When you look up at the stars and you see that the darkness outweighs the light, a little hope from a nihilist goes a long way. There is a monster at the end, but there is also hope. True Detective even had a little acting cadence at the end like one might serve pastries with espresso and Sambuca. It was a great meal that started with antipasto and had a monster course of spaghetti, albeit with green ears. And it was a good cop show, with grit and humor, that could sit atop any list with Joseph Wambaugh in it. True Detective satisfied me as a supernatural suspense thriller, as a monster movie and as a worthy entry into the Satanic Detective genre. Oh sure, I’d love to watch this every week for the rest of my life, but this was satisfying. True Detective’s final episode, “Form and Void,” breaks the cardinal rule of show business. This True Detective review contains spoilers.
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