2nd: I'd advise not clicking on the spoiler tag if you like not knowing, but I will simply pass it along and let you decide- its a 1 sentence teaser about a couple of the upcoming episodes. It's not really anything that is going to be some revelation or leak a vital plot detail.
Spoiler!
Episode #4: “Who Goes There”:
*Hart and Cohle follow a series of dangerous leads in an effort to locate a prime suspect.
Episode #5: ““The Secret Fate of All Life”:
*Hart and Cohle share the spoils of a solved case; Papania and Gilbough confront the detectives with troubling new intelligence.
Episode #6: “Haunted Houses”:
*Maggie sheds light on Cohle’s activities in 2002, when his relationship with Hart fractured and Cohle quit the force.
Originally Posted by Buck:
The Skinny black interrogation cop started out with an angry disposition towards both Cohle and Hart.
He has really lightened up to Cohle, but he's still hating Hart's guts.
Hart's interview is the week after Cohle's. So maybe Cohle was murdered and he thinks it's Hart.
All of Hart's questions are about Cohle, as all of Cohle's questions are about the 1995 case.
Wouldn't that be a twist if Rust ended up being a 2nd 2012 victim after his interview?
By the way, its a very old translation of the word or it's meaning, but Hart was another word for Deer .
Antlers.
Hart delineation
Originally Posted by :
The word*hart*is an old alternative word for "stag" (from*Old English*heorot, "deer" – compare with modern Dutch*hert*and Swedish/Norwegian*hjort, also "deer").Specifically, the word "hart" was used of a*red deer*stag more than five years old.
In*medieval hunting*terms, a stag in its first year was called a "calf" or "calfe", in its second a "brocket", in its third a "spayed", "spade", or "spayard", in its fourth a "staggerd" or "staggard", and in its fifth a "stag", or a "great stag".
To be a "hart" was its fully mature state. A lord would want to hunt not just any deer, but a mature stag in good condition, partly for the extra meat and fat it would carry, but also for prestige. Hence a hart could be designated "a hart of grease", (a fat stag), "a hart of ten", (a stag with ten points on its antlers) or "a royal hart" (a stag which had been hunted by a royal personage). A stag which was old enough to be hunted was called a "warrantable" stag.
The hart was a "beast of venery" representing the most prestigious form of hunting, as distinct from lesser "beasts of the chase", and "beasts of warren", the last of which were considered virtually as being vermin. The membership of these different classes varies somewhat, according to which period, and which writer, is being considered, but the red deer is always in the first class, the fox hardly being regarded at all
This is the kind of show that I prefer to "just let happen". I do like to watch them a few times to pick up on intricacies I may have missed the first time. But I stay away from other boards that speculate on what happens next.
I like the discussion here because we use spoilers most of the time and I appreciate folks abiding by that.
Originally Posted by WilliamTheIrish:
This is the kind of show that I prefer to "just let happen". I do like to watch them a few times to pick up on intricacies I may have missed the first time. But I stay away from other boards that speculate on what happens next.
I like the discussion here because we use spoilers most of the time and I appreciate folks abiding by that.
And this is a great series.
Speculation is fine, but I'd be all for banning someone from the thread if they drop a bombshell spoiler and not tag it and ruin it for everyone.
I'm interested in get analysis and theory, but don't seek out info that's going to give away the story before actually watching it. [Reply]
I'm glad to have a show I'm thoroughly fascinated by, that wasn't a book or comic series beforehand. I have very little patience with people who chirp, "Oh, wait until you see what's coming up next! You'll love it!" [Reply]