i would need to watch more carefully but rewatching s1 this year i thought i noticed how the extreme cleanness of the ~80s reconstruction~ was more deliberate than i took it to be; seemed like they were enabling a bit of differentiation between regions of the public/social world, by trimming away certain expected mixtures/holdovers that would normally be visible aspects of history/social interconnection.
― j., Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:12 (six years ago)
when tv's greg of dharma and greg shows up with his fbi team, they are in charge (they assist local authorities etc etc); the law is in charge, the president in charge
on this show, no one is in charge
― j., Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:15 (six years ago)
On a second watch it's really interesting and poignant how many parallel possibilities and conspiracies are broached in the Atlanta Child Murders and pointedly left by the wayside once Holden finds his perfect suspect. There are a lot of things conceded to making dramatic television but overall I think the show is very smart about what it's about.
Yeah, I almost think the most important line of the season is when the local FBI agent asks Holden, "What if a white guy had gotten out of that car?" and all Holden can respond is, "But it wasn't a white guy."
That and Kemper pointing out that the only things they can say with certainty (or what they think is certainty) about serial killers is based on the ones that got caught. (Which notably does not include Kemper himself, who turned himself in.)
― I don't get wet because I am tall and thin and I am afraid of people (Eliza D.), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:16 (six years ago)
yep tho tbf i think holdens theory didnt impede an awful lot on the investigation of other leads until the chief on the ground was left with either no other option or was just searching for the administrative equivalent of a divining rod
― theRZA the JZA and the NDB (darraghmac), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:19 (six years ago)
I can't remember where I heard it--maybe even John Douglas--but someone referred to Kemper as having "arrived at the Source" of his disturbance...which is a funny implication since it suggests that Kemper more or less did something akin to a completed psychoanalysis by realizing that it was his actual Mother that he wanted to kill, and that his articulateness about himself (feigned or not) is a result of that.
― ryan, Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:21 (six years ago)
the allure of kemper is that his speech seems so open, yet he is so obviously not trustworthy; so his counterpart holden is subjected to corresponding agonies.
this is really well put and reflects, I think, the logic of the show as a whole.
― ryan, Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:24 (six years ago)
holden was p much right tho is the thing. the other suspects that he didn't much fancy ended up being wastes of time
― Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:24 (six years ago)
i don't think this show is v critical of profiling. holden is obv v flawed but he's supposed to be brilliant.
― Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:25 (six years ago)
xxp the hug
― j., Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:25 (six years ago)
yes jim but the question he was asked stands- Holden is certain, even when hes wrong
― theRZA the JZA and the NDB (darraghmac), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:25 (six years ago)
holden is brilliant
profiling is worthwhile
profiling cannot be perfect
holden doesnt accept this
i think all of season 2 holds the r statements nicely
― theRZA the JZA and the NDB (darraghmac), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:26 (six years ago)
― Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, August 27, 2019 12:24 PM (one minute ago) bookmarkflaglink
we don't know that though. no one, including holden, thinks williams killed all of the kids
― na (NA), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:28 (six years ago)
Speaking of alternative theories...I did love the ominous silent presence of Homer Williams in this.
― ryan, Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:29 (six years ago)
― na (NA), Tuesday, August 27, 2019 10:28 AM (one minute ago)
and holden wanted to continue investigating! baldy boss at the fbi took them off the case, to holden's chagrin
― Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:30 (six years ago)
holden's 'brilliance' is depicted mainly as being a matter of recklessly playing a game of identification with his killer-interviewees, which is shown to produce apparent 'finds' of which little has really been made as yet
the doctor is an interesting character because she's made out to be the kind of member of the trio who is least tempted by identification-with. tench is of such sound disposition that he will do what it takes but basically finds identification or sympathetic performance with the monsters disgusting. holden is set up to be problematic because he has a weird bent that others feel the (wise) need to control. the doctor is by professional disposition and personal inclinations not prone to identifying with anyone or anything, which makes her a kind of ideal, but in the way the show focuses on a narrative of striving to understand the unidentifiable-with via scenes of controlled interaction and identification (the interviews), the liability of her role is that she might have no real contribution to make other than a scientific one, and only stands to be compromised by engaging in any identification/participation at all (hence, her own interview scene later in s2).
