January 19, 2024
Ava White, News Reporter
The HBO series “True Detective: Night Country” will feature a fictional town in Alaska called Ennis. While most of the filming was done in Iceland, some scenes were shot around Nome. Producers have been in touch with locals to get insights and feedback for the show.
Marjorie Kunaq Tahbone is one of five people on the Iñupiaq Advisory Council, which was the team working with the show. She said the producer’s goal was to “make the show about a place like Nome.”
“They just wanted people who were from up here to help advise the writing, then the whole process.”
Tahbone said the board reviewed the scripts for all six episodes featuring Ennis, and shared their concerns with writers about scenes and lines that seemed inaccurate or questionable.
One of those changes was featured in the first episode.
“There’s a scene where there’s caribou, but in the original script it was elk. And we’re like, ‘we have no elk in Alaska, let alone up in the Arctic.’”
She said the council encouraged producers to include Iñupiaq words and learn about the meaning behind traditional Alaska Native stories. Tahbone said they even helped choose most of the Iñupiaq names for characters in the town.
The council also encouraged including trigger warnings for the show because some episodes regard the Missing and Murdered Indigenous People epidemic.
“We advised about leaving traditional parts in and taking other elements of the story out just to maintain the integrity of the story and kind of keeping it true, but also kind of holding it close. It’s kind of like not wanting to give away too much, because people who aren’t from our area who weren’t raised in our culture, can misunderstand or just not have any clue what’s being said.”
Tahbone is also a traditional Inuit tattoo artist and helped design some of the tattoos on screen.
She said the film is a “melting pot” of unique cultures and includes people from other Arctic communities like Greenland and Canada.
Tahbone said she was glad to be part of the advisory council and to help ensure the content was as accurate and respectful as possible. She said she hopes it can pave the way for more Indigenous people to work in the film industry.
“It was just really cool to see the creative nature of how that works. Even how they build the rooms and how they make fake snow fly.”
The fourth season premiered on Jan. 14, and new episodes are released weekly.
Photo at top: Marjorie Tahbone works on a replica of an earring they needed for a scene. (Courtesy of Marjorie Tahbone)