So great that we have this amazing tv show that is filmed right in our backyard. This could go down as one of the best tv series in history, right up there with the Wire and Breaking Bad.
Latest episode was so friggin' good. I loved the contrast between Hanzee's situation and the Blumquists. Dodd and Peggy's interactions were perfect. This show needs all the awards.
The 2 shows I'm watching right now are Fargo and The Walking Dead. I can't say enough about Fargo. It makes Walking Dead seems so boring and drawn out in comparison.
I can't wait to see what direction or era season 3 is set.
They probably just printed a cover page and stuffed the Sun inside. You can see on the top right it is Sun font with the word "LIFE". But ya, some one must have been watching closely, though I have been known to pause on scenes with a newspaper and read them!
They probably just printed a cover page and stuffed the Sun inside. You can see on the top right it is Sun font with the word "LIFE". But ya, some one must have been watching closely, though I have been known to pause on scenes with a newspaper and read them!
No, that's the custom back page they made that has an ad for "Life Spring" with a movie/TV fictional 555 number.
"Life Spring" is the MLM/Cult/Self-Improvement Seminar from the 1970s that in this show takes place in Sioux Falls.
Not sure how I feel about that. Trying to buy it as a kind of Coen filmmaking quirk.
Otherwise, pretty amazing episode. The voiceover narration was...different.
Yeah, i was cringing with the UFO appearance. I hate that kind of artistic indulgence or whatever that was . Otherwise, amazing everything as usual in this episode.
Narration was Martin Freeman, wasn't it? (main character in season 1)
Location: A simple man leading a complicated life....
Exp:
Fargo showrunner explains that shocking (UFO) close encounter
Spoiler!
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: You finally paid off the UFO teases with, yes, a massive hovering UFO. What are you prepared to tell us about this?
Noah Hawley: I haven’t prepared anything. There are going to be people who will smack the TV and go, “Come on!” and that’s a great reaction. Everybody is entitled to their reaction. I like to say that everything in there is because it actually happened in the world of our “true story,” and in this case there was a UFO. I haven’t seen or heard any of the responses yet, so I’d be responding to phantoms.
In addition to Fargo being “based on a true story,” can you say what was your inspiration for including the UFO in the first place?
The Coen Bros. sometimes put something in because it’s funny, but that doesn’t mean it’s meant to be comic. … There’s a couple things that felt right about it. One is that it plays very well into the conspiracy-minded 1979 era where it’s post-Watergate, you had Close Encounters and Star Wars. There was a Minnsisota UFO encounter [in 1979] involving a state trooper. It was certainly in the air at the time. Alternately in the Coens’ The Man Who Wasn’t There they had a [running UFO thread]; certainly it was more ’50s inspired, but it was part of the cinematic language of their movie. So it felt like it worked for the time period and worked for the filmmakers, and is a way of saying “accept the mystery” — which is a staple of the Coen Bros. philosophy in their films. And I thought it was funny. But obviously it affects the story in a very real way. It’s not just a background element
I’m just picturing you in the writers room at some point going: “You know what? I’m going to put a UFO in this season, and just see if I can pull that off.” Because I know you like to challenge yourself and see how far you can push it, and you had to think that if you could creatively pull it off, it would be pretty impressive. An executive from MGM came to take us all to lunch before the season and they said, “Can you tell us anything about this season?” and I said, “Yeah, we’re going to make three fictional Ronald Reagan movies and there’s a UFO.” There was a long beat and they said, “So can you tell us anything about this season?” Nobody expected Fargo to be about any of those things in the second year. Ultimately what I think is exciting about a fake true crime story is that in actual history there’s a lot that we understand and there’s a lot of it we’ll never understand. The Zapruder film captured the JFK assassination, and we still don’t know what happened. It’s not just that truth is stranger than fiction, it’s that what we call truth is a small part of the historic picture. There are so many elements that usually get weeded out of the story so you can have a simpler narrative.