Colin Farrell, right, and Vince Vaughn will lead the cast for the second season of "True Detective," HBO confirmed Tuesday. Here are some other actors known for movie work who've decided to tackle TV.
Keanu Reeves is set to produce and star in the upcoming television series "Rain," which is about an assassin who grapples with his identity.
Oscar winner Halle Berry stars in "Extant," a space drama from Steven Spielberg's production company that premiered in July on CBS.
Katherine Heigl is returning to television this fall after spending four years working in film. The former "Grey's Anatomy" actress will star in NBC's new CIA/White House drama, "State of Affairs."
Terrence Howard has done his fair share of TV work, but he's best known for his big-screen appearances in movies such as "Crash," "Hustle & Flow" and "Iron Man." But soon he and filmmaker Lee Daniels are coming to TV with a Fox drama called "Empire."
Viola Davis has collected acclaim and two Oscar nods with her film career, but the actress is now starring in a Shonda Rhimes-produced drama on ABC. Called "How to Get Away With Murder" and described as a "sexy legal thriller," Davis plays a criminal defense attorney and professor.
Jamie Lee Curtis has signed up to star in a soapy CBS drama pilot. In the project, Curtis will portray a doctor and the mother of quadruplets, all of whom grew up as the subjects of a reality show. If all goes well, this would be Curtis' first regular TV role since 1989's "Anything But Love."
After returning to "American Idol" for its 13th season, Jennifer Lopez has apparently caught the TV bug. The actress is set to produce and star in a new NBC police drama called "Shades of Blue." She will play a detective who goes undercover in the FBI's anti-corruption task force. NBC has already picked up 13 episodes.
Susan Sarandon, seen here with her actress daughter, Eva Amurri, is known for films such as "The Rocky Horror Picture Show," "Thelma & Louise" and "Bull Durham." But as of October 2013, Sarandon has agreed to star with Amurri in a new NBC sitcom.
Meg Ryan has spent the past 10 years sporadically appearing in movies. Now the actress is planning to make her grand return on TV, not at the box office. She has signed on to produce and star in an NBC comedy about a single mom who decides to return to work at a New York City publishing house.
Anna Faris, right, was becoming a comedy queen almost solely on the big screen, thanks to parts in "The Hot Chick," "The House Bunny" and "Just Friends." But Faris switched it up last fall with "Mom," a comedy on CBS that stars the actress as a single mother and recovering alcoholic trying to put her life back together.
Don Cheadle's acting career is pretty legendary thanks to film credits like "Hotel Rwanda" and "Crash." But in 2012, Cheadle reminded anyone who'd forgotten just how funny he could be -- and how well he could lead a TV series -- with Showtime's "House of Lies."
"Sleepy Hollow" was one of the fall 2013 TV season's earliest hits, and it stars two actors known more for movies. British actor Tom Mison is known for flicks like "One Day" and "Salmon Fishing in the Yemen," while Nicole Beharie has shined in the films "Shame," "The Last Fall" and "42."
There was a time when you could only see Kevin Bacon on your TV screen if one of the cable channels was airing "Footloose." But in 2013, Bacon followed in the footsteps of his wife, Kyra Sedgwick, and made TV appearances a weekly thing with Fox's "The Following."
Kevin Spacey is a man notably devoted to theater, but the TV format has even ensnared the "American Beauty" actor. It's true that "House of Cards" doesn't *quite* count as TV -- it's original programming from Netflix that can be watched like a really, really long movie rather than in episodes -- but it was also nominated for a bunch of Emmys.
You might have seen Vera Farmiga on TV early in her career, but most came to know the actress when she transitioned to films such as "The Departed" and "Up in the Air." In 2013, Farmiga took a classic movie role and stretched it out to fill a TV series with A&E's "Bates Motel."
Prior to her barrier-breaking and Emmy-nominated role in "Scandal," Kerry Washington was better known for her film work. But in 2012, she became the first African-American actress to lead a prime-time network drama in almost 40 years.
Kat Dennings' first credited role was on TV ("Sex and the City," to be exact), but by the mid-2000s she was recognized from movies like "The 40-Year-Old Virgin" and "Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist." In 2011, Dennings hit paydirt on TV with CBS' "2 Broke Girls."
Ashton Kutcher, too, was a TV star who at one point tried to break out into movies -- what used to be the typical sign of "making it" in Hollywood. While Kutcher, center, still works in movies like many others on this list, it was telling when he decided to return to TV for another comedy, replacing Charlie Sheen on "Two and a Half Men" in 2011.
Although Claire Danes' early TV work on "My So-Called Life" is seminal to her career, her prestigious reputation was built with films such as "Romeo + Juliet," "The Hours" and "Shopgirl." So by the time she came full circle in 2011 and returned to TV with Showtime's "Homeland," it seemed like a big star had come home to roost.
These days, Zooey Deschanel is easily recognizable as the quirky teacher Jess Day on Fox's hit sitcom "New Girl." But before that, she was better known for her film work in "(500) Days of Summer," "Almost Famous" and "Elf."
Showtime's "Masters of Sex" has lured film star Michael Sheen to TV. Prior to 2013's freshman hit, Sheen was best known for work in movies such as "Underworld," "Frost/Nixon" and "Midnight in Paris." His co-star, Lizzy Caplan, has played across both mediums, starring in cult TV favorites like "Freaks and Geeks" and "Party Down" as well as big-screen blockbusters like "Mean Girls."
We think there's little James Spader can't do, and his recent resume is proof. In addition to playing a mysterious criminal on NBC's "The Blacklist," Spader, right, has also signed up to appear as Ultron in Joss Whedon's "Avengers" sequel.
- "True Detective" casting: Colin Farrell as cop, Vince Vaughn as criminal
- New season allegedly to be set in California
- Plenty of rumors, but little confirmation on storyline
(CNN) -- Colin Farrell and Vince Vaughn will lead the cast of "True Detective's" second season, HBO confirmed Tuesday.
Farrell had already told the Irish newspaper The Sunday World he would be part of the series, but Vaughn's name had only been rumor until HBO's confirmation.
Colin Farrell confirms he's joining 'True Detective'
The network (which, like CNN, is owned by Time Warner) has remained tight-lipped about the rest of the casting -- or, for that matter, things like plot details.
Colin Farrell told an Irish newspaper he's in the show.
"Three police officers and a career criminal must navigate a web of conspiracy in the aftermath of a murder," is how HBO's press release described the story.
Farrell will play Ray Velcoro, "a compromised detective whose allegiances are torn between his masters in a corrupt police department and the mobster who owns him," and Vaughn will star as Frank Semyon, "a career criminal in danger of losing his empire when his move into legitimate enterprise is upended by the murder of a business partner."
Vince Vaughn attends the Chicago premiere of 'Couples Retreat' at the AMC River East on October 6, 2009 in Chicago, Illinois
Nic Pizzolatto, who created the show and wrote its hit first season, has penned the new season as well. He told the radio show "To the Best of Our Knowledge" that the new season is set in California, but not Los Angeles.
"We're going to try to capture a certain psychosphere ambiance of the place, much like we did in Season 1," he told the show.
Rumors have been rife that the topic will be a "Chinatown"-esque story about resources, transportation and crime. Pizzolatto said it was about "hard women, bad men and the secret occult history of the United States transportation system."
Justin Lin will direct the first two episodes.