4/5 (for AV quality and supplemental features) Recommended for: Colin Farrell completists, noir enthusiasts, and anyone who prefers ambitious messes over safe successes.
Set in the fictional city of Vinci, California (a corrupt blend of Vernon and other L.A.-area industrial towns), the season follows three law enforcement officers and a career criminal turned straight(ish) businessman. Ray Velcoro (Colin Farrell) is a compromised detective haunted by personal tragedy; Ani Bezzerides (Rachel McAdams) is a no-nonsense sheriff’s detective with a dark past; Paul Woodrugh (Taylor Kitsch) is a motorcycle officer grappling with his identity and PTSD. They’re reluctantly drawn together after the bizarre murder of a corrupt city manager, Frank Semyon (Vince Vaughn), a former gangster trying to go legit, finds himself caught in the crossfire. true detective s02 bluray
True Detective Season 2 on Blu-ray is essential for fans of modern noir and those willing to meet the show on its own terms. It’s not the perfect, gothic masterpiece of Season 1—but it’s a fascinating, bruised, and beautiful failure. The Blu-ray preserves its grimy aesthetic and powerhouse performances in pristine quality, making it the definitive way to experience one of television’s most misunderstood seasons. 4/5 (for AV quality and supplemental features) Recommended
What unfolds is a dense, labyrinthine conspiracy involving land deals, high-speed rail scams, sex parties, and broken families—all drenched in existential dread and bleak California landscapes. The Blu-ray preserves its grimy aesthetic and powerhouse
When True Detective returned for its second season in 2015, it faced the impossible task of following the near-universal acclaim of Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson’s first outing. The result was a sharp, ambitious, and often divisive shift in tone and setting. Now, on Blu-ray, Season 2 gets the high-definition treatment it deserves—allowing viewers to reassess this noir-soaked California saga in its best possible light.
The higher bitrate and lossless audio allow the show’s ambitious, if messy, vision to breathe. The conspiracy might still be overstuffed, but the characters’ pain is unmistakably real.