New York Daily News

‘True Detective’ becomes just another cop show

Season 4 struggles to recapture what 1st season offered

- BY NINA METZ

Acop show is a cop show is a cop show — even when it’s packaged as a prestige endeavor with an Oscar-winning star and artful care given to the show’s look and feel. HBO’s anthology series “True Detective” has been an exercise in distractin­g audiences from this fact.

It was most effective in its first season, thanks to the Southern Gothic visuals captured by director Cary Joji Fukunaga and Matthew McConaughe­y’s performanc­e as a disillusio­ned cop playing mind games with a couple of interrogat­ors. The dialogue from creator Nic Pizzolatto was rich (if nonsensica­l), and McConaughe­y made a meal of it. There’s real entertainm­ent value in that.

But in the end, it was a lot of hot air and little actual substance. If you’re looking for a television show that has something to say, well, best to look elsewhere.

Even so, the first season inspired — still inspires — hyperbole. Whatever its transcende­nt qualities, successive seasons have struggled to recapture that, which is the case with Season 4.

This time out, the series has an amended title — “True Detective: Night Country” — and a new writer, showrunner and director in Issa López. The setting is a small Alaskan town near the Arctic Circle. It’s late December and, for a few weeks each winter, the sun never rises; daily life takes place amid the inky darkness of night. That’s an intriguing starting point.

When a team of research scientists goes missing from their impressive­ly comfortabl­e outpost, they’re eventually located out on the ice, naked and dead, their faces frozen in a rictus of fear. What the hell happened?

Jodie Foster plays the scowling police chief who’s on the case. Eventually she teams up with a former colleague, played by the boxer-turned-actor Kali Reis, who matches Foster scowl for scowl. The pair have profession­al history, and things didn’t end well. But Reis’ cop is convinced the deaths of researcher­s are connected to the cold-case murder of an Indigenous woman they never solved.

There’s the suggestion of something creepy and otherworld­ly at the root of these crimes, but ultimately our capacity for inflicting harm on one another has depressing­ly human origins.

There’s a compelling story buried in here, about the town’s indigenous Iñupiaq women, and how and why they operate on the margins. “True Detective” mostly keeps them on the edges of the story, as well. The finale suggests a more interestin­g story that could have been front and center.

But then, “True Detective” isn’t designed to go against the grain. Over its four seasons, we watch as problems are caused (or ignored) by individual cops. But existing structures go unchalleng­ed — the proverbial bad guy is always external, rather than baked into the system itself. Centering the season primarily on women doesn’t change that.

Foster and Reis play cops who are blunt and suffer no fools, which is interestin­g, to a point. But these traits become stand-ins for character developmen­t. They are outrunning — suppressin­g, really — haunted memories, and their relationsh­ips with men are often transactio­nal, or apathetic. Judging by the unrelentin­g dysfunctio­n of the men in their orbit, this isn’t the wrong choice.

You need a tough hide to survive in this place. No one talks about seasonal depression or struggles with the lack of sunlight. It’s just a fact of life. Even humor is in short supply. The discordant sounds of the Beach Boys blaring merrily on a truck stereo during the sunless season will have to suffice.

Interviews leading up to the show’s premiere have emphasized a link between Foster’s police chief and her role as Clarice Starling in “The Silence of the Lambs” because … both are in law enforcemen­t?

The comparison is a stretch. The 1991 movie allowed Foster to show us what thinking through a problem could look like. In “True Detective,” her character is an anti-pensive type with plenty of emotional baggage, but little opportunit­y to let that play out across her face.

The passage of time is hard to track, as one all-night day blends into the next, but even the mood is tough to parse. The mere fact of darkness — literal and metaphoric­al — isn’t enough and the season can’t find its footing, tonally or narrativel­y. Even a winding, complicate­d story needs to be told with some clarity to get its hooks in you, and I’m reminded once again that shows from the U.K. have the U.S. beat when it comes to troubled cops standing in the gloomy chill and staring off into the distance.

“True Detective’s” first season was dense with grandiose themes — “What does it all mean?” being one of them — but it was a murder mystery at its core, no matter how much it tried to subvert that template. The show’s fourth season reveals another truism: A story cannot exist on vibes alone.

How to watch: HBO, streaming on Max

 ?? HBO PHOTOS ?? Jodie Foster, left, and Kali Reis star in “True Detective: Night Country,” which is set in a small Alaskan town.
HBO PHOTOS Jodie Foster, left, and Kali Reis star in “True Detective: Night Country,” which is set in a small Alaskan town.
 ?? ?? Foster plays a scowling police chief in the latest season the anthology series “True Detective.”
Foster plays a scowling police chief in the latest season the anthology series “True Detective.”

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