hedlund, Michael Fassbender, Jessica Chastain, Christian Bale, Elisabeth Moss and Brad Pitt to be among a raft of potential candidates for the leads. The season's first significant casting was Colin Farrell as Ray Velcoro, which he revealed in his September 2014 interview with the Sunday World. Vince Vaughn, playing the role of Frank Semyon, became HBO's next important signing toward the end of the month. By November, True Detective principal cast expanded to include Rachel McAdams, Taylor Kitsch, and Kelly Reilly.Filming
California was selected as the setting for the second season. Producers were urged to avoid filming in Los Angeles and, instead, focus on the other regions of the state to "capture a certain psycho-sphere ambiance". Production began in November 2014.Music
returned as composer for the second season, and the score for the season is more electronic-influenced than the previous season. Burnett noted that the change in landscape, to California, also changed how he wrote the music. Leonard Cohen's "Nevermind," the season two opening theme, is a song off Cohen's 2014 album, Popular Problems. The theme song's lyrics change with every episode, incorporating different verses from Cohen's song. Lera Lynn's music is featured throughout the season, and the song "The Only Thing Worth Fighting For", which she composed with Burnett and Rosanne Cash, is used in the season two trailer. Lynn collaborated with Burnett on writing several original songs for the series, with cues from creator Nic Pizzolatto regarding lyrics and content. Lynn also portrays a bar singer in the season, where several of her songs are used, including "My Least Favorite Life", which was written by Cash.Themes and influences
's Emily VanDerWerff stated, "...above all else, True Detective wants to explore the role of men in society." "Yet if season one was already interested in the topic, then season two has nearly jumped off the cliff with its obsessions, to the degree that Rachel McAdams's Ani is defined largely by her rejection of the more open and traditionally "feminine" New Age philosophy of her father and her embrace of the hardened, traditionally "masculine" life of the emotionally closed-off police officer," she continued. VanDerWerff also noted that season two's three male leads are all dealing with their own issues of masculinity; "Ray seems tortured by having to exist as a man in this world that doesn't share his ideals," "Frank is trying to walk a very noble, masculine path by taking his dark, dirty enterprise legitimate," and " is mostly playing out a very typical story of a deeply repressed gay man who's trying to fight back his own impulses."Reception
Reviews
The second season received mixed reviews. Positive reviews praised the performances of Farrell, McAdams and Kitsch, its cinematography, and action sequences. The season was named one of the worst television programs of 2015, from many major news outlets such as Variety, The New York Post, Newsday, and TV Guide.On Rotten Tomatoes, the season has a rating of 65%, based on 72 reviews, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "True Detectives second season stands on its own as a solid police drama, with memorable moments and resonant relationships outweighing predictable plot twists." On Metacritic, the season has a score of 61 out of 100, based on 41 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
David Hinckley of the New York Daily News gave it a very positive review, and wrote "It's still the kind of show that makes TV viewers reach for phrases like 'golden age of television drama'" and that "the second installment of True Detective goes out of the way not to echo the first." Hank Stuever of The Washington Post gave it a generally positive review, praising the performances, and wrote, "There is something still lugubrious and overwrought about True Detective, but there's also a mesmerizing style to it — it's imperfect, but well made."
A more mixed review came from Brian Lowry of Variety, who wrote "Although generally watchable, the inspiration that turned the first into an obsession for many seems to have drained out of writer Nic Pizzolatto's prose."