Showing posts with label Billy Bob Thornton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Billy Bob Thornton. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Season 1 Fargo




This show starts off with a cryptic note telling the audience of the idea that what they are about to experience (not just watch) is based on real life and true.  This for most means that the tale will be told as is and will be as exciting as watching pain dry on a wall. 

Ah but Fargo season one is a lot more than that. The protagonist is a short and unassuming man trying to do his job as an insurance agent at a small firm in rural America. He has a part ridden with all sorts of sad but funny stories which place him as the underdog in almost all his school years. A local bully still rides him just as hard and to add insult to injury this same bully’s sons have inherited the same disrespect which they shovel out to him in massive amounts. As if this is not enough, he has a sarcastic wife who has made it her mission to berate him and ridicule him on every single act in his home. Martin Freeman delivers on this role with such as sense of innocence and bewilderment all captured in his magical facial expressions. 

During one of his challenging experiences with his childhood foe, a stranger passes through town whose role will be pivotal in the transformation of Lester Nygaard. 

After a series of unexpected events, Lester is thrown into the middle of an investigation in a town that has not seen any crime in a long time. At the helm is the newly promoted Captain (Bob Odenkirk later on to star in Better Call Saul) whose blind trust in the Lester is so annoying. His understudy in the meantime is a lady (Played by Allison Tolman) who will not take no for an answer. She must plow though the evidence at the chagrin of her boss who does everything in her power to steer him away from this case. Everything she turns her hand to seems to yield more and more results with her keen detective eye. 

In this town too there is a single dad whose fears for his daughter are plaguing his judgement after a chance meeting with a visibly cruel man. 

As though this is not enough the aforementioned crime has drawn in a duo of ill intentioned men who will stop at nothing to solve this crime. 

Lester has to deal with the attention he gets from the nosy detective as well as emerge from the shadow of his more popular brother. 

The whole show is really about transformation. The growth of Lester from victim, the attempt by the frightened single father to deal with his fears. The changes that Lester’s sole guardian (naive protector of his high school image) must go through as life’s realities hit his town. 

If there is anything that the show does effectively is make the audience cheer for villains out of understanding as well as appreciate the skill displayed by clearly evil men. What is clear at the end is that justice desk in the end prevail. 





Friday, July 12, 2024

Class of ‘09





Was looking for something great to post and then came across this gem. I watched it…no binged it a few weeks or months ago and enjoyed every bit of it…okay not so much the romance between the two ladies. Anyhow. 

Going with the theme of AI and Data, this is an appropriate series for watch. 

It is done in an interesting way featuring the cast in three major timelines past, present and future. 

Anyone who loves to see what it takes to become a Federal Agent will appreciate this show. There is a slight obsession with power for those who like these types of shows. Maybe it is the feeling you get when you walk into onto a crime scene and the cops have to make room: for you because it is a case that transcends borders and the local sheriff no longer has jurisdiction (at least the movies tell us this much). 




There is a story about how one person’s amazing attempt to stop crime through profiling and prediction goes all wrong. Maybe this is a look into the future with all the data that we are collecting and all the records that our systems have about people in our world. Maybe this is a conversations about the three strike rule (a law that punishes offenders if they commit crimes repeatedly and sets a limit to three-seemingly turning crime into a baseball game). 

The cast director was spot on in the choice of characters as were the actors in all the moral dilemmas they portray. 

My favorite and most troubling scene comes a little later in the show when a car is disabled remotely after some kind of violation. I guess it is not too sci-if given that this is possible with many cars today but transition from control to self-driving and then remote control is quite troubling. 




There are ways in which this show takes from some of the ideas in Eagle Eye at least in part with the immense power that is surrendered to the system when it takes over all operations and after some form of consciousness begins to make use of all devices with chips in them.