Download >>> https://tinurli.com/2835o6
As someone who's had to watch all of True Detective, I can tell you with certainty that the season has been one long dark roller coaster. One minute it seems like everything is going great for Rust and Marty, the next minute it seems like they're doomed. While things were looking good for them in last night's episode, I'm still skeptical that everything will be okay. Will Rust and Marty make it out alive? Or will the show end on a tragic note? When episodes are this unpredictable, there really isn't anything to write about before watching them. This is probably true for most TV shows, but not True Detective. So I'm going to write about the episode's themes, and why the show keeps throwing these curveballs our way. This episode was all about love. And it didn't start out that way at all... I think the episode's main theme was destiny. Rust Cohle was failing at life because he believed that his destiny was to be a detective, and that his fate had already been decided by God. It wasn't until he met up with Margaret that he started believing in fate again. The problem is that Rust still believes in fate too much. I'm not sure that fate is something that can be controlled. He's just "following the light" the same way he was in 1990. Why does he think Maggie can help him? I think this idea of destiny is embodied in Maggie's story about the R&B singer. Apparently she was his muse, but tragedy struck and he went off to rehab or prison or whatever, and hasn't been heard from since. She said she was screwed, but maybe she had something like depression like Rust did. At least that's what I took away from it. Either way it doesn't matter, she gave up on singing and eventually became a hard-headed teacher of bored teenagers. If Rust believes in the idea of fate, why doesn't he think that Maggie should've given up on singing and tried to raise her kids? Her story about the singer was nice and all, but I'm not sure that it had anything to do with his destiny. I think that Rust was just fascinated by this story and needed an excuse to come back to Dora. Maybe you could say destiny makes for good TV because it can make you root for something to happen, but I don't really buy it. It sounds like a lot of other people don't want this thing between Rust and Marty to end either (including me). Maybe we just like to see people with problems and long faces and hope that they can somehow solve them. I'm not sure what the show's creators want us to think about the kids either. It's obvious that Margaret was trying to tell Rust to take them back, but he didn't listen. He was right there saying that "kids don't belong in daycare", but then he goes off and sleeps with a hooker or whatever. I guess he felt like he had to do something crazy after seeing Dora again, but her reaction was so cold... it made me glad that he didn't try anything with her. She already had a BF and she still has him and the kid now too. cfa1e77820
留言