― j., Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:31 (six years ago)
― Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, August 27, 2019 12:30 PM (thirty-seven minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
sure, at the end. before that, he consistently rejected the klan as suspects even though everyone in the city kept reminding him that based on history the klan was probably involved. he also rejects any white suspects as possible (based on flawed testing) until the very end of the show when he's like "oh yeah maybe we should have checked out these old pedophiles that everyone told us about three months ago."
― na (NA), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 18:11 (six years ago)
xp holden reflects the nature of knowledge in general - to understand a killer one has to identify with them inevitably. his pursuit of this (forbidden) knowledge at least serves an altruistic purpose (to aid in the capture and prevention of future sks) but what is my/the audience's excuse?
― Mordy, Tuesday, 27 August 2019 18:55 (six years ago)
well, just to start with, it seems that a false belief would be that the audience is in a position to get understanding by watching, as if seeing an entertaining documentary; i think fincher probably rejects that, wisely, as many filmmakers would
also, the conventional procedural reward would be a renewed sense of security (perpetually threatened but perhaps never really given the fixity of formulas), and another false belief would seem to be that understanding and plot-level apprehension coincide. even in many sk stories they partially deny that belief for the sake of theme or effect, say a killer is apprehended but remains horrifically alien or inscrutable or just won't explain themselves. but the coordination between understanding and the effective action of law enforcement in their protective function is a deep-seated conviction, or wish. so if we go back to your 'forbidden' gloss here, looking for something the audience does/indulges to be excused, i would look for some kind of wishful thinking about securing 'safety' through knowledge. what's forbidden for them is not knowing the evil man, but transgressing the seemingly safe bounds of the ordinary and what it 'knows'. idk.
― j., Tuesday, 27 August 2019 19:05 (six years ago)
if there's something to the latter then it probably hooks up with fincher's general pattern of relation to his audiences, which (i couldn't say how this ultimately sorts out) readily invites interpretations of being too shallowly edgy to be really substantial. if that is not the case then the substance would lie in some kind of reversal of expectation about just what is supposed to be edgy or non-edgy in ordinary existence. (anthony edwards in zodiac, tench here—their relations to family in contrast to ruffalo/rdj and holden/the doc.)
― j., Tuesday, 27 August 2019 19:08 (six years ago)
^^ “Fincher has a knack for presenting and pacing seemingly dull events in such an involving manner, with such reassuring procedural inevitability, that I am now spending 12 hours in a single month thinking about weird creepy stuff serial killers did, instead of approximately 45 minutes twice a year skimming Wikipedia entries like a normal person”(I’ve actually noticed watching this that I dislike when things happen. There really is this odd Fincher effect where everything sweeps neatly along a certain process and it feels annoyingly disruptive when something new intrudes on that. And yes, last night, amid that sweep, I did find myself thinking: I read the Wikipedia entry for Dean Corll years ago and wasn’t that a large enough share of my life to spend thinking about him?)
― ን (nabisco), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 19:11 (six years ago)
maybe why the tench son storyline doesn't really work for me - too literally "bringing the sk home" (and i keep remembering how the kid got into the case photos last season) xp
― Mordy, Tuesday, 27 August 2019 19:11 (six years ago)
xp yes, that's good; i think it might have to do with why zodiac has to be so long.
it seems to be regarded as very costly for tv-makers to have characters that can genuinely have moments of unlikeability, probably one of the few minor novelties of the post-prestige era. betty draper a big one. holden often threatening here to ruin the mood with his annoyances.
