Article originally published as FARGO Review on Seat42F.
Last year, FX’s
FARGO delighted. With its Minnesota accents, oodles of charm, stellar
cast and guest stars, and hilarious mayhem, it provided a unique,
high-quality viewing experience.
Tonight begins season two, and because
it’s an anthology series that isn’t reusing it’s cast (unlike American
Horror Story), none of the familiar faces are back. This provides a
considerable obstacle for the show to overcome. However, overcome it,
FARGO does, immediately hooking fans in to what promises to be another
excellent miniseries.
Season two of FARGO is set in 1979, or
at least starts there. It is still in the same part of the country, and
has much of the same tone, but now has a period component added in. The
music, the cars, the fashion, even Ronald Reagan (Bruce Campbell, Burn
Notice), help sell that image. As such, it takes the specific spirit of
season one and ups the weirdness even more, with great results.
In order to reach out to existing fans,
FARGO season two does have two characters that connect it to the
freshman run. Lou Solverson is the detective on the case. Played by
Patrick Wilson (Watchmen) now, he is more than two decades younger than
Keith Carradine’s version of the character. Lou’s daughter, Molly, the
hero of last year, is five years old in this outing, so she probably
won’t get involved much. FARGO season two is a case referenced in the
first season and we know Lou will make it out alive, but that’s about
all we know.
Lou is going through a tough time when
this season begins. His wife, Betsy (Cristin Milioti, How I Met Your
Mother), is sick, and going by last year, doesn’t have a lot of time
left. Thankfully, he has a good father-in-law, Hank (Ted Danson, Bored
to Death, Damages), also in law enforcement, to help him out. I’m not
sure yet how the case will unfold, but if Lou and Hank are the primary
investigators, sign me up for the season pass!
Once more, FARGO has an average, quirky
citizen mixed up in murder. This time, it’s Peggy Blumquist (Kirsten
Dunst, Spider-Man), a hoarder housewife, and unlike last year’s Lester,
her spouse, Ed (Jesse Plemons, Breaking Bad), is not the victim. Peggy
doesn’t mean to do wrong, but she’s scared when events occur outside of
her control, and while she doesn’t handle them as well as we’d like to
think most people would, it’s hard to hate her, at least at first. What
she does next will determine if she remains sympathetic or not.
What’s interesting about what happens
with Peggy, which I don’t want to give away, is that it ties into a
familiar urban legend. FARGO bills itself as a ‘true crime’ story, with
words on the screen at the beginning of the episode proclaiming that
what you’re viewing actually happened. It didn’t; that’s part of the
conceit of the show, that it’s done in the style, but is not actually
real, so those words are a lie. However, tying in something that lots of
people think happened will only reinforce the believability of the
premise.
It’s less clear who the Billy Bob
Thorton-esque villain is this year. There’s an entire mob family
introduced in the premiere, led by Otto Gerhardt (Michael Hogan,
Battlestar Galactica). It doesn’t seem like Otto will be long for this
world, but he has a wife, Floyd (Jean Smart, 24), three sons, Dodd
(Jeffrey Donovan, Burn Notice), Bear (Angus Sampson, Insidious), and Rye
(Kieran Culkin, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World), and a daughter, Simone
(Rachel Keller, Hollidaysburg), so it’s likely one of them will emerge
as the bad guy. Or, it would be more fun if we’re left wondering who in
the clan is the worst as the installments play out.
This year’s cast also includes Nick
Offerman (Parks & Recreation), Brad Garrett (Everybody Loves
Raymond), Bokeem Woodbine (Saving Grace), Zahn McClarnon (Longmire), and
many more, so like last season, I doubt viewers will get bored or be
hard up for a fresh face to come in and shake things around.
If the season premiere is any
indication, FARGO has done it again, and I look forward to another
excellent batch of television episodes.
FARGO airs Mondays at 10 p.m. ET on FX, beginning tonight.
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