Anonymous wrote:Ugh, I hated the ending. I’m supposed to believe that an entire group of dorky scientists killed a young woman and then a group of cleaning ladies figured it out and enacted vigilante justice? Nope. No. No. Not on your life. Issa Lopez should stick to telenovelas. Shame on you HBO. Shame! Shame!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rolling Stone loved the ending.
https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-recaps/true-detective-night-country-series-finale-recap-jodie-foster-1234967345/amp/
Rolling Stone is a literary street walker.
The much maligned Season 2 was significantly better than this one. How on earth would these cleaning ladies manage to escape detection? Were there no security cameras anywhere? More on point, scientists come and go to these types of research centers. The guys that were there six years ago would never be there now. The whole concept is ludicrous and beyond the suspension of disbelief. I can go on and on about how terrible this season was. In fact, I cannot think of anything good, although Jodie tried.
I don’t care what the sellouts over at Rolling Stone have to say about it.
Anonymous wrote:Rolling Stone loved the ending.
https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-recaps/true-detective-night-country-series-finale-recap-jodie-foster-1234967345/amp/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m still confused how the tongue ended up on the kitchen floor after all that time, or how that one scientist didn’t freeze to death like the others, even though he was with them. Did I miss an explanation?
I was also confused who left the tongue, but they clearly explained the scientist - he locked himself inside the tunnel under the lab so the women couldn’t force him to go with the other scientists.
Anonymous wrote:I’m still confused how the tongue ended up on the kitchen floor after all that time, or how that one scientist didn’t freeze to death like the others, even though he was with them. Did I miss an explanation?
Anonymous wrote:I’m still confused how the tongue ended up on the kitchen floor after all that time, or how that one scientist didn’t freeze to death like the others, even though he was with them. Did I miss an explanation?
Anonymous wrote:I think it's Navarro's spirit on the porch at the end, visiting Danvers like Travis visits Rose. Rose said to Navarro early in the season that the dead come back to visit. I think Navarro is dead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's Navarro's spirit on the porch at the end, visiting Danvers like Travis visits Rose. Rose said to Navarro early in the season that the dead come back to visit. I think Navarro is dead.
I’m the one who asked this question, and that is what I thought, too (esp since Danvers literally said to Navarro near the end of the episode that if she ever does what her sister did, she needs to come back and visit). But I like PPs idea better, mainly bc I can’t bear the thought that mental illness can be inescapable in a family.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's Navarro's spirit on the porch at the end, visiting Danvers like Travis visits Rose. Rose said to Navarro early in the season that the dead come back to visit. I think Navarro is dead.
, mainly bc I can’t bear the thought that mental illness can be inescapable in a family. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spoiler…
I thought it was a great wrap up that grounded most of the story in reality despite all of the portends toward supernatural.
Two questions - Navarro died by suicide? And who left Annie’s tongue- Annie herself?
I thought it was a great wrap up. My take on Navarro is she finally left Alaska behind, but then I can't explain why she's on the porch at the end.
Tongue - I think the corrupt cop left it.
Anonymous wrote:I think Navarro moves out to a house out on the ice (like Rose), and we see Danvers and her stepdaughter go out to visit her at the end. And that's why they are both on the deck.
Or Danvers entered the spirit realm and is just visiting Danvers on vacation.
Toss up I guess, depends on how much you are willing to buy into the mystical aspects of the show.