The Bergen Record

Mexico City influenced latest ‘True Detective’

- Berenice Bautista

MEXICO CITY – For filmmaker Issa López, the first question was: Where?

“The moment I understood it was the Arctic, everything started falling into place,” the director of “True Detective: Night Country” told reporters in Mexico City ahead of its premiere on HBO and HBO Max. All six episodes were written and directed by López.

The Mexican director was looking for a region of the United States that had a totally different physical feel from the previous three “True Detective” installmen­ts, which were set in Louisiana, Los Angeles and Arkansa. And that’s how Ennis, a fictional and remote town in Alaska, came to be.

López conceived the season “in the darkest time of the pandemic,” infusing the story with a sense of loneliness and loss. Jodie Foster plays Liz Danvers, a detective who suffered the death of her son and husband. Kali Reis stars as Evangeline Navarro, a detective who lost her mother to mental illness and worries about the same fate befalling her sister. Both seek to shed light on the disappeara­nce of eight scientists from an isolated research station, and also face the unsolved murder of an Inuit woman who was an environmen­tal activist and midwife.

López, who grew up in the Mexico City neighborho­od of Tlatelolco, had a special interest in portraying violence against women and the disappeara­nces of Indigenous people that are not investigat­ed in the United States. “It’s an absolutely terrifying situation among the Indigenous population, almost as what’s happening in Mexico,” she said.

Navarro is a woman of Dominican and Inuit descent; Danvers has an Inuit stepdaught­er: “Maybe the biggest difference between our ‘True Detective,’ Season 4, and ‘True Detective’ 1, 2 and 3 is that the two main detectives can relate to the victims,” Foster said.

For Reis, developing Navarro’s character was a complex process that required her to step into the shoes of a police officer – and reckon with police brutality. “I being a woman and of color, and I also faced police brutality myself, I have been on the other end of playing Evangeline Navarro. So to jump right into the very thing that put a little bit of trauma in my own personal life was very interestin­g and kind of flipping it on its head,” said Reis, who as a boxer won two world titles and has Indigenous origins on her mother’s side.

The series was filmed in subzero conditions in Iceland and in its opening credits feature Billie Eilish’s “bury a friend.” López constantly listened to the artist while writing the plot – “but I don’t want to give writing credit to Billie Eilish,” joked the director.

Another Mexican influence on the plot is the relationsh­ip with the dead and the supernatur­al, similar to the Day of the Dead.

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