Allison Tolman and Shawn Doyle in Fargo, now airing on FX |
It's not a sequel. It's not a spinoff or a remake. Maybe it's more like a reboot? Right now I'm thinking of Fargo, FX's new limited-run television series, as falling into the "inspired by" category. My favourite theory is that its story is a riff on the same "true story" which playfully (and apocryphally) inspired Joel and Ethan Coen's feature. It shares a universe, an aesthetic of darkly comic, casual violence, and perhaps an area code with the Coen brothers classic 1996 film of the same name, but there is little other explicit overlap. (However, careful fans might observe a mysterious briefcase the show's opening scene.) Still, television viewers tuning in will be reminded of the film by the big skies, the unforgettable North Minnesotan dialect and exaggeratedly rounded vowels ("aw geez", "you betcha!"), and the signature pacing and tone. There are significant risks in toying with a beloved and critically acclaimed movie on the small screen, but so far, with nary a wood chipper in sight, FX's Fargo has already begun to stand on its own snow-booted feet.
With the blessing of the Coens, novelist and television
writer Noah Hawley (Bones alum, and
creator of The Unusuals) has brought
together an amazing cast and a confident eye and ear to the world the
filmmakers introduced us to almost 20 years ago. The film was set in 1987,
mainly in the Minnesota hamlet of Brainerd. The FX series resets the action to
2006, takes us two hours north to Bemidji (which Wikipedia reveals has an
almost identical population size as Brainerd), and offers a whole array of new
characters and situations. The ten-episode, single-season story begins with the
arrival of Lorne Malvo (Billy Bob Thornton, A Simple Plan, Bad Santa), a hired killer who quickly sets about
turning the quiet, snowy town upside down, one repressed, put-upon denizen at a
time. His first accidental target is Lester Nygaard (played by Sherlock and The Hobbit's Martin Freeman). The British Freeman seamlessly pulls
off the Midwestern accent and his hapless Lester somehow seems a full foot
shorter than his Dr. Watson character. For Malvo, converting Nygaard – with
his thankless job selling life insurance, dealing with a patronizing younger
brother, and putting up with a self-esteem destroying wife of 18 years – is
like shooting fish in a frozen barrel. After Lester's long-time bully and
one-sided nemesis Sam Hess (Kevin O'Grady) is found murdered, Nygaard finds
himself in the middle of a police investigation and a steadily increasing pile
of dead bodies. And blood – lots of blood.
Centre stage is the town of Bemidji itself, with its frozen
lakes, small town dramas, long chats about the weather, awkward breakfast
conversations, and explosive violence just waiting beneath the surface. In his
brilliant-but-underseen The Unusuals,
Hawley proved he can write quirky but real characters, and here he populates
the sprawling flatlands of Minnesota with an ever-expanding ensemble, whose
slow, deliberate speech and long silences are an echo of the pacing of the
story itself. (The series is filmed on location in Calgary, Alberta, and one of
the biggest mysteries of the series for me will likely continue to be where
exactly the Canadian Rockies have gone.)
But already what is most refreshing is the anthology format
itself. Even in this first 90-minute episode, you can already experience the
narrative freedom it offers. (Should Fargo
return to FX for a second season, Hawley has promised it would have a new cast and a new story set in the Coen
brothers' Minnesota universe.) Hawley
penned each of the season's 10 episodes, and compared it to writing a
"ten-hour movie." But television it is, and good television at that. With
only 15 minutes left in the premiere, I can honestly say I didn't know who was
going to survive to the next episode. Certainly skilled writers can accomplish this
in multi-season stories (for two recent examples, see Breaking Bad and Game of Thrones) but rarely has that thrilling uncertainty felt so real, so fast. The
best of American television has, until recently, been the long story, finding
surprising value in the open-ended tendency of the network model, for decades
premised on a syndication market. It was the purview of British television to
tell shorter, tighter stories– one season at a time, with little expectation
or need of extended runs. With True Detective, American Horror Story, and
now with Fargo, it looks like that
is beginning to change. Wouldn't ya know it?
Fargo's second
episode airs on Tuesday, at 10pm DST – on FX in the US, and FXX in Canada.
The series also premieres tonight on Channel 4 in the UK.
– Mark Clamen is a writer, critic, film programmer and lifelong television enthusiast. He lives in Toronto, where he often lectures on television, film, and popular culture.
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