― j., Tuesday, 27 August 2019 19:15 (six years ago)
xp my impression early on was that they were setting tench jr. up to be an early on-the-spectrum storyline, bc ~tv~, but even after the events of s2 i now think that perhaps he is a big misdirect, perhaps rather inelegant. tench needs something within the family zone of the narrative to make for shaky covert stuff that must be shielded from public view, so bam. perhaps the audience lust for autism characters is just being exploited; easy to get 80s sk-related folx thinking this kid is gonna be killing cats soon, send tench spiralling, etc.
but the opposition between him and his wife in the state-mandated oversight portion is interesting; 'she is not your friend' yet dutifully participating in the process, as opposed to his wife's more understandable bridling at it.
― j., Tuesday, 27 August 2019 19:19 (six years ago)
he was going along with it more because he accepts that their son isn't necessarily blameless in the whole thing, while his wife was in denial
― Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 19:20 (six years ago)
one of the less elegantly integrated themes (perhaps because it’s so clearly forefront in everyone’s mind) is the “nature or nurture” thing which Manson underlines.
― ryan, Tuesday, 27 August 2019 19:30 (six years ago)
definitely the most surprising thing I learned in my post-watch wiki trawl
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Bateson
Paul Bateson (born August 24, 1940) is an American former radiographer and convicted murderer. He appeared as a radiological technologist in a scene from the 1973 horror film The Exorcist, which was inspired when the film's director, William Friedkin, watched him perform a cerebral angiography the previous year. The scene, with a considerable amount of blood onscreen, was, for many viewers, the film's most disturbing scene;[1] medical professionals have praised it for its realism.[2][3]In 1979, Bateson was convicted of the murder of film industry journalist Addison Verrill and sentenced to a minimum of 20 years in prison; in 2003 he was released on parole, which ended after five years. Prior to Bateson's trial, police and prosecutors implicated him in a series of unsolved slayings of gay men in Manhattan, killings he had reportedly boasted about while in jail, bringing it up at his sentencing.[4] However, no additional charges ever were brought against him. The experience inspired Friedkin to make the 1980 film Cruising which, while based on a novel written a decade earlier, incorporated in its storyline the city's leather subculture, with which Bateson had identified.
In 1979, Bateson was convicted of the murder of film industry journalist Addison Verrill and sentenced to a minimum of 20 years in prison; in 2003 he was released on parole, which ended after five years. Prior to Bateson's trial, police and prosecutors implicated him in a series of unsolved slayings of gay men in Manhattan, killings he had reportedly boasted about while in jail, bringing it up at his sentencing.[4] However, no additional charges ever were brought against him. The experience inspired Friedkin to make the 1980 film Cruising which, while based on a novel written a decade earlier, incorporated in its storyline the city's leather subculture, with which Bateson had identified.
― Number None, Tuesday, 27 August 2019 19:35 (six years ago)
"nature vs nurture" is the main thing the tench sub-story is doing: refusing to resolve in either direction
also i liked (and also i think it's related) when they realised that tales of manson were helpfully distractive with the professionals now invading and somewhat controlling their homelife: the shrink and the social worker both (briefly) turn from judgmental and forbidding to ppl excited to be two degrees of separation from an actual famous monster
― mark s, Tuesday, 27 August 2019 19:40 (six years ago)
The scene where Bill first gets briefed on BTK was like "Zodiac" in miniature. I was like, "Yes, more of this!" The fact that Fincher can make dry recitation of procedural material so tense and involving is amazing to me.
― I don't get wet because I am tall and thin and I am afraid of people (Eliza D.), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 20:14 (six years ago)
i'm sorry if i ask this in a way that is insensitive, but is holden supposed to be autistic
― na (NA), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 20:17 (six years ago)
forgot this isn't twitter and i can't delete stuff when i immediately change my mind after posting
― na (NA), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 20:18 (six years ago)
i hadn't imagined so, he's just supposed to be weird. i think the characterization of him meeting his girlfriend was defining, as were further interactions where he clings (not the right word) to his Fed identity: square like he seems, and not embarrassed by it, except that the appearance hides a refreshing/disturbing inclination for free thinking and mind-broadening that in his norminess he is ill-equipped to steer into mature development. thus his susceptibility to visioneering, imagining himself as a heroic innovator, etc.
