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I feel like just yesterday you were telling me that this was a character-driven show and the characters are the story, not the case -- so are you really surprised that there's a lot of the case that really isn't going to get fleshed out?
I share your love for S1, but it was due to the acting, setting and that dread you mentioned... but the dread ultimately ended in a whimper as it lead up to some disgusting guy in a disheveled house out in the country, not some grand reveal. The stories are run-of-the-mill.
This PERFECTLY underlines my point.
True Detective IS a character-driven show, and IMO, season one PERFECTLY managed to meld the arcs of plot, case, and character in the final episode, in exactly the way you're alluding and should be. They got their killer (plot) - even if it
was in a "whimper" (which I disagree with) - but the grander case went unresolved, and most importantly, Rust went from pessimist to finally having hope in the end (character), which was ultimately what everything was in service of.
I'm agreeing that this show is and should be character driven, but I've said multiple times now that I'm simply not seeing the "character" of it all that's driving the (somewhat lacking) plot. What is the Rust-goes-from-pessimist-to-semi-optimist arc in this season with Hays or whoever else? I keep saying that I don't understand what the character arcs, if any, are supposed to be leading toward, and you keep saying "but it's character driven" without pointing to specifics. I legitimately
want someone to tell me what I'm missing so I have more anticipation going into Sunday, but no one here has yet to pinpoint what the "character" aspect of the show is arcing/driving toward, seeing as that's really what this is all about. I guess, maybe, it's that Hays wants to "solve" the case, in so much as THAT is at least a part of his "memory" that he can try to put back together? Or, rather, since he can't put his memory back together he's at least going to try and put this case back "together." But even then, again, he's just going to forget at all soon enough, so that seems somewhat unsatisfying.
Either way, it's just not all gelling for me like season one. Yes, the one-eyed-black-man is somewhat the equivalent of Errol in season one - in terms of the the overall chest pieces - but that plot point isn't anywhere near as compelling or creepy or as engrossing as it was in season one. I cared that they at least got the killer in season one (even though that wasn't the most important aspect, next to character), but here, I just don't care at all if the black guy - if he even is Will's killer - is caught or killed or not, because it's been 35 years since that happened, among other reasons.