Fargo Season 2 Thread

hex

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I'm still not sure how the UFO stuff is going to play into the storyline

It already did in a major way.
If Rye doesn't stand in the middle of the road looking like :ohhh: at the UFO he doesn't get hit by Peggy. They never kill him/hide the body, which never puts them on the Gerihardt radar, which never lets Dodd use that as an excuse to go to war with KC.

That UFO indirectly put every event on this show into motion.

Fred.
 
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TheNatureBoy

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It already did in a major way.
If Rye doesn't stand in the middle of the road looking like :ohhh:at the UFO he doesn't get hit by Peggy. They never kill him/hide the body, which never puts them on the Gerihardt radar, which never lets Dodd use that as an excuse to go to war with KC.

That UFO indirectly put every event on this show into motion.

Fred.

:ohhh:
 

hex

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Anyway, great episode. This might be #2 this year, behind only "Mr. Robot". Might even finish #1 depending on how the rest of the season goes.

I'm glad they're portraying Reagan as a clown. I was :dead: when he was in the bathroom trying to bond with Lou over war stories when his was just from some movie he couldn't even remember.

Then when Lou asked him "yeah, but how?" Reagan hit him with the :patrice::yeshrug:and bounced. :mjlol:

Fargo Flynn is going to fold like origami when the police start asking questions.

Dodd is a fukking moron. So is his daughter. It's a wonder the Geirhardts functioned this long with people like that.

Fat Damon had a Todd/Landry flashback and laid his murder game down.

KC out here catching Ls.:snoop:

Only complaint I have is the episode had very little Milligan. To use a Fargo-ism any scene with him is "a real hoot".

Fred.
 

ML29

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I haven't seen the ep yet but don't tell me the handicapped kid is gonna get in on the action :snoop:
the minute he showed Dodd he could shoot and reload a gun it was only a matter of time. Plus he's been thirsty to get involved from jump despite his fathers wishes.

It already did in a major way.
If Rye doesn't stand in the middle of the road looking like :ohhh:at the UFO he doesn't get hit by Peggy. They never kill him/hide the body, which never puts them on the Gerihardt radar, which never lets Dodd use that as an excuse to go to war with KC.

That UFO indirectly put every event on this show into motion.

Fred.
:whoo: Yo! hanzee immediately puts together everything Ed And Peggy did after he's outside the diner and has an encounter with UFO.

Looking Forward to Mike's next move now that the Prog Rock band is now a duo.

R.I.P. Other Kitchen Brother.
 

Dr. Narcisse

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Although this season of Fargo is set eight years before the film that inspired it, there are still plenty of references, allusions, and homages to the 1996 film. Here is what we've managed to spot thus far — check back for updates throughout the season.


Episode 1: "Waiting for Dutch"

The film and this season begin in the exact same manner. When Rye Gerhardt shows up an hour late for a meeting with his brother (“11, not noon”), his delay echoes the first scene of the film, when Jerry Lundegaard shows up an hour late to meet with his hired kidnappers. (”I’m sure sorry. Shep told me 8:30. It was a mix-up, I guess.”)

Otto Gerhardt looks familiar, doesn’t he? From the show, this is Otto Gerhardt, patriarch of the Gerhardt crime family:

fargo1.w529.h352.jpg

fargo2.w529.h352.jpg

You’d be forgiven for getting the two mixed up.

The typewriter salesman's financial troubles mirror Jerry's. In the film, Jerry (William H. Macy) hatches his hostage scheme to get out of debt. His other scheme, though, is to develop a piece of land into a parking lot with the help of funding from his father-in-law. In the series, Rye enters into a deal with a typewriter salesman (Mike Bradecich), whose mannerisms echo Jerry's. He is confident that this latest typewriter model will allow them to “turn on the money spigot.” Of course, this is Fargo, and both ventures result in dead bodies.

A murder begins with one main target, then ropes in two innocent bystanders. The first murder in Fargo the film occurs when an unlucky police officer pulls Carl and Gaear over. While Carl is moving the body, two people happen to drive by and bear witness, forcing Gaear to chase them down and add them to the body count. In the series, Rye — high on cocaine — pulls a gun on the judge and shoots her dead. However, he also seems to have forgotten that he committed the crime in full view of the Waffle Hut’s cook and waitress, forcing him to take their lives as well.

Criminals love breakfast. Rye commits his murders at the Waffle Hut, which could be analogous to the film’s unseen, much-lauded “pancakes house.”


Episode 2: "Before the Law"

A salesman deals with creditors. Before Mike and his hit men accomplices put some pressure on Skip, the typewriter salesman, he can be heard on the phone with his creditors, mirroring a similar scene in the original film.

Ed Blumquist grinds up his victim. This one’s pretty obvious, right? Substitute a meat grinder for a woodchipper and you’ve got the original film’s most infamous scene. Only Ed doesn’t get caught … yet.
giphy.gif

giphy.gif

Episode 3: "The Myth of Sisyphus"

“To kill all those people. And for what? A little money?” Another on-the-nose reference, said by Hank Larsson at the hair salon, hearkening back to Marge Gunderson’s monologue at the end of the film.

Freaking out by your car. When business deals go south, as they do for Jerry Lundegaard and Skip the typewriter salesman, there’s no better therapy than taking out your anger on your car.
giphy.gif

giphy.gif


Episode 5: “The Gift of the Magi”

When Peggy packs up and goes to sell her car, the song that plays in the background, a cover of Jose Feliciano’s “Let’s Find Each Other Tonight,” is a direct nod to the movie. In one scene, Steve Buscemi takes an escort out to see Feliciano, who performs the song. (I’m about 99.9 percent sure that the version used in the show is a cover by Jeff Tweedy, but I can’t find any record of such a song existing.)


All the References to the Coen Brothers’ Fargo in Fargo’s Second Season
 

The Prince of All Saiyans

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so time goes by a few hours or so when the UFO occurs right?

when john redcorn is in the restaurant and he looks at the time it's one time

goes over to the street and inspecting everything and looks at the time again and it seemed like that time might have changed..

then again I wasn't watching this in my usual way cause football was also on
 

hex

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so time goes by a few hours or so when the UFO occurs right?

when john redcorn is in the restaurant and he looks at the time it's one time

goes over to the street and inspecting everything and looks at the time again and it seemed like that time might have changed..

then again I wasn't watching this in my usual way cause football was also on

I'm not sure there's a pattern of that in this show but time speeding up/slowing down is basically UFO 101. They even used it in "The X-Files".

Fred.
 

The Prince of All Saiyans

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I'm not sure there's a pattern of that in this show but time speeding up/slowing down is basically UFO 101. They even used it in "The X-Files".

Fred.
i'm unable to look it up but if you or another watcher of the show get the chance to check that out at the beginning of this episode

kinda seemed like redcorn also knew this is what was happening and understood it:ohmy:
 

KalKal

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I haven't seen the ep yet but don't tell me the handicapped kid is gonna get in on the action :snoop:

the weird hand kid reminds me and sounds like Walt Jr

That's why some in this thread were calling him "Fargo Flynn".

Anyway, great episode. This might be #2 this year, behind only "Mr. Robot". Might even finish #1 depending on how the rest of the season goes.

IMHO "The Knick" would have to fall off pretty hard for that to happen. But this season of Fargo is probably the closest thing to Breaking Bad we'll ever see. The Kitchen brothers especially reminded me of Tuco's cousins.
 
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