― j., Tuesday, 27 August 2019 20:41 (six years ago)
the mentorship sort of relation to tench is interesting because we're slightly supposed to think that it would work out in a predictable way if not for the fact that tench is a bit too much of a throwback despite his seasoned judgment to be able to authoritatively steer this greenhorn who is eager to drown in the mad seas they are embarking onto; the kid just won't listen
― j., Tuesday, 27 August 2019 20:44 (six years ago)
tench is an established caricature cast and written and played to surprise us with subtle and more 2019 touches than that initial position would have us expect
holden is a v 2019 netflix series lead, cast and written and played much more through the lens we would maybe expect from this show if it was being made in the 80s
like...hes clearly on spectrum, its just a handwavey cliche pre-rainman 'weirdo' with a technical gift and no people skills.
whether this is fincher being clever, or how the actors/characters turned out, or an understanding that developed with the writers reacting over time....or i made it up...who knows
― theRZA the JZA and the NDB (darraghmac), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 23:04 (six years ago)
everyone keeps decribing this as a fincher project -- and obviously his name is going to be biggiest on the marquee -- but it was devised and written by joe penhall, and i believe it's ultimately his concept that fincher is realising (tho i think penhall is more of a backseat role in s2)
― mark s, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 10:58 (six years ago)
holden reminds me a lot too much of the lead in numb3rs (in role and affect), except he cocks more up
mindhunter is better than numb3rs obviously, everything is
― mark s, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 11:00 (six years ago)
I mean yeah, but Fincher's style and tone are so specific to his body of work that it can't help but seem like it's in conversation with stuff like Zodiac. It's a very specific aesthetic and it greatly informs how we interpret the narrative! It's very easy for me to imagine the same scripts redone in the style of Criminal Minds or whatever and just being background watching at best.
― Simon H., Wednesday, 28 August 2019 11:05 (six years ago)
ok fair, i haven't seen zodiac -- i just feel some of the cloudiness of intent we're identifying (by disagreeing!) may be the consequence of this being a collective project in a way that a kneejerk auteurism is muffling?
― mark s, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 11:21 (six years ago)
ok fair, i haven't seen zodiac
― lowkey goatsed on the styx (bizarro gazzara), Wednesday, 28 August 2019 11:40 (six years ago)
i was watching adventures with tip and oh
― mark s, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 11:42 (six years ago)
oh, here’s a tip: watch zodiac
― lowkey goatsed on the styx (bizarro gazzara), Wednesday, 28 August 2019 11:43 (six years ago)
oh yeah, I just rewatched zodiac last month because my spouse had never seen it and I think it may be my favorite fincher thing by a whole lot.
― Yerac, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 13:35 (six years ago)
it’s a masterpiece
― lowkey goatsed on the styx (bizarro gazzara), Wednesday, 28 August 2019 13:41 (six years ago)
It very slowly worked its way into my favorite movies ever, one of the ones I instantly think of when I'm thinking, "I want to watch a movie, what do I want to watch?"
― I don't get wet because I am tall and thin and I am afraid of people (Eliza D.), Wednesday, 28 August 2019 14:47 (six years ago)
also watch numb3rs, so you don't accidentally make worrisome pronouncements like this
― j., Wednesday, 28 August 2019 15:22 (six years ago)
never
― mark s, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 15:25 (six years ago)
I think Carl Franklin in particular brings a slightly different vibe in the last three eps...kind of a southern noir or cary fukunaga TD season one thing. That push in on Williams!
― ryan, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 15:34 (six years ago)
Also that really cool slow pan up to the cloudy silhouetted now conspiratorial APD in the last ep.
― ryan, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 15:35 (six years ago)
I was thinking Numbers was Murder by Numbers. Not the case.
― Yerac, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 15:37 (six years ago)
watching numb3rs is murder by numb3rs
― mark s, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 15:49 (six years ago)
bcz it's bad